If you're already champing at the bit for more Game of Thrones, good news, because there are prequels on the way (tentative airdate is TBD as they're all in the very, veryearly states of production and development — if all three of them even make it to air, that is). However, if you're looking for something along the lines of a straight spin-off with theGame of Thronescharacters we've come to know and love over the last eight seasons, forget about it. None of the potential shows will feature any characters from the OG series, which kills any hope for an Arya Stark (Maisie Williams) series where she's exploring what's west of Westeros.
We've actually known for a while the proposed series would all be prequels, with author George R. R. Martin even stating so on his blog back in 2018, a year after the spin-offs were first discussed. Now, with renewed interest in finding out what happened to our characters after the final credits, HBO programming president Casey Bloys is stating, for the record, that we're not going to see any familiar characters or what future Westeros looks like anytime soon — and honestly, probably never.
'Part of it is, I do want this show — this Game of Thrones, David Benioff and D.B. Weiss's show — to be its own thing,' he explained to The Hollywood Reporter. 'I don't want to take characters from this world that they did beautifully and put them off into another world with someone else creating it. I want to let it be the artistic piece they've got. That's one of reasons why I'm not trying to do the same show over.'
Bloys continued to say that the reason behind this is that HBO is keen on doing 'things that feel distinct — and to not try and re-do the same show. That's probably one of the reasons why, right now, a sequel or picking up any of the other characters doesn't make sense for us.'
It's also unclear if Benoiff and Weiss will even stay with HBO. The two are currently slated to helm the next Star Wars trilogy for Disney, and are currently in the process of shopping for an overall deal. While Bloys would like to see them stay with HBO and WarnerMedia, he notes, 'We'll see where they end up.'
Although we're mired in uncertainty as to where the Game of Thrones Television Universe will go next, one thing we know we're not going to get is any sort of show about Bronn (Jerome Flynn) opening up his own brothel (which is a shame) or Bran (Isaac Hempstead Wright) ruling over the Six Kingdoms as sometimes a weird bird. Oh well, at least the show will live on forever on HBO Go and HBO Now.
Need HBO?Add it through Hulu or through Amazon.
Arya Stark (Maisie Williams) on Game of Thrones Season 8, Episode 6: 'The Iron Throne'Photo: HBO/Helen SloanSpoiler alert: If you’re catching up on “Game of Thrones,” this article reveals a key scene and a major plot point from the final episode. Ask Game of Thrones fans about the final episode and you’ll get an earful. There’s no shortage of opinions on social media. While the finale might be debated for years, what isn’t up for debate is that the show scored a home run for HBO, setting a record with 19.3 million viewers.
It also contained one of the best speeches I’ve heard on the topic of storytelling—and it rings true.
In brief, here’s what happened. And you don’t have to be a Game of Thrones viewer to appreciate it. The speech came courtesy of Tyrion Lannister, played by award-winning actor Peter Dinklage. In the scene, the lords and ladies of the fictional land of Westeros had to find a new ruler to command the Seven Kingdoms. Tyrion made a surprise—and compelling argument— in support of a character named Bran Stark.
According to Tyrion, Bran has a special power that would make him a great ruler—he was the keeper of the kingdom’s stories.
“What unites people?” Tyrion asked. “Armies? Gold? Flags?” No. It’s stories, he said.
“There's nothing in the world more powerful than a good story. Nothing can stop it. No enemy can defeat it. And who has a better story than Bran the Broken? The boy who fell from a high tower and lived… He's our memory. The keeper of all our stories. The wars, weddings, births, massacres, famines, our triumphs, our defeats, our past. Who better to lead us into the future?”
Never mind how Bran learned the history of Westeros—he was taught by the Three-Eyed Raven in Season 6. Seriously. What you need to know is that Tyrion’s speech worked. He won his case.
The Game of Thrones writers are experts in storytelling, of course, and it makes sense that they would hand the reigns of the kingdom to a storyteller-in-chief. The Seven Kingdoms don’t really exist, but Tyrion’s logical appeal was historically accurate. Storytellers have always been the ones considered the best people to lead us into the future.
Storytelling around the campfire lit our imagination
Anthropologists point to fire as the spark that ignited human evolution. Once our ancestors gained control of fire, they could cook food, ward off predators, and tell stories around the campfire.
Social anthropologists like Polly Wiessner at the University of Utah believe storytelling played an important role in the evolution of society. Storytellers were the keepers of the tribe’s memory—its culture and history. “Appetites for firelit settings for intimate conversations and for evening stories remain with us today,” Wiessner reminds us.
Like today’s communicators, some ancient storytellers were more skilled than others. The good ones were widely admired for their ability to hold an audience’s attention, to keep them laughing, and for entertaining as well as informing. According to Wiessner, “Stories told by firelight put listeners on the same emotional wavelength, elicited understanding, trust, and sympathy, and built positive reputations for qualities like humor, congeniality, and innovation.”
The best storytellers were admired for engaging their audiences. Their reputations spread beyond the tribe as people came from near and far to listen to them. While the tools of communication have changed, the human brain has not. We are a storytelling species. We think in story, talk in story, and admire those who keep and spread our stories.
Star wars raider class corvette cross section. Has one installed currently, will keep that updated as the script gets updated.- Video by Game Horizons-Originally, the Imperial Raider was designed by Fantasy Flight Games in close connection with Lucasarts to create an epic format Imperial ship that would stand proud on the table.
In her book, Leadership for Turbulent Times, historian Doris Kearns Goodwin wrote about a leader who was so admired for his verbal skills, he “drew crowds from the countryside eager to be regaled and entertained by a master storyteller.” The storyteller was Abraham Lincoln. “He understood early on that concrete examples and stories provided the best vehicles for teaching,” writes Goodwin.
In the corporate world, storytellers keep the brand’s history alive.
For example, Nike designates some executives as storytellers. “As Nike gets even bigger, its storytellers feel that their mission becomes even more critical,” according to a Fast Company feature on the Nike storytelling culture. At Nike, the heroics of the past inspire the innovations of the future. 'The best way for a company to create a prosperous future is to make sure all of its employees understand the company’s past. That’s why many veteran execs at Nike spend time telling corporate campfire stories.'
Tyrion would agree.
I don’t know if Bran Stark will be the best ruler of the Seven Kingdoms (six, actually, since Sansa Stark decided to keep the North independent). But by putting their faith in a storyteller, the lords and ladies of Westeros are honoring the single greatest tool that leaders have to inspire future generations—the power of story.
Spoiler alert: If you’re catching up on “Game of Thrones,” this article reveals a key scene and a major plot point from the final episode.
Ask Game of Thrones fans about the final episode and you’ll get an earful. There’s no shortage of opinions on social media. While the finale might be debated for years, what isn’t up for debate is that the show scored a home run for HBO, setting a record with 19.3 million viewers.
It also contained one of the best speeches I’ve heard on the topic of storytelling—and it rings true.
In brief, here’s what happened. And you don’t have to be a Game of Thrones viewer to appreciate it. The speech came courtesy of Tyrion Lannister, played by award-winning actor Peter Dinklage. In the scene, the lords and ladies of the fictional land of Westeros had to find a new ruler to command the Seven Kingdoms. Tyrion made a surprise—and compelling argument— in support of a character named Bran Stark.
According to Tyrion, Bran has a special power that would make him a great ruler—he was the keeper of the kingdom’s stories.
“What unites people?” Tyrion asked. “Armies? Gold? Flags?” No. It’s stories, he said.
“There's nothing in the world more powerful than a good story. Nothing can stop it. No enemy can defeat it. And who has a better story than Bran the Broken? The boy who fell from a high tower and lived… He's our memory. The keeper of all our stories. The wars, weddings, births, massacres, famines, our triumphs, our defeats, our past. Who better to lead us into the future?”
Never mind how Bran learned the history of Westeros—he was taught by the Three-Eyed Raven in Season 6. Seriously. What you need to know is that Tyrion’s speech worked. He won his case.
The Game of Thrones writers are experts in storytelling, of course, and it makes sense that they would hand the reigns of the kingdom to a storyteller-in-chief. The Seven Kingdoms don’t really exist, but Tyrion’s logical appeal was historically accurate. Storytellers have always been the ones considered the best people to lead us into the future.
Storytelling around the campfire lit our imagination
Anthropologists point to fire as the spark that ignited human evolution. Once our ancestors gained control of fire, they could cook food, ward off predators, and tell stories around the campfire.
Social anthropologists like Polly Wiessner at the University of Utah believe storytelling played an important role in the evolution of society. Storytellers were the keepers of the tribe’s memory—its culture and history. “Appetites for firelit settings for intimate conversations and for evening stories remain with us today,” Wiessner reminds us.
Like today’s communicators, some ancient storytellers were more skilled than others. The good ones were widely admired for their ability to hold an audience’s attention, to keep them laughing, and for entertaining as well as informing. According to Wiessner, “Stories told by firelight put listeners on the same emotional wavelength, elicited understanding, trust, and sympathy, and built positive reputations for qualities like humor, congeniality, and innovation.”
The best storytellers were admired for engaging their audiences. Their reputations spread beyond the tribe as people came from near and far to listen to them. While the tools of communication have changed, the human brain has not. We are a storytelling species. We think in story, talk in story, and admire those who keep and spread our stories.
In her book, Leadership for Turbulent Times, historian Doris Kearns Goodwin wrote about a leader who was so admired for his verbal skills, he “drew crowds from the countryside eager to be regaled and entertained by a master storyteller.” The storyteller was Abraham Lincoln. “He understood early on that concrete examples and stories provided the best vehicles for teaching,” writes Goodwin.
In the corporate world, storytellers keep the brand’s history alive.
For example, Nike designates some executives as storytellers. “As Nike gets even bigger, its storytellers feel that their mission becomes even more critical,” according to a Fast Company feature on the Nike storytelling culture. At Nike, the heroics of the past inspire the innovations of the future. 'The best way for a company to create a prosperous future is to make sure all of its employees understand the company’s past. That’s why many veteran execs at Nike spend time telling corporate campfire stories.'
Tyrion would agree.
I don’t know if Bran Stark will be the best ruler of the Seven Kingdoms (six, actually, since Sansa Stark decided to keep the North independent). But by putting their faith in a storyteller, the lords and ladies of Westeros are honoring the single greatest tool that leaders have to inspire future generations—the power of story.
WSJThe full trailer for the final season of Game Of Thrones has been released, and the series looks to be ending in icy armageddon, with Cersei cooly sipping wine as Westeros freezes.
Game Of Thrones always delighted in subverting expectations, but wrapping up this long, complex story with a satisfying and surprising twist will be quite the challenge - George R.R. Martin will surely be taking notes. Half the fun is predicting the plot points of this series, just so one can be proved horribly wrong as a beloved fan-favorite meets their gory demise.
Here are my eight predictions for season 8 of Game Of Thrones.
1. Jaime will die a martyr
Jaime’s arc has been one of the strongest in the series, with the character starting his story as a violent, incestuous sociopath, before blossoming into a noble knight.
As Jaime seeks to fill his embarrassingly blank page in the White Book with a heroic deed or two, I have a strong suspicion that the man has become too good to survive. What better way to leave an indelible mark on history, other than to die a martyr?
If he lives, Tyrion will surely be tasked with writing the history of his sordid family, and his big brother might be the only member that he depicts flatteringly.
2. Cersei will (almost) drive humanity to extinction
“Everybody dies” is too bleak an ending for even this story, but I can’t help but suspect that Cersei’s stubbornness will have catastrophic consequences for the inhabitants of Westeros.
The White Walkers and the Long Night acts as a direct parallel to our modern-day calamity, climate change, and Cersei’s willingness to ignore and ridicule the problem is, unfortunately, far too accurate a reflection of our current leadership.
The Night King is too empty a villain to close this story on; it’s Cersei who will prove to be the real supervillain of this season, by turning her back on humanity.
3. Jon Snow won’t escape death
While it appears that Daenerys and Jon are all set to ride their dragons together, and eventually get married and have unhealthy, inbred babies, as per Targaryen tradition, surely their story can’t end so smoothly.
Jon Snow already escaped death once, in a plot twist that surprised even Melisandre. Why exactly did the Lord of Light (if it was even him), choose to resurrect the man? It seems that Jon’s life has a purpose, but that doesn’t mean he gets to settle down, happily ever after.
Jon might end up being the key to defeating the White Walkers, but he owes a debt to the Many-Faced God, and that guy doesn’t forgive, or forget.
4. Daenerys will survive everything
No matter what happens, I simply can’t imagine Daenerys dying. If the series was to single out one central protagonist, it would definitely be her; the character is integral to the plot, the one responsible for the return of dragons, and ironically, the melting of The Wall. In retrospect, this entire situation is all her fault.
She’s too important to die, but the story surely won’t allow her a fairytale ending; thus, the demise of her lover, Jon Snow, is all but inevitable.
5. Tormund and Brienne will be granted a happy ending
After the trailer revealed Tormund to be alive and well, it seems likely that his adorable romance with Brienne might just come to fruition. Why? Simply because the romance has been brewing for so long - there has to be a payoff.
The two characters are just inconsequential enough to survive, and provide the sweetness to whatever bittersweet ending the showrunners have planned.
6. Arya will provide a face-swap plot twist
I’m almost certain that at some point during season 8, somebody will do something insanely murderous and out of character, only to pull their own face off and reveal Arya.
Perhaps she’ll take a blade for a family member, or bake another flesh pie, but whatever it is, it’s going to be a red herring. What else is she going to do with her oddly specific superpower?
7. Sansa will betray the family, somehow
Sansa’s transformation into an ice-cold cynic might not have boded well for Littlefinger, but that doesn’t mean the character doesn’t still have the potential for a good betrayal.
The Stark family, what’s left of them anyway, is sure to receive one last loyalty test in the final season, and I have a suspicion that Sansa will fail. She’s seen the very worst side of Westeros, to the point where she might have absorbed a little bit of malice from all the terrible men in her life.
8. Bran won’t do anything
Bran already knows what’s going to happen. He’s lost his humanity during his transition into the Three-Eyed Raven, and has grown distant from the real world, viewing it as dispassionately as one views fiction.
Sure, he was nice enough to let his sisters know about Littlefinger’s nefarious plans, but for this season, I think he’s just going to sit it out, and let fate do its thing.
Those are my predictions for the final season, what are yours?
'>You know nothing, Kit Harington. (Photo by Willy Sanjuan/Invision/AP)
The full trailer for the final season of Game Of Thrones has been released, and the series looks to be ending in icy armageddon, with Cersei cooly sipping wine as Westeros freezes.
Game Of Thrones always delighted in subverting expectations, but wrapping up this long, complex story with a satisfying and surprising twist will be quite the challenge - George R.R. Martin will surely be taking notes. Half the fun is predicting the plot points of this series, just so one can be proved horribly wrong as a beloved fan-favorite meets their gory demise.
Here are my eight predictions for season 8 of Game Of Thrones.
1. Jaime will die a martyr
Jaime’s arc has been one of the strongest in the series, with the character starting his story as a violent, incestuous sociopath, before blossoming into a noble knight.
As Jaime seeks to fill his embarrassingly blank page in the White Book with a heroic deed or two, I have a strong suspicion that the man has become too good to survive. What better way to leave an indelible mark on history, other than to die a martyr?
If he lives, Tyrion will surely be tasked with writing the history of his sordid family, and his big brother might be the only member that he depicts flatteringly.
2. Cersei will (almost) drive humanity to extinction
“Everybody dies” is too bleak an ending for even this story, but I can’t help but suspect that Cersei’s stubbornness will have catastrophic consequences for the inhabitants of Westeros.
The White Walkers and the Long Night acts as a direct parallel to our modern-day calamity, climate change, and Cersei’s willingness to ignore and ridicule the problem is, unfortunately, far too accurate a reflection of our current leadership.
The Night King is too empty a villain to close this story on; it’s Cersei who will prove to be the real supervillain of this season, by turning her back on humanity.
3. Jon Snow won’t escape death
While it appears that Daenerys and Jon are all set to ride their dragons together, and eventually get married and have unhealthy, inbred babies, as per Targaryen tradition, surely their story can’t end so smoothly.
Jon Snow already escaped death once, in a plot twist that surprised even Melisandre. Why exactly did the Lord of Light (if it was even him), choose to resurrect the man? It seems that Jon’s life has a purpose, but that doesn’t mean he gets to settle down, happily ever after.
Jon might end up being the key to defeating the White Walkers, but he owes a debt to the Many-Faced God, and that guy doesn’t forgive, or forget.
4. Daenerys will survive everything
No matter what happens, I simply can’t imagine Daenerys dying. If the series was to single out one central protagonist, it would definitely be her; the character is integral to the plot, the one responsible for the return of dragons, and ironically, the melting of The Wall. In retrospect, this entire situation is all her fault.
She’s too important to die, but the story surely won’t allow her a fairytale ending; thus, the demise of her lover, Jon Snow, is all but inevitable.
5. Tormund and Brienne will be granted a happy ending
After the trailer revealed Tormund to be alive and well, it seems likely that his adorable romance with Brienne might just come to fruition. Why? Simply because the romance has been brewing for so long - there has to be a payoff.
The two characters are just inconsequential enough to survive, and provide the sweetness to whatever bittersweet ending the showrunners have planned.
6. Arya will provide a face-swap plot twist
I’m almost certain that at some point during season 8, somebody will do something insanely murderous and out of character, only to pull their own face off and reveal Arya.
Perhaps she’ll take a blade for a family member, or bake another flesh pie, but whatever it is, it’s going to be a red herring. What else is she going to do with her oddly specific superpower?
7. Sansa will betray the family, somehow
Sansa’s transformation into an ice-cold cynic might not have boded well for Littlefinger, but that doesn’t mean the character doesn’t still have the potential for a good betrayal.
The Stark family, what’s left of them anyway, is sure to receive one last loyalty test in the final season, and I have a suspicion that Sansa will fail. She’s seen the very worst side of Westeros, to the point where she might have absorbed a little bit of malice from all the terrible men in her life.
8. Bran won’t do anything
Bran already knows what’s going to happen. He’s lost his humanity during his transition into the Three-Eyed Raven, and has grown distant from the real world, viewing it as dispassionately as one views fiction.
Sure, he was nice enough to let his sisters know about Littlefinger’s nefarious plans, but for this season, I think he’s just going to sit it out, and let fate do its thing.
Those are my predictions for the final season, what are yours?
There can be no doubt that the Game of Thrones dragons are integral to the show’s climax now Game of Thrones season 8 is here. Many suspected that would be the case as far back as 1996, when George RR Martin’s now legendary A Song of Ice and Fire books debuted; yet few series prophets correctly foresaw Daenerys Targaryen’s flame-breathing descendants unleashing the ice as well as the fire. Pity poor, unknowing Viserion.
Yet how exactly did we get to this point, and what will become of the undead Vis and his very much alive siblings Rhaegal and Drogon as season 8 unfolds across six episodes spanning a staggering 432 minutes? That pair of key questions are among those answered by our Game Of Thrones dragons guide.
Below you’ll also discover the significance carried by each of the trio’s mysterious, mystical names, all of which have a Targaryen connection; what happened to the fire-breathing triple-threat’s ancestors long before the show’s story began; and how you can own Viserion, Rhaegal, and/or Drogon without having to wage battle against Dany. Because let’s face it, you’d have less-than-zero chance on that front.
This is everything you need to know about Game of Thrones’ scaliest, teethiest, pyromaniac band of brothers…
Game of Thrones theories | Game of Thrones ending | Watch Game of Thrones online | Game of Thrones characters | Game of Thrones merchandise | Game of Thrones facts
Who are the Game of Thrones dragons?
The Game of Thrones dragons are Drogon (black and red), Rhaegal (green and bronze), and Viserion (cream and gold).
Drogon is Daenerys’ personal mount. He’s named after Dany’s husband Khal Drogo, whose death in Game of Thrones season 1 ultimately triggered the Game of Thrones dragons’ birth.
The Future Of Game Of Thrones
Rhaegal takes his moniker from Rhaegar, Daenerys’s eldest brother who died before she was born and we were finally introduced to in a Game of Thrones season 7 flashback that confirmed Jon Snow is his son – and Dany’s nephew.
Viserion is named for Viserys, Dany’s other sibling who met his end at the hands of Drogo in one of Game of Thrones’ most satisfying deaths.
Game Of Thrones Future Books
When did the Game of Thrones dragons first appear in the show?
The Game of Thrones dragons first appeared at the climax of season 1, following the death of Daenerys’s husband Khal Drogo.
Earlier in the season, Dany was given three eggs by Illyrio Mopatis to commemorate her marriage to Drogo. She kept these eggs close by at all times, eventually placing them on Drogo’s funeral pyre following his death. Devoid of hope after losing her newborn and having to end Drogo’s life, Dany walked into the raging inferno – leaving Ser Jorah Mormont to assume her dead. Instead, she emerged onto the wastelands beyond Lhazar next morning with three baby dragons clinging to her.
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What happened to the other Game of Thrones dragons?
5,000 years before the show began, men of the Valyrian Freehold – Dany’s ancestors – used dragons to wage war across Essos, Westeros’ neighbouring continent. Yet they were almost entirely wiped out in a volcanic event known as the Doom of Valyria, which just one noble family – the Targaryens – survived.
Aegon the Conqueror is the last known Targaryen to have called upon dragons, and used the final three in existence to unify the Seven Kingdoms. In the ASOIAF books the last dragon is a small, sickly green female who gave birth to five eggs that never hatched. The show isn't quite that specific about its final dragons, but Tyrion tells a similar story about them being 'the size of cats' in Game of Thrones season 6.
Game of Thrones season 1 begins around a century later, with the creatures long extinct, and petrified dragon eggs the only thing left of the species. These are assumed to be decorative, but Dany senses that may not be that case upon receiving Illyrio’s gifts. Sure enough, the season 1 finale sees the species resurrected in spectacular fashion.
Where are the Game of Thrones dragons now?
Ahead of season 8, two are alive. One is dead… and yet more dangerous than ever.
A fiery highlight of season 7 saw Drogon, Rhaegal, and Viserion fly north of the wall to aid Jon Show in his titanic battle against the wights and White Walkers. It appeared successful until Viserion took a fatal blow to the neck, and sank beneath a frozen lake. Drogon and Rhaegal escaped with Dany and everyone else, and were last seen at the dragonpit parley where the houses of Westeros agreed to a truce. (Lol.)
Viserion, however, wasn’t left to rest in peace. The wights heaved him from the lake to be reanimated by the Night King, and the now blue-eyed wonder closed out the season by destroying Eastwatch-by-the-Sea’s castle and a huge portion of the Wall with icy blue fire – enabling the undead army to swarm into the Seven Kingdoms.
How will the Game of Thrones dragons affect season 8?
‘All men must die’ is a recurring Thrones theme, and don’t be surprised if season 8 extends the ‘men’ rule to ‘scaly creatures with Targaryen connections’. Viserion murdering a sibling would further establish the Night King’s thirst for evil, and be so very GRRM – our money is on Dany’s beloved Drogon getting ice-fired into oblivion.
But this is also a TV show about spectacle, and one of the biggest set pieces imaginable in season 8 is the toppling of an undead dragon. So expect Viserion to fall too, possibly at his own mother’s hand.
Naturally, countless fan theories surrounding their future also exist. One very plausible Reddit notion is Drogon killing Viserion, in a callback to Drogo ‘crowning’ Viserys in season 1.
How do I get my own Game of Thrones dragon?
A variety of essential dragon merch is available, although frustratingly HBO recently closed its UK and EU online stores – so dragon hunters in those territories must use third parties like Forbidden Planet or Amazon instead.
For the fan with plenty of Westerosi coin to spare, this 14” x 18” statue of Dany and Drogon has excellent reviews – though you’d expect it to, at an RRP of $349/£360. Slightly more affordable is a resin Viserion egg: the perfect mantelpiece tribute to the fallen sibling at $54/£40.
If Funko Pops are your jam, then consider the Night King/Icy Viserion Pop Rides figurine for around $25/£25, or plump for one of the individual releases at $15/£15. Here’s Rhaegal. The ultimate Game Of Thrones dragons grail for Funko collectors is a metallic three-pack released in 2015. Deleted long ago, you’re now looking at $125/£150 or more to get hold of that one…
Get ready for the final season with our ultimate Game of Thrones recap or watch the video before to get caught up in 16 minutes.