because the story would suck if they attacked early and everyone was already dead
bobinator said:
Then why attack Hardhome in force? If they'd have waited for the water to freeze to attack, they could have killed everyone there and increased their numbers even more instead of a lot of them escaping into the sea.
I think at the Fist of the First Men it was just dead men and dead horses.OnlyForNow said:
Have to say I disagree with this.
All those skeletons and what not weren't killed by WW/wights; they were just dead.
That's one reason, to me, that it's taking the army a while to get down there. The NK is going around raising the dead all over the north, to strengthen the army. Anything that is still partially put together is being brought back.
Literally I see him as a "lich", he is undead, can raise the dead, and is magic.
Someone remind me of what kind of creatures we saw and the Fist and at Hardhome plus what ever seen up to this point in the books; if anyone can remember...
DON'T post about what we might see if it hasn't already been brought up in the show or book (looking at you script and spoiler readers!!)
This and it is really that simple. The WW army has taken forever to move on the wall, the actual invasion, because EVERYTHING IN GOT TAKES FOREVER. Until now. It's really that simple. And no, it's not perfect but this is what you get when HBO has to take some 5000+ pages that still require (per GRRM) another 3000 unpublished pages to finish his story and try to do it essentially in 2.5 seasons (6, 7, 8). Remember, this was supposed to be a three book series, then five, then he blew it all out in AFFC and ADWD and essentially stopped writing.DannyDuberstein said:
because the story would suck if they attacked early and everyone was already dead
Maybe they did, but the custom changed when the Andals invaded.AstroAg17 said:
If men fought the WW before, how on earth did they not start a tradition of burning the dead after the first time?
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On Cercei: I like the idea she's killed in childbirth by a boy. I'm not sure how that's hands around a white neck though.
I've seen this theory and, while cool, I have trouble believing something this convoluted would make it into the show. I think we got all the NK backstory we're going to see last season.SpreadsheetAg said:
I know it's a bit out there, but the Bran theory:
About him being the night king. It basically says that Bran TER'd back in time, to affect something, while back in time he warged some dude (though in the scene they never show the guy standing, just his waist up, so it could be future Bran (older) back in time and somehow physically there?). Anyways, TER-Bran is back in the past and gets stuck there and tied to a tree, and converted into the Night King by the children.
1. The more I think about it, the more I think it COULD be possible? And it would be a huge twist.
2. We don't know the motive of the Night King other than (supposedly) there was a truce or a pact - what if the motive is that he is all knowing TER-Bran, and he's been waiting for TER-Bran to be born, and that's what kicks off his drive to go south beyond the wall. Because NK-Bran wants to stop his own creation from ever happening. So all this time he's been amassing this Army to go south of the wall, so that he can kill young-Bran and break the time-loop, setting an alternate reality.
There are some other sub plots to this, if it turns out to be true - the stories from Old Nan about the heroes of the past are not actually stories about heroes of the past. They are stories about what's happening now, that go taken into the past, so that they are self-fulfilling. e.g. The PTWP, literally, is_was Jon Snow and always has only been Jon Snow. The same for the Last Hero - could be young-Bran with his band searching for the Three-Eyed Raven and Children of the Forest, and only he (and Meera Reed) survived?
Check out this clip. I went back to look at the creation of the Night King. He and Bran are in the exact same position. After the COTF shove the Dragonglass into his chest, and the newly minted Night King's eyes turn blue, the screen switches to young-Bran who says, "It was you. You made the white walkers..." to which Leaf says "We were at war. We were being slaughtered. Our sacred trees cut down. We needed to defend ourselves.". Bran says, "From whom?" Leaf replies, "From you ...... From men." (Literally from you? Bran?)
Can't see Cersei taking a baby to term. I would see her having a miscarriage, dying before having the baby, or the whole thing just being a lie as far more likely. Her having a baby would conflict with one of the few prophecies they have made a significant effort in the show to demonstrate. I think the idea that she miscarries/lied and then goes even more crazy and then Jaime killing her is the most likely scenario.CoachRTM said:Quote:
On Cercei: I like the idea she's killed in childbirth by a boy. I'm not sure how that's hands around a white neck though.
Mother hugging a newborn baby right after childbirth crying uncontrollably as she dies?
Hands around the neck would be hugging, not choking.
No idea, just spitballing.
aggie93 said:CoachRTM said:
One dynamic that hasn't gotten much conversation is what is going to happen at Winterfell. I think the dynamic there is hardest to predict, I would be surprised if it is as simple as Arya seeing through LF and killing him and then making up with Sansa, though that sounds more like the Show than the Books as of late. Arya is honestly almost as creepy as Bran now imo, she doesn't even resemble her former self and I think she has a thirst for blood.
Probably just a lost tradition after hundreds of yearsAstroAg17 said:
If men fought the WW before, how on earth did they not start a tradition of burning the dead after the first time?
Heaven forbid they write towards their larger audience and not cater to the nitpicky whims of a small handful.FL_Ag1998 said:
Ehhh, Arya falling for a Littlefinger plot is kind of typical of the writing since they've no longer been able to draw from the books and had to think for themselves. Its painfully obvious where Martin's influence ended and where the tv writers have had to think for themselves, and they've proven they're not capable of the level of clever twists, intelligent dialogue, and attention to detail that he is. They're too worried about catering to internet jokes and what the show-only audience wants from their characters.
redline248 said:
For what it's worth, the "inside the episode" talked about Arya never having dealt with anyone as sly as Littlefinger before...and thus falls into his trap. Now, does that mean it's going to be a big ordeal that she accuses Sansa in front of everyone? Probably, bc that's standard tv writing. Which would be a shame.