Been using Spotify since late February 2019, and in those years I’ve listened over 100 hours to GoT music. Not bad, huh?
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When Jaimie poisoned Olenna...
Jaimie did not drink the wine he poured for himself. Is it possible he suspected the wine was already poisoned seeing that Olenna knew he was coming?
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Jaimie did not drink the wine he poured for himself. Is it possible he suspected the wine was already poisoned seeing that Olenna knew he was coming?
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Red Wedding
This is my first time watching Game of Thrones and I’ve been loving every bit of it. The episodes play out very well and if you pay attention to detail, they also foreshadow a lot of events. So I’m finishing episode 9 of season 3 and I am so speechless. Robb was my favorite character outside of Ned and Arrya and this character death hurt lol. Walder Frey did them so dirty. For some reason, I really thought it was water under the bridge after Robb apologized for calling of his wedding smh. And just as Arrya and The hound pulled up to the wedding, Robb and Catelyn and Talisa get ambushed and killed smh. AND THEY STABBED TALISA IN THE STOMACH!! THE WOLF!! Bro this was so stressful.
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This is my first time watching Game of Thrones and I’ve been loving every bit of it. The episodes play out very well and if you pay attention to detail, they also foreshadow a lot of events. So I’m finishing episode 9 of season 3 and I am so speechless. Robb was my favorite character outside of Ned and Arrya and this character death hurt lol. Walder Frey did them so dirty. For some reason, I really thought it was water under the bridge after Robb apologized for calling of his wedding smh. And just as Arrya and The hound pulled up to the wedding, Robb and Catelyn and Talisa get ambushed and killed smh. AND THEY STABBED TALISA IN THE STOMACH!! THE WOLF!! Bro this was so stressful.
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Is Tyrion actually a strategic failure? Let’s look at the track record.
I just finished the series, and I’m starting to think we’ve been sold a lie about Tyrion Lannister. We’re constantly told he’s the "intellect" of the family, but if you look at his actual results in leadership and war, his "genius" looks more like a series of lucky breaks and catastrophic miscalculations.
Here is my assessment of why Tyrion might be the most overrated strategist in Westeros:
The Myth of Blackwater Bay:
Everyone praises the wildfire trick, but let’s be real—Stannis had him beat. Tyrion was literally face-down in the dirt and his defense was collapsing. If Tywin and the Tyrells hadn't arrived at the last possible second for a "deus ex machina" save, Tyrion’s head would have been on a spike and the city would have fallen. He didn't win that battle; his father did.
The Meereen Diplomacy Blunder: When Daenerys left him in charge, he tried to "negotiate" with the Masters. He ignored the warnings of Grey Worm and Missandei (who actually knew the culture) and gave the slavers time to rebuild. It directly led to the firebombing of the city. He got played by men he thought he was smarter than.
The Casterly Rock Trap:
In Season 7, his big masterstroke was taking the Lannister ancestral home. He sent the Unsullied there, only to realize too late that Jaime had emptied the castle and moved the gold. He sacrificed an entire fleet and left his best soldiers stranded for a "win" that didn't matter.
The "Wight Hunt" Idea:
Was this the worst plan in history? Suggesting they go north of the Wall to catch a wight to show Cersei—a woman he knows better than anyone would never care. It cost Daenerys a dragon and gave the Night King the one thing he needed to break the Wall.
My Question to the sub:
Am I missing something, or is Tyrion’s reputation just based on the fact that he speaks eloquently? If you remove his witty one-liners, his actual success rate as a Hand or a General is incredibly low. Was he ever a genius, or did he just benefit from being around people who were even more chaotic than him?
Change my mind.
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I just finished the series, and I’m starting to think we’ve been sold a lie about Tyrion Lannister. We’re constantly told he’s the "intellect" of the family, but if you look at his actual results in leadership and war, his "genius" looks more like a series of lucky breaks and catastrophic miscalculations.
Here is my assessment of why Tyrion might be the most overrated strategist in Westeros:
The Myth of Blackwater Bay:
Everyone praises the wildfire trick, but let’s be real—Stannis had him beat. Tyrion was literally face-down in the dirt and his defense was collapsing. If Tywin and the Tyrells hadn't arrived at the last possible second for a "deus ex machina" save, Tyrion’s head would have been on a spike and the city would have fallen. He didn't win that battle; his father did.
The Meereen Diplomacy Blunder: When Daenerys left him in charge, he tried to "negotiate" with the Masters. He ignored the warnings of Grey Worm and Missandei (who actually knew the culture) and gave the slavers time to rebuild. It directly led to the firebombing of the city. He got played by men he thought he was smarter than.
The Casterly Rock Trap:
In Season 7, his big masterstroke was taking the Lannister ancestral home. He sent the Unsullied there, only to realize too late that Jaime had emptied the castle and moved the gold. He sacrificed an entire fleet and left his best soldiers stranded for a "win" that didn't matter.
The "Wight Hunt" Idea:
Was this the worst plan in history? Suggesting they go north of the Wall to catch a wight to show Cersei—a woman he knows better than anyone would never care. It cost Daenerys a dragon and gave the Night King the one thing he needed to break the Wall.
My Question to the sub:
Am I missing something, or is Tyrion’s reputation just based on the fact that he speaks eloquently? If you remove his witty one-liners, his actual success rate as a Hand or a General is incredibly low. Was he ever a genius, or did he just benefit from being around people who were even more chaotic than him?
Change my mind.
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