6 crucial things to remember before House Of The Dragon returns

It's been two years, people! Here's the refresher you need for season 2.

TV Features Borros Baratheon
6 crucial things to remember before House Of The Dragon returns
Clockwise from bottom left: Ewan Mitchell, Elliot Grihault, Emma D’Arcy, Olivia Cooke, Fabian Frankel, and Matt Smith in House Of The Dragon Photo: Ollie Upton/HBO

We’re almost back in Westeros. Twenty months after the season-one finale, House Of The Dragon returns on June 16 with eight new episodes. HBO’s Game Of Thrones spinoff isn’t perfect (here’s what we would change), but it strikes a chord with its epic world-building, fascinating characters, and, of course, way more dragons than the original ever had. Based on George R.R. Martin’s Fire & Blood novel, HOTD is set two centuries before GOT and depicts the brutal Targaryen dynasty clash that led to war called The Dance of the Dragons.

The show debuted in 2022 and slowly won over audiences, even those scarred from GOT’s final season, including this writer. With season two almost here, this is your refresher on the key storylines to remember so you’re not constantly running to Wikipedia while watching the series.

previous arrow1. The tragedy of Rhaenyra Targaryen and Alicent Hightower next arrow
1. The tragedy of Rhaenyra Targaryen and Alicent Hightower
Emily Carey and Milly Alcock in Photo Ollie Upton/HBO

The most vital takeaway from season one is how the friendship between Rhaenyra Targaryen (Milly Alcock/Emma D’Arcy) and Alicent Hightower (Emily Carey/Olivia Cooke) gradually crumbles to bits. At its core, is about the ramifications of their tragic rivalry. Yes, they hate each other, but what else to expect after they were pawns in the game of the men around them at a young age? They were manipulated, pitted against each other by circumstances, and forced to selfishly act in the interest of their children. It starts a war that’ll inevitably end in devastation, but their history is what forms the series’ emotional soul. The best friends grew up together as the kids of King Viserys (Paddy Considine) and his hand, Ser Otto (Rhys Ifans). To secure his family’s legacy, Otto weds his daughter to Viserys after his wife dies during childbirth. It creates an inevitable rift between her and Rhaenyra, further divided when Alicent gives birth to a son. Naturally, it impacts who’ll sit on the throne after Viserys. Will it be Rhaenyra, as he declared, or will Alicent fight to make her firstborn the next king? These questions are the basis of bloodshed and fights, from Alicent almost slicing her former BFF with a knife in front of the family to their sons battling it out in the open sky (more on that in a different slide).All bets are off for the war in season two even if the two women aren’t in the same place, but Rhaenyra and Alicent are still the beating heart. , showrunner Ryan J. Condal even said that during the editing process, they found a way to “connect those characters even if they’re literally islands apart. It adds dimensionality to this story.” As they say, a friend breakup hurts more than anything, right? It also allows D’Arcy and Cooke to deliver one hell of a performance.

16 Comments

  • garland137-av says:

    Aegon Targaryen is the John Smith of Westeros.

    • badkuchikopi-av says:

      I’m just glad they didn’t change one of them! Back in the early seasons of Game of Thrones they didn’t think their audience could wrap their minds around there being an Osha and an Asha. So they made up the name Yara for Theon’s sister.

      • apocalypseplease-av says:

        Which is baffling, because there was Bran and Bronn, and those two got WAY more screen time than Asha and Osha. 

        • badkuchikopi-av says:

          Hah, I never made that connection.In their defense, when plotting out the second season they probably figured Osha and Asha/Yara would end up having more screen time than Bronn. But damn what a performance Jerome Flynn gave, I understand why they gave him a larger role, even though it got a bit ridiculous in the end. 

  • dacostabr-av says:

    “There’s no one worse on HOTD than Ser Criston Cole”What’s wrong with you?

    • nickb361-av says:

      Nice try, Ser Criston, you absolute piece of shit

      • dacostabr-av says:

        Call me crazy, but I think stuff like rape is worse than a guy who snapped, killed someone, and then felt so ashamed that he tried to kill himself.But he called the main character a cunt, so obviously he’s the worst character in the show.

  • thegobhoblin-av says:
  • undeadcommenter-av says:

    I can’t wait to root for the side that contains of Joffrey 2.0, Bearded Machiavelli, Ser Incel McMurderface, Creepofinger, Anime Eyepatch Villain and Green Mean Girl.

    I guess the blond girl is alright?

    On the other hand the other side has niece-fucking wife murderer uncle, so that’s something

  • badkuchikopi-av says:

    She’s important to the story because in season two, Mysaria is back and her network of moles is crucial in the war to come.I’m fairly sure this is a show spoiler? Maybe not technically, my memory is fuzzy but I’m pretty sure her death was implied without showing a body at the end of last season. 

  • showdetective-av says:

    I hate to be this guy, but I read the initial sex between Rhaenyra and Cole as effectively involving coerced consent on Cole’s part (ie not consent at all), and his later attempt to marry her being his way of coping with having broken his vows of chastity (ie, if it was a grand romance than it was somewhat justifiable). I find it odd that it’s being portrayed as a ‘fun fling’ with him then being the spurned lover. My take was he turned on her because she effectively used him. Like, I thought this was what the show was going for, though I haven’t rewatched so maybe I’m wrong?

    • izodonia-av says:

      Plus, he’s a working class guy who got he was through talent and hard work, which still put him under the absolute control of an inbred dilettante.

    • egerz-av says:

      It’s been a while for me too, and I remember some debate about this point. I think this confusion was just the result of extremely poor characterization. Cole initially seems written as being coerced into a relationship, to the point where their first encounter feels a lot like a rape, which was interesting material because of the genders involved in this power imbalance. But then later on it’s unclear if Cole really was in love with Rhaenyra the whole time and she broke his heart, or if he was just deluding himself because he felt guilty about breaking his vows for her. So his entire character motivation is muddled.

  • dirtside-av says:

    I remember everything I need to remember about this show:all the characters are unsympathetic monstersthe visual palette of this show ranges from brown to a slightly grayer brown

  • benjil-av says:

    House of the Dragons is not perfect but it’s 100 times better than Rings of Power or a parody of a CW show made by half retarded teenagers like The Acolyte, but weirdly you have only praise for them and never proposed to improve them.

  • aej6ysr6kjd576ikedkxbnag-av says:

    A bit of a stretch to call Fire and Blood a novel. It’s an appendix of backstory for the books that have characters you can actually care about.

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