It’s wild to think it’s been 15 years since Game of Thrones hit our screens and completely changed what fantasy on TV could look like.
And yeah, there’s a lot to celebrate there.
But if I’m being honest, every time I think about the show now, my mind goes straight to how badly it fumbled the ending.


The backlash to Game of Thrones Season 8 was brutal at the time, and sure, some of that noise has quietened down over the years.
But the damage never really went away.
David Benioff and D. B. Weiss gave us one of the biggest shows of all time, but they also ran it into the ground because they didn’t want to stick around long enough to finish it properly.
And that’s the part that still doesn’t sit right with me.


HBO reportedly wanted more seasons. Honestly, that tracks. The story needed it.
Instead, we got two rushed seasons that burned through years of storytelling, tossed logic aside, and wrapped things up in a way that still feels… off.
Game of Thrones Delivered, But Will Always be Remembered for its Bad Ending
And I don’t think I’m alone in that.
When you’ve got cast members openly questioning the ending, you know something went wrong.


People who lived and breathed these characters struggling with how it all played out is a surefire way to solidify my point that the show was broken by its conclusion.
So where does HBO go from there?
Apparently, very carefully.
They scrapped a Naomi Watts-led prequel after filming a pilot, which, at the time, felt like a network second-guessing itself in real time.


And I understood it. How do you sell a new chapter when the last one left such a bad taste?
Then House of the Dragon came along, and for a minute, it felt like the franchise might actually recover.
Is There Potential for the Franchise to Recover?
House of the Dragon Season 1 was solid. At times, it felt like the closest thing to old-school Game of Thrones we’d had in years.
But then House of the Dragon Season 2 hit some bumps, episode counts got slashed, and suddenly George R. R. Martin is out here distancing himself from it.


I’m sorry, but that’s a red flag. It all starts to feel a little too familiar.
That same sense that things behind the scenes aren’t quite clicking the way they should, and that what we’re getting on screen is a compromise.
Fans can forgive a lot. We stuck with Game of Thrones through some messy middle seasons. But we don’t forget.
That’s why every new project in this universe feels like it’s carrying a bit of baggage.


With House of the Dragon Season 3 on the way, maybe things will turn around. Maybe this is where they steady the ship.
And yeah, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms looks promising.
But 15 years later, it’s hard not to feel like Game of Thrones should be remembered as the show that changed TV.
Instead, it’s just as much a cautionary tale about how not to end one. And that’s a hell of a legacy to be stuck with.


Over to you, Game of Thrones Fanatics. What’s your take on the ending as we reach this anniversary?
Do you believe there’s life in the franchise, or did the ending totally ruin things?
Still here? You’re our kind of people.
Drop a word in the comments or share this with a fellow fan — it’s the best way to support indie TV coverage that actually cares about the shows.
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