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I just finished rewatching 5x1, why does nobody talk about this scene? It still holds up.
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Question about Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, from a complete noob

Hey everyone! Thought this would be the best place to ask this question

So, I saw an ad for "Knight of the Seven Kingdoms" on Sky and it really intrigued me. It gave me Kingcome Come: Deliverance vibes and looked like a genuinely cool show.

However, I know absolutely nothing about Game of thrones (besides the final seasons bad reception and stuff like that).

So my question is, can I watch this show completely blind to the surrounding lore or is this something I need to be familiar with the rest of the GOT series / setting without getting confused and to actually enjoy?

Thanks and hope this isn't too dumb a question lmao

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Actors: If you could hand pick any actor/actress and place them in any role in the ASOIAF universe who would it be??
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Okay, about Stannis and Selyse’s three sons that died…why are the fetuses suspended in liquid held in glass jars? Seriously wtf?

Each time I’ve watched and rewatched that episode, seeing those pickled babies just absolutely throws me. Am I missing something?

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Tywin's plan for the North doesn't make sense.

I have recently been watching the TV show and have become very confused. Tywin marries Tyrion to Sansa, so they can have the heir to the North, but what does he expect to happen when they actually ride North?

The Northmen all blame the Lannister's for murdering Ned and Rob. He knows Sansa hates all the Lannisters. So why wouldn't they just kill Tyrion the second Sansa and he ride North to take control?

Or does he expect Sansa to birth a golden haired Lannister boy. They then raise that boy to act like a Lannister and then ride North and then just expect the North to accept this boy that acts and looks nothkng like a Stark? I mean I know they are loyal to the Starks, but seems like they'd see exactly what was happening and fight against it despite it beinf Sansa's child. I mean they questioned and doubted Robb who looked and acted like a Stark the whole time. Is it just me or does this plan make no sense. Am I missing something?

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Cant imagine how quickly jaimie would have traveled if he has allowed to be tyrion champion !!
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Do you think Arya actually managed to deceive Tywin, or did he know she was a noblewoman and simply chose to do nothing?
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i did not care about Arya becoming "no one"

I expect this has been discussed already, as probably all possible topics on this show, but i was recently watching it for the first time, and could not wait for the journey of Arya in Braavos to finish. At the start, i felt it was interesting, embracing death, giving her the discipline and training she longed for, letting go of her "identity"...

But i knew she would not be able to do it, especially with her being a Stark and her whole "list"/vengeance obsession
the show is all about the past & how everything is connected
familial roots being the most important thing determining your identity and deciding your life path (at least generally speaking, but of course you could find examples to disprove everything)

so we basically saw her arc of becoming physically strong but nothing else changed about her character (which i dont mind per say, but I expected something else from this arc)
she learned the skills, but did not embrace the philosophy, she was still the same Arya as always, stubborn and vengeful (also somehow they were okay with it despite her defying their God???)

plus, it went on for TOO long, she had a strong plot armor to survive death there and did not prove to be as complex of a character as i would have liked

if you compare her journey with say Jamie's when he's captured or Jon's beyond the wall, you can tell hers is lacking big time, to me at least
i know a lot of people loveee this character and especially this arc, but i think theyre blind by the "coolness" of it



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