Stannis died alone, in the middle who knows where. Besides, the Boltons found his body and probably took it back to Winterfel or burned it. Davos and Melisandre would have great difficulty recovering his body.
Am I correct that the dragons are still trapped inside the pyramid even if their collars are removed? There's not an open door on the other end of that pitch black labyrinth, right? So he wasn't releasing them he was just easing their imprisonment?
I've got to think that, given the dragons' rapid growth rate, Daenarys anticipated the need for a larger door so they could eventually be let out of their dungeon. So there's probably a large portcullis somewhere on the other side with a couple of Meereeneese wine & mead vendors, tiredly napping on their break on the loading dock after unloading Tyrion's weekly shipment of 15 pallets of wine, who are in for a rude awakening.Am I correct that the dragons are still trapped inside the pyramid even if their collars are removed? There's not an open door on the other end of that pitch black labyrinth, right? So he wasn't releasing them he was just easing their imprisonment?
Stannis is old and busted, Jon is the new hotness. Despite remaining with Stannis, Melisandre was already starting to gravitate toward Jon as the new savior a bit even before Stannis' defeat and death, but Jon's death coming right after Stannis' completely broke her faith and spirit. Plus, as mentioned, they didn't have access to Stannis' body like they did with Jon's, and he's probably little child-killing ashes by now.One thing confused me: why are Davos (I always want to say Davros and put him in a Dalek chair) and Melisandre so obsessed with bringing back Jon Snow? What about STANNIS, the King they actually served for all these years, who died at the exact same time?
You mean the tiny door only big enough for a man to get through?! Those dragons would never get through there.![]()
Ah, thanks. I must have missed that bit or forgot about it since last year.^ Selyse hanged herself before Stannis and what was left of his army marched on Winterfell...
Ah, thanks. I must have missed that bit or forgot about it since last year.![]()
Conversely, I wonder if after her time with the Dotharki and upon discovering that Slaver's Bay is back to how it was, she'll finally realize it's a fruitless war and refocus her efforts towards Westeros. She doesn't need a fleet: She has three dragons.My only real dislike being the news that Astapor and Yunkai fell back into the hands of the Masters again, which I hope is not yet another way (along with her burned fleet) of the showrunners saying that yes, Daenarys is going to continue to remain bogged down in her own personal Valyritnam quagmire once she escapes the clutches of the b-team Mongol horde, instead of finally moving on to Westeros. The fictional war to free the oppressed of Slaver's Bay has lasted as long as the actual Civil War, so it's time to end it.
Dragons are great for burning things down and terrifying your enemies, not so great for occupying and securing large swaths of territory. She's still going to need to transport boatloads (literally) of Unsullied and other troops unless she plans on starting over from scratch in Westeros. Which is certainly possible, since some Westerosi houses will rally to her cause when she returns astride dragons, but not having an established army in place wherever she chooses to make landfall increases the chance that her non-dragon riding minions and infrastructure will be driven back into the sea by a determined enemy.Conversely, I wonder if after her time with the Dotharki and upon discovering that Slaver's Bay is back to how it was, she'll finally realize it's a fruitless war and refocus her efforts towards Westeros. She doesn't need a fleet: She has three dragons.
More Bran to our diet.
I guess they're not going to bother to even try to explain how he got so tall and teenaged in the - wait, how long has it been since episode 1, in-universe?
Probably longer than you think. Those ship voyages are (should be) measured in months, alone. Nevermind all the land travel they do. Didn't Martin say something like Westeros was roughly the size of South America at one point? And they regularly gloss over how long it takes to traverse it for obvious reasons.I guess they're not going to bother to even try to explain how he got so tall and teenaged in the - wait, how long has it been since episode 1, in-universe?
I had no idea who the guy was that killed the Sea King, though. Has he appeared before? It's his brother? What was that bit about him being the Drowned God? Also, I don't remember what they did to betray the Starks?
Rang no bells with me either.
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