Mystery vs. Mystery Box: The Difference Between Storytelling and Cheating
If you’ve paid attention to popular entertainment over the last two decades, you’ve probably noticed that the word “mystery” doesn’t mean what it used to.
Audiences were once treated to carefully crafted stories wherein a perplexing question drove the plot forward. Now, more often than not, they’re handed a dangling thread that the writer promises will be tied up later, but it usually isn’t.
This Postmodern bait-and-switch has a name: the Mystery Box.
But before we dismantle the mystery box, we have to define our terms. What does a real mystery looks like?
The archetype of a genuine mystery is found in Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Murders in the Rue Morgue.” A baffling murder occurs under seemingly impossible circumstances. The reader is naturally compelled to ask who could have done it, how it was possible, and why it happened. Poe’s detective, Dupin, pursues the answers to those questions with logic, observation, and reasoning. When the solution is revealed, it’s surprising yet inevitable. The effect is satisfying and memorable.
Arthur Conan Doyle mastered this formula with Sherlock Holmes. Every Holmes story presents a case in which answering one or more of the fundamental questions—Who, What, When, Where, Why, or How—resolves the tension.
The same can be said of Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot mysteries. Readers know from the start that there is a coherent answer, and part of the thrill is watching the detective uncover it.
Related: Escaping the Christian Feedback Loop: Why Tolkien Isn’t Enough
The key point is that the mystery is not window dressing; it’s central to the plot, and its resolution provides closure that rewards the reader’s attention.
Now compare that kind of authentic enigma to the Mystery Box.
A writer inserts a tantalizing question into the story but withholds the answer; not because it must logically remain hidden, but because the author doesn’t know it himself.
The Mystery Box is a placeholder. It’s the equivalent of writing “insert payoff here” in the script and hoping inspiration will strike later.
When the time comes to open the box, the writer must retrofit a solution onto the story. This ad hoc answer almost always produces a resolution that clashes with the established setting or characters. And don’t kid yourself: The audience can feel how dissonant it is.
The classic case is Lost. Week after week, viewers were strung along with enigmas: polar bears on a tropical island, smoke monsters, cryptic numbers; without any clear plan for an explanation. The writers treated these unsolved elements as fuel to keep the audience hooked rather than as integral parts of a coherent story.
When the box was finally opened, the contents didn’t add up. Fans who had invested years of speculation felt cheated.
Screen shot: ABC
Disney’s Star Wars sequels committed the same crime with Rey’s parentage. The mystery of her origins was never central to the story’s logic. It was a Mystery Box; or if you will, a big red button marked “Controversy” meant to generate speculation online.
When the answer was eventually revealed, it contradicted both prior teases and the thematic direction of the trilogy. Again, audiences recognized the cinematic IOU for the cheat it was.
Screen cap: Disney
Even Japanese megahit Attack on Titan couldn’t resist. The locked basement in Eren’s house was dangled before fans as the key to the world’s mysteries. But because the contents weren’t devised from the beginning, the eventual reveal felt tacked-on. Instead of resolving the core conflict, it thrust the story into a different genre altogether.
Related: Attack on Titan
So, after that whole spiel, you may still be asking, “Why do Mystery Boxes fail?”
Let’s unpack it (pun intended).
The problem with the Mystery Box is, in the final analysis, structural. A mystery is only compelling if it’s necessary to the story. If removing the question wouldn’t affect the plot, it’s not a mystery, it’s a gimmick. It’s like baiting a cat with a flashlight. Sure, it’s attention-grabbing, but sooner or later the target finds there’s nothing there.
Sadly, movie and TV audiences likewise keep falling for it.
Real mysteries work because they’re grounded in the same soil as the characters, the conflict, and the theme. A fake mystery works like a flimsy plank laid over a plot hole. The writer places a stopgap to distract the audience long enough to come up with a permanent solution later.
But stories don’t work that way. Readers can smell when a writer is improvising. They sense when the payoff is unearned. And once they feel cheated, their trust in the author is gone.
That’s why as an author, your first duty is to keep readers from being bored or confused. A real mystery, properly handled, does both: It hooks the reader’s curiosity and then satisfies it with a logical resolution.
A mystery box does the opposite. It manipulates curiosity without delivering on the promise, leaving the audience confused. And when they quickly tire of trying to fit the square peg in the round hole, they soon get bored.
If you want your story to endure, follow the example of Poe, Doyle, and Christie. Ask questions that matter to the plot. Plant the answers from the beginning. And when the time comes to reveal the truth, let it feel surprising yet inevitable.
Don’t cheat your readers with empty boxes. Give them real mysteries.
For gripping mysteries you can be sure have perfectly haunting answers since I outlined the series 20 years ago, read Book 1 in my captivating Arkwright Cycle!
Brian Niemeier is a best-selling novelist, editor, and Dragon Award winner with over a decade in newpub. For direct, in-person writing and editing insights, join his Patreon.