Is 'Game Of Thrones Paladin Of Old Gods (Draft)' Canon To ASOIAF?

2025-06-17 19:28:39 135

4 Answers

Bianca
Bianca
2025-06-18 21:45:47
Comparing the draft to ASOIAF is like matching fan art to the original painting. It borrows Martin’s settings but adds uncanonical elements—paladins, structured Old Gods worship—that don’t fit. The books’ magic is ambiguous and scarce; the draft’s overt supernatural clashes with that. Fun to read, but it’s its own beast.
Finn
Finn
2025-06-19 06:54:04
Nope, not canon. Martin’s Old Gods don’t have paladins. The draft’s a creative spin, but ASOIAF’s lore stays rooted in weirwoods and whispers, not holy warriors. If you dig the concept, enjoy it as standalone fiction.
Gemma
Gemma
2025-06-19 14:54:07
'Game of Thrones Paladin of Old Gods (Draft)' feels like a fascinating tangent rather than canon. The original ASOIAF books and HBO’s adaptation never mention this paladin figure, and Martin’s lore focuses on the Old Gods through weirwoods and greenseers, not paladins. The draft’s premise—a warrior championing the Old Gods—clashes with the subtle, mystical vibe of the books, where magic is rare and enigmatic.

That said, the draft’s creativity is undeniable. It spins the Old Gods’ lore into something fresh, blending Westerosi mysticism with knightly tropes. But canon? Hardly. Martin’s world-building is meticulous, and unless he endorses it, this remains fanfic—albeit well-crafted. It’s a fun what-if for fans craving more Old Gods content, but don’t expect it to align with 'The Winds of Winter.'
Claire
Claire
2025-06-23 13:44:50
I’ve beta-read fanfics for years, and 'Paladin of Old Gods (Draft)' nails the ASOIAF tone—yet it’s undeniably non-canon. Martin’s universe avoids clear-cut heroes; a paladin contradicts its gray morality. The draft’s knightly order worshipping the Old Gods is cool, but canon Old Gods are passive forces, tied to nature and prophecy, not warriors. The draft feels like a D&D campaign set in Westeros: thrilling but separate from the source material.
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