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Why Character Arcs Make or Break Stories

Why Character Arcs Make or Break Stories

Posted on May 13, 2021March 19, 2026 by mark

Why Most Novels Fail Without a Character Arc

Here’s the truth most writing books don’t say clearly:

A story doesn’t work because of plot.
It works because someone changes.

If your character finishes the story the same way they started…
the reader will quietly wonder:

“What was the point?”

Let’s fix that.

 

What a Character Arc Really Is

At its core, a character arc is simple:

It’s the gap between who your character is at the beginning
and who they become at the end.

That change can go in any direction:

  • Better → stronger, kinder, wiser

  • Worse → broken, corrupted, lost

  • Or even unchanged → but changing everyone around them

What matters is this:

👉 Something meaningful must shift.

 

The Engine Behind Every Great Arc

Most strong arcs are built on one powerful tension:

What the character wants vs. what they actually need

  • The want is surface-level (success, love, revenge)

  • The need is deeper (truth, humility, self-worth)

Stories come alive when those two things collide.

At the end, the character faces a choice:

  • Chase the want… and stay the same

  • Or accept the need… and change

That decision is the arc.

 

Why Readers Care More Than You Think

Readers don’t just want entertainment.

They’re looking for something deeper—whether they realize it or not.

They want to see:

  • Struggle

  • Growth

  • Truth revealed through experience

Because when a character changes, it creates a quiet thought:

“If they can change… maybe I can too.”

That’s what makes a story stick.

 

Why Character Arcs Make or Break Stories

 

Not Every Character Has to Change

Here’s where many writers get stuck:

Your protagonist doesn’t always need an arc.

Sometimes, they are the force of change.

They stay the same—but transform everyone around them.

What matters is not who changes…

👉 It’s that change happens somewhere meaningful in the story.

 

The One Mistake Readers Always Notice

You can’t fake an arc.

If a character suddenly becomes “good” at the end with no buildup,
the reader will feel it instantly.

Change must come from:

  • Experience

  • Conflict

  • Consequences

In other words:

👉 Transformation must be earned.

 

A Simple Way to Fix Your Character Arc

Before you start writing, answer just one question:

“Who is my character at the beginning… and who are they at the end?”

Then ask:

“What forces them to change?”

That’s your story.

 

Final Thought

Plot might get a reader to turn the page.

But it’s change that makes them remember the story long after it’s over.

If your character grows, breaks, or transforms in a way that feels real…

You don’t just have a story.

You have something that stays with people.

 

you might be interested in these blogs…

THE GREATEST TIP ON HOW TO BE A GREAT WRITER

HOW TO PROPERLY PLACE A FLASHBACK IN YOUR NOVEL

UNDERSTANDING A CHARACTER’S WANTS AND NEEDS

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blogger at mark douglas doran
A novel writer looking to help you become the greatest writer you can be. teaching the in and outs of writing your novel.

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A novel writer looking to help you become the greatest writer you can be. teaching the in and outs of writing your novel.

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