Well they put like 4-5 in the other dragon the previous episode
Yeah I get the inconsistency in the story.
Well they put like 4-5 in the other dragon the previous episode
Yeah I get the inconsistency in the story.
Arya will kill Dany. Greyworm will kill Arya. Jon will kill Greyworm. Jon will move north to help rule the north with Sansa and Tyrion will sit on the iron throne.
My point being the symbolism of Arya and the white horse. I'm thinking Dany has now been added to her list after what she saw her do to the common folk in the city.
That really did suck about Jaime. I guess it was somehow fitting for them to die together, but the writers really made him look pathetic during the last 2 episodes.
It would have been so much better if they had just let him plunge a sword into her before the ceiling collapsed. Like, a literal sword. Not, you know...
Did anyone else totally miss...
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that Varys was trying to poison Dany with the little girl bringing her food? I totally just thought it was an exposition scene to tell us that Dany was distraught but now it looks more and more like he was trying to kill her.
Arya's ability to disguise herself with the face of the dead will be wasted if it is not used in this last episode. She learns all that and only kills Walder Frey in that manner. She has got to kill Dany in that way or they wasted another thing they built up all these years.
I think it will be Jon. but if it was Arya using a face, it would have to be Greyworm.
Did anyone else totally miss...
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that Varys was trying to poison Dany with the little girl bringing her food? I totally just thought it was an exposition scene to tell us that Dany was distraught but now it looks more and more like he was trying to kill her.
It seems people are critical of the scorpions inability to shoot down the dragon this episode.
I would say the idea that the scorpions could shoot down a dragon in previous episodes is more ludicrous. It can be done. But.... it would take an extreme amount of luck and everything coming together perfectly for a scorpion to be aimed in the direction and height to launch a arrow as a dragon flew by.
Go down to the lake with a bow. Jump some Canadas and try to put an arrow in one of them. Think about how much agile and faster your body is swinging to lead the goose and let an arrow fly at the perfect trajectory.
So I think it is much more plausible that Dany could burn everything and one down around her, than one be shot down with a heavy wooden cross bow that is aimed with men pulling chains.
With all that Said, I wonder who puts an arrow in the dragon to bring her down in the final episode.
i'm hoping the last bit of the spoilers are a troll job by someone. none of the last couple of things with Jon or Bran make any sense.
Arya's ability to disguise herself with the face of the dead will be wasted if it is not used in this last episode. She learns all that and only kills Walder Frey in that manner. She has got to kill Dany in that way or they wasted another thing they built up all these years.
I'm ready to see her die
Arya will kill Dany. Greyworm will kill Arya. Jon will kill Greyworm. Jon will move north to help rule the north with Sansa and Tyrion will sit on the iron throne.
Tyrion too. I think it’s just a matter of who gets to her first at this point. Of course, there is the whole issue of her big *** dragon, though. I don’t know, but I have a bad feeling that I’m gonna be extremely pissed after next Sunday
I actually disagree with most of you on the hate for this episode. In a vacuum, this episode was incredible. A work of art visually, incredible acting AND, wait for it, a good and believable story in GOT terms. It wasn’t perfect. But it was great. Could there have been more background on a lot of the characters and their decisions? Sure. And I don’t feel like typing it all out, but this video is a) hilarious and b) a good review in the end.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_uNgQ-lK9ks
If they do those things we have all read, then they are completely breaking their own rules.
I don’t think the show is given enough credit for building her up to be the Mad Queen. The signs were always there.
After she found the slave children crucified in Mereen, she gathered up 163 of the ruling class and crucified them in retaliation. The son of one of the victims goes to her in anger and tells her that his father was actually a good man who advocated for the abolition of slavery.
She burned every single surviving Khal for refusing her demands.
She burned Randall and Dickon Tarly for refusing to bend the knee. Besides being extremely cruel, it was foolish, as the Tarlys just may have been the most powerful surviving family in The Reach.
When she arrived in Westeros and found out that the fate of humanity was at stake, she stubbornly refused to help until the newly crowned King in the North bent the knee.
She’s always been a sociopath.
And she watched her brother get melted to death with no emotion.I don’t think the show is given enough credit for building her up to be the Mad Queen. The signs were always there.
After she found the slave children crucified in Mereen, she gathered up 163 of the ruling class and crucified them in retaliation. The son of one of the victims goes to her in anger and tells her that his father was actually a good man who advocated for the abolition of slavery.
She burned every single surviving Khal for refusing her demands.
She burned Randall and Dickon Tarly for refusing to bend the knee. Besides being extremely cruel, it was foolish, as the Tarlys just may have been the most powerful surviving family in The Reach.
When she arrived in Westeros and found out that the fate of humanity was at stake, she stubbornly refused to help until the newly crowned King in the North bent the knee.
She’s always been a sociopath.
A brutal but appropriate reaction to what happened there. Obviously she didn't crucify enough of them given the Harpy situation which came afterwards. And I find it odd that Hizdahr's supposedly progressive daddy obviously still hugely supported slave fighting in the pits of Meereen, as did Hizdahr himself. Ah, yes "they must be free men". Yet Jorah and Tyrion obviously weren't free men at the time they were thrown into the pits.I don’t think the show is given enough credit for building her up to be the Mad Queen. The signs were always there.
After she found the slave children crucified in Mereen, she gathered up 163 of the ruling class and crucified them in retaliation. The son of one of the victims goes to her in anger and tells her that his father was actually a good man who advocated for the abolition of slavery.
Every Khal there were in the process of sentencing her to life in that temple before hearing her speak and then being intent on raping her to death. That was directly before she destroyed them.She burned every single surviving Khal for refusing her demands.
They were in open rebellion against her rule and made it very clear that they intended to remain that way, along with many remaining captured lords from that battle. Tyrion's exposition in the show made it look like she had a bunch of choices, but she didn't. She could have imprisoned them for awhile. But do you think Randyll was going to bend? Do you think Dickon would have after seeing his father burned? Would have been like asking Robb to bend the knee after what happened to Ned. How was it any different from what Jon did to Olly? At least Olly had a reason to feel and act how he did when the Tarlys had no reason to side with the Lannisters in the deal when it was realistically obvious they stood no chance, sans the show's constant toying with numbers.She burned Randall and Dickon Tarly for refusing to bend the knee. Besides being extremely cruel, it was foolish, as the Tarlys just may have been the most powerful surviving family in The Reach.
Last I checked -- she went and saved their asses before any bending had occurred. Her path was already clear once she saw the army of the dead. Jon didn't need to bend at that point to have her assistance in the war.When she arrived in Westeros and found out that the fate of humanity was at stake, she stubbornly refused to help until the newly crowned King in the North bent the knee.
She's been brutal at times, like EVERY SINGLE character in the story. Maybe even slightlyyyy across the line a time or two. But her actions had never been totally incongruent with the circumstance at hand on the show, until she launched that dragon after hearing those bells. How will any of her men remain loyal to her? Thousands of them would have been realistically killed as well in that genocide. Especially when the wildfire started going off.She’s always been a sociopath.
Nah. I think its been clear that she has been obsessed with power the whole show. All the titles and everything.
Also, at this point she has lost all of trusted advisers, feels betrayed by the people around her, and she lost 2 of her dragons (which she considers to be her children). This means she has no one to ground her and doesn't have anyone to turn too.
I think they did good job of foreshadowing her downfall, but like with everything this season it seems a hurried. This season could of literally been stretched out over 2 seasons.
At this point complaining about the writing is beating a dead horse. Watching the show from the beginning will be a lot different knowing how it ends.