Game Of Thrones: The Sopranos with swords or Dynasty in chainmail?

Y'all bugging. Tywnn would have let Tyrion die if didn't go to the wall.

He wouldn't even save him from the moon door people.

Just cause he doesn't have it out for Tyrion like Cersi, doesn't mean he gives a fuck about him. The whole trial was proof of that
Agreed. Tywin was the most fear person in the kingdom. If he would have said, "Tyrion is not going on trial, you'd best believe that there would be no trial." Tyrion was a black eye on the Lannister name as far as Tywin was concerned. He even told him that the only reason I didn't kill you at birth was because you were a Lannister. He said, "I put family before myself, when it came to you." Tywin was as Old School as it gets.
 
It was never consummated so it was null.
Tywinn would have spun his death on the front lines as a testimony to the courage of the Lannister Lion name


BTW since Tyrion's marriage to Sansa was never annulled aren't they still legally married ?
 
Exactly.
Tywin didn't need to wait 35 years to kill Tyrion.
If he wanted him dead he would have been dead!
Shit.

Agreed. Tywin was the most fear person in the kingdom. If he would have said, "Tyrion is not going on trial, you'd best believe that there would be no trial." Tyrion was a black eye on the Lannister name as far as Tywin was concerned. He even told him that the only reason I didn't kill you at birth was because you were a Lannister. He said, "I put family before myself, when it came to you." Tywin was as Old School as it gets.
 
Look Over the Letters and Pages Featured in ‘Stormborn’
July 25, 2017
By Making Game of Thrones Blog


From Tyrion’s letter to Jon to the book Sam used in his attempt to cure Jorah’s greyscale, each of these documents played a key role in the Season 7 episode, “Stormborn.”

Letters of Note

"Dear Khaleesi"
See what Jorah was writing to Daenerys when he thought he was living his last days.
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"The Seven Kingdoms Will Bleed"
Take a look at Tyrion's letter to Jon Snow inviting him to Dragonstone and unite against Cersei.

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“A Map I Found”
Read the message Sam sent detailing where he’s discovered dragonglass.

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Follow Instructions Carefully
Check out the book Sam read to learn how to try the tricky (and forbidden) surgery.

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http://www.makinggameofthrones.com/...r-the-letters-and-pages-featured-in-stormborn
 
The Real Geology Behind The Doom Of Valyria And How It Literally Tore Game Of Thrones' World Apart
Charles Pulliam-Moore
Aug 2, 2017, 4:30pm


There are certain mysterious phenomena in the world of Game of Thrones — like the reappearance of dragons, White Walkers, and the Children of the Forest — that the people of Westeros can neither quite explain nor agree upon if they're real. Others, though, like the Doom of Valyria, are widely accepted as historical fact.


Every man, woman and child within Game of Thrones' larger world knows about the cataclysmic event that obliterated the Valyrian peninsula and its capital city, instantly destroying most of the world's dragons along with a vast wealth of ancient knowledge — much of which concerned now-forgotten magic. People know that there were explosions from within the earth so powerful that the Valyrian peninsula was ripped to shreds, turning the single landmass into a collection of shattered islands that still smoulder some 400 years later.

But because modern science — geology in particular — isn't something that the maesters have quite sunk their teeth into yet, the specific cause of the Doom isn't exactly understood in the world of Game of Thrones. Some logically assume that the Doom had something to do with the nearby Fourteen Flames, a chain of volcanoes known for their occasional rumblings, while others reason that the Doom was caused by Valyrian magic backfiring.


Interpreted geological features surrounding ValyriaL Miles Traer.

In a July 27 blog post titled "What Caused the Doom of Valyria", geological data scientist Miles Traer dug into the contextual clues about the Doom scattered throughout A Song of Ice and Fire and Game of Thrones and compared them to real-world volcanic and tectonic events. The end result is a compelling — and fascinating — theory. The Doom, Traer explains, most definitely began with a volcanic eruption, but not the simultaneous explosion of all Fourteen Flames. Rather, the first major event of the Doom likely began relatively far away from the city of Valyria itself and nearer to the Narrow Sea.

Traer writes:

We also know that "a wall of water three hundred feet high had descended upon [the Isle of Cedars]" in the sea to the northeast of Valyria while the city of Volantis, to the northwest, was spared the same fate. These details suggest that the Doom began with a volcanic eruption near Slaver's Bay similar to the 1883 Krakatoa eruption on Earth.

Assuming that the Doom began with a Krakatoa-like eruption, Traer argues that not long after, people living as far away as Volantis would have heard explosions, with the sound growing more intense the closer they to came to Valyria. The sudden shaking of the earth caused by the first eruption likely destabilised the topsoil covering the nearest of the other 13 Flames, causing massive landslides that released those volcanoes' internal pressure, triggering more eruptions, starting the process over and kicking off chain reactions down the line.

Traer is also careful to point out that, along with all of the erupting volcanoes, tsunamis are often caused by tectonic events of this magnitude. Though it would take time to make its way back to shore, the tsunami caused by the Fourteen Flames activating one right after the other would be more than sufficient to massively flood the Valyrian peninsula.

It's in the breaking apart of the peninsula, something that many people throughout Westeros attribute to the Doom, that Traer's theories become something more than just fascinating. Even if the Fourteen Flames all went off simultaneously due to tectonic activity, that event in and of itself would not be enough to rip apart the entire peninsula. You'd need something on the order of thousands of volcanoes. Realistically, there's only one thing in existence capable of wreaking that kind of havoc on the face of a planet: A meteor.

The sheer size of the smoking sea and the vast deposits of dragonglass and gold known to have existed in Valyria all suggest a meteoric event that took place before the Doom — had the meteor hit during the Doom, there'd be no ruins. It's possible that knowledge of the peninsula's splintering was common before the Doom, and that the two catastrophic events were simply conflated with one another over the centuries following the Doom itself.

Traer's theories are a doozy to read through; he previously went into a similarly impressive geologic history of Westeros. But you don't have to be a geology buff to dig into either of these looks at Game of Thrones' fiery, tectonic history.
 
Also has a time stamp counter and some text over the screen saying "for internal viewing only" and "2011 - Star India PYT LTD", very similar to the Orange is the new Black leaks.
 
I can't believe I'm saying this but as much as I usually love leaks...I'd rather wait to watch when it airs on Sunday. The anticipation and chatter before and after are damn near an event itself:fuckyousay::lol::cheers:

ya I'm have to wait for y'all to watch it on sunday before I say anything if I watch it early
 
Yeah that was epic

:hellyea:To bad my lady and I don't have a grill b/c I'd make an event out of this Sunday's episode based off the responses.

I'd be outside :barbeque: and sipping something strong and grown by the time the show came on. Unfortunately, GOT is not a show to watch while eating.
 
I was hoping this had something to do w/ the recent hack and more eps would drop...but it might be an isolated incident...something about india's distributor losing the file or w/e...quality is pretty bad
 
He may be able to help right khalesi's military strategy, plus eventually there should be a good scene with him and his niece/cousin little lady Mormont. She will probably tell him off initially for disgracing the fam. Also, when he sees that Jon has the Mormont family sword, he will probably let khalesi know that his dad wouldn't have give it to him if he wasn't a top notch dude... Which might make Aunt Danaerys' wet for her nephew lol.


Why is Jorah still relevant? The writers must be keeping him around for something big
 
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