The Queen Who Ever Was
The dragons dance, and men are like dust under their feet. And all our fine thoughts, all our endeavors are as nothing.
Ser Criston Cole
Major Plot Points: Rhaenyra confronts her husband and ex bff. The dragonseeds party on Dragonstone. Daemon and Aemond learn some unsettling facts about the future. Tyland Lannister enjoys a tropical vacation. The various armies of the Seven Kingdoms are finally on their way for real this time.
Observations from a Book Reader
- The people of Tyrosh, the Tyroshi, were known for dyeing their hair blue. The most famous Tyroshi to book/show fans is Daario Naharis, but Game of Thrones removed his iconic blue hair and forked beard. In this episode’s scenes with Tyland Lannister we finally see some weird blue hair. Further note, Lohar was a male in the book.
- Larys did help Aegon escape King’s Landing, but he did not go with him. Larys remained in the city hiding within its secret tunnels and passages. Aegon’s remaining 2 children (only 1 child left in the show) were also sent to different places for safety. Another difference is that Aegon only fled because Rhaenyra was on her way to take the city, not because of fear of his brother.
- Rhaena does eventually claim a dragon, but it is a hatchling from one of the eggs she brought to the Vale, not Sheepstealer.
- Cole and Gawyn never got in a confrontation, because Cole did not sleep with Alicent in the book. This scene felt out of place to me, how did Gawyn figure out his sister and Cole were having an affair? There was no set up to this, and it seems odd Gawyn would wait so long to bring this up. I wonder if this was a cut scene from an earlier episode that they added to the finale to give Cole a final scene before the next two year wait.
- Daemon’s vision of the future never occurred in the book. Some of the things he sees in this scene are odd to say the least. He sees a man with an antler helmet by a weirwood, a possible reference to the Green Men who were said to live in the weirwood grove on an island on the lake by Harrenhal, called the God’s Eye (more on this below). He also sees a man with a mark on his face, and the Three Eyed Raven. This would be Brynden “Bloodraven” Rivers, a descendant of Daemon’s who eventually becomes the Three Eyed Raven we remember from Game of Thrones. What is strange is that in Game of Thrones, Brynden Rivers did not have this iconic mark on his face when Bran met him north of the Wall. I am not sure if this is a retcon, or perhaps it is a teaser to connect this show to the upcoming A Knight of The Seven Kingdoms, which is coming out before season 3 and will definitely feature Bloodraven in it.
- Just as Rhaenyra never went to King’s Landing to see Alicent, Alicent never went to Dragonstone to see Rhaenyra. They were never friends growing up as their ages were too different, Alicent being much older than she is in the show. Alicent agreeing to sacrifice Aegon to end the war is a stark contrast to the Alicent we once saw attack Rhaenyra on behalf of her son Aemond losing an eye. It feels like the writers wanted to strongly re-establish the possible love between her and Rhaenyra.

Other Points to Notice
- The final addition to the tapestry in the opening credits, is a depiction of The Red Sowing. We see Vhagar being blocked off by Syrax and six other dragons. Vermax (Jace), Caraxes (Daemon), Moondancer (Baela), Seasmoke (Laenor), Vermithor (Hugh), and Silverwing (Ulf).
- When Larys is selling Aegon on his escape plan, he gives him a series of hypothetical names. The last one “The Realm’s Delight” is a name that Rhaenyra used to be called when she was a girl. This is not lost on Aegon as he smiles and seems to enjoy this name the most, since it is a direct mockery of his elder half sister.
- I have no idea why we got so many scenes of Rhaena looking for Sheepstealer. It can be summed up as: Rhaena leaves her caravan and finds the dragon she was looking for.
- When Alfred Broome is selling Daemon on the idea of claiming the throne for himself, you can audibly here the word “Traitor” spoken in the background, which causes Alfred to look around wondering if someone else was there. I only caught this with subtitles, but since he is by the weirwood tree when this happens, it can be assumed magic or prophecy is involved. Keep an eye on this Broome fella.
- Helaena is the first one to outwardly accuse Aemond of the treason he committed against his brother. She also predicts Aegon will become king again, and that Aemond will die in the God’s Eye. The God’s Eye is the name of the lake next to Harrenhal, it is called this because it is shaped like an eye and has an island in it’s center which from above looks like a pupil. This scene also implies Helaena can communicate via weirwood trees like Alys Rivers.
- All season Daemon has been having visions of his mistakes and the cost of his ambition to be king. But when he bows to Rhaenyra none of those seem to matter as it is only his vision of the future that makes him fully loyal. The only way to justify the time spent with Daemon in Harrenhal the past seven episodes is that maybe he needed to grow from the first visions before being open to seeing the future and believing the prophecy to be real.
- We see a few interesting things in the final montage. First, a blue dragon flying over the Hightower army which must be Daeron Targaryen and his dragon Tessarion, which would be the first time they have been on the show. We also see Otto Hightower in some sort of prison, presumably at the hands of the Beesbury army. They were mentioned last episode as attacking the Hightowers as revenge for the death of Viserys’ hand in season 1, Lyman Beesbury.


Stray Observations:
- The line about Aegon’s dick exploding like a sausage on a stick was incredible
- Ser Alfred Broome constantly mentions how anti-betrayal he is, and he of course immediately tries to betray Rhaenyra with Daemon.
- For some reason Simon Strong sneaking around eavesdropping was the funniest part of this episode to me.
- Did we really need to spend a quarter of the finale watching Tyland Lannister’s exploits in Essos? One scene really could have sufficed. Maybe this was to give Lohar some characterization but doing so in the finale is odd. Why not wait until next season?
- Jace has been ridiculously moody for too long.
- Alyn had a nice speech to Corlys. But I am not sure we are attached to him enough as a character for this emotional moment to really have affect.
- The final montage did a great job of changing the music to reflect the armies onscreen. First we get the Stark theme, then the Lannister theme, and finally Daenerys’ theme.
- Bold move to end a season with a finale that is practically just a trailer for the next Season.
RIP: All the peasants of Sharp Point.
Season Verdict: Overall I would rate this season a 7/10. There were many high points in character arcs, but also some strange deviations from the source material (why did they kill off Aegon’s dragon Sunfyre???) and really only 1 episode that had any action whatsoever. Last season ended with a promise for war but then this season began with Rhaenyra doing everything she could to not engage in any combat whatsoever. Daemon’s arc really dragged as well, even if the payoff made sense for his character. I could go into way more detail on all my thoughts, but I think my episode summaries made it clear what I did and did not agree with. See you all in 2026 for season 3, where the show-runner Ryan Condal has assured us the largest battle of the series will take place in the first few episodes.





















