Mjolnir Reborn
Blunt Instrument
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- Sep 11, 2018
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So? Ned Stark was the main character in Season 1. One, it was foreshadowed, would beat Jaime Lannister in a duel and get justice for Bran. Robb Stark was heavily foreshadowed to kill Joffrey (more so in the book where they're presented as rivals of about the same age, but still in the show as well). Arya also had Joffrey on her "list," but he was poisoned by none of the Starks and Tyrion got the blame while he was innocent, robbing Joffrey's death of feeling like a huge W. The show is predicated on not giving you the traditional expected fantasy ending.
I really cannot fathom how Jon Snow not having a sword fight with the Night King is a deal breaker for so many. I actually was thrilled it went with something way more unexpected (now killing the Night King being an instant KO for all white walkers is another matter, but we knew that was coming since Season 7).
Where is it foreshadowed that Robb would kill Joffrey? Having them as same age rivals during a few days certainly doesn't foreshadow something so specific. I don't see anything foreshadowing Ned beating Jaime either, especially not in the books where Jaime is described as a vastly superior fighter. Arya's list isn't foreshadowing either, it's just the character expressing her hate and desire and not any inevitable conclusion.
Red Wedding is foreshadowed in the books, which is done both in the House of the Undying and by Patchface on Dragonstone. The same thing with Jon being Rhaegar and Lyanna's son in a few different places. That's proper foreshadowing with specific events being hinted at in ways that are at least clear after the fact and often clear enough for there to be a chance of connecting the dots beforehand.
Azor Ahai is one of those strongly foreshadowing things that people figured what it meant, but had to speculate who it was as several characters fit the description. It's not some vague thing like that a character wants to get revenge on someone else, it's a clear prophecy and one of those that has been seen like a Chekov's Gun because it has tangible traces in what's happening. Just like the Valonqar prophecy that has everything fulfilled in the show, except the final piece.
I don't see it as strange that people are upset that all that build up was discarded. Martin hasn't played bait and switch with such things, he's written them cleverly enough for them not to be obvious so events are still exciting despite foreshadowing. That of course doesn't mean that everyone has to agree, but I certainly think it's easy to understand.