Johne
Moderator
- Sep 27, 2005
- 4,373
- 2,728
Here's a sneak peak of my LinkedIn post for next Monday.
What's the difference between 'coincidence' and 'deus ex machina?'
Authors hate coincidence in fiction. It's widely considered an almost unforgivable sin, a sign that you haven’t been able to make your story work logically.
But what if I told you there's a way to write coincidence that works?*
Take THE NICE GUYS by Shane Black. Ryan Gosling and Russell Crowe’s characters keep stumbling into bigger messes through sheer dumb luck—a chance beating, a wrong-place-right-time moment, a killer who keeps showing up.
By all rights, it should feel contrived. But it doesn’t. Why?
Because every coincidence makes things worse.
Each one tightens the noose, forces the duo to adapt, and reveals who they are under pressure.
In short:
> Coincidence can start a story or make things worse.
> Coincidence cannot end a story or make things easy.

What's the difference between 'coincidence' and 'deus ex machina?'
Authors hate coincidence in fiction. It's widely considered an almost unforgivable sin, a sign that you haven’t been able to make your story work logically.
But what if I told you there's a way to write coincidence that works?*
Take THE NICE GUYS by Shane Black. Ryan Gosling and Russell Crowe’s characters keep stumbling into bigger messes through sheer dumb luck—a chance beating, a wrong-place-right-time moment, a killer who keeps showing up.
By all rights, it should feel contrived. But it doesn’t. Why?
Because every coincidence makes things worse.
Each one tightens the noose, forces the duo to adapt, and reveals who they are under pressure.
In short:
- Coincidence that causes trouble → fuels tension, demands choice → drama
- Coincidence that fixes trouble → removes tension, demands nothing → disappointment
> Coincidence can start a story or make things worse.
> Coincidence cannot end a story or make things easy.

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