Ekeke
Full Member
Okay, I was just asking. In that case then yes its silly
Has it occured to you, that some prople enjoy this? I think to many people it's not that important wether or not the show is actually good, they just derive their joy from writing about and discussing it. Others like me are just disappointed and like to vent.It really wasnt all that different. And I dont mind people criticizing it, I have plenty of times. It's just the absolute joylessness that amazes me. I've watched some shows to the bitter end that sucked way worse than this (sons of anarchy) and I just had them on while doing something else and fast forward liberally. I certainly didnt write weekly essays about every little detail.
With everyone I meant the characters on the show.. Apologies if I didn't make that clear.
Sure the Dothraki charging thing was dumb (but yes I believe it was for the visuals and more importantly the sheer terror of seeing all the lights just go out. For that it was certainly effective) but so was Stannis sailing into a funnel like tiny bay right at the base of the most fortified part of King's landing and I heard very few people complain about that. And that was supposedly one of the great tactical minds on the show. If things not making sense is what you re gonna hang your hat on you may wish to rewatch the entire series.
Great episode but the Bronn scene is just terrible. He should have been written off ages ago, it's clear they have nothing for him.
I've seen the left over Starbucks cup too....somebody is getting a slap for that this morning.
Okay, I was just asking. In that case then yes its silly
Great episode but the Bronn scene is just terrible. He should have been written off ages ago, it's clear they have nothing for him.
I've seen the left over Starbucks cup too....somebody is getting a slap for that this morning.
All in all, probably the best episode of the season. Last two seasons actually, bar Spoils of War.
With everyone I meant the characters on the show.. Apologies if I didn't make that clear.
Sure the Dothraki charging thing was dumb (but yes I believe it was for the visuals and more importantly the sheer terror of seeing all the lights just go out. For that it was certainly effective) but so was Stannis sailing into a funnel like tiny bay right at the base of the most fortified part of King's landing and I heard very few people complain about that. And that was supposedly one of the great tactical minds on the show. If things not making sense is what you re gonna hang your hat on you may wish to rewatch the entire series.
Jamie left because his allegiance was with Cercei after the war for humanity was won.Surely Jamie would have known about the ballistas. So he kept quiet about them on purpose? He was in the war room right?
Sansa cares for the north and her family. She is seeing a woman who acts rashly on emotions, who is powerhungry and doesn't care much for the north beyond what is needed for their submission to her, she has also learned from Littlefinger to always picture the worst possible reasons people have for doing what they do, it's absolutely within her character to be extremely sceptical.
Also why tf did they decide to skip Jon revealing his true ancestry to Sansa and Arya? Could have been a brilliant scene that
Jamie left because his allegiance was with Cercei after the war for humanity was won.
He probably kept it tight under wraps so it would be a surprise and a bonus for "his"/Cercei's side.
Bah Gawd!!!
The thing with Dany, though, is that she's suffered loss with Jorah and is acting very emotional. It's one thing to tease the impending meltdown of her character, but there's sympathy too for her character because we're aware she's in a fragile emotional state. Sansa likewise has suffered loss with Theon, however, the difference in how Dany treats Sansa and viceversa is interesting. The undermining of Dany, even prior to knowing Jon is a rightful heir, is a flaw in Sansa's character, and her lack of discretion in keeping Jon's secret just adds to that impression of Sansa as being a hypocrite.
Your point is?Wasnt the whole point of Stannis charging into Tiny Bay because that was the weakest part of Kings Landing defense? Stannis knew it, but so did Tyrion which allowed them to prepare for it but unlike the Dothraki charge which was wiped out instantly, Stannis still continued and had pretty much won the battle until Tywin marched up last minute to save the day.
I'm fine with saying Sansa has some huge character-flaw. But again, she just had to deal with potential in-fighting due to Littlefingers schemes and ended last season on the note that "the lone wolf dies but the pack survives" spiel. I see her focus on the north & the Starks. The north doesn't want another king in the north apart from one named Stark. Her paranoia/attmepts to act on what she learned from Littlefingers way of thinking is definitely creating friction where there doesn't need to be friction.I can buy that completely if Sansa hadn't immediately acted liked a dick. But the problem is that Sansa threw the toys out the pram straight away. It was like a teenager talking to adults. Had Sansa been calm and composed in that first meeting, watching what Daenerys was saying/doing then I think i'd buy into it more. She's now just becoming a Cersei clone imo.
Really pissed-off with them killing Rhaegal like that - after having him survive last week I thought they might actually have him do something useful rather than just endlessly focusing on Drogan, but no there he goes as pathetically as ever
Poor Ghost as well
I don't remember if he was there.He wasn't in the war room then? I didn't pay attention to the details but didn't he leave way after that scene? Or do you mean he left the war council? I'll have to rewatch that bit again I guess.
edit: yeah just watched that scene again and he wasn't in the war room. Guess he skipped telling them about the ballistas.
Your point is?
Tyrion still wants Cercei & her child to survive, so he has a motive to not comment on it. On the other side, the fact that it was a used weakness of Kings Landing means they likely would have prepared better for it in case it happened again. It's also noteworthy that having the Iron Fleet means that if it's a water-battle, they are likely the winners there.
Tyrion has been a awful hand as his double-lojalty to two sides at war has been commented on multiple times already by the characters in the show.
My bad. If it's about another situation then I'm off.I think you're not understanding. Lambs and Redplane were discussing Stannis attack on Kings Landing in Season 2. Re read the conversation to get better context.
I don't remember if he was there.
My point is that if he wasn't there, he wouldn't have told them, and if he was there he still wouldn't have told them.
I'd certainly assume that they would be there with or without his information if we go under the assumptions that the Golden Company is a known army that works for money, and that Cercei has money.He was happy enough to let them know about the Golden Company. Which they wouldn't have known about without his intelligence.
He was happy enough to let them know about the Golden Company. Which they wouldn't have known about without his intelligence.
I liked most things apart from the Pirates of the Caribbean interlude and the scene with Bron and the two brothers.Bar the whole "getting ambushed by a fleet" thing, this was the best episode so far with some really good tension and plotting going on. How does one fleet get "ambushed" by another fleet within visible distance off the shore of Dragonstone? No spotters?
Agreed.Euron is the worst villain the show has had.
few complaints apart I actually agree with this, this episode is a lot better than the previous few and better than most of season 7.
I see other people enjoyed it like I did. I thought maybe I just had bad taste.
I could maybe understand Euron's ships managing to sneak attack the Dornish people back in season 6, when he killed the Sand Snakes (though still unlikely because it's not as if you are completely blind in the dark, your eyes manage to adjust to the dark in a few minutes and you can actually see quite a lot) but how did he managed to sneak them in plain daylight, with dragons patrolling?!
Also, how the hell did Euron know she was coming there? I hope they reveal there's a spy in Dany's camp otherwise it won't make sense at all.
I get that and agree that first 4, maybe 5 seasons were like that. But 7th one especially was uber brainless Hollywood stuff, I mean you had Dany swooping in on a dragon for a big save in same way as Arya in last one. So I am just surprised people are so disappointed now in this season while were fine with Season 7? Last great proper GOT episode was Winds of Winter.Thats precisely the reason why I loved GoT in the first place, it was intelligent. It was a refreshing change to the superhero genre and shows like Walking Dead. Guess thats why i'm disappointed.
I get that and agree that first 4, maybe 5 seasons were like that. But 7th one especially was uber brainless Hollywood stuff, I mean you had Dany swooping in on a dragon for a big save in same way as Arya in last one. So I am just surprised people are so disappointed now in this season while were fine with Season 7? Last great proper GOT episode was Winds of Winter.
Yeah, that IMDB is not a reliable metric. And a lot of nerds were in love with Missandei. NTTAWWTLatest episode currently rated 7.6 on IMDb, which is sure to plummet further the more time passes since its air time. On course to be the worst rated episode in Game of Thrones history. By a long way, too.
Says it all, really.
More because Tyrion knew of the passage is the way I understood it. If we compare it to real world strategies that make sense, like folks did with the other battles on the show, then it seems to be rather silly.Wasnt the whole point of Stannis charging into Tiny Bay because that was the weakest part of Kings Landing defense? Stannis knew it, but so did Tyrion which allowed them to prepare for it but unlike the Dothraki charge which was wiped out instantly, Stannis still continued and had pretty much won the battle until Tywin marched up last minute to save the day.
Rhaegal's body was pushed up North by strong currents or something. Tormund and Ghost realised that the easiest way to Hardhome is through Eastwatch instead of Castle Black so they go North East and find the washed up corpse of Rhaegal. Tormund pours giants mill over the dead dragon and he comes back to life. Now Tormund and Ghost spend their days flying about on Rhaegal, and they live happily ever after.
Latest episode currently rated 7.6 on IMDb, which is sure to plummet further the more time passes since its air time. On course to be the worst rated episode in Game of Thrones history. By a long way, too.
Says it all, really.