Where the fuck is this thing getting so much force to literally obliterate buildings with fire breath?

Where the fuck is this thing getting so much force to literally obliterate buildings with fire breath?

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unironically dragon power/magic
did you ever see Harrenhal?

just watch the show bro

can't remember exactly, but I feel like Harrenhall burned and melted or smth, here thigns just blew apart

It was pissed off and already larger than the other dragons

That's because it rains more at Harrenhal. King's Landing was really dry.

>your only gripe with GOT is the buildings being blown up when a dragon breathes fire

jesus christ

Lord Tywin told the story of how Harrenhall was melted by dragon fire, so Dany's dragon fire is not totally out of the blue.

The best explanation which could maintain story consistency is that the dragon can choose how forcefully to breath fire. This explains why some fire is just like a normal flame whereas other fire is hot enough to melt steel beams.

Dragonstone was upgraded to a castle tier 4.
That means the dragon units can be upgraded using 5 crystals 5 sulfurs and 5000gold.
this upgrade gives dragons 30+hp 4+speed 300%dodge skills an finaly, upgrade its fire breath to EXPLOSIVE BREATH!

never played heroes 3 of might and magic before?

It's fantasy magic nigga, turn ya brain off.

Fire is a gas emission. High presaure gas can pulverize rock.

7 years on nofap

>did you ever see Harrenhal?

Harrenhal melted. King's Landing was shattered. It doesn't have to be realistic but holy fuck it needs to be consistent.

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Where were you when they destroyed the long wall

hairsplitters

>Due to the extreme heat of dragonflame, the castle took on a charred, melted appearance.

charred/melted, not fucking exploded
I'm okay with all the houses and building exploding because of wildfire, but castle walls crumbling and exploding is just plain retarded


BRAVO D&D

Remember when Jon hid behind a single block of debris in Winterfell while the skele dragon was blasting it with fire, and Jon was completely untouched? You know, debris created from the same dragon literally blasting a giant hole in the wall with the very same flame that now leaves a single rock completely untouched.

that scene in the last episode where they're outside of the walls negotiating reminded me so much of HoMM3

Dany needs real dragons

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A common design for every action movies: you always ends it with explosion. Explosion must have both the fire and force. It's similar to fireworks but you need to show property damage.

If your superhero can shoot beams from his eyes the beam must be able to push things away. Melting isn't enough.

>wtf how does this fictional mythological creature do unrealistic thing?

The wildfire that the Mad King left around KL plus dragon fire = big fuckin explosions

>Watching GOT post season 4
>not turning your brain off

Why not make the dragons look like while you're at it? They coulda at least make them look like dragons not fucking wyverns

Literally unbelievable how much of a cheaply done piece of shit this whole shitshow is

>Can shatter buildings and walls with your endless amount of fire
>Can't do a few strafing runs to kill a bunch of highly flammable undead
what the fuck ever

Nah it's just whatever the writers need it to do. Like in this scene there's no consistency at all. They just don't give a fuck about anything but spectacle and effects.

What happened to all the fucking massive basllistas around the wall

There were like 50 of them and they took like two shots at the dragon?

This. You'd think
>oh he's gonna blow a huge fireball at them, then recharge for a moment
>it's actually an endless pillar of fire that goes through solid rock and would instantly vaporize 1000s of zombies

Mate... do you even FUS RO DAH?

Harrenhal only melted.

*crack* *siiiip*

Ahhhh, they don’t make castles like they used to son, Harrenhal was built by real men for men - none of this new age paper thin construction, quality over quantity son always remember that

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HAVE

>hurr durr rocks and bricks are flammable
bravo d&d

I think you might be able to explain this away by Harrenhal and King's Landing being built out different materials, differences in climate, etc. . At the end of the day I think the point is the same. Dragon fire is clearly magic, so it's not the same just a really big flamethrower, and it can clearly annihilate castles, which is how the Targaryens were able to take over Westeros in the first place.

I think the one thing this episode got right is portraying a dragon as some kind of medieval fantasy version of a WMD, just one of these can comfortably take out an entire army or a city. Now that clashes with the earlier shitty episode where Captain Jack took one of them down with his heat-seaking anti-aircraft missiles but still.

A dragon brought down the wall you fucking retard.

Melted the ice wall

it exploded

that was reverse ice undead frozen zombie dragon fire.
read the books.

the other 50-100 on ships only shot twice too.
have sex

froze the ice wall
see

Drogon gets +6000000 power bonus when the kween's afro interpreter gets beheaded. Please try to keep up with D&D's genius writing. They are more success than you. Also please stay within /got/ general. Thank you.

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Can u eve spell correctly? I bet you're 14, fuck off

one explanation could be that the fire melts the mortar holding stone together

the real explanation is that dnd are hacks and anyone defending this show has 60iq

Quit speaking like a nigger.

it's the biggest one for me
everything else is whatever, shit writing.
but this, and the scorpions on the boat last ep. absolutely embarrassing and hbo should be ashamed.

lol u mad mistke 2 u fukin fagit

Melt steel beams, are... are you suggesting dany did 911?
It all makes sense now.

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The show is just really inconsistent with showing the destructive properties of dragon fire. Harrenhal was a fortress built to withstand abuse and even it was melted and cracked by Balerion. A city is just gasoline to dragon fire.

They've shown the dragonfire to have explosive properties since at least Season 6.

Though even in Season 3 it was causing small explosions along the top of Astapor's wall

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How does she always have such a good grip on the Dragon? Just how

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She clenches her meat-curtains around one single, bulbous spike.

Did Daenerys consider what effect razing King’s Landing would have on her tax base?

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