Who do you want to die in tomorrow's Game Of Thrones?



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AVQ & AWelcome to AVQ & A, where we are launching a discussion issue between staff and readers. Consider this as an invitation to compare notes on your interface with pop culture, to reveal your embarrassing tastes and experiences.

This week's question is related to the showdown that is of concern to everyone: Who do you want to die in the future? Game of thrones?


Danette Chavez

Call it an act of mercy, but I go with Theon Greyjoy, who essentially signed his own death warrant (assuming they have it in Westeros) when he betrayed the Starks. I admire Yara's rescue as much as I appreciate his response – a whim – and, of course, he helped Sansa get away from Ramsay. Despite an act of bravado gone astray here and there, Theon moved away from the deadly reel for several seasons, eager for the sweet oblivion of death and let everyone, except the North, forget what he did . I say we give it to him.


Myles McNutt

I've been reluctant to "Death Pools," because I do not want to get a clear idea of ​​the end of the game in the series and I'm disappointed, but in front of this question, I realized that I really wanted to see how they were doing. will kill Ghost. It sounds morbid, I know, but they have exhausted so many potential werewolves' deaths: you've had Lady's performance, Gray Wind's desecration, Summer's heroic sacrifice and Shaggydog's performative beheading off. screen. If Ghost is to die, and I certainly believe him, I want to see what kind of purpose the authors concocted to avoid feeling like a retreat from the fate of one of his siblings. If they do not get tired of coping with the logistics of its survival and do not kill it sooner, I really feel that they must have something particularly tragic, heroic or brutal about it. mind, and I'm going to focus my curiosity on it. avoid confronting the volume of lives hanging in the balance for the moment.


Caitlin PenzeyMoog

I know my heart will tear after the battle of Winterfell. There are too many characters that I love and that I've come to love – Ser Brienne, Samwell Tarly, The Hound, Arya – who are all embarking on a potentially low survival rate battle. But one thing I would like as to see happen is the death of the two remaining Daenerys dragons, Drogon and Rhaegal. I think of the future: if Daenerys survives the battle with the White Walkers, she will continue to challenge Cersei for the Iron Throne. I would like to see her do that without the benefit of her dragons. That would put Cersei and her on an equal footing. The dragons make Daenerys dreadful and frightening; without them, she would need only her cunning to progress in the game of thrones.


Katie Rife

If one of the Starks has to leave – and it's been a while since this series did not run in a good old starkicide, at least one of them will probably disappear – I guess we could end that. Bran Stark. He was away all season five, so I'm not as attached to him as I am to other Starks. And he spends most of his season in the Winterfell yard watching people. So it could be a relief for all the people who stay after the battle of not sitting there to forge weapons and carry all the grain. day. His brothers and sisters would miss him, of course. But, as sick as it may seem to say, there is an advantage to Bran's death: his bellicose powers. If Bran sends his consciousness to an animal just before the death of his human body, he can continue living inside that animal, which means that if Myles is right and Ghost dies at the Battle of Winterfell, Arya, Sansa and / or Jon may have a new animal Bran instead.


Sam Barsanti

From the top of my head, what about Gray worm? I think he's cool, I enjoyed his bow and I still love him when fictional characters to choose their way rather than just blindly kissing their destiny (What's up, Daenerys?), but he sealed his own destiny in this last episode. Everyone was looking for a way to spend what he thought was his last night alive, but Gray Worm and Missandei were one of the few couples to talk about what they planned to do. after the war to win Westeros. Have they never seen such a battle in pop culture? Making romantic plans for later is no different than putting a big target on his chest that says, "Hey White Walkers, kill me first." It seemed to me that to presume that one of them would die was the subject of their conversation (and an entire episode), but if they risk it anyway, they might as well pay the price for such apparent disregard for the tropes of narration.


William Hughes

Like someone whose love for Game of thrones Over the years, I will immerse myself in the heart of the purest and bitter schadenfreude with my choice: Daenerys Stormborn does not deserve Tyrion Lannister, the series hardly deserves Peter Dinklage, and so I say we watch them both try to fend for themselves without any of their individual strengths in the hole. Kill Tyrion – guys, you know these crypts are not safe, is not it? – would blow a hole in large parts of the dramatic heart of the series, leaving barely more than a group of amazed teens fumbling while trying to keep humanity alive, c & # 39; that is exactly the kind of chaos that I want. And hey, I know that I had said in a previous question-answer that Tyrion would make a perfect final litter of the Iron Throne, but what do we do then when did anyone at Westeros ever get it, or deserved, perfect domination? Meanwhile, convinced that the only appropriate end of the series is a victory for Team Night King, ultimately eliminating this planet full of miserable and disturbing people once and for all, eliminate one of the last Smart People standing can only move. the needle a little further.


Alex McLevy

It's been a long time since this show was really shocking with one of those terrible, unexpected deaths that happened at least once or twice a season. That's why I'd like him to do it one last time – and the only way to think that doing it is really a horrible and violent death Lyanna Mormont, for example, Tiny Mormont. Admittedly, the series has already proven that it was not above killing children in the most horrific way (RIP Shireen), but can you imagine the absolute courage it would take to murder no doubt the one of the only universally appreciated characters in the series? The screams of despair that would probably greet such a death would be matched only by the confession of gratitude for the fact that Game of thrones succeeded, one last time, to create a disturbing surprise. Of course, that would destroy my hopes of shooting in a spin-off from Tiny Mormont, but I really can not imagine a more surprising death in the next episode than the cool-blooded murder of Winterfell's tough guy.


Randall Colburn

I'm on the same wavelength as Alex, because all I want is that my jaw falls like she did during the red wedding or the purple wedding. Basically, I want another wedding in the capital, but since the imminent death of Gray Worm – half of the only healthy relationship in the series – this it will not happen, give me Samwell TarlyHead falling on a spear. Gilly too, and turn that baby into ice at the White Walker. I counted with the deaths of Davos and Tormund, Brienne and Arya, Jon and Dany, Jaime and Cersei. But although I can see George R.R. Martin having the stones to kill one of the sweetest and most innocent characters in Westeros, I just can not imagine David Benioff and D.B. Weiss doing it. I say it's high time to remember that in this world, good people can to die in a horrible way. Give me chaos. Give me futility. Give me the old Game of thrones.


Nick Wanserski

The death that I've always envisioned Jaime Lannister was that he would meet his sister face to face on the final battlefield and that the two men would stab themselves in a deadly embrace like Arthur and Mordred at the end of the month. Excalibur. They were the closest in life, so it makes sense that they are so close in death. It would be a perfectly worked death for these two incestuous glamorous rockers. But Game of thrones is not really about these opera moments. These are small cruelties, deadly injustice, mud and mud. It is therefore perfectly logical for him to die at Winterfell, so that Cersei, to whom his children have already been abducted, will also be without his brother and his love and that at the end of his reign, she will be truly alone . She has the throne, she has the iron fleet and the gold company (without elephants), but she has chased away all those she had loved in the arms of death. So, sorry, Jaime. But you have to die for another to feel even worse.

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