Most Satisfying Character Ends in Game of Thrones

By Adam Garcia | Published

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A storm of betrayal, flames from winged beasts, one moment safe the next gone – eight years unfolded like a cursed scroll. While some fell hard into darkness, others found paths where peace waited without fanfare.

Joy was never promised each turn, still a few stories curled to rest in quiet satisfaction. Heads dipped slowly at what felt earned, not given.

Take a moment to consider which conclusions landed well – what made them click became clear only later. How they settled sat just right, not forced, never flashy.

Theon Greyjoy

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Lost for much of the journey, Theon searched piece by piece for some kind of identity. After turning against the Starks, he faced unrelenting torment under Ramsay Bolton, stripped down until little remained of who he once was.

Everything changed when he stood guard over Bran in the sacred grove amid chaos and fire. Giving his life to shield a Stark – following all the pain he had brought upon them – finally sealed what had been left open too long.

One phrase from Bran – “you’re a good man” – undid lifetimes of guilt in silence. Then, just like that, it ended.

Joffrey Baratheon

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A gasp escaped him, purple-faced during vows, as chaos swallowed the feast – his mother frozen nearby. For three seasons he had twisted kindness into fear, making Sansa stare at a severed head just because he could.

People vanished when arrows flew across courtyards on his whim, laughing afterward like thunder without rain. That moment, choking under golden décor and stunned guests, felt oddly clean.

Dying bewildered, breathless, clueless why wine turned poison – that somehow fit too well.

The Hound

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Burning buildings never scared anyone quite like they scared Sandor Clegane. Face-to-face with the Mountain in a falling castle, smoke and fury closed in around him.

Through flame he charged, dragging hate behind until it snapped loose mid-leap from shattered glass. Words changed everything when he told Arya to walk away – his voice rough, but meaning every syllable.

Death met him fast, after years of chasing blood instead of peace. A man who lived for anger died giving someone else a way past it.

Ramsay Bolton

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That moment when Ramsay died – ripped apart by his own hounds – carried a kind of quiet balance, almost like the world correcting itself. For years he turned those animals into weapons, starving them just enough so they’d obey without question.

It was Sansa who stood there, calm, as the pack finally turned on their master. She had once been helpless under his cruelty, now she simply stepped back, eyes steady.

His screams faded behind her while the wind caught the edge of her cloak. What stayed wasn’t triumph exactly, but something deeper – the look of someone who no longer needed revenge to feel free.

Tywin Lannister

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Down on the privy seat, a bolt through his chest ended him – his boy holding the bow. Years of crafting power, shaping courts, bending houses to his will – all undone in one weak moment.

That smartest son, tossed aside like trash though he saved them more than once, finally had enough. Words failed Tywin then, just as they’d always worked too well before.

The great lion fell quiet, gut emptying, pride shattered. A lifetime of crushing others taught only this: cruelty breeds knives in the dark.

Cersei Lannister

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Death found Cersei just as stubborn as life had shaped her, still grasping at control even when it slipped through her fingers. Beneath the crumbling Red Keep, stone fell fast, sealing her fate alongside Jaime in narrow tunnels where glory could not reach.

A bold exit once danced in her thoughts – something loud, something remembered – but silence arrived instead under tons of broken walls. Grand dreams never left her mind, yet dust filled her lungs like anyone else’s.

That old prediction whispered years before finally showed its face: she did perish beside the one she held closest. Just not standing tall; curled small, unseen, nothing like triumph promised.

Littlefinger

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Petyr Baille crept through seven seasons, moving just before others saw what was coming. Only then did it slip – his mistake lay in thinking the Stark kids would stay naive, especially Sansa, who studied every move he ever made.

In his last breaths, pleading and twisting words, she cut deep where he once held power, right inside his own home. He shaped half the turmoil in the story yet fell by failing to picture those he toyed with outgrowing his shadow.

Viserion And Rhaegal

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When Daenerys lost her dragons, it broke the image she carried about being meant to lead. One of them, Viserion, rose again – cold-eyed and chained – to fight against those he once protected, making the loss sting far worse.

Out of nowhere, Rhaegal fell from clouds after iron bolts tore through him, proof that no creature is untouchable when met with sharp tactics. With each fall, the edge she held melted away, leaving only hard truth behind: fire from above does not teach wisdom, nor grant justice.

Olenna Tyrell

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Out on her own path walked the Queen of Thorns, somehow right for someone never shy with words. Poison arrived by Jaime’s hand, yet she spoke truth before breath left – owning Joffrey’s end just to sting deeper.

Peace denied to Cersei; vengeance slipped through fingers cold. Last laugh claimed by Olenna, lips curled, wineglass steady at journey’s close.

Fear never touched her. Never bent. Never broke.

Night King

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The ultimate villain of the series got taken out by a teenage assassin he never saw coming. The Night King spent thousands of years building his army and marching south to end all life.

Arya appeared out of nowhere to stab him with the very dagger that started the War of the Five Kings tied together multiple storylines in one move. His shattering into ice along with his entire army ended the threat in an instant, proving that even ancient evil can fall to someone small and quick.

Daenerys Targaryen

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Daenerys’s death by Jon’s hand completed her transformation from liberator to tyrant. She spent the entire series breaking chains and freeing people, only to become the thing she hated most.

Jon killing her right after she achieved her lifelong dream of taking the Iron Throne showed that destiny doesn’t guarantee a happy ending. Her final moment reaching for the throne she never got to sit on while her last dragon carried her away captured the tragedy of her fall perfectly.

Jon Snow

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Jon getting sent back to the Night’s Watch felt like coming home after a long, painful journey. He never wanted power or titles, and ending up beyond the Wall with the Free Folk gave him the freedom he craved his whole life.

The man who died and came back to life got to actually live for the first time, away from politics and prophecies. His exile was technically a punishment but turned into the reward of finally belonging somewhere without expectations weighing him down.

Brienne Of Tarth

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Brienne becoming Lord Commander of the Kingsguard fulfilled every dream she ever had about being a true knight. She spent her whole life fighting to be taken seriously in a world that mocked women warriors.

Writing Jaime’s deeds in the White Book showed that despite everything, she kept her honor and did right by the people she served. Her final scene proved that staying true to yourself eventually gets recognized, even if it takes longer than it should.

Sansa Stark

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Sansa becoming Queen in the North brought her character full circle from naive girl to hardened leader. She survived more abuse and manipulation than almost any character in the series and came out stronger instead of broken.

Her declaration that the North would remain independent showed she learned to fight for her people and herself. The crown on her head represented not just power but the wisdom she earned through suffering, making her the leader the North actually needed.

Arya Stark

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Arya sailing west of Westeros to explore unknown lands gave her the adventure she always wanted. She spent the whole series training to be an assassin and checking names off her list, but her ending showed her choosing life over revenge.

The girl who never fit in anywhere got to write her own story instead of following someone else’s path. Her ship disappearing into the unknown captured the spirit of a character who refused to be defined by what others expected from her.

The Legacy They Left Behind

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These endings worked because they reflected who these characters really were and what their journeys meant. Some got justice, others got peace, and a few got exactly what they deserved.

The best conclusions in Game of Thrones weren’t always happy, but they felt earned by the choices each character made along the way. These moments remind us that good storytelling doesn’t need perfect endings, just honest ones that respect the paths characters walked to reach them.

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