UK’s ‘SCARIEST’ haunted house where visitors sign waiver before they’re humiliated, given electric shocks & even SHAVED
BRITAIN'S "scariest" haunted house has opened where visitors are verbally abused, humiliated and even have their hair shaved or waxed off.
Before entering, those hoping to enter the Halloween experience have to sign a two-page waiver before being subjected to electric shocks and representations of a sexual nature.
The over-18s only event has warned of the six different themed rooms where every boundary is pushed.
Liam Gould, 32, was left stunned by his Enola experience, in Walsall and was lost for words after exiting the final room.
The clothing brand owner said that at any point guests could shout the safe word “mercy” to move onto the next task.
During his experience, Liam said he was verbally abused, prodded, shocked, shaved, waxed and stripped to his boxers.
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Liam, 32, from Wolverhampton, said he was left in "total shock" and couldn't believe "how far things were taken in there".
He told : “I didn’t expect it to be as intense or at the level it was but I should have known better after signing the waiver form.
“I was shocked beyond belief when I came across naked actors there.
“This is a one-on-one experience so there is just you alone in there.”
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Liam said the first room is a hospital waiting room where you are sat with other patients.
He said he was spoken to in the worst possible manner - belittled and bossed around.
He added: “If you are easily offended this experience won’t be for you.”
On Enola’s website, a description of the experience calls it a “bad trip”.
It says: “This is NOT a scare maze, this is only for those who believe they are brave enough to face the sick, twisted, weird and strange.
“You will leave wondering ‘WTF have I just experienced.’
“It's time to check in for your appointment at the Enola Clinic.
“Everyone wants to live life on a high from time to time and at this clinic, a new drug is being trialled.
“Will you get the desired effect and feel euphoric?
“Chances are, you're in for a ‘bad trip’ like no other.”
One horror lover said:: “I’ve been to every haunted house and Halloween experience.
“This was by far the most intense.”
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Another added: “We did it. Never again.”
A third said: “Jeez I was so out of it I couldn’t form proper sentences.”
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Despite children being terrified of the DIY creation outside the Sittingbourne house in Kent, the dad-of-three has no plans to pull it down.
Back in 2017, Rob and his wife Laura originally placed a few fake headstones to raise some money for an Autism charity.
After collected nearly £500, the 51-year-old decided to go a few steps further the following year and hand-crafted a haunted house.
Since then, the family have raised some £5,500 for The Autism Apprentice CIC.
This year has topped his previous efforts with Rob even needing to enlist the help of his alarm and electronics business, Amey Security Systems.
Using his skills, the house of horrors hides further spooky props, set off by electrics and pressure pad systems.
This year's theme is Insane Asylum and features various gory medical scenes.
Rob said: "Every other year we've run it we ran it from 5pm until 9pm, Friday, Saturday and Sundays," Rob told The Sun.
"This year it's 6pm until 9pm.
"We raised £490 the first time, that was just with some cemetery railings. But the first time we did a big build like this we raised over £2,500.
"I pay to store all this stuff in three garages, I'm renting them all year long, each garage is around £80 a month and then there's a month off work to build it all.
"This is really the last year we can do it, but we're going out with a bang.
"I could say what I pay in rent and come to the same amount as we donate.
"I get frustrated, stressed and anxious that it won't be done in time but I enjoy it.
"You have to reinvent it every year, through imagination, there's so many films to draw from.
"I thought of this one as I was walking half way through last year's opening night. I always start scavenging stuff from November.
"This is made of plywood that you paint and construct, it's basic carpentry skills as long as you can measure and cut straight it's not that difficult.
"Props wise a lot are imported from America. You have to pay through the nose for import duties though but they do it better."