Stakes are what make readers turn pages at 2 AM thinking “just one more chapter.” They’re why readers care what happens, why they’re invested in the outcome, why they need to know if everything works out.
But in fantasy romance, you’re juggling two types of stakes: the external fantasy stakes (saving the world, winning the war, breaking the curse) and the internal romantic stakes (can they trust each other, will they end up together, can their love survive).
When I started writing my fantasy romance series, I had to figure out how to make both types of stakes feel urgent and important—and how to weave them together so they enhanced each other instead of competing for attention.
Here’s what I’ve learned about creating high stakes that keep readers hooked from first page to last.
Understanding Two Types of Stakes
Fantasy romance requires balancing two distinct but interconnected types of stakes.
External Stakes (Fantasy Plot):
- What happens if the quest fails?
- What’s at risk in the outside world?
- Who gets hurt if they don’t succeed?
- What are the physical/magical/political consequences?
Internal Stakes (Romance):
- What happens if they can’t be together?
- What emotional risks are they taking?
- What will they lose if they can’t trust each other?
- What are the relationship consequences?
The key I discovered: Both types of stakes need to feel real and urgent—but the romantic stakes should never feel less important than the external stakes, even when the world is ending.
Making External Stakes Matter
Your fantasy plot needs real consequences that readers can understand and fear.
What I’ve learned works:
Make It Personal
“The kingdom will fall” is abstract. “Her sisters will die” is personal.
External stakes hit harder when they affect people readers care about:
- Threaten loved ones
- Put the found family at risk
- Endanger innocent people readers have met
- Show the human cost, not just abstract consequences
Show What’s at Risk
Don’t just tell readers the stakes—show them:
- Let readers meet people who will suffer if heroes fail
- Show glimpses of what failure looks like
- Create characters readers care about who are in danger
- Make the threat tangible, not theoretical
Escalate Throughout
Stakes should build as the story progresses:
- Start with immediate danger
- Reveal larger implications
- Raise what’s at risk with each act
- Make success increasingly difficult
Create Impossible Choices
The best external stakes force characters to choose between terrible options:
- Save one group or another
- Achieve goal at devastating cost
- Choose between duty and desire
- Sacrifice something precious to win
Making Internal Stakes Matter Just as Much
This is where many fantasy romances struggle—the world-ending threat overshadows the romance. But readers came for the love story, and romantic stakes need to feel just as urgent.
What I’ve discovered:
Emotional Stakes Are Real Stakes
The relationship isn’t less important than saving the world—for these characters, it’s everything:
- Losing each other matters as much as any external loss
- Trust broken can’t always be repaired
- Some wounds don’t heal
- Love is on the line, and that’s real
Make the Relationship Cost Something
If love is easy and free, there are no stakes:
- Being together requires sacrifice
- Trust means vulnerability
- Love puts them in danger
- The relationship threatens other important things
Create Genuine Obstacles
Not just misunderstandings that could be solved with one conversation:
- Real differences in values or goals
- Legitimate reasons they shouldn’t be together
- External forces actively working against them
- Internal fears or trauma that create barriers
Show What They Stand to Lose
Make readers understand what’s at risk emotionally:
- This person understands them like no one else
- They’ve never felt this way before
- Losing this relationship means losing hope
- They’ve already been through so much together
Connecting External and Internal Stakes
The magic happens when both types of stakes interconnect and raise each other.
Ways I’ve learned to connect them:
External Stakes Threaten the Romance
The fantasy plot should complicate the relationship:
- Quest forces them apart physically
- Mission requires betraying partner’s trust
- Achieving goal means losing each other
- External enemies exploit their relationship
Example: They must defeat the villain, but doing so requires one of them to make a sacrifice that will end their relationship.
Romance Stakes Affect External Plot
The relationship should have consequences for the fantasy stakes:
- Their love is forbidden by the very people they need to ally with
- Protecting partner compromises mission
- Trust issues cause tactical mistakes
- Being together violates laws/magic/treaties
Example: Falling in love with the enemy means betraying their people, but not loving them means losing their only chance at peace.
Same Choice, Both Stakes
The most powerful moments hit both types of stakes simultaneously:
- One decision affects both romance and plot
- Solving external problem requires romantic sacrifice
- Choosing love has world-changing consequences
- The climax resolves both arcs together
Example: To break the curse (external), they must choose each other over duty (internal)—one action resolves both stakes.
Common Stakes Problems I’ve Faced
Problem #1: External Stakes Overwhelm Romance
The issue: The world-ending threat makes relationship drama feel trivial by comparison.
What I learned:
- Frame romantic stakes as equally important to characters
- Show how relationship affects their ability to handle external threat
- Make romantic resolution necessary for external success
- Keep romantic stakes present even during action scenes
Problem #2: Stakes Aren’t Clear
The issue: Readers don’t understand what’s actually at risk.
What I learned:
- State stakes explicitly at key moments
- Show consequences of failure
- Remind readers what they stand to lose
- Make abstract threats concrete and personal
Problem #3: Stakes Don’t Escalate
The issue: Tension is flat because stakes stay the same throughout.
What I learned:
- Each act should raise what’s at risk
- New information should increase danger
- Complications should make success harder
- The cost should increase with each choice
Problem #4: False Stakes
The issue: Threats that readers don’t believe will actually happen.
What I learned:
- Follow through on threatened consequences sometimes
- Kill/hurt characters readers care about
- Show that failure is possible
- Don’t pull punches—make danger real
Problem #5: Too Many Stakes
The issue: Trying to make everything high-stakes makes nothing feel urgent.
What I learned:
- Focus on core stakes that matter most
- Not every scene needs life-or-death tension
- Build to big stakes moments
- Give readers breathing room between peaks
Raising Stakes Throughout Your Story
Stakes should build in intensity as your story progresses.
What I track:
Act One Stakes:
- Establish what characters have to lose
- Show them caring about what’s at risk
- Introduce initial threat/obstacle
- Set up both external and internal stakes
Act Two Stakes:
- Reveal larger implications
- Increase what’s at risk
- Show consequences becoming more severe
- Make obstacles harder to overcome
- Add time pressure or urgency
Act Three Stakes:
- Everything is on the line
- Success requires ultimate sacrifice
- Failure means losing everything
- Both external and internal stakes peak together
Making Readers Feel the Stakes
It’s not enough for stakes to exist—readers need to feel them.
Techniques I’ve found effective:
Show Characters Caring
If characters don’t seem worried about consequences, readers won’t be either:
- Let them express fear
- Show them struggling with weight of choices
- Reveal what they’re willing to sacrifice
- Make their investment clear
Create Ticking Clocks
Time pressure raises urgency:
- Deadline for achieving goal
- Limited time before consequence hits
- Countdown to disaster
- Race against enemy’s plan
Use Close Calls
Almost-failures show stakes are real:
- Near misses that remind readers of danger
- Close calls that show cost of failure
- Moments where they barely succeed
- Victories that come at high price
Show Consequences
When stakes are threatened, show what happens:
- Someone gets hurt
- Relationship suffers damage
- Mission suffers setback
- Price is paid for mistakes
Questions to Ask About Your Stakes
When developing or revising stakes, I ask:
About external stakes:
- What happens if they fail the quest/mission?
- Who specifically gets hurt?
- Can readers visualize the consequences?
- Does the threat feel real and immediate?
- Do stakes escalate throughout?
About internal stakes:
- What emotional risks are characters taking?
- What will they lose if relationship fails?
- Why can’t they just be together easily?
- Do romantic stakes feel as important as plot stakes?
- Is there genuine obstacle to their happiness?
About connection:
- How does external plot threaten romance?
- How does romance affect external mission?
- Do both stakes peak together at climax?
- Could one be resolved without the other?
- Would removing either make story weaker?
Balancing Stakes Without Overwhelming Readers
High stakes don’t mean constant crisis.
What I’ve learned about balance:
Vary Intensity
Not every scene can be peak tension:
- Build to crisis moments
- Give readers breathing room
- Alternate intense and quieter scenes
- Let stakes simmer between peaks
Ground Stakes in Character
Stakes matter because characters matter:
- Readers care about stakes when they care about characters
- Personal investment comes before plot mechanics
- Emotional connection drives engagement
- Character reactions help readers feel stakes
Make Stakes Believable
Over-the-top stakes can backfire:
- Stakes should fit your story’s scale
- Not everything needs world-ending consequences
- Personal stakes can be just as compelling
- Authenticity matters more than magnitude
Bringing It All Together
Creating high stakes in fantasy romance means making readers care deeply about two intertwined things: whether heroes succeed in their quest AND whether they end up together.
What I’ve learned through writing:
- Both external and internal stakes need to feel urgent
- Romantic stakes are just as important as plot stakes
- Stakes should connect and raise each other
- Show what characters stand to lose
- Escalate throughout the story
- Make consequences real and personal
- Balance intensity with breathing room
I’m still learning how to calibrate stakes perfectly, still figuring out when to raise tension and when to give readers relief. But I’ve found that when both types of stakes feel real, personal, and interconnected, readers can’t put the book down.
Because ultimately, stakes are about making readers care. They need to fear what characters might lose, hope for what they might gain, and need to know how it all turns out.
That’s what keeps them reading.










