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For fans doing a rewatch, the number 73 is a comfort and a commitment. It is longer than The Wire (60 episodes) but shorter than The Walking Dead (177 and counting). It is exactly long enough to make you feel the weight of winter, but short enough that the final season’s fire still feels like it ended too soon.
But the defenders counter that 73 episodes is also a miracle of efficiency. Think of all the characters who had complete arcs in that time: Jaime Lannister from incestuous villain to broken knight. Theon Greyjoy from cocky ward to Reek to redeemed prince. Sansa Stark from dreamer to survivor to Queen in the North. Arya from tomboy to faceless assassin to explorer of the unknown. Seventy-three episodes gave us the Hound’s redemption, Brienne’s knighting, and Tyrion’s endless trial speeches.
So the next time someone asks, “How many episodes of Game of Thrones are there?” you can say “73.” But if they ask why that number matters, tell them this: 73 episodes is the story of a show that grew too big for television, but refused to stop being television. It is the number of the dragon’s shadow passing over King’s Landing, one hour at a time.
Valar morghulis. But 73 episodes? Those are forever.
When the final credits rolled on “The Iron Throne” — the series finale of Game of Thrones — on May 19, 2019, an era ended not with a triumphant roar of a dragon, but with the quiet finality of a page turning. For eight years, the HBO adaptation of George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire had been more than a television show. It was a cultural weather system, a watercooler obsession, and a shared global ritual. At its conclusion, the official count stood at seventy-three episodes .
Could it have been better with 80? Perhaps. Could it have been worse with 50? Almost certainly. Today, Game of Thrones holds the record for most Emmy wins by a drama series (59), largely on the strength of those 73 episodes. The prequel House of the Dragon has now begun its own count, learning from its predecessor — its first season had 10 episodes, and its second will have 8, showing that the “shorter season” model is now standard for fantasy television.
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For fans doing a rewatch, the number 73 is a comfort and a commitment. It is longer than The Wire (60 episodes) but shorter than The Walking Dead (177 and counting). It is exactly long enough to make you feel the weight of winter, but short enough that the final season’s fire still feels like it ended too soon.
But the defenders counter that 73 episodes is also a miracle of efficiency. Think of all the characters who had complete arcs in that time: Jaime Lannister from incestuous villain to broken knight. Theon Greyjoy from cocky ward to Reek to redeemed prince. Sansa Stark from dreamer to survivor to Queen in the North. Arya from tomboy to faceless assassin to explorer of the unknown. Seventy-three episodes gave us the Hound’s redemption, Brienne’s knighting, and Tyrion’s endless trial speeches. how many episodes of got
So the next time someone asks, “How many episodes of Game of Thrones are there?” you can say “73.” But if they ask why that number matters, tell them this: 73 episodes is the story of a show that grew too big for television, but refused to stop being television. It is the number of the dragon’s shadow passing over King’s Landing, one hour at a time. For fans doing a rewatch, the number 73
Valar morghulis. But 73 episodes? Those are forever. But the defenders counter that 73 episodes is
When the final credits rolled on “The Iron Throne” — the series finale of Game of Thrones — on May 19, 2019, an era ended not with a triumphant roar of a dragon, but with the quiet finality of a page turning. For eight years, the HBO adaptation of George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire had been more than a television show. It was a cultural weather system, a watercooler obsession, and a shared global ritual. At its conclusion, the official count stood at seventy-three episodes .
Could it have been better with 80? Perhaps. Could it have been worse with 50? Almost certainly. Today, Game of Thrones holds the record for most Emmy wins by a drama series (59), largely on the strength of those 73 episodes. The prequel House of the Dragon has now begun its own count, learning from its predecessor — its first season had 10 episodes, and its second will have 8, showing that the “shorter season” model is now standard for fantasy television.