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BABY FOOD?! - Game of Thrones 2x2-2

THE VIDEO:

https://mega.nz/file/azB0zb7J#Rm_zJIyByhBZ-rHzVVeHMy5z5hiELgAFB8R91c99zdU

What exactly did Jon Snow just see? My fear is, it was the serving of baby food!

I WATCH GAME OF THRONES AT MAX: https://play.max.com/show/4f6b4985-2dc9-4ab6-ac79-d60f0860b0ac

BABY FOOD?! - Game of Thrones 2x2-2

Comments

I love the interactions between Gendry and Arya. It's cute. The Iron Islands are more like legally recognized pirates. Balon, Theon's father, is a bitter, petty old POS. Also, yeah Theon bad touching his sister was ick. What Cersei said to Tyrion was so fucking cold. I actually get emotional on his behalf, because what she said was pure cruelty. He didn't intentionally kill his own mother; he was a newborn infant. You can tell it stung hard too, because he didn't make any sort of smart reply, he was genuinely hurt. Stannis is not fond of pirates or law breakers, but he'll take what he can get, given that he does not have much of a standing army at the moment. "The side with the greater number wins 9/10" Actually inaccurate. Most times the side with the larger number loses because they become complacent and don't rely on strategy or tactics. Examples: Battle of Okehazima, Nobunaga had a force of I think 2,000 and his rival, Imagawa, had like 10,000. Nobunaga used a sudden rainfall to sneak into Imagawa's camp, killed most of his retainers and his soldiers even executed Imagawa himself. Imagawa's remaining retainers then joined Nobunaga's cause, which propelled him up to being from the weakest contender, to the strongest. In The Three Kingdoms era, when China was divided into multiple factions, Cao Cao was similarly being challenged by a rival and former friend, Yuan Shao at Guan Du. Yuan Shao was an arrogant nobleman, not a bad man per say, but arrogant. He had Cao Cao cornered and outnumbered, the disparity of forces is debatable and I do think ROTK exaggerates the events. Anyways, Cao Cao won a major Battle at Guan Du by sneaking some men over to burn Yuan Shao's army's supply camp, crippling their morale and Cao Cao just let his army slowly wear Yuan's down until he won. From there Yuan Shao lost most of his territory and I think it was 202 AD ended up dying. His sons fought among themselves and Cao Cao moped up what was left and then he controlled what was then northern China. Final example: Battle of Canae. Hannibal had around 50,000 men while Rome had almost 100,000 but he gave Rome it's worst defeat since its inception and even killed, I think two of the three or four main Roman commanders of the battle. Hannibal lost maybe a fraction of his army, but took out the bulk of The Romans. Rome itself went into full panic mode when they learned of the news and Hannibal's only fault was not knowing how to utilize a victory. Dood was a strategy prodigy, but he never capitalized on his wins. Regardless, Stannis' point is a falsehood.

DevilJynx

This whole story is based heavily off history. The civil war over who will become king is based off the War of the Roses and each of the 7 kingdoms is based off a historical country/culture. For example the North, which is divided between the Kingdom of the North and the wild North beyond the wall are Britain, even including Hadrian's Wall which separated the land controlled by Rome and the natives beyond that. Although I'd say it's closer to Scotland in terms of how they portray the people. And now we have the Iron Islands introduced, who are essentially the Vikings (granted, seaborn raiders covers a very large variety of peoples over a long period of time so not just the vikings). Although it is a fantasy setting so the author can tweak things here and there however he likes but it's fun to do comparisons between the book events and what inspired them.

J Johnson


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