Are There Completed Novels Similar To Game Of Thrones?

2026-05-05 01:04:12 219
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5 Answers

Xander
Xander
2026-05-06 08:02:30
Ever tried 'The Dagger and the Coin' by Daniel Abraham? It’s GOT’s cunning little sibling—less violence, more banking-as-warfare (weirdly thrilling). The character work is top-tier, especially Cithrin’s arc as a finance prodigy in a patriarchy. And for sheer mythological depth, Guy Gavriel Kay’s 'Tigana' feels like a lost Silmarillion chapter with Italian city-states. Both are standalone(ish) and beautifully written.
Peter
Peter
2026-05-06 17:26:58
If you’re after that addictive mix of betrayal and battles, 'The Farseer Trilogy' by Robin Hobb wrecked me in the best way. Fitz’s journey is painfully personal, and the political machinations are slower but more intimate than GOT. Plus, Hobb’s prose is like poetry with knives hidden in it. On the flip side, 'The Broken Empire' by Mark Lawrence is like if Joffrey starred in his own dystopian road trip—unapologetically dark but impossible to put down. Both series are finished, so no waiting years for endings!
Marcus
Marcus
2026-05-08 02:55:17
Malazan Book of the Fallen. Ten books. Done. Steven Erikson drops you into a war-torn world with zero hand-holding, but the payoff is unmatched. It’s like GOT’s scale squared—ancients gods, undead armies, and marines cracking jokes mid-apocalypse. Took me two tries to get into it, but now I annoy friends by quoting Tehol Beddict’s absurd wisdom.
Rowan
Rowan
2026-05-10 09:44:08
Oh, diving into epic fantasy after 'Game of Thrones' is like chasing a dragon-high—nothing quite matches, but there are gems that scratch the itch. I adore 'The First Law' trilogy by Joe Abercrombie for its brutal politics and grey characters. It’s grimmer, wittier, and packed with jaw-dropping twists. Then there’s 'The Stormlight Archive' by Brandon Sanderson, which trades medieval realism for sprawling worldbuilding and magical systems so detailed they feel scientific.

For something closer to GRRM’s historical inspiration, 'The Accursed Kings' by Maurice Druon is often called the 'original GOT'—it’s literally about royal intrigue in medieval France. And if you miss the dragons, 'The Priory of the Orange Tree' by Samantha Shannon weaves feminist lore and fire-breathing beasts into a standalone epic. Honestly, each of these pulled me out of my post-GOT slump in different ways.
Quinn
Quinn
2026-05-11 10:28:46
For a wildcard pick: 'The Poppy War' by R.F. Kuang. It’s GOT meets dark academia with a protagonist who makes Daenerys’s descent look tame. Based on Chinese history, the war scenes are visceral, and the magic system is 'what if opium gave you nuclear powers?' The trilogy’s complete, and the finale left me staring at walls for days.
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