In the books we're told the Wall isn't just ice, if it were the Others would have breached it generations ago. Something else has to happen, something that isn't just an increase in firepower.
Well I would say Joffrey had a few mental issues.How did none of Cercei's and Jamie's kids have any issues from being inbred?
Well I would say Joffrey had a few mental issues.
I don't know if I'd go that far, but I speculated earlier that Cersei might be fooling even herself that she's actually pregnant.I'm wondering if Cersei's pregnancy is actually a tumour as happened in the real world to Mary Tudor.
If she were to fall ill, she might reconsider some of her choices. If she were to die, it would leave a power vacuum until Jamie returned - would he even be accepted as king given he has abandoned her?
Yes he did, but I think that was just his personality, not any sort of birth defect.Well I would say Joffrey had a few mental issues.
I expect that it's not the human race as we know it. Apparently incest doesn't cause birth defects in this particular realm. Or some people are lucky to have a certain mix of DNA that averts defects.How did none of Cercei's and Jamie's kids have any issues from being inbred?
I expect there is a maximum amount of time after a creature has died for it to be turned un-dead. Beyond that there's too much essential decay having taken place.If the white walkers happen to walk past a graveyard would they be able to increase their numbers?
Or do you have to be killed by one of them to become a white walker?
I expect that it's not the human race as we know it. Apparently incest doesn't cause birth defects in this particular realm. Or some people are lucky to have a certain mix of DNA that averts defects.
That would be worrying if they ever got to Winterfell given what's down in the crypts...If the white walkers happen to walk past a graveyard would they be able to increase their numbers?
Or do you have to be killed by one of them to become a white walker?
Counterpoint.
I agree with that--if it's magic, then for something as preposterous as zombies, we have to be all in for magic.I expect there is a maximum amount of time after a creature has died for it to be turned un-dead. Beyond that there's too much essential decay having taken place.
But in a medically practical point of view... zombies are ridiculous. The body and brain requires oxygen and nutrients. Without blood circulation, that doesn't happen. And with most of these creatures, their wounds are great enough that all the blood would leak out. These bodies are bereft of energy and there's no way these decayed corpses could muster up so much strength as depicted. The only way to get over it is to fan-wank magic... that it's just so powerful it can animate any recently killed corpse. Maybe that's why the wights disintegrate when a White Walker is killed, as the magic is "cut off."
I have a friend who is a doctor and... he can't stand "The Walking Dead." He just can't get past the extreme implausibility. And with that series, we're talking about a virus. No magic. And I agree. It would've been more insidious if the infection altered someone's brain chemistry and structure. And then some slight change would happen in the eye where you could see something a little "off"... that would let you know this person isn't OK. The mind alteration would leave the person essentially functioning normally until certain moments when they'd go berserk and have a cannibal moment. And like HIV, having sex with an infected person would get you infected as well. Then in a certain stage of the virus, the mind stops pretending to be normal and "converts"... you end up with an evil army of people-creatures. Similar to what we saw in "Legend." THAT would be easier to believe.I agree with that--if it's magic, then for something as preposterous as zombies, we have to be all in for magic.
Let me add: muscles don't work without water. Zombies don't eat, except once in a blue moon, and they don't drink ever that I can see, and even if they did they don't have any functioning systems to bring water to their tissues any more than nutrients that they have no way of processing.
That part of the prophecy wasn't shown for whatever reason. Maybe it'll come up as another prologue at the beginning of the next season but I doubt it.ETA: I can't remember if Maggy the Frog's prophesy about the valonqar strangling her has been depicted on the show. Early this season, Cersei was depicted standing on the neck of her big Wersteros map while Jamie stood on the fingers. Could he manage it with just one good hand?
The impact of inbreeding tends to be exaggerated in the popular mind. And Cersei/Jamie is first generation, too, unlike the Targaryens or, indeed, the European aristocracy that they're based on. Unless their family was carrying genes for recessive genetic conditions, one generation of inbreeding is unlikely to result in significant issues.How did none of Cercei's and Jamie's kids have any issues from being inbred?
I don't think that's the bluff they're talking about. Otherwise, him 'reading her bluff' would involve him calling her out on the fake pregnancy. I think they're talking about her threatening to kill him there and then, which she can't do - something which repeats itself with Jamie later on.During their comments on Tyrion and Cersei's meeting, David and Dan talk about Cersei bluffing and Tyrion reading her bluff because she wanted him to directly overlaid on top of the specific moment where she puts her hand on her belly and he says "You're pregnant".
Plus the beat where the Night King touched Bran; I understand that it is speculated that this was his passport across the wall. Because magic.In the show the Wall is also established as more than a "simple" ice wall, that's why Benjen couldn't go back across since he's half-wight. So the wall is magic, but Dragons are magic too, so it's not just firepower, but also magic beats magic I guess.![]()
And Cersei/Jamie is first generation, too
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