Kimithechamp
Kimithechamp
Kimithechamp

What an eh-hole.

With the size of the US, we should honestly have both.

Yep, it works pretty great, too. Just get one of those $5 square bug nets from a camping/sporting goods department and a roll of magnetic tape (make sure it has some strength, some of this stuff is super shitty). Grab some scissors and cut magnetic strips to size for whatever window you want to use it on, trim down

It’s shocking that many Game of Thrones fans continue to believe in (or hope for) a story about heroes and villains or good versus evil. Dany was never a savior - she might have believed that shit to justify her claim to the throne, but audiences should have known better.

I guess. I just think that if a person keeps burning people alive, and telling her friends that she’ll burn them alive, too, if they are ever disloyal, then you might have an authoritarian strong(wo)man who A) is insecure, and B) likes burning people. Even a season or two ago when Tyrion was appointed Hand of the

I think Dany chose to burn the city for a very specific and relatively foreshadowed reason: she was punishing the populace. They specifically mentioned how the cities she liberated across the sea were sort-of bloodless battles because the people rose up against their oppressors themselves and then welcomed her as

Pacing issues with the final seasons aside, hasn’t Daenerys always been a strongman authoritarian with a god complex who is capable of extreme cruelty, and who takes it extremely personally when she doesn’t receive the unconditional love she believes is her birthright? The show has spent a lot of money showing us how

We’ll have spent an entire series empathizing with the point of view of a leader who is eventually going to go down a dark path, taking you with her and pushing you to reflect on how she came to be there.

I will say that the incompetence of both the Iron Fleet and the Golden Company seemed a bit too convenient.”

That white horse was obviously led to Arya by a warging Bran. Use your heads, guys.

I personally think Dany’s arc makes sense. As she travels around the world conquering cities and dealing with various groups, her reactions to challenges get more and more violent. Whether its indiscriminately murdering the masters, burning the Tarwell’s (and Dothraki leaders), and her frustration at not being “loved”

1) Her motivation is FEAR. None of this, ‘Jon has a better claim and is loved by the people’ nonsense. She will rule by FEAR.
2) What nothing? We may have seen Cersei shed a tear or two, but never a full-on cry like this (not even the walk of shame can compare). Her shell was finally fully cracked. And Dany’s look

Daenerys’ arc toward madness has been telegraphed on the show since season 2, so I don’t understand what all this complaining about her heel turn being rushed is about. Everyone’s entitled to their own opinion of what would be the better story*, but attacking the show’s decisions as poorly thought out just makes you

It was not because she didn’t get laid. It was because she was feeling unloved by people in Westeros, her BFF got beheaded, her advisors were scheming against her, and Jon Snow tells her that he loves her and she’s his queen but even he is showing doubts. It adds to her increasing sense of isolation and is one of the

“A sexually unsatisfied woman is a dangerous woman.”

Maybe keeping Gendry safe at Storm’s Landing means he & Arya can be together in the end. I don’t see her going full m’lady, but they could work something out so they’d both be content, I think. That “meaningful emotional fallout from Arya” could be her realization that there’s more to life than assassinating people.

- Is there a reason Gendry wasn’t there for the fight? Besides the fact that D+D probably didn’t want to reckon with too many named characters in the chaos.

Not bad, we’re missing a lot of connective tissues to make this work. D&D once again rushing to a conclusion. Thoughts:

The Unsullied are brainwashed and trained to obey unconditionally, and even when granted his freedom, Grey Worm chose to stand by Daenerys. Combine the psychological damage he grew up through, the loss of his one love, and his queen deciding to attack, and it makes perfect sense, optics be damned.

At least Sallador is

What’s important to note here, is that Ghost is very safe in the North, the REAL North, mind you.