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    Gia
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    Plot point is always the best point.

    Fire doesn't kill him instantly, but a full-on dragon missile maybe would.

    Fire doesn't harm him just by touching him, but a dragon flamethrower maybe would do it?

    Last thought: Why didn't the dragon aim at the Night King? He was right there.

    So:
    - I suspect Cersei will see the zombie and say "Oh, like Mountain but frozen. OK".
    - I don't care about incest in this show. The girl has dragon children, body parts have their own logic in this world. But I still don't see chemistry.
    - Arya and Sansa are either braindead from too much cold in the North, or it's a

    I forget he exists. He's the only leader I forget exists in the whole show.

    Yes, it read as a mother in mourning and they gave us lonesome teenager in lurv.

    Moral of the story:

    Not real spleens. But I can watch anything. Once I was in the cinema watching Hannibal, the scene where he hangs the policeman from the balcony and everything spills out. Everyone was either ready to puke or disgusted and I was munching my chips, everyone turned around to look at me like "how???". Literally all the

    Bronn is a hired sword, so morality is the first thing he threw away, to make space for wit and grit. I want him to stay on because he has been good for the story, but the way he survived this battle smelled like plot armor.

    Kingdoms need an inspiring person amongst the leadership, but not the leader. Unfortunately, historically the leaders tend to kill off the persons who inspired the people for them. If Jon wasn't (groomed to be) a king in the story, he would have died- permanently- far from the finale.

    Um, no, I don't automatically have to like her, because I'm a woman. She is the kind of ruler that would benefit a lot by spending a good amount of time in a library, studying past rulers and their strategies (and not just lineage).

    I don't know, chemistry usually is or isn't. If they manage to create it later on, I don't have any problem with them getting together.

    Separately they are ok, but I don't see them as a romantic couple.

    I think Littlefinger lost most of his steam when they made him to pin after the daughter the way he had pinned after the mother. He made a huge story arc and returned to "man who doesn't get the girl", which is a shame, because he was at his best when evil plotting.

    I always saw a possessive mother, but never a loving mother. Not even tough love. She only loved the kids for being her secret revenge to Robert.

    I got my fights this episode, I hadn't realized how much I've missed a good, satisfying battle in GoT.

    I also saw Dickon, not Bronn.

    People laugh at me all the time because I can eat my lunch watching spleens flying here and there, but someone kills a dog and there's something in my eye.

    First time I ever cared about Ellaria and the Kids (and last, probably) and first time I liked Varma's acting in anything.