Clegane Bowl!!
But I do have to echo the disappointment with others. While the story has definitely been rushed this season and there have been some plot holes and questionable decisions - e.g. significant plot armor being chief among them, but also no non-Night King White Walker action in episode three, Night King somehow surviving Drogon's full fire blast, etc. - I've generally still liked this season, and especially episode three. I've also felt like a lot of it could be looked over given how good the story and writing has been up until this point, and many were being too critical and looking for things to complain about.
But tonight I felt some of those criticisms came to fruition pretty heavily with some head-scratching decisions. Some of the ones that bugged me the most:
1) Rushed, rushed, rushed. The entire season absolutely feels rushed, but the Dany/Mad Queen storyline feels like it is being forced down our throats. They've dropped very, very subtle hints toward this end over the past several seasons, but they needed to start hedging that way more explicitly last season. By going full steam ahead with this storyline only in the final season it absolutely feels forced and rushed.
2) So much for that final "battle." What a cakewalk. After playing up the Scorpion weapons, the Iron Fleet, and the Golden Company so heavily, Dany literally nullifies the Scorpions and the Iron Fleet in a matter of minutes and the feared Golden Company in one freaking swoop of Drogon. After killing off Rhaegal all willy-nilly last episode with what looked like an incredibly deadly and efficient weapon, this was such a letdown and out of nowhere. Just poor writing and set-up.
3) Okay, I get the whole blood lust/"flip a coin" Mad Queen narrative, but they absolutely took it to far with the virtual complete destruction of the city by Drogon. What sense does it make to beat Cersei and take control of King's Landing if you're going to blow it to hell needlessly when doing so? I just don't buy that narrative that she is so blood thirsty that she couldn't recognize that; perhaps if that narrative was more played out and had more time to establish itself it would be more believable.
4) The entire Jamie narrative kind of p---es me off. Like he spends, what, three full seasons on a redemption arc, and in the matter of 1 1/4 episodes he goes full circle and ends up right back where he started in episode one?! I mean, come on. And while I have to imagine that we'll see Jamie and Cersei one more time in the finale, it very well might be that their supposed death scene was true, which would be so underwhelming of an end for those two.
5) Finally, after making Arya a complete badass over the past few seasons and having her actually own her badass self over the last several episodes, I simply don't buy that she would tuck tail and run for her safety rather than go to battle with the Hound with the chance of taking two people off of her list in The Mountain and, especially, Cersei. Like, that's just completely out of line with the entire character that they've developed with her, so it's frustrating to watch that.
All that said, the Clegane Bowl was awesome, and I still love the series and have enjoyed this season overall. But, yeah, tonight was a bit of a letdown for me.