oxygen_temp wrote: » I'm honestly upset by that. Watched it this morning and have been walking around in silence for rest of the whole day. I know its only a show, but for f**ks sake, that ending. I honestly thought GR Martin wouldn't have done that. That was way more upsetting than Ned Stark losing his head, because Oberyn has had a decent amount of screen time, as many episodes as Ned but I am way more invested in Westeros now. When he kept shouting "Elia Martell, Princess of Dorne, you raped her. You murdered her, you murdered her children" increasingly aggressively I could see he was loosing his cool and it would cost him the fight and his life.
shrewdness wrote: » Something I was wondering - after Ramsey said to Theon they'd be going to a new home, and he was told he would be known as a Bolton now, was that Winterfell they were riding towards? I thought it looked similar in surroundings but it's a while since we've seen it.
Da Shins Kelly wrote: » ....Something has to happen that spares him. If both the Mountain and Oberyn are dead, is the trial by combat still valid? Is it just about who dies first?
Basil3 wrote: » I was thinking much the same when hypothesising with a mate about different scenarios. I think in the episode it was made pretty clear that Oberyn dead = Tyrion dead, regardless of the Mountain though.
road dog wrote: » I thought it was moat Cailin
Washington Irving wrote: » It doesn't matter whether the Mountain lives or dies. Oberyn died first so Tyrion's sentence is final.
Degag wrote: » When has that ever been stated?
Blay wrote: » That how a trial by combat works, even in real life. The first to die is the guilty party.
Optimalprimerib wrote: » Im trying to figure out what good is it for tywin sending that letter about jorah? She is still very strong without him. They really like the gruesome headshots this season dont they?
wprathead wrote: » It wasn't Tywin that sent the pardon it was King Robert - remember on his death bed he said to Ned that "he was wrong to go after Daenarys" and to undo it
Gadgie wrote: » But it was Tywin who arranged for the pardon to be sent to Ser Barristan.
Blay wrote: » Robert sent a pardon to Jorah back in S1 just before the assassin tried to kill Dany. That's how Jorah knew she was about to be killed, he binned that pardon. Tywin forged another one from 'Robert' and had it sent directly to Barristan who he knew would act on it.
Blay wrote: » Tywin forged another one from 'Robert' and had it sent directly to Barristan who he knew would act on it.