Robb games
I promise you, the traitors will see justice. And we'll do it together. If he'd been a trifle less arrogant How's that for pomposity?!
Well, here's to the Young Wolf! Neither of you understand the depths of my pain! I personally will see to it that their houses are destroyed root and stem Walder Frey and Roose Bolton will pay for what they've done! They shot an arrow at me. And Robb Oh gods no. Robb, I heard what Roose Bolton did to him. He stabbed Robb I will kill them all.
I will kill them! What they've done, they broke the sacred laws of gods and men. And mother? Tytania, were you a part of this? You and your father? Are you going to kill me now? Was all of it just a sham? Our relationship? Answer me damn it! Couldn't face Robb like a man so they stabbed him in the back.
They couldn't even give him an honorable death. Let him die fighting He said, "Next time I see you, you'll be all in black". I was jealous of Robb my whole life. The way my father looked at him, I wanted that. He was better than me at everything. Fighting, and hunting, and riding, and girls. Gods, the girls loved him. I wanted to hate him, but I never could. Both of you need to be smarter than Robb. I loved them, I miss them, but they made stupid mistakes and they both lost their heads for it.
Universal Conquest Wiki. Preceded by: ' Torrhen Stark '? If the secret were to get out it, it would undoubtedly start a war for the Iron Throne. Long ago, in a time forgotten, a preternatural event threw the seasons out of balance. In a land where summers can last decades and winters a lifetime, trouble is brewing.
The cold is returning, and in the frozen wastes to the north of Winterfell, sinister forces are massing beyond the kingdom's protective Wall.
To the south, the king's powers are failing—his most trusted adviser dead under mysterious circumstances and his enemies emerging from the shadows of the throne.
At the center of the conflict lie the Starks of Winterfell, a family as harsh and unyielding as the frozen land they were born to.
Now Lord Eddard Stark is reluctantly summoned to serve as the king's new Hand, an appointment that threatens to sunder not only his family but the kingdom itself. Amid plots and counter-plots, tragedy and betrayal, victory and terror, allies and enemies, the fate of the Starks hangs perilously in the balance, as each side endeavors to win that deadliest of conflicts: the game of thrones.
Published in celebration of the twentieth anniversary of George R. Martin's landmark series, this lavishly illustrated special edition of A Game of Thrones—featuring gorgeous full-page artwork as well as black-and-white illustrations in every chapter—revitalizes the fantasy masterpiece that became a cultural phenomenon. And now the mystery, intrigue, romance, and adventure of this magnificent saga come to life as never before. In Breaking the Bank Henry Stickman made the big mistake of thinking robbing a bank would be easy.
Why not try it out yourself? Think you are smart enough to get to the end of this puzzle game? Hop in your police car and chase criminals at all cost. Become the king ot thieves and steal the big treasure. Find a way to steal items without getting caught by the camera. She mentions to Jon that she also lost two brothers, just as he had lost two of his, Robb and Rickon actually his cousins, unbeknownst to both her and Jon.
After Jaime captures Highgarden from House Tyrell , he informs Olenna that he learned from his past mistakes and utilized the same tactic that Robb used against him years ago during the Battle of the Whispering Wood, in which he and his father had been tricked by Robb into thinking the entire northern army was moving against Tywin's encampment but rather it was a ploy and the real bulk of the army surprised Jaime's forces and successfully captured him during the fighting.
Following Robb's death at the Twins, his army was completely massacred with the exception of the Bolton and Frey men. The North, now without a King and having lost thousands of men during the war, have no choice but to adhere to House Bolton's control of the North. Roose Bolton and his then-bastard son Ramsay, demand complete loyalty from former Stark bannermen and enforce their new rule by executing and flaying any who oppose.
The Boltons also rally the north behind a common enemy, House Greyjoy, whose ironborn soldiers still occupy areas in the north following Robb's death. With Bolton assistance, the northerners repel the Ironborn and once again become loyal to the crown. Robb's execution of Rickard Karstark days before the Red Wedding lead the Karstarks, a cadet branch of House Stark, to abandon Robb, and over the years they continued to view him with distaste and considered the execution of Rickard to have been the ultimate act of betrayal.
Other once-loyal northern lords also found themselves with unsavory views of Robb. House Glover, now lead by Lord Robett Glover, refused to answer Jon and Sansa's plea for help when they prepare to take back Winterfell from the Boltons, with Robett going so far as to speak ill of Robb's war and that his marriage to a "foreign whore" got himself and all of his men killed.
House Manderly under Lord Wyman Manderly initially also do not assist Jon and Sansa; it is later mentioned that Wyman's son died for Robb, and that he did not want to sacrifice more Manderly lives for a lost cause. Lyanna Mormont, Lady of House Mormont, also initially is hesitant to assist given that she too does not want to sacrifice more Mormont lives.
In the Riverlands, Robb's rule also comes to an end and House Tully is stripped of its ancestral title and home by House Frey with the backing of the crown, the Lannisters, and the Boltons.
Robb's uncle Edmure is kept prisoner in the years following his wedding. However, Brynden Tully, the "Blackfish", continues a guerrilla war against House Frey for control of Riverrun and eventually manages to take control of it back from the Freys.
In response, Jaime under order from King Tommen is sent to lay siege to the castle. Using Edmure as a way to override the Blackfish's control, the remaining Tully forces surrender and the Blackfish is killed. House Tully, whose forces are the only remaining remnants of Robb's army, then becomes subservient to the crown and the new lord of the Riverlands, Walder Frey. Robb's death is a cause for celebration in King's Landing, as Joffrey openly mocks Robb and the way in which he died, taking credit for defeating the Young Wolf.
Tyrion mentions to his father that the northerners will never forget the way in which Robb and his forces were killed to which Tywin proudly boasts it as a reminder of what will happen if the north ever goes to war with the south again. It is not until approximately three years after Robb's death that House Stark once again gains control of the north. Jon and Sansa, having rallied loyal northern houses and with Jon leading the now loyal Free Folk, battle Ramsay's forces during the Battle of the Bastards.
Soon after, Jon is elected King in the North, having now become Robb's official successor and continues Robb's fight for northern freedom. At this point, all three men who conspired to murder Robb are each killed in a similar fashion to the way Robb and Catelyn died. Tywin is killed with a crossbow by his son Tyrion Robb was injured by crossbow bolts , Roose is betrayed and stabbed in the heart by Ramsay Roose betrayed and killed Robb this way , and Walder Frey's throat is slit by Arya Catelyn's throat was slit by Walder's son.
Robb had a keen sense of honor and justice, which he received from his father. He was fair, caring, and willing to do anything to keep his family safe.
He was close with his siblings, particularly his half-brother Jon, and shared mutually loving relationships with them all. Robb also regarded his father's ward Theon to be like a brother to him. Unlike Roose Bolton, one of his central bannermen, Robb saw no reason for torture, cruelty, or unnecessary executions, and treated his prisoners of war well and justly.
He did not wish for violence or war and did his best to limit the deaths and casualties on both sides. He also expended tremendous sympathies to innocent victims of war such as Martyn and Willem Lannister. Robb had a surprisingly keen mind for warfare and strategy, a trait that takes Tywin completely by surprise.
Tywin had originally seen Robb as a stupid child who hadn't the slightest idea of the violence of war and after his first taste of battle would "run back to Winterfell with his tail between his legs.
Tywin also did not expect Robb to have the determination to send hundreds of his own men to their deaths in a feint to the east. Sansa mentions to Joffrey that Robb is known to fight with his army's vanguard and commands his forces where the fighting is thickest. As such, Robb's tactical prowess and bravery in battle results in the Northerners seeing Robb as a larger than life figure and he is quickly known as the "Young Wolf" for his ferocity in battle.
Robb's actions create lore throughout the Seven Kingdoms that tell tales of him riding his direwolf into battle and even transforming into a wolf himself. Tywin mentions to his war counsel at Harrenhal that Robb's men worship him and that he doubts Robb will lose unless drastic measures are taken to ensure this. Robb was very much his father's son, but this meant that he had not only his father's strengths, but also his father's weaknesses.
Like Eddard, Robb lacked proper political skills and had a tendency to put honor before reason. He married a political nobody out of love, needlessly spurning a badly needed political alliance with the Freys. Robb also put honor before pragmatic political needs when he executed Rickard for treason and murder, costing him the Karstark contingent from his army.
Like most Northerners, Robb was more proficient as a warrior than as a politician. Much like his own father and the man he was named after, Robert Baratheon, Robb was an excellent warrior and military commander but a poor politician. Roose Bolton viewed Robb as both arrogant and foolish, and Walder Frey considered Robb's title as the Young Wolf to be a show of pomposity. Despite this, Robb was overall viewed favorably as good man. He was mourned profusely by Sansa, Jon and Theon once they heard the news.
Even Tyrion Lannister commented to Sansa that Robb seemed like a good man to him. Others high lords and ladies such as Stannis, Olenna Tyrell, and Randyll Tarly viewed the way Robb was murdered to have been absolutely detestable. See: Robb and Talisa Stark. He is his father's son, with a keen sense of honor and justice. Robb gets along with all his siblings and of them, he is closest to his half-brother Jon, who is the same age and with whom Robb shares a strong brotherly relationship, being raised together by their father.
Robb is also close with his father's ward Theon, who is five years older than himself. Robb is not a POV character in the novels, thus his actions are witnessed and interpreted through the eyes of POV characters, mainly Catelyn.
Robb is largely a background character in the second and third novels; important events in his life, including his successes at Oxcross , Ashemark , and the Crag , and his marriage, mostly occur off-screen, and are only revealed when POV characters mostly Catelyn learn of them or discuss them.
There are some minor differences from the books. He tells Bran that when Grey Wind tore off the Greatjon's fingers, he was very scared about the possible consequences but couldn't show it. Later, he accepts his mother's tactical advice while splitting his army in two, appointing the cautious, experienced Roose Bolton in command of the army tasked with delaying the Lannisters at the Green Fork. Robb's appearance in the books is also different: he is described in the books as having the thick auburn hair of the Tullys, while on the show Robb has dark brown curly hair and a more lean build.
Bran's hair color is also darker in the TV series. In the books, all of Eddard's children except Arya and of course, Jon inherited from their mother Catelyn the typical House Tully features of auburn hair and blue eyes. Talisa Maegyr does not exist in the novels. Robb wins every battle, but fails at everything else, as he himself admits more than once, due to a series of unwise decisions: he loses his brothers, Winterfell, the North, his most important captive , a large number of troops at Duskendale and at the Ruby Ford due to Roose Bolton's treachery , the Freys, the Karstarks - and also the Boltons, as he finds out too late.
Soon after the Battle of the Whispering Wood, Robb unwisely gives the Riverlords leave to depart, each to defend his own lands, at Edmure's request. Later, Brynden explains Catelyn the folly in Robb's decision: scattering the Riverlords simply made it easier for the Mountain to pillage their lands, and at the same time weakened Robb's host.
In comparison with Robb's next mistakes, however, this has not been a serious one. One of Robb's most serious mistakes is taking nearly all the armies of the North to the south, leaving the North scarcely defended - a very tempting target for the ironborn which they cannot resist. Sending Theon to the Iron Islands against Catelyn's advice is an additional mistake: the ironborn's invasion would have probably occurred in any case, as two facts strongly imply: the Iron Fleet is ready to sail when Theon arrives, and the frigid welcome he receives; however, Theon does what none of the other invaders would do - taking Winterfell, which is erroneous both strategically and logistically, as Asha Yara's name in the books explains him.
Thus a chain of events is opened, and results in the Red Wedding. Many disasters could have been prevented had Robb returned to the North as soon as he received reports about the ironborn's invasion: even if he had reached Winterfell too late to save his brothers, he'd still have had the Freys, Karstarks and Boltons on his side, wouldn't have met Jeyne Westerling, and the Red Wedding would have never occurred.
In such a scenario, Robb might have lost all the lands he conquered and eventually found himself caught between the Lannisters and ironborn, but still it would have been much better position than how things turned to be. Robb, however, is so absorbed in his vendetta against the Lannisters that he turns a deaf ear to the reports about the invasion, indifferent to the suffering of the common folk whose villages are ravaged by the ironborn.
Even when he receives reports about the Fall of Winterfell, he does not send even one soldier back unlike in the show, Roose Bolton never suggests to Robb to send Ramsay, and the "liberation" of Winterfell is performed without Robb's knowledge or consent , because, as he explains to Catelyn, he foolishly trusted Theon to act rationally and spare his brothers - and was indifferent about the safety of the servants with whom he lived for years.
This is his third serious mistake in a row, which, combined with the aforementioned two former mistakes, seal his fate. In the beginning of A Storm of Swords , Robb still intends to continue fighting against the Lannisters, but Catelyn tells him bluntly "So long as Theon Greyjoy sits in your father's seat with your brothers' blood on his hands, these other foes must wait. Your first duty is to defend your own people, win back Winterfell, and hang Theon in a crow's cage to die slowly.
Or else put off that crown for good, Robb, for men will know that you are no true king at all. The woman Robb marries is Jeyne Westerling, a noblewoman of House Westerling , an ancient but impoverished vassal house of the Lannisters in the Westerlands.
Robb is wounded while storming the Westerlings' ancestral castle, the Crag , and Jeyne nurses him back to health. She comforts Robb when he is grief-stricken by the false reports of the deaths of Bran and Rickon, and they sleep together. Having taken her maidenhood, Robb feels honor bound to marry her, despite his previous oath to marry a daughter of Walder Frey. The fallout from the marriage is much the same as his marriage to Talisa in the TV series, although Jeyne is not present at the Red Wedding and is still alive.
Jaime Lannister later reflects that Jeyne was " not a beauty to lose a kingdom for. It is unclear how far was Jeyne involved in the scheme. The way Robb reacts when he learns that his mother helped Jaime escape is the opposite of the show: rather than punish or at least chide her, he gives a speech about love and forgiveness in presence of his bannermen, including Rickard Karstark. That speech, and the fact that Catelyn was not given even the slightest punishment, increase Rickard's rage about Jaime's escape to the point that he kills Willem Lannister and his cousin Tion Frey the latter was replaced with Martyn Lannister in the show.
Robb decides to execute Rickard, stating that Rickard has tainted Robb's honor by killing the boys, and that he owes their fathers justice; the decision costs Robb the Karstark troops, and worsens his already weak position. After he is told that Lysa will not send him any reinforcements, or at least open the Bloody Gate for the Stark troops, Robb is filled with despair.
He curses "The Others can take her, then. Bloody Rickard Karstark as well. Gods be good, why would any man ever want to be king? How did it all get so confused? Lord Rickard's fought at my side in half a dozen battles.
His sons died for me in the Whispering Wood. Tion Frey and Willem Lannister were my enemies. Yet now I have to kill my dead friends' father for their sakes. Will the Lannisters thank me for Lord Rickard's head? Will the Freys? Before going to the Twins, Robb issues a royal decree, by which he legitimizes Jon and names him his successor despite Catelyn's objection. The decree is not mentioned afterward. It is speculated by fans that Robb has given it to Maege Mormont and Galbart Glover , whom he sent on a mission to the North, and it is unknown what has become of them.
So far in the books, Jon has not received the decree and has no idea about it. During the War of the Five Kings, Robb also begins to wear a bronze and iron crown just like his ancestors, the Kings of Winter. After his death, Ryman Frey gave that crown to a whore who accompanied him during the siege of Riverrun. Jaime notices it, and is filled with rage to see how the Freys continue making fun of Robb long after his death, although Robb was an enemy of his house.
Later, Ryman is killed by the Brotherhood without Banners and the crown is given to their new leader who replaced Beric - the monstrous Lady Stoneheart , formerly Robb's mother. Robb's last words are slightly different in the novels. In both versions, he has been shot with several arrows already and is struggling to remain conscious, but somehow manages to find the strength to stagger to his feet.
Catelyn calls to him to flee, and his last words are "Mother Grey Wind Roose Bolton then stabs Robb through the heart, finishing him off, saying, "Jaime Lannister sends his regards. Robb's last spoken words are later echoed by his "bastard half-brother" Jon's last words while being stabbed in the Mutiny at Castle Black which happened at the end of Season 5 in the TV series.
Jon's last utterance as he fades out of consciousness at the end of the fifth novel is actually " Ghost " - both brothers called to their direwolves as they were dying. The TV series simply omitted this. There is a fan speculation that Robb and Jon, in their last breath, managed to warg into their respective direwolves. It did not do any good for Robb, since Grey Wind was killed shortly after him; it is not the case with Jon, whose direwolf was not around when he was stabbed - he might have survived.
In the books, Robb is the third of the titular leaders in the War of the Five Kings to die in the show - the second , following Balon Greyjoy. Stannis tells Catelyn that in his eyes - Robb is a traitor like Renly. Yet, when Stannis and Melisandre perform the leech ritual , Stannis hesitates a bit before saying Robb's name. Robb is the second to die of the three "usurpers" in the show - the first , following Balon Greyjoy. Since Robb was not involved in the conflict between Stannis and the Lannisters, his death whether or not was affected by the leech ritual did not get Stannis any closer to the Iron Throne.
However, since Stannis is still alive in the books and has obtained the support of the Mormonts and other Northern houses, it can be argued that Robb's death assisted Stannis indirectly : his death has left a void, and the people of the North wished to settle the score with their oppressors, but needed someone to rally them; by liberating Deepwood Motte , Stannis has proven himself capable for that task.
The direwolf head is Robb's personal sigil, and not the sigil of House Stark a running direwolf. Game of Thrones Wiki. Game of Thrones Wiki Explore. Game of Thrones. House of the Dragon. Peterson - linguist. Patel - director. Vhagar Caraxes Syrax Meleys Sunfyre. Explore Wikis Community Central. Register Don't have an account? Robb Stark.
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