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Game of thrones political map
Game of thrones political map






game of thrones political map

Why else would the showrunners remake the entire look of King's Landing just to insert the space for sprawling flatlands? Cersei might have cut down trees but she certainly didn't bulldoze those gigantic hills. That's bad news: The razed region around King's Landing likely means that even though Jon has the disadvantage, there is going to be a big battle outside the castle walls. Worryingly, in the episode five preview we actually see Tyrion, Jon, and Ser Davos assembled outside the walls, as if waiting to make a brute-force attack: Now tunneling or some other sneak-attack have been ruled out. Cersei is clearly using the same technique trees and brush would give the usurper armies an advantage of cover and stealth, which they frankly need - battered and tired after the Battle of Winterfell, Jon and Daenerys' troops are going to be at a disadvantage on an open field. The technique of clear-cutting is borrowed from the men of the Night's Watch, who kept a cleared strip of land between the Haunted Forest and the Wall as both a warning track and for protection, so wildlings couldn't sneak up on Castle Black. Let's start with the deforestation around the walls of King's Landing, because it's actually the most realistic part of the retconned castle. The hills and trees are gone - that means there's no chance of a sneak attack. This reveals several things about how the showdown between Jon, Daenerys, and Cersei might go.ġ. Those changes alone, though, would be just another case of harmless retconning if it weren't for the fact that Game of Thrones' showrunners transformed King's Landing right on the eve of battle. The hilly, lush coastal town of earlier seasons is no more, replaced by a city in a sprawling, arid flatland, where the harbor is no longer the defining geographical trait and the locations outside the walls might be more important than those within. This season's continued remodeling of King's Landing isn't the first instance of retroactive continuity in Game of Thrones, but it is quite drastic. Oh, silly me, of course you would put your army in that giant flat swath of land that had never made an appearance before the very end of last season. Uh, but hold up, how? Isn't King's Landing built on a small peninsula, and protected from the flank by hilly forests? Where is there room to assemble an army? Game of Thrones fans are still catching their breath after the Battle of Winterfell, but Jon Snow and Daenerys Targaryen are already assembling their armies outside the gates of King's Landing, ready for the final battle against Cersei to take the Iron Throne.








Game of thrones political map