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101 Great Plot Twist Ideas to Elevate Your Script

Never go without a great plot twist idea again...
by Ken Miyamoto - updated on November 28, 2022

Is there anything better than a great plot twist? Twists, turns, big reveals, and surprise endings are some of the most coveted aspects of a great story, whether they are found within movies, TV shows, or novels. Plot twists break the monotony of conventional plots and stories, which is why script readers, audiences, and publishers love them.

[bctt tweet="Every story ever told can be broken down into three parts. The beginning. The middle. And the plot twist - R.L. Stine." username="screencrafting"]

But writing the right plot twist can be a challenge. A great plot twist can impact your audience with an emotional gut-punch they'll never forget. While the wrong kind of plot twist will leave readers feeling cheated or even let down. That being said, you can't rely solely on plot twists to make your script engaging. You still need strong storytelling and characterization.

Read More: What is a Plot?

And even when you find the perfect plot twist, you still have to build to it. Like one of the best plot twists of all-time in Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back:

We've seen plenty of movies and shows and read plenty of novels that depict a hero facing off against an evil villain. Light versus Dark. But when that villain is revealed to be that hero's father, your world is rocked. In a good way.

The good news is that finding and developing a great plot twist is pretty easy. You just start with a seed—a revelation or epiphany that starts with, "What if..." Then you weave the results into your plots, stories, and characters for a more dynamic script. To help you get started here's a collection of 101 great plot twist ideas you can use to elevate your script. Try them out. Play around with them. And if you find one that you think is a good fit, plant it into your story and watch it grow.

101 Plot Twist Ideas

[bctt tweet="Plot twist idea #8: The smartest character is the first to be outwitted." username="screencrafting"]

Red Herring — All suspicion points to one character, but when the truth is revealed, it's another that did the terrible deed.

The narrator is not the person we thought they were.

A weakness of a character is actually their greatest strength.

A character's strength defeats them.

A character's weakness saves them.

The weakest character is the villain.

The strongest character is the first to die.

The smartest character is the first to be outwitted.

The most skilled character succumbs to the least skilled character. 

The protagonist is living two lives.

The antagonist is living two lives.

The wrong first impression of a character.

What first seemed like a wrong first impression of a character ends up being right.

A surprising person ends up being the puppet master behind everything.

When the protagonist solves the mystery, it opens up a Pandora's Box.

The conflict the protagonist was going through was a ruse concocted by their friends to help them with confidence or to overcome fear.

The conflict the protagonist was going through was a ruse concocted by former victims of their bullying.

The conflict the protagonist was going through was a practical joke.

The protagonist receiving help actually doesn't want it.

The protagonist that doesn't seem to want help actually does.

A gift is really a danger.

What seems like a dangerous object at first is actually a gift that helps the protagonist. 

The dead body isn't dead.

The informant is actually the mastermind.

The supposed mastermind is actually a red herring.

An otherwise straightforward romantic comedy leads into horror territory.

A gigantic meteor streaks across the sky.

A terrible storm moves in, threatening all.

A stranger enters the story, informing the characters that they are all being watched. 

The goal achieved ends up making things worse.

The love interest is the antagonist.

An object has a special meaning.

A missing child planned their abduction to get back at their abusive parents.

The parent is really the grandparent. 

Good vs. Evil Plot Twists

[bctt tweet="Plot twist idea #50: The strength of a character is actually their greatest weakness.  " username="screencrafting"]

The narrator is the villain telling the hero's story.  

The narrator is the hero telling the villain's story.

Your character is a superhero that lost their powers.

The opening hero is killed within the first act. 

The villain is a twin of the hero.

The hero is one of a triplet trio. 

Two villains are two of a triplet trio — the hero is the third.

The protagonist is both the hero and the villain. 

The supportive friend is the killer.

It is revealed that the hero has an unheroic past.

The villain is in love with the hero.   

A supporting character is an intruder working for the villain.

The hero is related to the villain.

The villain is an evil clone of the hero.

The villain is revealed to have been right under the hero's nose the whole time.

The strength of a character is actually their greatest weakness.

The hero must die to save everyone else.

The villain has a change of heart but has driven the hero too far over the edge and must stop them.  

The villain ends up being revealed as the true hero.

The hero ends up being revealed as the true villain.

The hero and villain each live dual lives — one where they are the hero and another where they are the villain.

Timeline Plot Twists

[bctt tweet="Plot twist idea #72: A stranger enters the story, informing the characters that they've all done this before. #Screencraft" username="screencrafting"]

The protagonist is revealed to be from the future.

What we believe to be set in the past is actually set in the present.

What we believe to be set in the present is actually set in the future.

What we believe to be set in the future is actually set in an alternate reality. 

The protagonist is revealed to be from the past.

The protagonist is revealed to be from another dimension or timeline.

The antagonist is revealed to be the protagonist's future self.

The antagonist is actually the protagonist's past self.

The antagonist is revealed to be the protagonist's alternate reality self.

The ending is revealed to be the beginning.

The beginning is revealed to be the ending.

It's all a dream. 

It's all a nightmare. 

It's all a memory. 

The love interest is a bodyguard sent from the future to protect them. 

Your story based on or around true events is an alternate reality with a different ending.

A stranger enters the story, informing the characters that they've all done this before. 

Mind-Bending Plot Twists

[bctt tweet="Plot twist idea #84: The love interest is actually a figment of a lonely person's imagination." username="screencrafting"]

The story being told is revealed to be a fictional book written by the protagonist.

The characters are actually figments of someone's imagination.

The characters are manifestations of someone's multiple personality disorder. 

The antagonist is a split personality of the protagonist. 

A stranger enters the story, informing the characters that their reality isn't what it seems.  

The love interest is actually a figment of a lonely person's imagination.

The detective hunting down the criminal is actually the criminal — they suffer from Dissociative Identity Disorder.

The physically challenged character isn't physically challenged.

The mentally challenged character isn't mentally challenged.

The mentally stable character isn't mentally stable.

The killer imagined their whole killing rampage.

Supernatural Plot Twist Ideas

[bctt tweet="Plot twist idea #90: The dead body discovered is a dead ringer for the person that found it." username="screencrafting"]

The protagonist is revealed to be a person's psyche trapped in another's body.

The narrator is an angel, examining the lives of humans.

God is the narrator, admiring his/her creations.

The narrator is Satan, reveling at the tormenting of God's little creatures known as humans. 

Death narrates the story, witnessing a life he/she must take.

The dead body discovered is a dead ringer for the person that found it.

A character that believes they are in Heaven is actually in Hell.

A character that believes they are in Hell is actually in Heaven. 

The ghosts aren't ghosts — they're from a parallel universe merging with the protagonist's universe. 

An object has a special power.

Those we thought were dead are not.

The people we thought were alive are dead.

Tech & Sci-Fi Plot Twist Ideas

The events of the story were all a computer simulation.

The city the characters live within is actually on a spaceship.

The city the characters live within is actually set deep within a mountain after a nuclear war.

The spaceship where the story takes place is actually a prison—unbeknownst to the crew.

An otherwise straightforward drama leads into science fiction territory. 

Plot Twist #101. The writer looking for plot twist inspiration had a revelation that led to an even better plot twist not mentioned above.

Bend and shape these plot twists to fit and elevate your stories — and share them with your writing peers.


Ken Miyamoto has worked in the film industry for nearly two decades, most notably as a studio liaison for Sony Studios and then as a script reader and story analyst for Sony Pictures.

He has many studio meetings under his belt as a produced screenwriter, meeting with the likes of Sony, Dreamworks, Universal, Disney, Warner Brothers, as well as many production and management companies. He has had a previous development deal with Lionsgate, as well as multiple writing assignments, including the produced miniseries Blackout, starring Anne Heche, Sean Patrick Flanery, Billy Zane, James Brolin, Haylie Duff, Brian Bloom, Eric La Salle, and Bruce Boxleitner, and the feature thriller Hunter's Creed starring Duane "Dog the Bounty Hunter" Chapman, Wesley Truman Daniel, Mickey O'Sullivan, John Victor Allen, and James Errico. Follow Ken on Twitter @KenMovies


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