Plot Coupon



""DANIEL RADCLIFFE: Michael, I found out that Ralph Fiennes split his soul into 7 pieces and scattered them around the world. And yes, this really is what I learned, not the set-up to an RPG on Super Nintendo.""

- Rod Hilton, Abridged Scripts

A thing that a character needs to obtain in order to cash it in later for a Plot resolution.

For example, let's say that our intrepid hero must steal a key, then find the Treasure Chest of Galumphry that the key will open, then remove the Orb of Power from the chest and use it to banish the Big Bad. The key, the chest, and the Orb are all plot coupons. Extremely common in video games, where collecting these coupons is known as a Fetch Quest, it is often presented as collecting several pieces of a lost artifact or gaining recognition from several factions.

A plot coupon might just as easily be one item in a series of MacGuffins, where the things are not important, it is the seeking of them that moves the story along. See also Sword of Plot Advancement.

If the items in and of themselves are useless and only become valuable in hindsight, see It May Help You on Your Quest.

If the goal of the mission is to obtain an item that turns out to be less valuable than the finding of it, It's the Journey That Counts.

Coined by Nick Lowe in a science fiction convention talk, later printed as an article The Well-Tempered Plot Device in the fanzine Ansible and popularized by the Turkey City Lexicon.

Subtropes and Related Tropes:


 * Plot Coupon That Does Something (affects in-story mechanics)
 * Sword of Plot Advancement (necessary for hero advancement)
 * Cosmic Keystone (artifact regulating the universe)


 * Fetch Quest
 * Free Sample Plot Coupon
 * Gotta Catch Them All
 * Chaos Emeralds
 * Twenty Bear Asses


 * Golden Snitch
 * Amulet of Concentrated Awesome
 * Artifact of Doom


 * It May Help You on Your Quest
 * With This Herring
 * You Will Know What to Do


 * It's the Journey That Counts
 * All That Glitters (compare Worthless Yellow Rocks)
 * The Magic Was Inside You All Along (Magic Feather)


 * MacGuffin
 * Dismantled MacGuffin (the pieces must be reassembled)
 * MacGuffin Escort Mission (the object must be taken deep into X, and...)
 * I'm Dying, Please Take My MacGuffin
 * Full Set Bonus
 * Star-Shaped Coupon (because it is always stars)

Anime

 * Shards of the Shikon Jewel in Inuyasha.
 * The rings with the Cagliostro crest in The Castleof Cagliostro.
 * The Dragon Balls in Dragon Ball. In its sequels, the plot is resolved more by fighting, and they become used to enforce status quo.
 * Fushigi Yuugi has the two Shinzahou.
 * Every Story Arc of Sailor Moon had one or more of these. Most notable are the Seven Rainbow Crystals...especially since they weren't in the original manga and were created by the anime specifically to extend the storyline. In the manga they're just looking for one big crystal; in the anime it breaks into seven color-coded pieces so the senshi have to spend that much longer trying to find them.
 * The Jewel Seeds in Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha, and season 3 has the very-similar Relics.
 * The Cyber Planet Keys and Omega Lock in Transformers Cybertron.
 * The Clow Cards in Cardcaptor Sakura.
 * The Crests in Digimon Adventure.
 * Shikizaki Kiki's twelve Perfected Deviant Blades in Katanagatari.
 * The Philosopher's Stone from Fullmetal Alchemist.
 * The feathers in Tsubasa Reservoir Chronicle.

Film

 * Lara Croft: Tomb Raider had the pieces of the Eye of the Illuminati.
 * Men in Black had the Galaxy "on Orion's Belt"
 * Pirates of the Caribbean had this in each movie. The cursed coins of Cortez needed to lift the curse in the first, the key to open Davy Jones chest in the second, and the Pieces of Eight in the third.
 * And the  in On Stranger Tides.
 * The Ark of the Covenant, the Sankara Stones, the Holy Grail, and the Crystal Skull in Indiana Jones
 * Also the headpiece of the Staff of Ra, Grail Diary and Grail Markers.
 * The car in Dude, Where's My Car?
 * Averted in that
 * The White Castle restaurant in Harold and Kumar
 * Subverted in The Matrix: Revolutions when Trinity provokes a Mexican standoff rather than fetch "the eyes of the oracle" in order to save Neo from the Merovingian
 * The Death Star plans in Star Wars: A New Hope. Luke's original quest was to get them into the hands of the rebels.
 * The Percy Jackson and the Olympians: The Lightning Thief movie features the titular character, Percy Jackson, and his friends Grover and Annabeth follow a magical map given to them by a guy who's clearly very trustworthy to find three magical pearls that will let them escape from the underworld. In the books the three pearls are given to Percy by some water Nymphs, via his father. In contrast to the book, the movie seems to miss the lesson the books set up by having Percy  Then again, I'm pretty sure no one making the movie had actually READ the book, so that's not much of a surprise.
 * The tape in Enemy of the State.
 * The floppy disk in The Net.
 * Sucker Punch- to escape the insane asylum/brothel, Baby Doll and the other girls must collect a map, fire, a knife, a key and.

Literature
""Don't get cute." He grinds the gun barrel against the back of my neck. "The encapsulated bird your conspirators sent you to fetch. The sterilized male chicken with the Creator DNA sequences. The plot capon. Where is it?""
 * Helen Hawthorn, the narrator of Ni Claydon's Hand of Mercy, is increasingly annoyed when she realises that the scattered bones of Clem's severed hand are effectively Plot Coupons.
 * Each volume of Susan Cooper's The Dark Is Rising requires tracking down one or more Plot Coupons, all of which are named in a poem presented in the second volume.
 * Over Sea, Under Stone is the hunt for the grail (not the Holy Grail, though).
 * Volume 2 involved a hunt for six similar, elementally-themed discs known as The Signs of the Light.
 * In Greenwitch, the protagonists had to retrieve a cipher key for the inscription on the grail.
 * The Grey King involved winning the golden harp (clues having been provided by the grail), then using it to wake the Sleepers.
 * Silver on the Tree had a mini-Plot Coupon sequence to retrieve the actual Plot Coupon (the crystal sword), the user of which had to be protected by the Signs.
 * Lampshaded in Death by Cliche by Robert J Defendi; only, it's the bad guy who's been collecting them.
 * In Teresa Edgerton's The Grail and the Ring, the titular grail. (It is not the Holy Grail, but a grail carved out of a single large sidhe-stone, a substance that grants it magical powers.) Subverted in that Prince Tryffin, when tracing the object's history in the Inner Celydonn, . It's strongly implied that Dame Ceinwen.
 * In The Ancestral Trail, the pods and, later, omni pieces.
 * In Austin Grossman's Soon I Will Be Invincible, Doctor Impossible must collect three of these to construct his latest Doomsday Device.
 * Justified in Bridge of Birds by Barry Hughart—the story is structured as an elaborate, carefully-scripted quest, and it turns out that there's a reason why it's structured that way.
 * Lampshaded and double-subverted in Un Lun Dun by China Mieville. The book of prophecy claims that, in order to defeat the Big Bad, they must collect a chain of these. The initial subversion comes when the protagonist decides this will take too long, and skips to the last link in the chain. The double-subversion comes when she realizes that she actually needed the Plot Coupons after all. Fortunately, she is able to Take a Third Option to get around this.
 * In Keys to the Kingdom, there are parallel sets of Plot Coupons such that one of each set must be retrieved in each book: the Key held by that day's Trustee, and the portion of the Will of the Architect being held prisoner by said Trustee.
 * Emily Rodda's Deltora Quest series and its magic gems (plus other random broken pieces of something in the sequels.)
 * In Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows, Harry has to track down two sets of Plot Coupons before he can finish off Voldemort. The second set was strictly optional, but as long as Voldemort's already looking for one of them...
 * Lampshaded in Charles Stross' Saturn's Children via a particularly egregious pun:


 * EVERY book in the Rainbow Magic series has one of these. No exceptions.
 * Inverted in Roger Zelazny's Forever After, in which the group of heroes who originally gathered the five sacred weapons/armor pieces, must return them to hiding, to keep the world from tearing itself apart from the strength of the combined energy.
 * Coraline had to recover the souls of three dead children as part of the game to escape the Other World.

Live Action TV

 * Mocked in the Angel episode "Reprise," wherein Angel is told that to get to the Big Bad, he needs a ring; to get the ring, he needs to kill a certain demon; to kill the demon, he needs a magic glove. Angel cuts off his informer with, "Okay, now you're making this up."
 * The long-running T-Bag series, whose 9 series and 4 specials consisted of nothing except chasing plot coupons (first letters, then numbers, then whatever arbitrary things the writers came up with). And hanging lampshades on them.
 * Subverted in the Doctor Who episode Last of the Time Lords: The Doctor's companion Martha spends an off-screen year assembling a super-gun and set of super-bullets that can kill a Time Lord permanently. As soon as she's done it, the Master captures her and destroys it; Martha later laughs at him for believing in such an obvious plot device and reveals that her search was just a cover for her real mission.
 * Although the real mission required her to find everyone on the planet. Sort of counts.
 * Done straight when the Fourth Doctor spent an entire season chasing the segments of the Key to Time.
 * The Objects in Sci-Fi's miniseries The Lost Room.
 * Just about every Rambaldi artifact from Alias (very evident in season one).
 * Supernatural :
 * Prison Break uses this repeatedly, with varying effectiveness. Coupons range from a specific bolt all to all sorts of evidence about the Company to the five million dollars that.
 * The protagonists in The Legend of Dick and Dom need to make a magic potion, and hunt down an ingredient Once an Episode. The ingredients vary in difficulty (The Eye of the Beholder, which requires a Journey to The Center of The Earth! ... A Pint of Milk!) which allows more time to be spent on adventuring or comedy, as required.
 * In one episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Jake and Nog end up trading one plot coupon for another in a seemingly endless chain. 5000 wrappages of yamok sauce, for 100 gross of self-sealing stem bolts, for seven tessipates of land...

Video Games

 * Just about every adventure game ever made: Space Quest, The Dig, Sam and Max Freelance Police, Monkey Island. The second episode of Tales of Monkey Island by Telltale Games did some Lampshade Hanging with this, when a local bait shop will ONLY accept literal coupons to purchase bait. One of these three coupons leads to a (literal) Red Herring, but the other two are quite essential to progress in the plot.
 * In Albion, a long quest revolves around finding (of all things) a virility amulet for a tribal king (and saving the guy who made it, who got lost in a big dungeon). Then there's the Metal-Magic Scroll and the High Knowledge which are required for a spell that is pretty much the only thing that can defeat the Big Bad.
 * The Jiggies in Banjo-Kazooie, which are used to complete the jigsaw puzzles in Gruntilda's Lair to open new worlds. Used again in Banjo-Tooie as proof that you are worthy to complete the challenges of Jiggywiggy, who seems to be the master of all things Jiggy. Naturally, these challenges open up new worlds.
 * The parts of Dracula's body in Castlevania II: Simon's Quest, again in the inverted castle portion of Castlevania: Symphony of the Night, and a third time in Castlevania: Harmony of Dissonance.
 * Used in most Commander Keen games. (Ship parts in Invasion of the Vorticons, guardians in Goodbye Galaxy!, bombs in Keen Dreams)
 * Used repeatedly in Diablo II:
 * In Act II, you must collect the Viper Amulet, the Staff of Kings, and the Horadric Cube to assemble the Horadric Staff, which acts as a key to open the tomb of Tal Rasha.
 * In Act III, you must collect Khalim's Relics; combined, they act as a key to open the Durance of Hate.
 * In Dragon Warrior/Quest IV and sequels, the player must collect the 4 legendary armaments (sword, shield, helmet, and armor). Only the hero may wear them, and by the time the player acquires these, his hero likely already has better equipment.
 * In the flagrant Dolled-Up Installment Dragon's Lair: The Legend, Dirk quests to collect the Lifestones to awaken a sleeping giant knight. Specifically, 194 of them. It's as much fun as it sounds.
 * Elemental crystals in many Final Fantasy games.
 * The music notes of Harvest Moon: Magical Melody and the harvest sprites of Harvest Moon DS
 * Kirby games generally have a set of special stars (or Crystal Shards in the game with that title) that you must collect to actually face the real Big Bad. Who will only show himself you complete everything else. However these items are generally used to make the weapon he needs in the final fight.
 * The Legend of Zelda and its various sequels are the namesake for this trope. In later games, there are often two sets of coupons, the first usually being three items (pendants, pearls, etc.) needed to claim the Master Sword, rewarded halfway through. The second act then has a set of more items (medallions, pieces of a mirror, etc.). Another is simply eight items (essences, pieces of the Triforce of Wisdom) without any distinct midpoint
 * The Legend of Zelda: Eight Pieces of the Triforce of Wisdom.
 * Zelda II: The Adventure of Link: The Six Crystals, or rather the six statues to put the crystals in (you have the crystals at the outset).
 * A Link to the Past: Three Pendants first, then the Seven Maidens.
 * Link's Awakening: Eight Instruments of the Sirens.
 * Ocarina of Time: Three Spiritual Stones followed by the Six Medallions.
 * Majora's Mask: Four Mask Remains
 * Oracle of Seasons: Eight Essences of Nature.
 * Oracle of Ages: Eight Essences of Time.
 * The Wind Waker: Three Goddess Pearls, then the Two Sages, finally the Eight Pieces of the Triforce of Courage.
 * Four Swords Adventure: Eight Shrine Maidens.
 * The Minish Cap: Four Elements.
 * Twilight Princess: Somewhere around a hundred Tears of Light, then Three Fused Shadows, then the Four Mirror Fragments.
 * Phantom Hourglass: Three Spirits, then the Three Pure Metals.
 * Spirit Tracks: Four Force Gems/chunks of the Tower of Spirits, followed by the Bow of Light, and then the Compass of Light.
 * Skyward Sword: The three tablets, then the three Sacred Flames.
 * Even closer to the trope, in Ocarina of Time, Zelda gives you a letter that allows you to pass by a certain guard.
 * The Wind Waker featured plot coupons in the form of maps to Triforce pieces, each of which must be redeemed at your expense for almost 400 rupees...apiece. Then you have to go collect the pieces.
 * Every Mario RPG game uses this.
 * Super Mario RPG: The Legend of the Seven Stars has you locating the seven pieces of the broken Star Road.
 * Paper Mario makes you rescue the seven Star Spirits.
 * Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door has you locating seven Crystal Stars.
 * Super Paper Mario mixes it up a little, you need eight Pure Hearts (You start the game with one of them, though, so you still only actually need to find seven).
 * Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga has you collect the four pieces of the Bean Star after it shatters.
 * Mario & Luigi: Partners In Time has you collecting the six pieces of the shattered Cobalt Star. Played for laughs in this one, as the number of shards you have goes up and down wildly throughout the game, until you get them all.
 * Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story has the three Star Cures.
 * The 3-D Platforming Mario games also use this trope. Super Mario 64, Super Mario Sunshine, and Super Mario Galaxy all have you looking for 120 stars.  However, none of these games actually require you to get them all to see the ending.
 * In Super Mario Galaxy 2, you also have to collect 120 stars and then  In both Galaxies, power stars are justified as being fuel.
 * The coins in Super Mario Land 2 Six Golden Coins.
 * Each Metroid Prime games has a set of items that must be collected in order to access the final level. Fortunately, neither Metroid Prime or Metroid Prime 3 force you to get them in the main quest, and Prime 2, despite having a set of keys for The Dragon of each energy controller (which aren't Plot Coupons themselves), only told you to find them when you needed them, many times along with you doing something more important/interesting.
 * The big exception here are the Octoliths in Prime: Hunters, where you must find them all at very specific plot points, and in a specific order.
 * Each game in the Earthbound series features Plot Coupons. However, only the first game actually had you collect anything, and that's in the loosest sense of the word.
 * MOTHER 1 features the Eight Melodies, or the 8 parts of a song that the mysterious Queen Mary of Magicant has forgotten. The Melodies aren't actually items. Instead, various NPCs or Items sing them to you, In order to proceed to the Big Bad, you have to sing all eight melodies to Queen Mary.
 * Mother 2/VideoGame/EarthBound features Your Sanctuaries, eight locations where Earth's Power was the strongest. Each also had a melody associated with it, and when Ness uses the Sound Stone to play them all back, he goes to his own version of Magicant.
 * Mother 3 features Seven Needles scattered across the Nowhere Islands, which require the use of PK Love to be pulled out. Pulling out all seven The Big Bad eventually reveals a mysterious masked general who can use PK Love as well, and uses him to try and pull out the seventh and final needle.
 * Dark Souls has the Bells of Awakening, that must be rung to reveal the purpose of the Undead. And then, after that,