This article contains spoilers from House of the Dragon Season 3.
Hugh Hammer may become one of House of the Dragon’s most tragic weapons against Rhaenyra Targaryen if he ever connects his daughter’s death to the blockade of King’s Landing. The show has carefully shaped Hammer as a weary, decent, and wounded man rather than a simple opportunist, which makes his future far more uneasy. Viewers are now debating whether Hammer already understands that Targaryen’s blockade helped create the hunger that crushed the smallfolk, or whether that truth could become the cruel spark that pushes him away from Team Black.
Quick Read:
- Hugh Hammer’s daughter died amid King’s Landing’s starvation crisis.
- Fans believe Rhaenyra’s blockade may have caused that hunger.
- Hammer may resent Rhaenyra if he learns the full truth.
Hugh Hammer’s grief may reshape his loyalty
Credit: HBO
The strongest part of Hammer’s House of the Dragon arc is that he does not feel like a man chasing power for vanity. He was introduced as a blacksmith trying to keep his family alive while nobles fought over crowns, armies, dragons, and inherited claims. That detail matters because his possible betrayal would feel cheap if it came only from greed.
Add WoT as a preferred source on Google.
Fans on Reddit are already reading his grief as the deeper wound. One user wrote, “I would guess he resents her for that, yeah. But unlike Ulf, he knows how to keep his thoughts to himself.” Another added, “He may not comprehend that…”, which captures the central uncertainty around Hammer’s knowledge.
The tragedy is not simple. One fan argued, “Didn’t she ultimately die because he wasn’t being paid for his work as a blacksmith? By the greens. And couldn’t take her to a dr, get medicine or food cause he had no money to pay for what little there was.” That reading does not erase Targaryen’s role, but it shows how the Dance of the Dragons destroys common people through several linked failures at once.
Another comment put it more bluntly: “And in a more immediate sense, food was more expensive because Rhaenyra blockaded the city, leading to famine. I have no idea how anyone could watch this show and still come away thinking that Rhaenyra is totally innocent.”
That is exactly why Hammer’s future feels so combustible. Targaryen may have a rightful claim, but rightful claims rarely feed starving children in King’s Landing.
Tumbleton could become the final fracture
Credits: HBO
Hammer’s wife being in Tumbleton has made fans deeply nervous about what the series may be preparing. One Reddit user wrote, “When he said his wife is in Tumbleton, I’m dreading what is to come,” while another predicted, “We’re gonna see a very ‘back to the wall’ turn for Hugh. He’s shown to be far too brave and level-headed to just turn on a dime for selfish reasons.”
That distinction is important. Hammer should not suddenly become cruel because the plot requires a shocking betrayal. The show has given him too much human weight for that. If he turns on Targaryen, the better version would be a man carrying grief, resentment, and fresh loss until loyalty becomes impossible.
Some fans also believe the smallfolk already know enough. One pointed out that Torrhen Manderly notes that Targaryen feeding the people might make them forget she was responsible for the bread becoming scarce in the first place. Another fan wrote, “Hugh seems smart enough to understand that his family’s hardship is the result of the war between the factions fighting for the crown.”
That may be the most convincing reading. Hammer may not need one grand revelation. He may already know, quietly and bitterly, that highborn ambition took his daughter from him. Tumbleton may simply give that anger somewhere to go. House of the Dragon has its best opportunity here with Hammer. If the show lets his betrayal grow from pain rather than convenience, he could become one of the most devastating figures in the Dance.
Rhaenyra Targaryen may gain dragons through the dragonseeds, but she may also be arming the very grief that turns against her. Do you think Hammer will blame Targaryen, the Greens, or the whole rotten game of crowns?
Also Read: Game of Thrones actor Pilou Asbæk (Euron Greyjoy) joins Apple TV’s biggest sci-fi franchise

















![[Book Review] The Blade Itself (The First Law Trilogy) by Joe Abercrombie](https://bendthekneegot.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/1516047103_maxresdefault-218x150.jpg)












