Why Humans Are Drawn to Revenge Stories
There is something deeply satisfying about a revenge story. A wrong is committed. Someone suffers—often unjustly, often helplessly. And then, slowly or suddenly, the balance shifts. The powerless become powerful. The victim becomes the agent. The world, which seemed indifferent or unfair, is forced—at least within the boundaries of the story—to acknowledge what was done and answer for it. In real life, that rarely happens. The scales have yet to settle. Most injustices go unresolved. Most wrongs are absorbed, endured, or forgotten. The systems we rely on to deliver justice are imperfect, slow, or constrained. And so revenge stories offer something reality often cannot: the promise that the scales will balance, that suffering will be answered, and that the story will end where it should. At their core, revenge stories restore a sense of order. Not just emotional order, but narrative order—the feeling that events lead somewhere, that causes produce consequences, and that nothing simpl...