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By Michael Rougeau | @RogueCheddar and Phil Hornshaw | @philhornshaw on

Winter Has Come

Season 8, the conclusion of Game of Thrones, is almost here. There's a little over a month left to go until Season 8's release date on April 14, and we're learning more and more about the show's long awaited final season. Of course, most of it is simply the tiny tidbits HBO wants us to know, but desperate as we are to learn how this conclusion will play out, we're not complaining.

Over the last month or so, we've finally caught some glimpses at GoT Season 8 in motion--first in a Season 8 teaser trailer and then in a second teaser HBO released on Oscars day in February. One thing is for sure at this point: Nothing about Season 8 seems predictable right now. The show is best known for brutally killing off characters, even the ones fans love, and its final chapter is likely to elevate the feeling that nobody is safe to all-new levels. It's also a time of war, with the rivalries that have marked all seven seasons finally coming to a head. Oh, and the White Walkers have shown up with their army of the dead, and they're trying to wipe out all life in Westeros. So there's a lot going on.

HBO is notorious for its attempts to stop secrets from leaking out onto the internet, although it's not always successful (remember when one whole episode got out early in Season 7?). Things have been buttoned up pretty tight during production of Game of Thrones' final season, but we do know a few details about what to expect. And there are plenty of theories from fans who've pored over every frame of the show and every word of A Song of Ice and Fire, the book series by George R. R. Martin on which the show is based.

Here's everything we know for sure about Game of Thrones Season 8, including the date of when it'll hit HBO, and what dangling plot threads remain to be resolved.

We Know Game of Thrones Season 8's Release Date

Thanks to a teaser trailer for Season 8 that dropped in November, we know for sure that Game of Thrones is coming back in April 2019. Beyond that, a video released alongside the True Detective Season 3 premiere teased things further and confirmed a release date: April 14.

Game of Thrones Season 8 is one of the series that you can download torrent or magnet on ETRG website. This Drama tv show was created by David Benioff and it was published in 2019 with duration of 57min.

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We've Gotten A Very 'Crypt'-ic Teaser

In the lone teaser trailer released so far for Season 8, Jon, Arya, and Sansa walk slowly through the crypts beneath Winterfell while extremely ominous music and voiceovers play. There's not much to glean from it as far as what's actually going to happen in Season 8--think of it more as a tonal preview than a narrative one. But you might want to check out our full trailer breakdown anyway, since it's oh so fun to speculate about Game of Thrones.

And Another One That Doesn't Bode Well For The Living

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HBO's teaser dubbed 'Aftermath' does not suggest Season 8 will have a happy ending. It wanders through a frozen Winterfell, focusing on key objects that are all closely related to main characters--like Jon Snow's sword Longclaw, the chains used on Daenerys' dragons, Jamie Lannister's golden hand, and Bran Stark's wheechair. They're all left behind, and the teaser ends with a frosty figure standing at the gates of the castle as wind and snow blast around them; very likely, the Night King.

Does that mean that the White Walkers are going to win the war and bring the Long Night to all of Westeros. It seems more likely that this teaser is more about evoking feelings of doom and dread than being too literal a look at the future. Then again, what little footage we've seen of Season 8 isn't exactly super upbeat, so anything's possible. Watch the teaser for yourself right here.

But That's Not The Only New Footage We've Seen

The teaser trailer featuring Winterfell's crypts isn't the only new footage we've seen from Season 8. On Oscars day in February, HBO released a new teaser video showcasing many of their upcoming shows, from Watchmen to Barry Season 2. Nestled in there was a never before glimpsed clip from GoT Season 8 that showed the Dany's Unsullied army marching at what looks like Winterfell, and Arya gazing incredulously up at a dragon flying through the sky above the Stark keep. Knowing what we know about Season 8, this is probably in the first episode.

Season 8 Will Have Fewer Episodes Than Other Seasons

Season 8 is shorter than past seasons in terms of its number of episodes--there will only be six in total. However, it will be a longer season in terms of its overall length. Each of the episodes will be longer than the usual runtime of approximately an hour.

We Know The Full Run Times Of Each Episode

In March, HBO released the exact running time for each Season 8 episode:

  • Episode 1: 54 mins (April 14)
  • Episode 2: 58 mins (April 21)
  • Episode 3: 82 mins (April 28)
  • Episode 4: 78 mins (May 5)
  • Episode 5: 80 mins (May 12)
  • Episode 6: 80 mins (May 19)

That's just over seven hours total. We're expecting them to cram a lot into each ep.

Even George R.R. Martin Doesn't Know What's Going To Happen

You'd think the author of the entire series would know what's going to happen in the end, but apparently not.

'I haven't read the [final-season] scripts and haven’t been able to visit the set because I've been working on [The Winds of Winter],' Martin told Entertainment Weekly. 'I know some of the things. But there's a lot of minor-character [arcs] they'll be coming up with on their own. And, of course, they passed me several years ago. There may be important discrepancies.'

Maybe that general confusion is what's taking him so long to write the last two books?

HBO Is Having A Lot Of Fun With The Question Of Who Will Sit The Throne In The End

The question of whose butt will be warming (or cooling!) the Iron Throne by the series' conclusion is one that's driven fans mad for decades, since the first Game of Thrones book was published in the '90s. With Season 8 finally drawing the story to a close, that question is forefront in viewers' minds--a fact of which HBO is keenly aware. They made that terribly evident with the teaser images the network released at the end of February, which featured nearly every remaining living character in the series taking their turn on the sharp, stabby throne. Follow the link to view them all.

The Remaining Living Characters Are Looking Fly

In character photos from set released in early February, we caught a glimpse at what some of the remaining characters are up to as Season 8 gets underway. Most of them are looking fly, including Arya's 'I could kill you so easily I wouldn't even break a sweat' look and Jon and Dany's apparent comfort around one another (they are lovers now, after all, and presumably haven't learned yet here that they're related). Click the link to view them all.

Some Of The Show's Best Directors Are Returning

We know showrunners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, as well as returning directors David Nutter and Miguel Sapochnik, are splitting the duties of directing the final six episodes. That's very good news. Weiss and Benioff have obviously been instrumental to the vision of Game of Thrones since the beginning, but Nutter and Sapochnik have been responsible for helping to bring some of the show's best moments to life. Sapochnik helmed episodes like Battle of the Bastards and Hardhome, and he's apparently in charge of a huge battle scene in Season 8. Nutter has directed some intense episodes as well, including The Rains of Castamere--which contained the Red Wedding. He's taking on three of the final six episodes.

Season 8 Starts The Way Season 1 Did

Back in November, Entertainment Weekly had a big cover story about Season 8. It wasn't too heavy on specific plot details, but it did reveal one in particular: Expect the opening of Season 8 to feel a lot like the opening of Season 1. Daenerys Targaryen (Emilia Clarke) is marching to Winterfell with her forces, where she and Jon Snow (Kit Harington) mean to put up a defense against the White Walkers. It'll echo the fateful moment from the show's first episode, when King Robert Baratheon (Mark Addy) marched to Winterfell to meet with Eddard Stark (Sean Bean), starting a series of events that would spell disaster for Westeros.

There Will Be An Epic Stark-Lannister Showdown

The Targaryens have returned to Westeros, the North is united against the White Walkers, and the politics are still raging, even as the worst winter in generations descends on the country. This is Game of Thrones, so there will be alliances, betrayals, and deaths--but if a recent teaser is any indication, we can bank on at least one big rivalry coming to its final conclusion. The struggle between the Starks and the Lannisters has been bubbling at various levels of murderous boil since the very first episode of the show. Season 7 suggested Cersei has a plan to wreck everyone's life while pretending to back them against the White Walkers, and both Sansa and Arya have serious scores to settle with her.

Season 8 Has A Huge, Ambitious Battle

Fighting is going to happen at Winterfell, and it's going to involve White Walkers. That's easy enough to figure out just from having watched the show, but the EW feature about the battle revealed some ancillary material, too--it'll be the biggest battle the show has ever done. According to Peter Dinklage, it makes the enormous Battle of the Bastards in Season 6 'look like a theme park.' The hugely ambitious sequence took 55 nights to shoot, more than double The Battle Of The Bastards' 25.

It's A Good Thing The Series Is Ending--According To One Actor

Game of Thrones' ending will likely be divisive--some fans may be thrilled that the series is actually coming to a close after all these years, while others will be sad the show is ending before the books could tell us author George R.R. Martin's version of his conclusion. And there are many shades in between those two reactions. But one fan who knows exactly how he feels is actor Liam Cunningham, who plays Davos Seaworth on the show.

'I get asked all the time, 'What the hell are you guys thinking? You could run Game of Thrones forever.' If you want to stay cool, and the show is cool, the best way to stay cool is to not overstay your welcome,' Cunningham told IGN in February. 'It would be dishonorable to stay on longer than we should. There’s a portion of me that will miss it dearly, and it will probably read Liam ‘Game of Thrones’ Cunnigham on my headstone. But it was time to get out and wrap up that story… People deserve the end of that story and to not drag it out just because there’s a book to be made. I think it’s very honorable what they’re doing.”

It'll Have An Intense Ending

Finishing the show has been pretty emotional for the cast, and they've revealed that what Game of Thrones has in store is pretty intense. Kit Harington cried during the table read, according to the EW story. Clarke told Vanity Fair the ending 'f--ed me up.' Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, who plays Jaime Lannister, told TheWrap that all the pieces fit together in the end, but even he found some of the outcomes surprising. And Dinklage, who plays Tyrion Lannister, trolled the world when he said to Vulture that he thought Tyrion got a 'very good conclusion'--and then suggested that that conclusion may potentially be Tyrion's death.

A Fan-Favorite Character Is Returning

No, it's not Lady Stoneheart (as far as we know). The show's visual effects supervisor, Joe Bauer, told the Huffington Post that Jon Snow's direwolf, Ghost, will return for the show's final season. He hasn't been around much because, apparently, direwolves have been very hard on the show's VFX budget.

It's The End, But It's Not Over

While the story of the Starks, Lannisters, and Targaryens is ending in Season 8 of Game Of Thrones, it's not the end for Westeros. At least one prequel series about the world of the show is coming and will star Naomi Watts and Joshua Whitehouse, with casting ongoing. The prequel show is set to shoot a pilot in summer 2019.

Martin leaked on his blog that the show may be called The Long Night (he later retracted that mistaken reveal), and we know it takes place in the Age of Heroes, thousands of years before Game of Thrones, when great houses like the Starks and Lannisters were first founded. The title from Martin also suggests the show will cover the first war with the White Walkers, before the building of the Wall.

We Have Plenty More Theories

We picked our favorite Season 8 fan theories--click here for the full list.

Spoilers through Season 5 of 'Game of Thrones' follow.

Well that was a nice surprise.

Game Of Throne Episode 8 Download

After quite a lot of build-up---and more than a few fans complaining that Game of Thrones had lost its edge---Sunday night's episode "Hardhome" brings the heavy hitters, including (but not limited to) Tyrion, a woman Sparrow with a powerful ladle, and the White Walkers themselves.

We have now fully parted ways with the books. If the rest of Season 5 hadn't convinced you that the show was forging its own path, this episode is the final nail in the coffin.

And it was great. Truly, one of the best, most exciting episodes I've seen in the entire show's run, let alone this season.

Download Game Of Throne Episode 8

We'll get to the really huge stuff with Jon Snow in a bit. First, let's talk about Sansa.

Not Bran and Rickon

Sansa and Theon/Reek's scene was pretty powerful tonight. Far from being the desperate damsel in distress, Sansa is unforgiving and relentless in her accusations toward the broken Greyjoy. She tells Reek she would do everything Ramsay has done to him and more for what he did to her brothers, Bran and Rickon.

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And then he lets it slip, and she pries the rest from him, that the boys he killed were not really her brothers. They were farmboys. For all Reek knows, Bran and Rickon are still alive. "I couldn't find them," he tells her. Is that hope that flickers across her eyes? Another reason to persevere.

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In the books, of course, most people still believe the boys dead, though a few know---including Sam, Jon, and Stannis. I rather like that it's Sansa who makes the discovery in Game of Thrones. It should give her even more purpose now, even more drive to escape. Sansa is woven more closely to these stories in the show than she ever was in the books.

Game Of Thrones Season 7 Episode 8

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    We have now fully parted ways with the books. If the rest of Season 5 hadn't convinced you that the show was forging its own path, this episode is the final nail in the coffin.

    And it was great. Truly, one of the best, most exciting episodes I've seen in the entire show's run, let alone this season.

    We'll get to the really huge stuff with Jon Snow in a bit. First, let's talk about Sansa.

    Not Bran and Rickon

    Sansa and Theon/Reek's scene was pretty powerful tonight. Far from being the desperate damsel in distress, Sansa is unforgiving and relentless in her accusations toward the broken Greyjoy. She tells Reek she would do everything Ramsay has done to him and more for what he did to her brothers, Bran and Rickon.

    And then he lets it slip, and she pries the rest from him, that the boys he killed were not really her brothers. They were farmboys. For all Reek knows, Bran and Rickon are still alive. 'I couldn't find them,' he tells her. Is that hope that flickers across her eyes? Another reason to persevere.

    In the books, of course, most people still believe the boys dead, though a few know---including Sam, Jon, and Stannis. I rather like that it's Sansa who makes the discovery in Game of Thrones. It should give her even more purpose now, even more drive to escape. Sansa is woven more closely to these stories in the show than she ever was in the books.

    Her husband, Ramsay, has his own awful purpose though we don't know what he has in store just yet. Roose Bolton wants to wait out Stannis, who he assumes will run into ruin in the snow now that winter has finally arrived (at least in the North.) Roose is the calculating one, but his bastard son just asks for twenty good men. I assume he has some terrorist strike planned.

    If he leaves Winterfell, it may be Sansa's only window to escape.

    The Oyster Cart

    Meanwhile, far off in Braavos, Arya continues to train with the Faceless Men, slowly learning to lie, to blend in, to become one of these holy master assassins. She even gets her first contract, to kill a man down at the harbor who refused to pay what essentially amounts to a life insurance policy to a widow and her children. We're bound to see more of this in the next couple episodes, but not much really happened here.

    Mostly, I'm just eager to see Arya return to Westeros. She better hurry, too, because it looks like Fire and Ice are on the verge of making their own journey to the Seven Kingdoms.

    Fire

    It's really lovely to see Tyrion and Daenerys talk to one another. Tyrion's advice to the Queen of Meereen over Jorah's fate proves to be just and wise, or at least I thought so, and Dany seemed to agree. He gives a frank and honest description of Jorah's devotion to the Khaleesi. He urges her not to kill him---because killing those who are devoted to you is a terrible way to inspire devotion, something she'll need in Westeros---but also rightly says he cannot be by her side when she does return to the Seven Kingdoms.

    Tyrion's undergone an interesting shift, one that largely took place during his travels with Jorah rather than Varys, and that's been fairly subtle up to now. The drunken, morose Imp has shed his skin and the Tyrion we all know and love has reemerged. Now, despite his House, he will advise the Mother of Dragons. And he seems kind of excited about it, even though his past experiences as adviser/King's Hand/good person have all ended up going awry.

    Book spoilers: Questions over Tyrion's own parentage remain, of course, though the show has done little to highlight Tywin's concerns that Dany's father might be Tyrion's father, too. Tywin's hatred for Tyrion may be more than grief over his wife's death, or shame over his son's deformity, but the fact that they don't in fact share blood at all. If Tyrion is a Targeryen, he may have the 'blood of the dragon.'

    This is all part and parcel with the R+L=J theory. That posits that Rhaegar Targeryen (Dany's older brother) and Lyanna Stark eloped and had a baby we now know as Jon Snow, protected by Ned Stark from a jealous and wrathful Robert Baratheon by masquerading him as Ned's bastard rather than a potential heir to Rhaegar. This would mean that Dany, Jon, and Tyrion all share Targeryen lineage, and could each potentially ride a dragon in the final battle against the Ice./End Book Spoilers

    Ice

    Speaking of ice, tonight's most exciting bit was an extended battle at the seaside settlement of Hardhome from whence the episode derived its title. This is a huge departure from the books, but not a bothersome one at all. We see with our own eyes just how terrifying the army of the dead truly is, led by the creepy White Walkers and their frightening king (who we can assume is the Night's King, a legend from long ago, and once a Lord Commander of the Night's Watch before his descent into evil.)

    Jon arrives just in time to save the Wildlings at Hardhome. He convinces many of them to accompany him, to travel to the other side of the Wall where they can farm and stand beside the Crows to fight off the undead.

    The terrifying undead. They come in all shapes and sizes, from sword-wielding skeletons to zombies fresh off the press. And they come before Jon can load up everyone on the boats. At first it's just dogs barking. Then, it's as if a storm of snow rises in the distance. Something is coming toward them, and the Thenn leader calls for the gates to be closed. The Wildlings left outside scream and beat at the gates before a terrible silence falls.

    Then the dead attack. Jon goes after the obsidian (dragon glass) when a White Walker appears before him, kills the Thenn, and proceeds to beat the crap out of Jon Snow. But Jon has the Old Bear's Valyrian steel longsword, Longclaw. It's a rare blade. Valyrian steel is priceless. It comes from Old Valyria (now home to the stone-men who attacked Jorah and Tyrion) and once home of Dany's ancestors, who fled west after the mysterious Doom of Valyria.

    In any case, unlike normal weapons, when the White Walker's blade comes into contact with Longclaw, the sword doesn't break. You can see the sudden realization in the White Walker's creepy blue eyes. Then Jon Snow shatters him in a single blow. And Jon Snow finds himself at the center of some very unpleasant attention.

    We already knew Valyrian steel was good stuff. Forged in dragon fire, the blades never lose their edge. Ned Stark had such a blade: Ice. It was reforged into two blades. The first was given to Joffrey, the second to Jaime who later gave it to Brienne of Tarth. That's at least one more Valyrian steel sword in the North that we know of, which I think may be important.

    Littlefinger has a Valyrian steel dagger---the one used to almost kill Bran way back in the first season. There are a handful of others. Some accounted for, others not. Not much of an arsenal to go up against an army of really fast undead warriors. (These are not your Walking Dead shamblers, not by a long shot.)

    The entire battle sequence was pretty great. Not only did this season need some good action, viewers needed to be reminded of this threat beyond the Wall. Now the Night's Watch themselves need to be given a rude awakening in what the real threat is, and put aside their petty disputes with the Wildlings and with one another.

    Revelations

    High action and a series of pretty crazy revelations make for a terrific episode.

    We learn that Dany and Tyrion will work together to bring her back to power in Westeros. She couldn't have picked a better adviser, though she may not know it yet. And she'll have to keep grabbing away the wine.

    We learn that Kevan Lannister is headed back from Casterly Rock now that Cersei is imprisoned, and that without confessing she may never see her son, King Tommen, again. Poor Tommen. Far too young and too sweet to be king. Kevan will be a good King's Hand. Perhaps...too good?

    We watch as Sansa discovers her two little brothers' fate---or at least learns that they may yet live. And we see that she is wholly unbroken by Ramsay's abuse. She isn't crying or pleading with Reek to help her, as so many assumed would happen when Theon first witnessed Ramsay's rape of Sansa. She's proud and strong, and I'm rooting for her more now than ever before in this show (which, I suspect, is part of the point.)

    And we learn that Valyrian steel is actually dragon steel, the only thing other than dragon glass that can slay a White Walker.

    Last, but not least, we watch as the Night's King lifts his arms and brings back an entire battlefield of the slaughtered as new undead fodder---precisely the thing Jon Snow has been so worried over.

    Now I just want to learn more about this shadowy enemy.

    Other thoughts:

    It's kind of tragic to watch Jorah throw himself at Dany like this, to the point where he'd give up life and freedom just to fight in front of her. I can't imagine he'll change her mind.

    HBO really threw me for a loop with the one dark-haired Wildling woman who ended up getting killed gruesomely by undead Wildling children. She had lots of lines, seemed tough and likable, and was just what the male-centric Northern storyline needed. And then she was killed.

    Too quick, if you ask me. She could have been a neat character. Killing characters in their debut episode is a little bit too much like Martin's propensity to add small POV characters just to kill them off right away.

    Still, I didn't want the episode to end. I'm really curious to see how they wrap this season up, but I don't want it to end either.

    Oh, and I was really right on the money when I said that this season had 'plenty of surprises still in store' wasn't I? As a book reader, I still have no idea what to expect anymore. This was definitely not what I saw coming.

    What did you all think? Am I missing anything?