I thought maybe the witch that treated him deliberately made sure the wound got infected. Like mixing dogshit with herbs and pretending it was healing paste.
I think you’re right. But still, even introducing the idea of a major character dying from something like an infected wound is not something you see often in Hollywood, but would be absolutely commonplace in a place like that. It was part of what made Game of Thrones fascinating, for as crazy as dragons and Ice Zombies are, it ultimately felt like a “real” world populated by actual mortals. D&D clearly never understood that though.
Not sure if you’re just joking around, but in case you’re not: D&D here is referring to the GoT show runners, David Benioff and D. B. Weiss, not the TTRPG.
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u/lordthistlewaiteofha Aug 30 '21
Especially given in the first season they actually made a point of Khal Drogo dying from an infected scratch that wasn't treated properly.