I don't ever recall Braavosi politics being thoroughly explained on the show? Do you? Although it's fairly clear they don't have slaves there, I don't see any inconsistency in a Braavos bank having some kind of connections to the slave trade.
I don't ever recall Braavosi politics being thoroughly explained on the show? Do you? Although it's fairly clear they don't have slaves there, I don't see any inconsistency in a Braavos bank having some kind of connections to the slave trade.
But the characters occupy a whole swathe of morality. Is the point of Jon Snow that humans are all terrible at the base of their nature? What are you even talking about?
the answer is no.
Yeah this episode kinda brought home for me how she's one of the only characters who genuinely cares for Finn and looks after him.
Great episode in a great final season.
Since when did Stannis claim to have seen a "desirable" battle? He said he saw a great battle in the snow. There have already been a few battles in the snow and there will presumably be a truly great one towards the end of the series. Stannis never said anything about seeing himself at the battle.
No. Not congrats. It wasn't hard.
No, I just understood the basic story beats of this episode…
Final scene was literally setting a giant table.
Most of which were in the Twins.
That wasn't speculation, that was a statement…
No duh.
Tommen did technically kill her last remaining child.
That's not what happened at all. During that conversation Cersei had already made contact with the Iron Born, who are indeed the only people who might plausibly fight for her. It was just exposition. Just because Jaime was explaining it, doesn't mean she didn't already know it. In fact she literally replied "don't you…
Seriously though I can't see the line meaning that. People have mistaken what they've seen in the fire, but they've never seen something that was actually false. If the Hound saw an actual mountain then he saw a mountain, not a mountain that was a metaphor for The Mountain.
Why will she have to slaughter them?
One could make the counterargument that introducing it an entire season ago when it wasn't going to be used would be an inefficient means of exposition and reduce the surprise and immediate threat when it is revealed.
Probably because Lemongrab has barely been back on the show since Rick and Morty started…
They literally just replayed the bubblegum hair scene from season 1 as some kind of fundamental component of Finn's happiness, so honestly I think it's a bit crazy to say there have been "no hints" about a relationship for ages, and pretty tenuous, not to mention rude and condescending, to take that "we're really…
wat