Your first point is something I've wondered too. Not that Jon and Dany would know, but having a dead guy walking around isn't going to be super impressive considering Cersei hangs out with one all day long.
Your first point is something I've wondered too. Not that Jon and Dany would know, but having a dead guy walking around isn't going to be super impressive considering Cersei hangs out with one all day long.
Even if the fire didn't kill him (do we have an in-show reason to think it wouldn't?) it sure would've cleared a path for Jon with his Valyrian steel sword.
Thank you for shattering my hopes.
I liked the first half of Luke Cage better than Iron Fist, but the nosedive that occurred when Diamondback showed up may have drug the season as a whole down past Iron Fist for me as well.
That too.
She didn't say sheep because sheep are edible, but because they're followers. She's outlived these followers because she thinks for herself. My point is that everything Olenna was saying in the context of the scene indicates that she was talking about trusting her own instincts and making her own decisions, not…
Here's the context: "He's a clever man, your Hand. I've known a great many clever men. I outlived them all. You know why? I ignored them. The lords of Westeros are sheep. Are you a sheep? No. You're a dragon. Be a dragon."
The leader of the Brotherhood without Banners that Thoros has repeatedly brought back from the dead.
So because it's fantasy, armor isn't heavy? This stuff doesn't bother me that much, to be honest, but let's be honest: Jamie and Bronn's miraculous swim happened because of lazy writing, not because swimming in armor is actually super easy in this world.
I thought "Be a dragon!" was more about making her own decisions than setting people on fire.
Also he could mention that one time Littlefinger betrayed Ned Stark and got him killed to someone. Like, say Arya.
Yeah, he'd just be a liability.
Why wouldn't they be?
She's probably not pregnant.
For a long time, I thought the show wanted me to root for Danerys, but now I'm not so sure. The deaths of the Tarlys, Tyrion's attempts to save them and Tyrion and Varys' subsequent conversation about her make me wonder if the show is acknowledging that she's more like her father than she'd care to admit.
I don't think they'd bring him back after all this time to have him killed off immediately.
Better than Bran coming back to tell Sansa he watched her being raped. What good is a psychic brother if he doesn't warn you about the man who is currently trying to put you against your sister?
You know what else GoT's world has? Physics.
Well, he does have some Valyian steel.
All hail King Gendry, first of his name!