Bravery vs. Desperation: A Look at Dark Fantasy Protagonists

Traditional fantasy celebrates heroic courage, choosing to face danger for noble causes.

But dark fantasy understands that sometimes what looks like bravery is really desperation.

That choices made with knives at our throats aren’t really choices at all.

This distinction creates protagonists who feel real precisely because their actions stem from necessity rather than nobility.

Soren’s Journey in Guild of Assassins

My novel Guild of Assassins explores this tension through Soren’s journey.

His initial pursuit of his father’s killer might seem brave.

But it’s really grief and rage driving him forward.

When Raz offers him the choice between joining the guild or death, his “decision” isn’t courage but survival instinct.

Like the best dark fantasy protagonists, his path is shaped more by desperate circumstances than heroic choices.

Psychological Complexity Born from Desperation

This creates a fascinating psychological complexity.

When Soren enters the guild’s training, he’s not volunteering for hardship.

He’s accepting it because the alternatives are worse.

Each skill learned, each compromise made, comes from necessity rather than choice.

Yet somehow, real courage emerges through these desperate acts.

Training as a Test of Desperation

Consider the training sequences.

Soren doesn’t face Varus’s brutality or master Tamasin’s poisons because he’s brave.

He does so because he must to survive.

Yet in choosing to endure rather than break, in maintaining his friendship with Alaric despite pressure to compete, he displays a different kind of courage.

One born from desperation rather than virtue.

Desperation Masquerading as Bravery

The distinction becomes clearest during the Threshing.

Soren and Alaric’s decision to stand together might seem brave.

But it’s really about refusing to face their darkness alone.

Their loyalty comes not from nobility but from a desperate need for human connection in an inhuman situation.

Like the best dark fantasy, it shows how something like courage can emerge from primal necessity.

Human Nature and Desperate Choices

This reflects something true about human nature.

That our most profound choices often come not from heroic intention but from desperate circumstance.

When Soren kills during the Threshing, it’s not bravery driving his blade but raw survival instinct.

Yet his choice to retain some humanity through loyalty, to not completely surrender to savagery, is where real courage emerges.

The Guild’s Method: Desperation Over Bravery

The guild masters understand this distinction.

They don’t try to inspire bravery in their students.

They create desperation through systematic pressure.

Each brutal lesson, each impossible choice, forces recruits to act from necessity rather than virtue.

Like the best dark fantasy institutions, they recognise that desperation shapes more reliable tools than courage.

Relationships Driven by Desperation

Even relationships reflect this dynamic.

Soren and Alaric’s friendship endures not because they’re brave enough to maintain it.

But because they’re desperate enough to need it.

Their loyalty comes from recognising their mutual need for human connection to survive the guild’s corruption.

It’s necessity masquerading as choice.

Desperation Forging a Different Kind of Courage

Perhaps most interestingly, these stories show how desperation can forge something stronger than simple bravery.

Through enduring impossible situations, through making choices with no good options, characters develop a harder kind of courage.

One born from surviving rather than choosing danger.

The Threshing as a Test of Forced Courage

The Threshing sequence crystallises this theme.

Soren and Alaric don’t fight Kierak because they’re brave.

They fight because they have no choice.

Yet in choosing how they fight – standing together, maintaining some fragment of humanity – they display a courage that emerges from rather than precedes their desperate circumstances.

The Profound Truth About Human Nature

This reflects something profound about human nature.

That our finest moments often come not from choosing to be brave.

But from refusing to break when circumstances force us to be.

Through characters like Soren, we explore how courage can emerge from cornered animals rather than willing heroes.

Why Dark Fantasy Protagonists Feel More Real

Maybe this is why dark fantasy protagonists feel more real than traditional heroes.

Their actions stem from relatable desperation rather than aspirational bravery.

When Soren kills, when he compromises his principles, when he betrays his former self, we understand because we recognise how desperation can reshape anyone.

True Courage Emerging from Desperation

Yet these stories don’t completely dismiss true courage.

Rather, they show how it can emerge from desperate circumstances rather than preceding them.

Through Soren’s journey, we see how enduring desperate situations, making impossible choices, and refusing to completely surrender humanity can forge a different kind of bravery.

Chosen vs. Forced Courage

In the end, perhaps the real distinction isn’t between bravery and desperation, but between chosen and forced courage.

Dark fantasy recognises that sometimes the most profound acts of bravery come not from choosing to face danger.

But from how we face the dangers we never chose.

Your Thoughts on Bravery and Desperation in Dark Fantasy

How do you think desperation differs from bravery in dark fantasy?

What examples have most powerfully explored this distinction for you?

Share your thoughts below.

The post Bravery vs. Desperation: A Look at Dark Fantasy Protagonists first appeared on Jon Cronshaw.

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Published on January 21, 2025 01:53
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message 1: by TaniaRina (new)

TaniaRina Valdespino Spot on!


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