Fair play
phrase·Interwar
The Golden Age principle that all clues needed to solve the crime must be presented to the reader before the denouement.
The Golden Age principle that every clue needed by the reader to identify the criminal must be presented in the text before the denouement — that the reader is the detective's equal and the writer must not cheat. Codified by Father Ronald Knox in his 1929 “Decalogue” and by S. S. Van Dine's “Twenty Rules for Writing Detective Stories” (1928).