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cindy_in_tx
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But not Arya!

Talking about it and seeing it with your own eyes are two different things. Besides, his beloved brother was there along with a good friend. It has to be sobering.

Bronn wasn't in full armor was he? It seemed like he was just wearing leather. I assume that was him that saved Jaime from the fire.

I've never read the books so I'm pretty ignorant of the history, but it seems they put so much stock in the hair color in season one about the Baratheons always having black hair. One would assume the Targaryons are equally all silver haired. The Starks seem all over the map, so we can't count of Lyanna being the

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Good point. I bet that's how it will be explained, if it's explained at all.

I guess Joffrey had enough enemies that anyone could be suspect, but Jaime knew Tyrion had no love for Joffrey. I haven't watched that in a long time though, so I forget a lot from that season. And I've never read the books to have a deeper understanding of the motivations of the characters. I'm waiting for the end

I never thought of the dead just walking through the water, but I suppose there is nothing to prevent that. It would make for a bad story though, since they obviously have been held back for thousands of years by that wall.

I know his lingering love for his brother let him help Tyrion escape after he killed Tywin, but I thought he always still thought Tyrion killed Joffrey as well. It seemed like a big surprise when Olenna told him it was her. I was just thinking that may make him more receptive to a reunion with Tyrion now that Cercei

I figured that would be what makes Jaime forgive Tyrion and possibly join sides with him in the end.

I saw that part again when my husband was watching, and it wouldn't be that hard to reload with a trained army. They used to do that with cannon, and I assume they still do that with all sorts or weapons today.

Thanks for the clarification.

From what Bran's uncle said, there was some spell that wouldn't allow them to cross the wall, though he never tried. Now that Bran is across the wall, it seems like the Night King could do it and then simply open the gate. It occurred to me only as I was reading your post so I haven't really put a lot of thought

I know, who cares? Timelines are for books, not television shows. Every television show has timeline issues, but it doesn't matter. Just enjoy the ride, and assume each segment could be taking place simultaneously or sometime in the past.

Theon was a pretty good archer. Did he learn that at Winterfell or the Iron Islands?

I thought Bran being touched by the Night King was going to mean they could breach the Wall now. I've never read the books though, so what do I know. But it seemed pretty significant that he was touched by the king, and now he's on the other side of the wall.

They've done enough foreshadowing to make the dragons not seem like the great weapons I once thought they were. The giant crossbows are going to take out one or more.

It came up already. Jaime mentioned it to Cercei when he was telling her how little of the Seven Kingdoms they still control. I believe others have mentioned it in passing.

So teeth works while regular iron swords don't? That wouldn't make sense. I was just wondering if there are magical properties to the direwolves that do damage to White Walkers.

I agree, but it's not like they really care where it comes down. They still shoot arrows at their own fighters during battles. I wonder how far it will shoot.