She believes her destiny is to build a better world for everyone.
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Everywhere she goes, evil men die and we cheer her for it, and she grows more powerful and more sure she is good and right. The Dothraki khals she burned alive? They would have done worse to her. When she crucified hundreds of Meereenese nobles, who could argue? They were evil men. “When she murdered the slavers of Astapor, I’m sure no one but the slavers complained,” Tyrion tells Jon, the two of them speaking in the once and future Hand of the King’s makeshift prison cell. It’s a move stemming from Jon’s simmering doubts about Dany, which fully boiled over after “The Bells,” vocalized in conversation with Tyrion (Peter Dinklage).
#Game of thrones last hearth series#
Snow boasts the only kill of the series finale, assassinating Dany in the bitter cold throne room, mere feet away from the powerful seat she coveted so long. Tackling that last question first: wielding a shield meant wielding a dagger. What was the purpose of his Targaryen roots? Was he destined to become the King of Westeros? How would his reluctance to take on the Iron Throne hold in the light of Daenerys’ rampage against King’s Landing? If Jon’s true purpose was to guard the realms of men, then what would it mean for Game of Thrones‘ very own Captain Westeros to wield the shield? Now, Game of Thrones‘ watch has ended, and the questions that have flowed within the veins of the Jon Snow storyline finally have some answers. “I am the shield that guards the realms of men,” a thoughtful Jon responded, reflecting upon his own former oath as a man of the Night’s Watch. If Jon wasn’t going to be the man who saved the world, then what was the whole point of his death and resurrection?
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Jon, meanwhile, spent those wars facing down the very notion of mortality: birthed from a mosh pit of corpses in “Battle of the Bastards,” and pinned down by an undead dragon in “The Long Night.” At the time, both of those fights felt like futile and frustrating uses of Jon Snow, Game of Thrones‘ closest thing to the traditional fantasy hero archetype, what with his powerful sword and his secret claim to the Iron Throne - a claim that directly challenged the love of his life, Daenerys Targaryen (Emilia Clarke).
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Jon’s sisters Sansa and Arya (Maisie Williams) won the battles against Ramsay Bolton (Iwan Rheon) and the Night King (Vladimir Furdik), through hard-earned alliances and assassination skills, respectively. He survived them both, sure, but on both occasions, he deviated from the carefully laid plans and nearly died as a result. So what has happened to the Stark direwolves in the seven seasons and 66 episodes since they were introduced? When Season 8 premieres on April 14, the living Stark direwolves may prove pivotal to whether Westeros can repel the Night King and his army of the dead.In the end, Jon wasn’t much use in either of those specific conflicts. They were meant to have them."įrom the first episode of Game of Thrones, the six direwolves-Snow finds a sixth for himself, the snow-white runt of the litter-are tied to the fates of the Stark children and possibly the future of Westeros. Only Jon Snow (Kit Harington) sees the portent. He calls for a quick death and his ward, Theon Greyjoy (Alfie Allen), pulls out a dagger. Nearby, Lord Stark finds a dead direwolf, her cubs squirming at her side.
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Returning to Winterfell, the Starks find the mangled body of a stag. But rarely does fate align quite like it did on the day Lord Eddard Stark (Sean Bean) sentenced and execute a Night's Watch deserter, who warned him of the coming White Walker threat. Featured on the Stark coat of arms, the massive direwolves have long been associated with the people of the North in Westeros, even if the creatures were not known to roam south of the Wall when Game of Thrones begins.