What Are The Biggest Theories For 'The Winds Of Winter'?

2025-06-25 12:15:26 327

3 Answers

Grayson
Grayson
2025-06-26 04:04:11
Let me break down the theories that keep me up at night. The 'Hound is Gravedigger' theory seems confirmed - Sandor Clegane's alive on Quiet Isle and will return to fight his undead brother in Cleganebowl, possibly as Cersei's champion. There's also heavy foreshadowing that Arya will assassinate Lady Stoneheart, completing her 'death' motif from the Many-Faced God training.

More tinfoil-y but fascinating is the 'Dany will go mad' theory. Unlike the show's rushed version, the books plant seeds - her increasing paranoia in Meereen, the 'slayer of lies' prophecy suggesting fAegon is the real heir, and her family's history of mental illness. I think she'll torch Volantis first, not King's Landing, as a tragic parallel to Aegon's conquest.

The wildcard? Howland Reed appearing finally to reveal Jon's parentage properly. The Knight of the Laughing Tree story was too detailed to be just backstory - he's the missing puzzle piece for R+L=J.
Ryder
Ryder
2025-07-01 10:48:20
I think the most compelling theory is the 'Grand Northern Conspiracy'. It suggests the Northern lords are secretly working together to overthrow the Boltons and install Jon Snow or Rickon Stark as the rightful ruler, using Manderly's hidden army and the Umbers' double-cross. There's also strong evidence that Euron Greyjoy will summon a kraken using Valyrian blood magic to attack Oldtown, mirroring the Horn of Winter legend. The most heartbreaking theory posits that Cersei will burn King's Landing with wildfyre when defeat seems inevitable, fulfilling the 'valonqar' prophecy in a twisted way by becoming her own killer.
Owen
Owen
2025-07-01 22:52:18
The theories for 'The Winds of Winter' are wilder than a Dothraki wedding, and I've spent years piecing together clues from the books. One massive theory involves Daenerys finally reaching Westeros only to find fAegon (possibly a Blackfyre pretender) already ruling with popular support, sparking a second Dance of Dragons. The battle sequences in the sample chapters hint at this - Aegon's taking Storm's End while Dany struggles in Meereen.

Another layer involves Bran's time-warging abilities. Many believe he'll accidentally influence past events, possibly being the voice that drove Aerys II mad or even creating the Night King legend through a failed attempt to stop the Long Night. The show's version was simplified, but the books have way more magical complexity.

The most disturbing theory comes from the 'Jojen paste' concept - that Bran unknowingly ate his friend in the weirwood paste to gain greenseer powers. There's textual support for this when Meera's behavior changes abruptly after the ceremony. If true, it shows Martin's willingness to make magic truly horrifying rather than glamorous.
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