- Joined
- Feb 28, 2015
for those who care, i'll be playing the first season on saturday somewhere between 12 to 2pm central time
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This is the picture that comes up in the dictionary when you look up "Human Misery".The making of documentary is the gift that keeps on giving:
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Stannis will always be the true king. At least in my heartThis wouldn't have happened if you'd all supported Stannis.
How can the King Who Lost the North or Queen Not Appearing in this Book possibly compete with Stannis I Baratheon, the King Who Cared?Stannis will always be the true king. At least in my heart![]()
How can the King Who Lost the North or Queen Not Appearing in this Book possibly compete with Stannis I Baratheon, the King Who Cared?
It's all Renly's fault. If he'd just supported Stannis the way a dutiful brother should have Joffery would have reined for like a month and so much misery would have been avoided.This wouldn't have happened if you'd all supported Stannis.
Renly wasn't really a bad person, but just like Robert, he would have been shit at being a king.It's all Renly's fault. If he'd just supported Stannis the way a dutiful brother should have Joffery would have reined for like a month and so much misery would have been avoided.
In hindsight the fact that D&D thought Renly was a good person and would have been a good king was a major warning sign.
Well considering they changed Renly's motivation from "Lol I wanna be king because everyone loves me and why the fuck not?" in the books to him being a truly benevolent man who wants to do whats best in the show I think the answer is obvious.Renly wasn't really a bad person, but just like Robert, he would have been shit at being a king.
Robert was a great warrior and I think he's described at being far better at conquering a kingdom than ruling it. Similarly, Renly is a flashy hedonist, that enjoys all the grand spectacle of the court and knighthood, but would have been an equally incompetent ruler, since he'd most likely be more focused on great turneys and festivities than actually managing any aspect of his kingdom.
Stannis, on the other hand, would have been a stern, uncharismatic, but otherwise competent king. I doubt he'd have been beloved, but he would have reigned very efficiently... then again, his idea of justice would have been no fun to deal with for the poorer folk. But out of the three, he's the one who would have been the most dutiful ruler.
D&D thinking Renly would have been a great ruler that unjustifiably gets offed by Stannis is indeed a huge problem, since they seem to think that Renly being a charismatic guy means he'd be a good ruler, when his vice is almost as bad as Robert's.
D&D pretty much fall for the colorful flashy boasting, without really thinking about it from a more logical place. Hell, even Caitlyn Stark saw through Renly's shenanigans... how can the showrunners fall for a fictional character?
Renly was worse. At least Robert had the sense to actually fight a war instead of stop and feast at every castle he passed and hold tournaments so a month long march turns into a half year ordeal where you eat the country bare and your enemies have time to prepare for you.D&D thinking Renly would have been a great ruler that unjustifiably gets offed by Stannis is indeed a huge problem, since they seem to think that Renly being a charismatic guy means he'd be a good ruler, when his vice is almost as bad as Robert'
Renly was worse. At least Robert had the sense to actually fight a war instead of stop and feast at every castle he passed and hold tournaments so a month long march turns into a half year ordeal where you eat the country bare and your enemies have time to prepare for you.
But he didn't, did he? His leisurely pace allowed all kinds of unforeseen shit to happen.It didn't matter. Renly would have taken King's Landing no matter what. He had two great armies under his command. KL only had the city watch.
Stannis vs. the Boltons lacks sympathetic characters on the opposing side so loses some of that dynamic. But yeah. Unless you're just a huge fan of Lady Dustin.The battle of the Blackwater is probably my favorite part of the books, looking back. When I read it for the first time on a ferry from Ireland to Scotland it was just so vivid in my imagination. The drums, the chain, the wildfire and the assault on the beach were all thoroughly exilerating. The fact that I wanted neither Tyrion nor Stannis, some of my favorite characters, to lose the battle only makes it stand even more as a brilliant story. I hope GRRM finishes the Winds of Winter soon because I expect him to make the Battle of Winterfell with Stannis vs Ramsay of a similar quality. I also expect Aegon to pull an Agincourt against the assembled chivalry of the Reach (but if Agincourt had English war elephants)
Renly was worse. At least Robert had the sense to actually fight a war instead of stop and feast at every castle he passed and hold tournaments so a month long march turns into a half year ordeal where you eat the country bare and your enemies have time to prepare for you.
Armies on the march are in fact constantly losing men. Not that Renly would know that. 40,000 men shitting in a crude ditch tends to cause issues.
You do realize that the only reason that the North and Riverlands broke away is that Renly declared first?Much like Mace stopping to siege Storm's End back during Bobby B's big throwdown, it's an entirely politically motivated move.
In stopping to feast and tourney at Bitterbridge, you're not really losing any men.Importantly, the food from the Reach is no longer going to KL, which means that the populace there are getting hungrier and angrier. Even though Robb Stark has gone full glue-eating levels of stupid and declared himself King of the North and Riverlands, it doesn't really matter as much because they're already fighting the Lannisters, and with Ned Stark and (on the Lannister side) Stafford Lannister dead, they're going to want to kill each other more than you, and they could but whoever's left is going to be bled dry or still having to watch his back.
The entire problem with Renly, isn't that his actions were stupid, but that his choices in letting might settle things over legitimate succession would have led to a bad precedent for Westeros.