Part I of our new series: Who Will Survive? In this episode, we talk about Jaime’s odds of survival. Does he kill Cersei? How does he handle the Mountain? If he survives, what role will he play in Westeros?

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5 COMMENTS

  1. Sorry for the long comment.

    Most people seem so sure Jaime will kill Cersei. What if I point out that the show has reminded us every season by song that Tywin ended an entire house by drowning them? Is it a coincidence that Cersei's only real ally any more is the iron born, otherwise known as the drowned men? There are a lot of people that hate her personally, but if there are gods in the world, what would justice be to them? If Jaime were to survive, could he do it with his family name or would he have to sacrifice it?

    I'm pretty sure her new husband to be, the younger bro of the drowned men will kill her. But I could be wrong.

    Getting past the mountain, that would be interesting. Plus, exactly how true to the books will the golden company be? What would the sell sword company founded by the Blackfire rebellion, led by the gold plated skull of bittersteel, actually do if they set foot in kings landing and found they were the only force of note in the city? Littlefinger was so worried about Verys gash, but does he have one? Has the true leader and blackfire heir been ruling the seven kingdoms with whispers for years, has no gash, and Cersei just paid to bring him his army?

    The hound is an interesting story. The only person to beat him in battle is the one person in the world he may actually believe is a redeemable person. He refused to be knighted because all the knights he's seen are horrible people. Ned Stark was a good and honourable person, but he let it blind him to dangers, so from the way he saw it at the time he seemed weak. But he had his ass handed to him by some one who actually had the qualities he thought were impossible to find in some one. The hound may have had his faith in humanity restored. Thoros believed the world was nothing be murderous clergy burning innocents, drinking, whoring, unjust knights serving unjust kings. Sent on a real task to deal with some one dishonorable, set to the task of protecting people that needed it, he lost some one he considered honourable and a friend. He found his faith. Melisandra who would seem from all appearances to be many times over more devout, and has spent years in dutiful service to her god, can't believe anyone could be granted the power to bring back the dead. Has the church lost its way and been corrupted? But back to the hound. The hound obviously is the character in a story that has been limited by a horrible pain. Is he intended to find his true strength in his weakness? It seems to be heavily foreshadowed in the hound's sudden connection to fire. Will the comment the writer want to subvert the trope that a hero finds a way to get past his fears and than win a redemptive fight against the person that caused them? In a world written by some one as cynical as our writer, how does the hound do this? Can he? Does he need to? Does the world need him to overcome the fear and defeat his brother? Even bad people can do and say things that aren't. Was Tywin right when he asked Jaime why Ned was alive? Does the defeat of a dishonorable person require some ideal of an honourable action? If it had been Ned that refused to finish off Jaime because it wasn't clean, would it be honourable to let his dishonorable foe live? Of course we want to know if the hound could hand his brother his ass in a one on one fight. But would it mean less if the hound through a vile of dragonfire at him and just watched as his brother left the world?

    And to validate that long seemingly random message. Is the story bringing together a kingsguard made up of truly honourable knights for the first time in forever?. Jaime, Sandor, Breanne, Jorah, and who else?

  2. You guys do my fav GoT vids on YT right now. Your conversations mimic the ones I have with my friends when we are talking about our predictions/theories on what will happen. Whoever is the Jaime & Brienne shipper on your panel is my soulmate because I feel like J & B should make it to the end & have tall (not giant) blonde babies and be happy (well as happy as they could be living in a place like Westros. lol )

    However, truth be told, I feel fairly certain that Jaime will die in arms of the woman he loves ( as Jaime himself foreshadowed long ago) and that will be Brienne. I think Jaime will sacrifice himself saving Brienne (from Cersei) who I feel like will try to kill Brienne. And either he will kill Cersei in the process of saving Brienne or Brienne then will kill Cersei for killing Jaime. Either way, Brienne needs to survive to the end of the show. If she doesn't, I'm going to be severely traumatized. She deserves to live more than anyone else on that fucking show. So D&D will probably kill her in epi 1 of Season 8 because they are assholes like that. lol

    Ok, keep up the good work guys. I share your vids on Reddit! And please, do more of these kinds of vids on the characters on your channel. ✌❤

  3. The Nightking will head straight for king'd landing with his dragon, turn cersei and the rest of the city into ice zombies, then march his second army north to the battle of Winterfell, where Jaime will rekill Cersei, and winter will fall, then Bran will go back in time to name the city "Winterfell" and build the wall, just to put Trump to shame. Jaime will then become the hand of the king, the now grown up little Sam, who has married the daughter of Jon and Danny. The end.

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