Tale Spinning

A Story-Structure Method

GlossaryMoral of the Story

The King's Law

The King's Law is the survival philosophy the Protagonist learns in the Home World: do whatever it takes to get by. It wins the McGuffin, never Heaven.

Applies to
All story types

The King’s Law


Definition

The philosophy rooted in survival: do what you have to do to get by. Lie, steal, follow orders, hide who you are — whatever it takes. The King’s Law is taught by the King in the Home World and is the operating system the Protagonist runs on at the start of the story. It is not evil — it is pragmatic. It worked in the Home World. The problem is that it cannot get the Protagonist to Heaven on Earth.

Why This Term Matters

The King’s Law is what makes the Bad Habit understandable. The Protagonist is not wrong to have learned it. They were taught it by someone who survived by following it, in a world where following it was necessary. The moral drama of the story is not about the Protagonist learning that the King’s Law is evil — it is about them learning that it is not enough. That it will get them the McGuffin but not Heaven. That there is a higher standard, and that reaching it requires a harder kind of courage.

Key Properties

  • Rooted in survival, not morality
  • Taught by the King in the Home World
  • Can win the McGuffin — which is why the Midpoint is a false victory
  • Cannot reach Heaven on Earth
  • Is directly opposed by the Universe’s Law
  • Governs the first half of the story

In a Kind Comedy — Examples

Ratatouille: Django’s Law: rats survive by hiding, scavenging, and never trusting humans. Stay invisible. Never reveal yourself. This is what Remy follows in the first half — hiding in Linguini’s hat, concealing the partnership, performing his Talent behind a lie. It wins him the McGuffin. It cannot win him La Ratatouille.

In Bruges: Harry’s Law: the code is everything. You honour the job. You follow the rules. No exceptions, no mercy, no independent judgment. Ken has followed this Law for his entire career — it is the only framework that made professional violence bearable. It cannot win him a clear conscience.

Good Will Hunting: Southie’s Law: protect yourself before others can hurt you. Push people away before they abandon you. Never trust institutions. It is a Law of pre-emptive self-defence — and it keeps Will from the life his Talent could give him.

In a Tragedy

Coming soon.


Learn More

The King’s Law is introduced in the free Fundamentals Course on learn.tale-spinning.com and developed in full in the Kind Comedy Course, including how it drives the first half of the story and why it fails at the Midpoint.