Summary
TheSawfranchise is a gruesome one, twelve films long now and constantly challenging viewers with the gross and gory traps that victims of Jigsaw are locked inside. Usually, victims awaken in a trap with no time to prepare, are told what the puzzle is, and are given an extremely brutal time limit in which to try escaping, often with a hefty cost attached.
Though awakening suddenly without any time to plan makes these traps even more difficult, there are some traps that, with careful planning time, viewers have been able to see easy ways around. Difficult though they might initially appear, someSawtraps are fairly simple to escape,though the ones in the newest entrySaw 10have proven popular and less easy than some.

6Reverse Bear Trap
Saw
As the franchise continued, the primary theme of most Jigsaw traps was that they required some form of sacrifice, the gruesome level of themwas more common in 2000’s horror movies. Many of the victims were people that Jigsaw felt needed to redeem themselves to continue living, by showing what they were willing to do to continue receiving the gift of life.
This trap, used on multiple occasions but first on drug addict Amanda, can be unlocked with a key. For Amanda, the key had to be cut out of the abdomen of another person. While this is a gruesome thing to be forced into, it is not nearly as challenging as performing similarly harmful acts upon one’s own body and then trying to escape. Compared to most Jigsaw traps, this was one simple.The ending ofSawshowedthe kinds of sacrifices Jigsaw demanded of people.

5The Neck Tie Trap
Saw 5
Five people awaken in a house filled with traps and are told they will have to work together to survive. Even these terrible people, realizing what was going on, could have made it through every trap together. Instead, the traps got progressively harder throughout because there were fewer people left to help.Jigsaw always claimed to never be a killer, and these traps made it feel more the fault of the victims at times.
The first trap was the easiest of all though, because they awoke knowing who Jigsaw was and convinced it must be him that had put them here, and he appeared on the screen to make it quite obvious they had to work together. Not only did they waste a huge amount of time arguing and fighting against each other, but still four of the five got their keys in time to save themselves. With less time spent fighting, they could all have made it. Not to mention, the keys are revealed to all be the same, they could have passed them along. This trap was amazingly simple, but these terrible people panicked and acted selfishly.

4The Needle Pit
Saw 2
Amanda went through a lot of pain before becomingthe apprentice of Jigsaw, and this was one of themost memorable traps for sheer brutalityin the whole franchise. However, there was a bed with sheets in the room, which really could have mitigated most of the damage that anyone had to go through with this very singular trap.
If the group had stopped to think even just momentarily, they would have realized covering themselves in the sheets of the bed would have allowed someone to get in with minimal damage, or at least rip it up to cover their arms, so they could search through the needles. Instead, Xavier pushed Amanda in immediately, causing her far more pain than was necessary. This is just one of the many examples where teamwork could have easily helped deal with a trap.

3The Pig Vat
Saw 3
There are some hefty physical tolls that the victims are asked to take to survive Jigsaw’s traps throughout the series. However, it isn’t so common that they are asked to take an emotional toll instead. InSaw 3, the tasks set by Jigsaw are for Jeff. He walks through different traps, each containing a person partially responsible, as far as he is concerned, for the death of his son.
Saving the judge who gave a light sentence to the drunk driver who killed his son was an easy one. All Jeff had to do was burn some of his son’s old belongings, quickly, before the judge was drowned in pig blood. With a man’s life at stake, Jeff stands paralyzed for a ridiculous length of time in dealing with a simple and quick trap.

2The Final Step
Saw 4
The situation inSaw 4is similar toSaw 3, they eventake place concurrently in the confused timeline. Both follow one man, in this case Detective Rigg, as Jigsaw puts him through various tests to teach him about letting people save themselves. After a variety of successes and failures at learning this lesson, Rigg seems to be catching on.
However, in the final step, with his opportunity to wait until the timer runs out on his friends or rush in, attempting to save them, making the same mistake he’s been warned many times not to make, he still rushes in. Of course, the traps were set so that if anyone entered the room before the timer was up, his friends would die. This one simple lesson that Rigg had to live by throughout his tests, which he’d learned earlier, was completely thrown out the window. If he’d thought about it at all, he would have realized he didn’t need to save them, that the point of all his tests was not to save them.

1The Ceiling Jars
Most of the traps inSaw 5feel silly after you realize the point is to work together. Despite being horrible, almost all the five victims have high-paying jobs and aren’t stupid, so the fact that they never realize they can work together is ridiculous. The tunnels they are meant to hide in are big enough to fit more than one person in each.
Despite this, the four people assume only three of them can survive and they attack each other. With any sort of cooperation, even the most basic shred of human decency or unselfishness, they would have realized that two of them could fit in the tunnels. The point of the traps was that everyone could have survived, yet nobody wondered what was meant to happen if all five of them had made it that far.