I'm v ready for inevitable takes that people are hypocritical cucks if they watch GOT and root for the night's watch/humans to beat the white walkers but don't support the us Mexico border wall. You just know that Bill Maher or someone is crafting that right now
I could see Gendry being the trueborn son of Robert and Cersei. "The seed is strong". So any trueborn child of theirs would have been a brunette.
I feel like all of those types were too busy trying to find food to eat to occupy some isolated island castle with zero farmlands.
Something along the line of "He was a black haired beauty..." in S1E1 Cersie was telling Catelyn of her and apparently Robert's child whom she alluded succumbed to fever.
Also possible that she is studying them before she kills them. Not really the style she was taught to just roll up and attack, especially since there is a reasonably large number of them.
Exactly, DragonStone relied solely on trading via Ship. As Tycho Nestorisis had pointed out in Season 4.
For a split second, when she told them she was "going to kill the queen" it was about to erupt into a scene like when The Hound ate every fucking chicken in the rooom.... Then they laughed and I thought
Any thoughts on Jon's decision to spare the Umber And KarStark Lineages/Houses/Keeps ? Am thinking perhaps it was a subtle illumination of Jon's ability to show compassion even unto what would normally be considered "enemies".
I think a combination of him showing leadership and knowing that he needs every able body for what lies ahead. Those two houses will probably end up being very loyal as a result.
So you agree with this hideous theory? I was referring to him being Cersei and Robert's. It was her/their first child. Highly doubt she would've killed her own baby. Not that hard.
So Sam is going to find a way to save Jorah, right? Spoiler Sure looks like it based off of what could be seen in that book he was flipping through.
Sam figures out how to get the dragon glass under Dragonstone but it's dangerous for some reason and Jorah volunteers to sacrifice himself for Dany.
Something I noticed but I could be wrong. When Sam was looking through the books there was a picture of a dagger. Was that not the same dagger that was used to try to kill Bran in season 1?
in "Talk the Thrones" they very specifically say Dragonstone is very close to Kings Landing, basically a 2 day trip
"I'm going to kill the queen".. everyone starts laughing and Arya's looks all but for real, that's what I'm going to do.
My point was that if it is Wun Wun then Bran's vision would be in the setting of at or after the army reaches Winterfell. Obviously, Jon would've burned Mag the Mighty and Wun Wun, but who knows. Just a lot of similarities when comparing the freeze frame pic of the vision and Wun Wun at his death. I am of the opinion that it is Wun Wun and they flipped the image vertically in the vision to throw us (TV watchers) off.
Marko asks, “How was Wun Wun walking with the White Walker army in Bran’s vision?” It’s not him. Over the course of the centuries, any number of non–Wun Wun giants could have fallen to the White Walkers and been raised as wights.
Was that in the post show? I never watch those until after the season, just as I don't watch the "upcoming on GoT" previews. Hmmmmm
99.9999% of giants died north of the wall and I imagine aiming for the eyes is the best way to take a giant down.
Yeah, I assume that all non burned dead anything is fair game for the Nights King to raise. Wun wun getting taken out via the eye just shows that's what will take down a giant.
The real question is ... how are you just noticing this? They've been building this story since season two when she first met Jaqqan ...
didn't Jaqqan pretend to be the chick in the faceless house for a while? same concept. move along white wun-wun talk reaching bernardobot level
Johan Philip "Pilou" Asbæk (Euron) actually talked about what the gift he is getting Cersei on his twitter account recently