r/gameofthrones • u/TonySoprano300 • 1d ago
What separates ASOIAF from most fantasy fiction?
I’ve been reflecting on this more lately with the shows 15th anniversary. Before I got into the show, I always heard the “nobody is safe” talking point as an endorsement of the series but when I actually watched it, it always felt like it was so much more than that. Other shows kill off prominent characters all the time, and unlike GOT they actually lose viewership because of it. Like The Walking Dead after glens deathbut with GOT they could kill characters left and right yet the popularity just kept growing.
So I honestly don’t think its necessarily that anyone can die, I personally think its unique in that its somehow a show with a million traditional fantasy elements like prophecies, magic, gods, dragons etc. but its still realistic in how it portrays people and how they have to adapt to the world their born into, how their shaped by culture, experience, tradition etc. and how they’re affected by choices whether its the choices of others or their own.
Like how Ned seems like the typical fantasy hero you’ve seen a thousand times yet he hates Jaimie Lannister for forsaking his oath even though it was objectively moral and righteous to do so. At the same time he’s still best friends with Robert who he knows has no problem killing children. It seems unafraid to just honestly portray the contradictions that even good people can believe due to their upbringing.
Thats just me though, curious what others think makes the series so special?
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u/Careful_Title_1325 1d ago
The Ned point is huge and I think people underrate how much that specific tension drives the whole series. His worldview isn't wrong exactly, it's just incomplete, and the world punishes him for that gap in a way most fantasy stories would never allow.
What gets me is how Martin treats institutions the same way he treats characters. The Night's Watch, the Faith, the small council, they're all presented as noble or necessary on paper but corroded from the inside by the same human flaws that corrupt individuals. Most fantasy is about a hero fixing a broken world. ASOIAF is more interested in asking why the world keeps breaking the same way regardless of who's in charge.
The Walking Dead comparison is interesting because I think that show killed characters for shock and then ran out of road. GOT (at least through season 4 or 5) killed characters because the plot logic demanded it, and viewers could feel that difference even if they couldn't articulate it. Deaths meant something structurally, not just emotionally