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There Is No Saving ‘Game Of Thrones’ Now

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Game of Thrones is ending, and based on how season 8 has gone, there is no redemption possible in the finale.
Game of Thrones
The series finale of Game of Thrones is nearly upon us, and most of the fanbase is no longer watching with hopeful anticipation, but a general sense of looming dread.
Game of Thrones has faltered at times the last few years, especially once it moved past Martin’s books, but in season 8 specifically, things have started to go downhill fast. I’d consider episode two of this season one of my favorites of the series, but I will agree with both critics and fans that “The Long Night,” “The Last of the Starks” and last week’s “The Bells” have taken a turn toward the terrible, and now with just one episode left, it’s hard to see any way out of this tailspin. Spoilers follow.
The main culprit, as has been discussed at length already, is the fact that this ending has been rushed. What seems like a bad decision (Daenerys burning King’s Landing) might have been better if it was given more time to manifest, or if we had more time to dissect the consequences. Everything has felt hurried, whether it be romances (Jon and Dany’s), villain arcs (the Night King evaporating with no further explanations about him) or long-running lore from the books (remember the Azor Ahai prophecy?). Instead we have gotten impressively filmed battles and…a series of baffling character decisions. That’s pretty much it.
As we head into the finale, the problem is that so much has gone wrong and we’ve arrived here so quickly that it’s hard to imagine anything happening tomorrow night that’s going to bring things back from the brink. It feels like we’ve already jumped off the cliff and there’s nowhere to go but the jagged rocks at the bottom.
Game of Thrones
With literally just 80 minutes left to go in the series, and Daenerys now being the “final boss” big bad of the series as of last week, there are so few things that can actually happen now. Dany can win, because literally no region left alive has the power to stand up to her army and dragon in open battle, or Dany can be assassinated, probably by Arya, the assassin, or by Jon, who may still have the ability to get close to her. Or the show pulls something wild out of its rear end like Bran warging into Drogon to defeat her, though given the extent of his participation in the Battle of Winterfell, that seems unlikely.
Game of Thrones was always going to be a hard series to end. That’s why George RR Martin is probably going to take twenty years to end it in the books, with two more still left to publish. And yet almost no one likes the direction things have gone this season. It’s not that fans want a happy ending and the series finale to be Tyrion officiating Jon and Dany’s wedding at the Weirwood with Sam and Sansa as best man and maid of honor. It’s that they want an ending that feels earned, that feels properly thought out given the time it needs to breathe.
In theory, with Daenerys going full Mad Queen, we should have an entirely new season dealing with the fallout of that. Dany suddenly being the villain with her still-strong army and invincible dragon going up against the rag-tag army of the north is a very interesting turn that could easily go for another ten episodes as Jon and company scramble to figure out how to deal with their ally-turned-enemy.

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