Epic episode but my nitpick echoes the above. The episode was so dark. Then they hammered you with the blizzard. Those two things combined made for less then optimal viewing.
Can someone tell me what happened. It was so damn dark on my TV I couldn't see a thing for the first hour!
Makes sense.Well, I can certainly understand it. He didn't have time to find out of the dragon was ok. As far as we knew, his singular goal was to find the Night King and kill him. I mean, when they did that amazing tracking shot in Winterfell, he had a moment where he saw SAM getting overrun by wights and he didn't stop to help. If that doesn't explain his singe-mindedness, I don't know what does.
KM is not Tyrion. He’s Arya.I wasn't keen on the KM pick, but I'm over it.
Tyrion Lannister is our QB and as the Battle of Blackwater Bay proved, he's intelligent, skilled and resourceful. Yes, he's vertically challenged but if the Unsullied on the line hold up and the Dothraki do their thing in passing game, he'll be fine. My only concern is that there is a Night King out there and we don't have enough dragon glass blades or Valyrian steel to handle the White Walkers.
KM is not Tyrion. He’s Arya.
AgreedMeh episode.
Disapointing character development from Jamie and Daenerys imo
Jamie still not done with Cersei.
Daenerys being more and more obsessed with ruling instead of doing the obvious which would be to rule alongside Jon.
Next Dragon down, although the preview of the next episode with the Dragon screech and Eurons shocked face and the conversation between Cersei and Euron about "being sure that dragon is dead" hints that maybe we are not down to 1 dragon.
Disapointing character development from Jamie and Daenerys imo
Jamie still not done with Cersei.
Daenerys being more and more obsessed with ruling instead of doing the obvious which would be to rule alongside Jon.
Next Dragon down, although the preview of the next episode with the Dragon screech and Eurons shocked face and the conversation between Cersei and Euron about "being sure that dragon is dead" hints that maybe we are not down to 1 dragon.
*StarkbucksGuys. There truly is a Starbucks on every corner
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Agree with the first part, and the last part would make me not want to watch any longer. That would be epic-level bad schmuck bait.
There was a lot of good stuff in the episode, but a lot of it was badly presented.
Disapointing character development from Jamie and Daenerys imo
Jamie still not done with Cersei.
Daenerys being more and more obsessed with ruling instead of doing the obvious which would be to rule alongside Jon.
Next Dragon down, although the preview of the next episode with the Dragon screech and Eurons shocked face and the conversation between Cersei and Euron about "being sure that dragon is dead" hints that maybe we are not down to 1 dragon.
Wow...
This was some high level concepts
A man's honor versus a woman's love
Duty versus loyalty
Selfless sacrifice versus appreciation
Nature versus nurture
Sansa still literally the worst character of all time
Vengeance versus temperance
Geez does nobody understand time progression?
This is so obviously the big setup episode and people are complaining about it? What exactly did you all expect?
I think it’s finally completely obvious that Dany is NOT going to end up Queen. She’s turning “mad” like her father right in front of our eyes.
My wife remarked that I didn't seem to be into this show as much as prior seasons and that is true. With the exception of Episode 2 this season, I have been completely underwhelmed. However, I think it can all be redeemed in the last two episodes. If some of the "stupid" choices that the writers made end up having some sort of explanation that retroactively makes sense, I'll buy it. But watching it unfold in real time makes each episode appear that it was written by people who never even watched this show (much less ran it from Episode 1).
For instance, why did certain characters survive the Battle of Winterfell, only to be given happy goodbyes? Presumably, we would not see any of them again either way, so why not off them one episode earlier for dramatic effect? If they still have some sort of part to play in the final two episodes, if their goodbyes were not really forever, then it can be forgiven. If we never see Sam or Ghost or Tormund again, then what was the point of them surviving?
Same with Rhaegal. I actually think his death at Winterfell would have carried more impact than having an entire fleet of ships sneak up on him and kill him. They simply had to show the walls of the Red Keep lined with scorpions to let us know that Cersei was ready for a dragon attack.
Also, characters seem to know things they shouldn't. Like why did Cersei and Euron know who Missandei was and that she was worth capturing? How was she the only one captured?
Was Bronn's scene last night his send off? If so...what a letdown!
Will Euron realize that Tyrion shouldn't know about his baby and start doing the math in his head? If so, then Tyrion goes from being useless this season to a master tactician all over again. If not, why was he not pumped full of arrows?