>>9887
Oftentimes. The point is the emotional cocktail that comes with the foreknowledge of what's going to happen, for both the predator and the prey. The intense fear of a slavegirl being demoted from household help to pantry filler alone gets plenty of vore-centric minds going.
Remember, vore is an extremely complicated fetish. There's a lot going on, not just the physical, and people get into it for different reasons. Some people like, implicitly, yourself, may just get off on the physical sensation of consuming or being consumed. Others are interested in the extreme dehumanization aspect of a person being turned into food. Some, yes including myself, started with a BDSM fetish and found vore as a route to a more intense, raw application of emotion. I know at least one person who is interested because her default mindset is extreme low self-esteem/dehumanization, and the idea of being eaten by something her energy would be better in the hands of is redemption/validation, not even needing the vore to be sexualized to take great catharsis/pleasure in it.
So prey being hunted or even ranched like animals, processed and packed like game or chattel (up to and including butchering), traded in as a marketable product, used as a long-term food source for something that doesn't need to kill to feed (vampires, demons, some plants I guess), and yes, prepared and cooked (live or post mortem) in any way you might prepare a meal in real life. Which itself can be as merciful as a dispatching gunshot followed by roasting, or as terrifying and painful as being skewered on a steel spit and turned slow over coals while still squirming.
There's at least a dozen different fetishes at play here; they just all get scooped under the tag "vore" because they end in consumption, no matter how you got there. Hell, it doesn't even have to end there. There's a vore -> scat thread up right now.
So depending on the context of the image/material and what exactly you're into vore for, all of these images could be vore-related.