

#Tyrion azor ahai crack#
It is said that her cry of anguish and ecstasy left a crack across the face of the moon, but her blood and her soul and her strength and her courage all went into the steel.

‘Nissa Nissa,’ he said to her, for that was her name, ‘bare your breast, and know that I love you best of all that is in this world.’ She did this thing, why I cannot say, and Azor Ahai thrust the smoking sword through her living heart. But if she wasn’t the promised hero, then who was? Was it Jon Snow after all? Or was the prophecy wrong? And was the "darkness", in fact, the madness of Daenerys?Ī hundred days and a hundred nights he labored on the third blade, and as it glowed white-hot in the sacred fires, he summoned his wife. If she was the promised hero, then the prophecy got a lot of other things wrong. Arya didn't fit any of the prophesied criteria for Azor Ahai: she had never woken dragons out of stone, unlike Daenerys. This was, many of the characters thought, how the Night King and his threat would be defeated.īut in episode three of season eight, the Night King was killed by the skilled assassin Arya Stark. It would be the saviour who will wield a burning sword called Lightbringer and make the “darkness flee” before them.

This was the hero destined to save the world from the cold darkness falling after a long summer. Whatever happened to Azor Ahai, the so-called Prince That Was Promised? Now that all the episodes have aired, we still haven't had a clear signal of who Azor Ahai was, or if the prophesised saviour even existed at all.Īccording to the ancient prophecy in Game of Thrones, a hero from the distant past named Azor Ahai would be be reborn “amid smoke and salt”, “when the red star bleeds and the darkness gathers”, and would “wake dragons out of stone”. This piece contains extensive spoilers for season eight of Game of Thrones
