avclub-826aad531083df9d0c5dbf488a9973c9--disqus
Musashi Myamoto
avclub-826aad531083df9d0c5dbf488a9973c9--disqus

They burn everyone north of the wall. The magic there seems to raise anyone from the dead eventually. Example; the Halfhand was burned by the Wildlings after Jon killed him, with the quote 'You better burn that one . . .you don't want him coming back'. None of them had any recent encouters with the dead that I

If she really is pregnant, that puts her on the clock, for she will have to die in the next 9 months.

That Jon was at least part Targaryan was fairly clear after the Bran flashbacks to Ned's younger days and seeing the death of Lyanna. The marriage part mentioned in this episode was new information and was easy to miss.

He met with Tyrion, an agent of a foreign government who was at war with her, without telling her he was doing it. He didn't kill Tyrion or discipline Bronn afterwards.

The events of these last 2 seasons has seen Balish's degrees of freedom in his quest for the Iron Throne become narrower and narrower. He still thinks he has a shot at Sansa and using her titles as his key to the Throne, but more and more potential rivals spring up to get in his way, and one of the people now in his

The Unsullied can now simply march across Westeros to rejoin the Dothraki. There is no army left in the area that would want to come between them. The battle of last week changed everything in that regard.

All that was conjecture. The show never told us that one way or the other.

In this universe, 'The seed is strong'. Children always have the basic haircolor of their fathers in Westeros. The mother seems to have little bearing.

They sent a raven to let Winterfell know. But unfortunately time and distance have no further meaning in this universe.

As soon as I saw Jorah saying good bye to Danerys, I figured he was a goner.

I'd say it would be 'If you think this story has a happy ending, you haven't been paying attention.'

Over the last 14 episodes any discussion of logistics or timelines makes no sense. I'm just writing off any of these considerations for the rest of the series.

Naa I think she's saving herself for a relative.

Against humans the poison part would be wasted once the thing hit you and pinned you to a wagon or ripped off one of your arms or legs.

One battle does not a war make. In this situation the Dothraki had the advantage of being on horseback against infantry; had the Lannister forces been on horseback, things could have looked a little different. Drogon still would have cooked them, but still, the fact that the Lannister forces had to stand in

The Mad King was not the one who had the dragons. He was the one who placed Wildfire everywhere under the city. The one with the dragons was 300-400 years in the past.

That's an interesting argument. Allow me to retort . . .

When Theon returned to the Iron Islands, dressed in Northern court gear, his father insulted him and told him he wasn't his son. He gave Theon a crappy mission while giving his sister the real job to do. His every interaction with Theon was degrading. Balon was being an a**, and I don't think there was anything

I think the blade was stolen from Tyrion after he won it from Balish.

Must be close to Dorne.