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Avenger
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Love is the death of duty. Robb chose love. Jon chose duty.
Both got shot by arrows.
Both got shot by arrows.
Love is the death of duty. Robb chose love. Jon chose duty.
Both got shot by arrows.
If this was Dungeons and Dragons, Jon could at least tell people he was shot by a Ranger, one of the best character classes.
Robb got shot by what were essentially Bards, the most mocked character class.![]()
LOLs.Would have been funny if someone had wondered why the music was so bad.
Find out all the bards are really crossbowmen who can barely play.
Would have been funny if someone had wondered why the music was so bad.
Find out all the bards are really crossbowmen who can barely play.
This isn't D&D, Pink. This is the story that an overweight, middle-aged man thought of while *********ing, eating a pork pie.... and playing D&D.
There's a difference. THERE'S A DIFFERENCE!!!![]()
This isn't D&D, Pink. This is the story that an overweight, middle-aged man thought of while *********ing, eating a pork pie.... and playing D&D.
There's a difference. THERE'S A DIFFERENCE!!!![]()
Thank you for searing that image into my head.![]()
It wasn't there already? Pffffft....![]()
Let me guess: in that mental image, George is still wearing that hat.
I am still waiting for Slash to appear in the background as a customer at a bar or brothel.
True. Littlefinger is a freaking creep.
Why have they added so much violence and gross imagery in this series from an already violent book. Was this necc.
Not really. They choose to hint at things that are implied in the book for maximum reaction like Theon's castration, but they also do that with revealing that Renly and Loras are explicitly gay or that Margaery is just as scheming as Olenna.
Simultaneously they do choose to cut things when they think Martin goes too far. You complain about the Red Wedding, but as I recall they showed neither Cat mutilating her face or her body being stripped naked and thrown into the river. Those both would have been far more graphic than what we got in the battle. In the same vein, they chose not to have Tyrion's nose totally cut off like in the book.
It is the give and take for adaptation.
As for Talisa's womb stabbing, the point you really seem to be harking back on, I would argue it was done as a character moment. In the books, Jeyne Westerling is just a dangling plot thread that is left hanging by Martin. Probably indefinitely. Beyond wrapping up that plot thread by killing her off, it maximizes the loss for Robb Stark (and thus we the audience) of not only knowing that he dies, but that his hope for the future with a Stark heir in Winterfell seemingly die. In short, it makes the scene sadder and maximizes the punch while also surprising book readers who felt cocky in knowing how it'd play out.
I actually think it was a wise addition to the show.
He gave up his right to the Throne. He was older than his brother, Aegon, but refused it and joined the Night's Watch so he couldn't be the Grand Maester of the King's council either.
Even Jaime, which I still can't believe. How they actually managed to make me feel bad for him is kind of amazing to me...because after the first episode of the series I considered him to be about as vile a character as can be.
ChrisBaleBatman said:I think the well crafted character arcs, and execution on getting people to care about these characters is why people get so up in arms.
Tyrion's nose was also kept from a practical standpoint I think. Imagine the extra detail work they would have to do in order to make it look like Dinklage had no nose? And how gruesome it would look every time we saw him?
Time will fly by for me I think
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