The Hound (Rory McCann) and Sandor Clegane's backstory is explored, while Arya says goodbye to a loved one. The episode also features a dramatic and emotional confrontation between Bran Stark (Isaac Hempstead Wright) and Meera Reed (Ellie Gall).
The season’s masterpiece. Cersei’s revenge is biblical. Wildfire blooms beneath the Great Sept of Baelor — Margaery, Loras, Mace, Kevan, Lancel, the High Sparrow, and hundreds of innocents incinerated in green flame. Tommen, seeing the smoke from his window, removes his crown and steps into the air. Cersei is crowned queen of ashes. Then, the North: Jon Snow is declared King in the North — the White Wolf, the resurrected son of Ned Stark. And in the south, Daenerys sails for Westeros with three dragons, an armada, and Tyrion as Hand. But the final shot belongs to Winterfell: Bran, watching a vision of the Tower of Joy, hears Lyanna Stark whisper: “His name is Aegon Targaryen.” Jon is not a bastard. He is the heir to the Iron Throne. The screen cuts to black as Dany’s fleet crosses the sea, and the Night King’s army marches toward the Wall — ice and fire racing toward collision. game of thrones 6th season episodes
Reunions and fire. Sansa reaches Castle Black. The moment she and Jon embrace — two lost wolves finding each other in the snow — feels like the first real warmth of the season. “We have to get Winterfell back,” she says. In Meereen, Daenerys returns from Vaes Dothrak on Drogon’s back — a goddess of flame and fury — burning the khals alive and seizing an army of 100,000. The episode ends with two queens rising: Dany, unburnt, and Sansa, no longer a pawn. The Hound (Rory McCann) and Sandor Clegane's backstory
The best battle television has ever filmed. Jon Snow stands alone on a field of corpses, sword in hand, as Ramsay’s cavalry charges — and the camera refuses to cut. The chaos is suffocating: arrows falling like rain, bodies piling into walls, a boy’s face crushed under hooves. Then — the horns of the Vale. Sansa, watching from a hill, has done what Jon couldn’t: played the game. Ramsay is devoured by his own hounds. And in Meereen, Daenerys flies Drogon into the Masters’ fleet — dragonfire turning ships to ash — while Tyrion negotiates surrender. Two victories. Two leaders. Two different kinds of justice. Cersei’s revenge is biblical