- Joined
- Jan 18, 2019
So i just rewatched the episode (it's just me or it was too dark?) and I saw that Danaerys
basically used Jorah like a human shield. That's taking the friendzone to another level.
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So i just rewatched the episode (it's just me or it was too dark?) and I saw that Danaerysbasically used Jorah like a human shield. That's taking the friendzone to another level.
Jaime and Tyrion's Excellent Adventure?
So i just rewatched the episode (it's just me or it was too dark?) and I saw that Danaerysbasically used Jorah like a human shield. That's taking the friendzone to another level.
I thought he was going to have a more important purpose... But apparently, that's not the case.Could anyone explain to me the whole Beric scene? Was that the only reason he was brought back?
I thought he was going to have a more important purpose... But apparently, that's not the case.
In the books, he gives his life to resurrect Catelyn Stark.
I, and several people in this thread, have read millions of words worth of Martin's writing.What if Martin told D&D to write the show like this, just so he can test the audience reaction and rewrite the last 2 books?
Maybe that's why it takes so long for the fat man to release winds of winter, he is rewriting it as we speak.
They should've made Beric the one who killed the Night King, and this is coming from someone who was mostly fine with Arya doing it.I feel like they didn't know what to do with him, how does someone who died six times (He got stabbed in the eye ffs) die from a couple of jabs to the ankle and back?
So what his excuse for the gap between A Storm of Swords and A Feast for Crows then?What if Martin told D&D to write the show like this, just so he can test the audience reaction and rewrite the last 2 books?
Maybe that's why it takes so long for the fat man to release winds of winter, he is rewriting it as we speak.
I'm genuinely contemplating to just ditch watching the last couple episodes for the time being, since this lackluster resolution to the Night King plot has really taken away all investment I had in the show.
Well, turns out the whole fucking show builds up to the Night King being disposed off even with less impact than fucking Littlefinger. What a let-down. Also fuck 10.000 years of mythology and prophesies, turns out Cersei is a bigger threat to Westeros. She's the endboss and she's a bigger threat. Why? Cause she has a snatch that she uses to charm random dimwits to do her bidding. How could the Night King hope to match that and become the actual endboss of the show? He could only raise the fucking dead, clearly no match for Cersei's twat.
Well, turns out the whole fucking show builds up to the Night King being disposed off even with less impact than fucking Littlefinger. What a let-down. Also fuck 10.000 years of mythology and prophesies, turns out Cersei is a bigger threat to Westeros. She's the endboss and she's a bigger threat
Very little about Azor Ahai is confirmed, including whether or not he actually ever existed. But Melisandre believes he is meant to fight the Great Other (the title of an entity of cold, darkness, and death that her religion refuses to actually name), who she also believes the Others (called specifically White Walkers in the show, which is an epithet used in the books too albeit rarely) serve. That said the Azor Ahai story does share the Long Night phenomenon of other legends so they're at least probably a legendary rendition of actual historical truth, however distorted.Bookreaders, help me out.
Was it confirmed that Azor Ahai was supposed to fight White Walkers? The wiki made it sound like the WW were a prophetic sign rather than the calamity AA is supposed to fix. For all I know, it could mean his reincarnation will bring peace and prosperity to Westeros for the first time in centuries.
As someone pointed out, a subversion like this could actually work if Euron was the secret endboss rather than Cersei. But only if it was book Euron who actually seems to have some idea of what's going on.Well, turns out the whole fucking show builds up to the Night King being disposed off even with less impact than fucking Littlefinger. What a let-down. Also fuck 10.000 years of mythology and prophesies, turns out Cersei is a bigger threat to Westeros. She's the endboss and she's a bigger threat. Why? Cause she has a snatch that she uses to charm random dimwits to do her bidding. How could the Night King hope to match that and become the actual endboss of the show? He could only raise the fucking dead, clearly no match for Cersei's twat.
On a more serious note, this episode was really anticlimactic and it would have been a whole fucking lot better to resolve the Iron Throne conflict before dealing with the Night King, it feels so utterly idiotic to do it the other way around. First, utter survival of every living thing was at stake. Now, in the coming episodes, people will fight over the privilege of sitting on a pointy, rusty chair. I didn't care about Sansa's and Dany's endless bickering about the iron throne/king in the north bullshit back then, I won't care in the future.
And even with her epic kill at the end, it feels like bear loli (and Dolorous Ed, for that matter) was a mere cheap shock-death. A shame, really.
I'm genuinely contemplating to just ditch watching the last couple episodes for the time being, since this lackluster resolution to the Night King plot has really taken away all investment I had in the show.