Mostly good, I think.
As Danaerys unleashed Drogon against the fleet, I was thinking, “She really should use all 3 dragons”. And then the wall of the city fell out and the other 2 dragons appeared. Nicely done.
At Meereen, there seemed to be small band of Sons of the Harpy outside the gates, slaughtering a small band of people. I have no idea what that was all about. And then the Dothraki horde shows up and slaughters the Sons of the Harpy. Nice, but that whole bit seemed confused to me.
I have to say I’m not really a Jon Snow fan. He doesn’t listen to his sister, he lets his emotions get away with him. I don’t see him as a real leader, but of course everyone who meets him does. Just doesn’t ring true.
The Knights of the Vale seemed almost anti-climactic. When Sansa wrote a letter for raven delivery a few episodes ago, it seemed quite obvious whose aid she was requesting.
Also, I fail to see how anyone in the world would have ever shown loyalty to Ramsay. Rickon Stark is in Winterfell, and the North (very famous for remembering, you know) doesn’t offer support for him (or Sansa or Jon) but instead puts all their chips on crazy Ramsay with no family at all. Stupid and unrealistic.
Well the show too a detour from the book on Ramsay, so we don’t know how this was handled in the book.
I’m wondering what is the significance of that little Baratheon symbol being found by Davos.
And what did the red lady do to Jon?
I do watch G.O.T. but I haven’t seen tonight’s episode.
There was a flaw, I think, in the story line regarding one of the characters adventure north of the wall. I can’t put my finger on it right now, but it occurred in a much earlier episode.
Running out after Rickon after his sister said he’d get killed was a mistake, and he’s lucky more of his people didn’t run after him and lose even more
Or they were trying to plot how to rescue Rickon and hadn’t figured it out yet.