the traps were made by the main character dude...the protagonist...think his name was Rainsford...ya Rainsford cause he was being hunted by Zarrof, Ivan, and Zarrof's hunting dogs.
Zaroff is hunting Rainsford for entertainment. Rainsford building traps like these entertains him. Animals and most sailors have previously seemed incapable of providing such a foe for him. His congratulations can also be seen as him mocking Rainsford because the trap did not damage him very much.
He uses the tricks of hunters
Rainsford came up with traps to thwart Zaroff because he is a master hunter and has hunted almost everything there is to hunt. He is clever, and is used to being out in the wild and surviving. He also makes a certain "pit of death" like trap for Zaroffs dogs because he saw them in a pen earlier in the book.
In the story Rainsford hears the sound of gun shots so he runs towards the sound. He then slips and his pipe flies out of his mouth. Then Rainsford jumps to try to catch his pipe but he jumps to far and falls in the ocean. Then he swims to the island.
wepon, trash and traps.
Chloroplast
Rainsford appearing in the bedroom. If the resolution is that Rainsford survives and Zaroff does not, the turning point must be what causes that ending. The cause of that ending is Rainsford's appearance in the room. There is no falling action seen in the novel. The climax is the turning point of the story. It mostly falls in the middle or at the end of the story. In other words it is when Rainsford changes his personality. The climax, i think is personally is when Rainsford jumps into the sea, from here on the events change in the mood of the setting and what actually happends I must say the Climax of the short story "The Most Dangerous Game" is when Zaroff decided he wanted to hunt Rainsford which was when the story had the most action. when Rainsford had to run for his life and also had to make traps. Although many people say the climax was when Rainsford came into Zaroff's bedroom and attacked/killed him
Yes. The resolution is that Rainsford "has never slept in a more comfortable bed," which means that Zaroff lost the final fight, and he was fed to his own hounds.
Rainsford sails by island (start of story) Rainsford reaches island (fell from boat) Zaroff hunts Rainsford (action of the story) Rainsford eludes Zaroff (end of story) (alternatively - in the first half of the story) Rainsford falls off the boat. Rainsford meets Ivan. Rainsford meets Zaroff. The hunt begins.
Rainsford must outwit Zaroff in a deadly game of cat and mouse on Ship-Trap Island. He uses his survival skills and cunning to turn the tables on Zaroff and ultimately defeat him in their final confrontation. This allows Rainsford to escape and survive the hunt.
Rainsford used his knowledge of hunting to set traps and mislead General Zaroff in the jungle. He utilized his resourcefulness to create diversions and misdirect Zaroff's pursuit. Rainsford also displayed his physical agility and survival skills to outwit Zaroff throughout the hunt.