> Show Oberyn: let's make peace, Lannisters tend to lose peace. > Book Oberyn: let's make peace... until Young Griff come > Show Lysa: Petyr4life > Book Lysa: Petyr4life > Book Littlefinger: My masterplan involves the one kingdom untouch by the war and the North who is grateful from being freed of the Boltons > TV Littlefinger: My masterplan involves fucking around in Winterfell with no purpose.
It is rebellion. Feudalism works that way, you're obligated to defend your liege. Refusing is treason.
Hunter Miller
>I'm only pointing out how dumb the Lords of the Vale were. What do you mean? It all worked out perfectly for them. They're the only area that wasn't weakened by the war, and the only area that's adequately prepared for winter in terms of food supplies. They went from one of the weaker kingdoms to probably the strongest just by doing nothing. >It is rebellion. Feudalism works that way, you're obligated to defend your liege. Refusing is treason. Not if you retroactively pay lipservice to whoever wins. Especially if you're the only area with it's entire army intact.
Kevin Cooper
Can some explain to me how the most mountainous area of Westeros also has the most knights and considerable amounts of cavalry? Mountains and steep hills aren't the most suitable environment for horses, neither for riding nor for breeding them.
Lucas Carter
The mountains are filled with bandits and barbarians, there are only a few somewhat safe roads through them. All the civilized people live in the vale behind the mountains, thus the kingdom being called the Vale.
Yes but "the vale" is relatively tiny, hilly and full of rocky coast line, still not very good land for raising horses. I mean what about the reach or dorne, realistically they should have the largest amounts of horses and cavalry
Benjamin Collins
how do you go from this to getting shanked by a goblin in a dining hall?
Levi Cruz
Petyr conspired to keep them out of the war. In the book and before the show went to shit Petyr planned for the war to remove the starks from power so he could use the army of the vale to install himself in the north. Robin arryn and his regent mother were under Petyr's influence, and he skillfully used politics and threats to keep the majority of the lords against intervention.
Jayden Hill
>Yes but "the vale" is relatively tiny, hilly and full of rocky coast line, still not very good land for raising horses. If I remember correctly it's described as a fairly flat area that's insanely fertile for farming. >I mean what about the reach or dorne, realistically they should have the largest amounts of horses and cavalry I think the Reach does have the the most cavalry and knights, or at least did before the war began. They made up the bulk of Renly's army. Dorne on the other hand is almost entirely a desert.
Why does everyone in both the show and fanbase pretend like Tyrion is some kind of awesome negotiator when in reality he fails at pretty much every negotiation he ever attempts?
Davos could talk circles around him and has a better beard.