In 1980, George R.R. Martin wrote a children's novel called The Ice Dragon, which is of course the name of this series finale. It also says on the wiki that some publishers believe that the story might be set in the same universe as A Song of Ice & Fire.
During the funeral, the person who is Sentinel is holding an ironwood torch, while the other isn't. Your Sentinel gives you the torch to light the pyre.
I noticed that there are some sentences in the subtitles that don't have periods.
EDIT: also, when Gared is talking to Jon Snow the subtitles say "They killed my family...My father, my little sister." but he only says "They killed my family."
Not really.
The last one frome Episode 1 is 'Squire': Gared didn't die.
The last one from Episode 2 is 'Knight': No Knight dies (Damie… moren is not a knight)
Now, Royland ('Master at Arms') and Duncan ('Castellan') could potentially die, but it wouldn't make sense to:
* put this big a spoiler in the achievments.
* let every important character die at the end of the Episode.
* render the choice of Sentinel useless. Episode 6's last achievment is called 'Sentinel'. But if the achievments would stand for a person who dies, then both Sentinel options would be dead already (OK, maybe they elected a new one, but still).
Also, Grand Maester Pycelle doesn't die in Episode 5.
I think it's more likely that it kind of represents the 'status' of the player: Starting very low ('Squire', House Forrester down), going over to 'Knight' (House Glenmore deal, Whitehill is stupid enough to disobey Ramsay Snow, Tyrion deal), then over to '… [view original content]
At the start of episode 3, when Malcolm talks to Asher about putting faith in women he shouldn't, Asher has a choice of saying don't lecture me.
If he chooses this option, all he says is uncle, and it cuts off. Anyone else get this glitch?
Rodrik mentioned that Ludd tried to murder Asher for his affair with Gwyn so I imagine Whitehill soldiers tried to kill Asher and Asher killed them to escape.
Gwyn says that Highpoint's walls hold "a thousand years of Whitehill history" and if they've been bannermen to the Boltons for "five fooking centuries" does that mean that for five centuries, they were just being around?
In episode 3 or whichever one you run from Castle Black, when you're talking to Finn there's a spelling error in one of the options. "Parhaps" instead of "Perhaps"
Not a big deal, but when I found it I had to take a pic
In episode 3 or whichever one you run from Castle Black, when you're talking to Finn there's a spelling error in one of the options. "Parhaps" instead of "Perhaps"
Not a big deal, but when I found it I had to take a pic
In episode 5, when you first confront the Beast, sometimes, the dead soldier that Beast threw from the stairs, sometimes he's revived and sometimes he stays dead. So it's a glitch cuz he meant to stay dead.
In Episode One, Ludd Whitehill mentions that House Whitehill has been bannermen to House Bolton for five centuries. This is a incredibly short amount of time, meaning the Whitehills haven't always been bannermen to the Boltons.
I also expect Ludd's wife is a relative to the Manderlys.
In Episode One, Ludd Whitehill mentions that House Whitehill has been bannermen to House Bolton for five centuries. This is a incredibly sho… morert amount of time, meaning the Whitehills haven't always been bannermen to the Boltons.
I also expect Ludd's wife is a relative to the Manderlys.
In Episode One, Ludd Whitehill mentions that House Whitehill has been bannermen to House Bolton for five centuries. This is a incredibly sho… morert amount of time, meaning the Whitehills haven't always been bannermen to the Boltons.
I also expect Ludd's wife is a relative to the Manderlys.
Comments
"Look into my eyes Rodrik... tell me all your secrets"
u havin a gigle m7
1v1 me irl skrub
More like WhiteHILLED! badum tsst
Ah, of course. I knew there was something exceptionally sexy about that beard.
So, is there somenthing about Harys smilling killing Asher and not killing Rodrik or is just a glitch ?
Just a little fun fact about ironwood.
Winterfell's godswood has some ironwood trees amongst the oaks and sentinels.
/hint hint House Forrester/
In 1980, George R.R. Martin wrote a children's novel called The Ice Dragon, which is of course the name of this series finale. It also says on the wiki that some publishers believe that the story might be set in the same universe as A Song of Ice & Fire.
During the funeral, the person who is Sentinel is holding an ironwood torch, while the other isn't. Your Sentinel gives you the torch to light the pyre.
He does smile when killing Rodrik, but not right away
I meaned when he stabs Asher he is smilling, when Rodrik not
He does smile just not immediately.
Yeah I noticed this on my second playthrough, and you can't even talk about sparring the mans life...
If you suck
It's almost September and this bug still exists. I thought I was the only one
How disappointed were you guys when u found out that you could kill the castellan/master at arms in episode 5?
Now I'm defintely thinking Gared could become a sentinel at the end of the game
He looks like Legolas
At the start of episode 3, when Malcolm talks to Asher about putting faith in women he shouldn't, Asher has a choice of saying don't lecture me.
If he chooses this option, all he says is uncle, and it cuts off. Anyone else get this glitch?
I picked that. It might be intentional, to show how Asher's focus quickly goes from Malcolm to Beskha.
I hope, but GoT has a lot of these scenes
I never thought much of it, really.
claps in shia
Like I said, he does smile when he kills Rodrik. You can see him smiling as he pulls his blade out
In episode 5 asher says it been a long time since i killed any whitehills implying he killed someone in their house before
Rodrik mentioned that Ludd tried to murder Asher for his affair with Gwyn so I imagine Whitehill soldiers tried to kill Asher and Asher killed them to escape.
So... somebody posted that if you promised to kill the traitor to Talia and then if you spared him, she will call you coward.
You have any video?
Yeah and then the Boltons abandoned them anyway lol
Enjoy your backstabbing ally Ludd Whitehill
Here.
"You're a bigger coward than he is!"
Thank u
Welcome.
In episode 3 or whichever one you run from Castle Black, when you're talking to Finn there's a spelling error in one of the options. "Parhaps" instead of "Perhaps"
Not a big deal, but when I found it I had to take a pic
Velkome, to ze Grammar Nazi patrol.
Hearing your little sister say something like that to her elder brother is really harsh...
Even more so when it's the last thing we ever hear her say to him, at least in my game.
If Gared spares the soldier, he lives until the brother that stayed (Rodrik in my case) kill him in the final stand
In episode 5, when you first confront the Beast, sometimes, the dead soldier that Beast threw from the stairs, sometimes he's revived and sometimes he stays dead. So it's a glitch cuz he meant to stay dead.
In Episode One, Ludd Whitehill mentions that House Whitehill has been bannermen to House Bolton for five centuries. This is a incredibly short amount of time, meaning the Whitehills haven't always been bannermen to the Boltons.
I also expect Ludd's wife is a relative to the Manderlys.
What makes you think that second part? I always took Lady Whitehill as being from the Westerlands, which would explain why her kids are mostly blonde.
If Gared kills him, the brother also kills him in the last stand... its a reused model.
I also think that Lady Whitehill's a Manderly, solely based on the two houses being the few whom worship the Seven.
Really? I saw this in a wikia, because I always kill the guy