oh right....... last week Theon... uh, I mean, Wreak, lol..... told Locke that he never actually killed Brann and Rickon. so then he went to go find Jon Snow who might know where they are. then i suppose he volunteered to stay close to Jon and gain his trust?
anyway, good episode. way way way way better than lasts weeks.
I think I liked last week's more than this one tbh. I'd have to watch them both again, but I was way more invested in certain scenes last week than I was at any point in this one. I didn't think this one was anything special
I had trouble paying attention to this episode tbh. I barely picked up on the Wall scenes. I'm gonna try to make it a point to rewatch it before the next one.
d ( i n o s r o a ) r "She essentially tore apart the Hex Girls with a simple STAT" LUCK CREATOR | HEART HACKER | BUY GOLD BYE
For book ppl. I heard this episode differed quite a bit from the novels. More so than any episode before apparently?
Is this true + how so?
Pretty much everything North of the wall seems to be changed as of this moment. It might correct itself back onto the book course in the next episode or two. Much like Dany's Strong Belwas they wrote out a Bran and company character named Coldhands who kind of shepherded them through with little incident. There was none of this captured at Craster's Keep stuff.
The main thing seems to be that book readers are either really excited or really, really angry about the last scene with the Night's King reveal. They're treating it as a book spoiler. In the books up to now nothing like that last scene has ever been "seen." Assuming that White Walker at the end was indeed the Night's King - some HBO episode guide called him that so I suppose it's accurate enough.
It appears HBO has since edited that episode guide synopsis and replaced the specific name with just "a Walker." So I dunno what's going on with regards to all of that. The scene still threw readers for a huge loop, whether it was the Night's King or not.
There is something sort of wonderful about a relatively small thing for the books potentially getting spoiled for the book readers.
The main thing i enjoyed about last nights episode was the potential spoiler and Bran getting captured which wasnt in the book. I always enjoy the show but its much better when something happens that I wasn't expecting from the books.
For book ppl. I heard this episode differed quite a bit from the novels. More so than any episode before apparently?
Is this true + how so?
Pretty much everything North of the wall seems to be changed as of this moment. It might correct itself back onto the book course in the next episode or two. Much like Dany's Strong Belwas they wrote out a Bran and company character named Coldhands who kind of shepherded them through with little incident. There was none of this captured at Craster's Keep stuff.
The main thing seems to be that book readers are either really excited or really, really angry about the last scene with the Night's King reveal. They're treating it as a book spoiler. In the books up to now nothing like that last scene has ever been "seen." Assuming that White Walker at the end was indeed the Night's King - some HBO episode guide called him that so I suppose it's accurate enough.
I missed that Night King thing.... Thats a major spoiler if true. I assumed it was just another White Walker.
Also Jon Snows wolf wasn't captured in the books too, correct?
I think I liked last week's more than this one tbh. I'd have to watch them both again, but I was way more invested in certain scenes last week than I was at any point in this one. I didn't think this one was anything special
How could you not be invested in the Hodor abuse you monster
There is something sort of wonderful about a relatively small thing for the books potentially getting spoiled for the book readers.
My snotty book nerd friend who always spoils the non-readers hasn't seen last night's episode yet. We're all incredibly tempted to spoil him since we finally have the power to