senethsomed--disqus
Incogneato
senethsomed--disqus

Just wait til Tywin comes back to life after training with King Kai in 10x gravity.

Dany can still just burn it all down whenever she wants, though.

Those unguents really do the trick.

IIRC most people didn't believe in giants either. Nor resurrections. But dragons are a well attested part of the historical record.

I'm certainly not arguing that the show isn't getting sloppier in its quest to wrap everything up neatly. That said, when every second of screen time is precious, there's an argument to be made against spending 15 of those seconds on a throwaway line where Jon complains that all the wildling wargs are dead.

Ok. But that's not what you did. You complained that they didn't properly adapt the ending the DOES NOT EXIST. If you wanted to complain about those things instead, you should have done so.

Then you should do that, rather than blaming them for not properly adapting a story that doesn't exist.

Right, but I'm also considering that this is a story being told in which details are mentioned, or not, based on their meaning to the story. To suddenly have a wildling pop and and be a warg after entirely ignoring the possibility that another one of them existed at this point would be very sloppy storytelling

If Martin actually knew how he wanted everything to end he'd have written it down and made himself another hundred million dollars.

Does anyone else think that Jaime tells Cersei that Olenna had Joffrey killed… and Cersei responds with "Nah, it was totally Sansa and Tyrion. I like that idea better."

His hair is always fantastic.

I'm only going by what we're shown. If there are any more wargs left among the wildlings, they haven't been mentioned.

As far as we know, the wildlings had one warg. Who Jon killed.

That was probably a body-double for Headey, but that might have been Nik's real ass.

I loved that Olenna drank that wine without hesitation. Just straight badass. "Oh, you're not going to torture me to death. Alright boy, let's do it. Bottoms up! Now let me tell you how I tortured your son to death…"

I guess Qyburn's candy is just better.

That star was on the hilt of the sword Ned leaned against Jon's birth bed. As for salt and smoke, well, those things are always around. Pretty sure a fire was burning in that room, and Lyanna's and Ned's tears were certainly salty.

Also he's not actually any good at it.

Or even just do some plain old intelligence gathering the old-fashioned way.

True, and that connection does get implied a bit. But Jon constantly mumbling and being unable to properly explain anything fits perfectly with his established character.