The setting is so essential to the plot in the short story “The Most Dangerous Game” by Richard Connell. For instance the story takes place on a deserted island which is hard to get on and hard to get off. That makes it important to the plot. Whitney tells Rainsford, “The old charts call it ‘Ship-Trap Island,” Whitney replied”(1). The name of the island tells how the island will trap them so they can not get off the island. Another reason the setting is so important to the plot of the story is because of the false channel. General Zaroff created a false channel on the island so boats will end up crashing into the rocks. “The general chuckled. They indicate a channel” he said “where there’s none; giant rocks with
razor edges crouch like the sea monster with wide-open jaws”(8). Sharp rocks makes it very hard to get on the island and once a boat sees the sharp rocks they avoid it so no one will find out what the general is doing. The setting is so essential to the plot because without the deserted island and the false channel the story would not be the same. In the short story “The Most Dangerous Game” by Richard Connell the setting is extremely essential to the plot.