Inducing in a sentence as a noun

I had a similar experience, that was at least as groan inducing.

I was blown away by her deceptively simple RPG and to hear about that backlash is rage inducing.

It's snarky, flame-ware inducing comments like this that are bringing down the the quality of conversation here.

"Nothing to hide" is thematically similar to the groan-inducing "Do you want the terrorists to win?

If so, are we really prepared to attack, say, stomach cancer by inducing an autoimmune response that might also attack the stomach itself?

The idea is that if you can't deal with 10+ hours of being on edge due to vertigo-inducing noise and open-back visibility, you're too old/lazy/weak to write code.

I think they fragment human interaction into the smallest possible dopamine-inducing units.

Don't you see how saying "You can only use our payment processor on Google Play" and immediately following it up with "Our payment processor is not available in your country" is rage-inducing?

[1]If you're "starting out", then bodyweight exercises like pullups, chinups, bodyweight squats, planks, pushups, situps, are going to be low barrier to entry, good-habit inducing work that can be leveraged to take the person to the next level when they're comfortable.

Inducing definitions

noun

act of bringing about a desired result; "inducement of sleep"

See also: inducement