| name | novel-obstacles |
| description | Plan the obstacles, conflicts, and sources of tension in a novel. Use this skill when the user wants to develop conflict for their story, plan obstacles for their characters, add tension or intrigue, create mysteries, craft dynamic character relationships, figure out why their novel feels slow or boring, or improve the pacing of their book. Also use when someone needs help making their middle section more compelling, or when their characters don't seem challenged enough. |
Novel Obstacles & Conflict Planner
Help the writer identify and plan the obstacles, conflicts, mysteries, and sources of tension that will drive their novel forward. Conflict is a book's oxygen -- it gives the story life.
The goal is to produce or update an OpenTales ProjectDoc for the obstacles and conflict plan that maps out the conflicts and obstacles across the novel in a way that creates compelling, escalating tension.
Pressure Is Not Yet Drama
Do not stop at building an escalation grid.
Many outlines fail because they understand conflict as "more things go wrong." That produces attrition, not drama. A strong obstacles plan does not merely pile pressure onto the protagonist. It forces them into choices that reveal who they are, what they want badly enough to betray, and what part of themselves they are willing to sell, deny, or damage.
Always ask:
- What is the protagonist tempted by, not just threatened by?
- Which obstacles are really decisions in disguise?
- How do victories betray the values that motivated the goal in the first place?
- What wound, lie, or governing self-deception makes this character generate bad outcomes, not merely suffer them?
- Which scenes collapse multiple pressures into one event instead of distributing them into tidy separate tabs?
The middle of a novel stays alive when every setback is also a mirror.
Philosophy: Conflict Is Everything
Conflict is the reason we read novels. It forces characters to make decisions, tests their strengths and weaknesses, reveals how they think and react to pressure, and shows us what makes them tick. Readers want to see whether conflicts will be resolved, how they'll be resolved, who gets what they want, and how they win.
A man contentedly walking down the street is not a story. It only becomes a story when something disrupts that contentment.
But conflict doesn't mean constant gun battles. A slow literary novel can be just as intensely conflict-driven as a thriller -- the conflicts just operate differently. Ian McEwan's Enduring Love has nearly every exchange on the page intensely filled with interpersonal and internal conflict, creating an incredibly intense reading experience.
The Two Types of Conflict
Surface Conflict
Conflict demonstrated through actions, dialogue, and visible events:
- Arguments, battles, confrontations
- Physical obstacles and challenges
- Characters actively working against each other
Beneath-the-Surface Conflict
Implied, unsaid tension that creates an undercurrent of unease:
- A character who thinks freely in a totalitarian world (even when not actively evading authorities, the conflict is always present)
- Two people who love each other but can't be together
- A secret that could destroy everything if revealed
The best novels have both types working simultaneously. Is there conflict acted out on the page? Is the protagonist pitted against the world they inhabit? Is there conflict between characters expressed through actions and hidden desires? Does the character have competing interior desires?
How Conflict Works
Conflict happens when a character tries to surmount an obstacle in order to get what they want. It can be:
- External obstacles: A cop who stops and delays them, a villain who blocks their path, a storm that prevents travel
- Interpersonal conflict: Two characters with conflicting motivations (one wants to break up, the other wants to stay together)
- Internal conflict: Competing desires within a single character (wanting to help a friend vs. protecting their family)
The best way to introduce conflict is to place obstacles in the way of your characters. Whenever you're stuck on what should happen next, throw an obstacle in the character's path and things will start getting interesting quickly.
Then push further. The most powerful obstacle is often one the character can plausibly accept, justify, or even desire:
- the profitable compromise
- the morally gray shortcut
- the person whose criticism hurts because they're right
- the success that feels like betrayal
- the truth told at the wrong time
- the care that becomes control
If an obstacle only hurts the character, it may produce sympathy. If it tempts them into complicity, it produces drama.
Conflict and Pacing
Conflict controls the rhythm of a novel. Readers internalize a basic rhythm in the first fifty pages and expect the speed to gradually ramp up toward the end.
- If a stretch goes too long without conflict, the reader will die of boredom
- If things are too relentlessly intense with no breather, the reader will be exhausted
- Quiet moments should be respites from conflict or setups for future conflict, not gaping voids
Think of it like music -- variation in intensity creates rhythm. A constant fortissimo is as monotonous as a constant pianissimo.
When something feels slow, it's usually because:
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There's no conflict
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The author is indulging in exposition not woven into the plot
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Events are transpiring that are unrelated to the big unanswered question driving the action
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The scenes are escalating in quantity, but not changing the meaning of the goal
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The protagonist is being overwhelmed by circumstances instead of choosing among wounds
Crafting Mystery (In Any Genre)
Every novel, regardless of genre, should have mysteries keeping readers turning pages. Mysteries are the lures that create an irresistible forward pull.
The formula: character's desire/stakes + obstacles/intrigue + delay = mystery
Desires and Consequences
The first step is showing what the character wants and what the stakes are. If you show a character caring deeply about something, it plants a question in the reader's mind: are they going to get what they want? The more they care, the more we care.
Obstacles and Intrigue
Place roadblocks that prevent the character from immediately getting what they want. Show the character putting skin in the game and expending great effort. The more difficult and insurmountable the mystery seems, the more curious the reader will be.
Tantalizing hints, creepy details, and an atmosphere of danger or uncertainty deepen intrigue.
Delay (The Right Kind)
Great mysteries are built by prolonging suspense. But this delay must come from genuine difficulty, not from the author arbitrarily withholding information.
Bad delay: The character knows exactly what happened but the author simply won't tell the reader. This is like playing keep-away while yelling "neener neener." The reader will feel cheated.
Good delay: The truth is obscured, confusing, or surprising. The character is working hard to figure it out, and we know what they know, but the answer lies just beyond their grasp.
Always Deepen the Mystery
Keep the protagonist actively pursuing answers. If they seem to stop caring, the reader will too. The better you articulate the character's fears and desires, the greater the mystery the reader experiences.
Dynamic Character Relationships
One of the most powerful tools for creating compelling obstacles is through dynamic relationships (inspired by John Green's Looking for Alaska):
The sine wave with increasing amplitude:
Every interaction between key characters should advance their relationship in incremental steps that swing between positive and negative emotion, with each swing more intense than the last.
- One encounter leaves the character feeling hopeful
- The next makes them feel rejected or confused
- The next positive moment feels even higher because they earned it through the negative
- The variance creates suspense about where things will end up
Why this works:
- It feels true to the confusion and intensity of real relationships
- The reader becomes increasingly invested because each swing is earned
- One-note relationships (same level of interaction throughout) quickly bore readers
- If the relationship doesn't grow in intensity or change dynamics, the reader decides they already know everything they need to know
This pattern applies to any intense relationship: romantic, adversarial, mentor-student, family.
But do not settle for "sometimes good, sometimes bad." The relationship should intensify because the characters' coping strategies and values actively damage one another.
Escalating Intensity
The obstacles in a novel must escalate:
- If the most challenging obstacle happens in the first half, the reader will be bored in the second half
- If the character always has "up" moments, the reader will be bored with predictability
- If things only get worse with no hope, the reader will be depressed or find it unintentionally funny
The biggest battle comes at the end. There are gains, setbacks, and smaller obstacles along the way. The intensity of both the obstacles and the emotions should steadily increase while swinging back and forth.
Escalation should include:
- reversals: a win that feels like loss, a rescue that creates debt, a discovery that weakens the protagonist's moral position
- compression: one scene doing financial, relational, social, and psychological damage at once
- contamination: the protagonist's chosen solution creating the next layer of conflict
How to Guide the Writer
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Identify the central conflict: What is the main obstacle standing between the protagonist and what they want?
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Identify the governing contradiction: What lie, blind spot, appetite, or self-deception makes this particular protagonist especially vulnerable here? Reduce scattered internal conflict into one core contradiction whenever possible.
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Map escalating obstacles: What smaller obstacles build toward the central conflict? Do they increase in intensity?
- Do not just list stressors. Mark which ones force active choice.
- Find the temptations early, not just the punishments late.
- Move the novel's real moral logic into smaller earlier scenes, not just the climax.
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Check for both types: Does the novel have both surface and beneath-the-surface conflict?
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Plan the mysteries: What questions will keep readers turning pages? Where are the delays and reveals?
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Design dynamic relationships: Which relationships have the sine-wave pattern of increasing intensity? Which relationship can wound the protagonist most because the other person has standing, history, or a coherent argument?
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Find the quiet moments: Where does the reader get to breathe? Do these moments serve the story (setup or respite)? Quiet scenes should still destabilize, reveal, tempt, or complicate -- not merely rest the reader.
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Stress-test the middle:
- Are scenes arranged like an obstacle conveyor belt?
- Are there enough reversals, not just escalations?
- Does each apparent success betray the values that launched the story?
- Are there at least 3 major scenes where multiple pressures collapse into one event?
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Test the pacing: Are there dead stretches without conflict? Stretches that are too relentless?
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Harden the climax: The climax should not just punish the protagonist or prove the theme. It should force a choice between legitimate goods, or between one harm and another.
Searching for Additional Information
Search the web if helpful for:
- Conflict structures in the writer's specific genre
- Examples of effective mystery-building in comparable novels
- Pacing techniques and frameworks
Output Format
Write a single markdown ProjectDoc for the obstacles and conflict plan. Be EXTREMELY thorough and descriptive -- write rich, detailed, multi-paragraph content. Do not abbreviate or summarize. Each section should feel like a map of real dramatic pressure, not a managerial spreadsheet.
Suggested ProjectDoc title: Obstacles & Conflict Plan.
Structure:
# Obstacles & Conflict Plan
## Central Conflict
[The main obstacle/conflict that drives the entire novel]
## Governing Contradiction
[The protagonist's core lie, appetite, temptation, or self-deception that turns conflict into causation]
## Surface Conflicts
[Visible, action-level conflicts throughout the story]
## Beneath-the-Surface Conflicts
[Implied tensions, unspoken desires, environmental pressures]
## Internal Conflicts
[Each major character's competing desires and internal battles]
## Temptations & Compromises
[What the protagonist is drawn toward because it works, flatters them, protects them, or pays off -- even if it betrays their values]
## Obstacle Escalation Map
[How obstacles build in intensity from beginning to end -- mark where the protagonist actively chooses, where a win turns sour, and where the story's meaning shifts]
## Mysteries & Open Questions
[The questions that will keep readers turning pages, when they're introduced, and when/how they're resolved]
## Dynamic Relationships
[Key relationships and how they oscillate between positive and negative with increasing intensity]
## Reversals
[The moments where apparent success becomes betrayal, safety becomes debt, truth becomes damage, or the protagonist's chosen solution makes things worse]
## Pacing Plan
[Where the intense stretches are, where the breather moments are, and how the rhythm works; note which scenes collapse multiple pressures at once]
## Climax Pressure
[What legitimate goods or harms collide in the climax, and what the protagonist must choose to wound]
## Notes
[Any additional thoughts on conflict, obstacles, or tension]
Adapt the structure freely. The goal is a clear map of how tension works across the entire novel.
Do not produce a managerial spreadsheet disguised as drama. Produce a plan where the protagonist's obstacles keep forcing them into uglier self-knowledge and harder choices.