- Ending very different in a lot of ways to what GRRM planned; Sansa as Queen in the North was correct but King Bran was a D&D attempt to come out of left field
- Cersei was meant to miscarry at the end of S7 and it was meant to drive her to paranoia
- Bronn storyline was a leftover from that outline, with Cersei sending him to kill Sansa, believing she poisoned her (and by extension Brienne too). That would have set up Jaime as Valonquar as he went south to kill her
- Dany was going to lose it with Cersei post battle, and only after she outright threatens to blow up KL with the rest of the wildfire
- Grey Worm (and Missendei?) were supposed to die in a battle that led up to Dany losing it, with both Jon and Tyrion also walking out on Dany BEFORE KL was razed to ash
- Dany would have commanded Drogon to melt the throne as a 'fu' to Jon and Westeros overall, and she was meant to nope out and fly back east to her true home
- Jon was meant to be King, with Jaime as his Hand (as penance for killing the last Queen), as he wanted someone who would be willing to kill him if he ever lost it and went too far
- Jaime was meant to marry Brienne, with some sort of political aspect involved
- HBO ordered more screentime for Kit, Emilia and Peter to give them a shot at the Emmys, but this came at the expensive of Lena and Nikolaj, whose storylines were poached (killing the Queen, and big death scene respectively)
'Game of Thrones' prequel, 'House of the Dragon,' coming to HBO
HBO announced Tuesday it has ordered a "Game of Thrones" prequel from George R.R. Martin and Ryan Condal based on Martin's "Fire & Blood" series.
The show is set 300 years before the events of "Game of Thrones" and tells the story of the House of Targaryen, according to HBO.
Daenerys Targaryen, played by Emilia Clarke, was a major character in the mothership series, which ended earlier this year.
Condal will partner with Miguel Sapochnik and share showrunner duties on the new series.
Sapochnik, who has an overall deal at HBO and directed several episodes of "Game of Thrones," will direct the pilot.
This series is different from the other prequel that had been in the works at HBO with Naomi Watts set to star. HBO reportedly passed on that project.
After how GoT ended, I'm not sure I'm ready to jump back into another one of these series.
This one will actually have plenty of completed story lines depending which way they want to go. They could go the Aegon's Conquest route, the Dance of the Dragons plot ( which would be my hope) or they can break it into chunks like a history piece which is kind of how Fire and Blood is set up. There's a lot more source material for Miguel to work with and since some of the plots are painted with broad strokes, fans of the books won't go to crazy over adding new plots because there are a lot of vague points. I am very excited for this regardless of how they choose to attack it.After how GoT ended, I'm not sure I'm ready to jump back into another one of these series.
Miguel was also the director for most of the big battle episodes. I trust him more than the previous showrunners.This one will actually have plenty of completed story lines depending which way they want to go. They could go the Aegon's Conquest route, the Dance of the Dragons plot ( which would be my hope) or they can break it into chunks like a history piece which is kind of how Fire and Blood is set up. There's a lot more source material for Miguel to work with and since some of the plots are painted with broad strokes, fans of the books won't go to crazy over adding new plots because there are a lot of vague points. I am very excited for this regardless of how they choose to attack it.
He and Weiss outline their decision to skip the character, for whom many fans clamored, citing: discussions with Martin about what he has planned for her in future novels (in A Feast for Crows, she is heavily involved in Jaime and Brienne’s storyline), an unwillingness to pack too many back-from-the-dead moments into the narrative (“Too many resurrections start to diminish the impact of characters dying,” Benioff points out) and a desire to let the Red Wedding stand as the gut-punch that it was.
Are they getting the prequels lined up?