rogatny wrote:
I think we're going to see the downfall of Cersei. She's increasingly seeming like a sideline character, less and less necessary to the plot. My guess is that Jaime is the one that takes her out right before she blows up the city with more wild fire.
I have suspected this for a couple of years; it is the most dramatic way for her to go. There is also still a possibility that he is the third head of the dragon, and Cersei the mad twin.
T. Foster wrote:
In the books the Night King is rumored to have a magic horn that will cause the Wall to collapse (actually, IIRC, Mance Rayder was falsely rumored to have it, so I assumed the Night King actually does). Ever since reading that I always figured the Wall collapsing would be the cliffhanger finale of the next-to-last season of the show. I can't remember if that's been mentioned in the show, but I'd still bet on it happening in episode 7.
This seems quite likely. In the trailer we have seen Jon going north of the wall again this season, and the only motive I can think of is to recover the horn. His true heritage was already known to the Crannogmen, is now known to Bran, and as has been pointed out can be proven through fire. Unless something truly unexpected happens, we can reasonably expect Jon Snow to be the King of Westros by the end of the show. Although that seems far too happy an ending in the general context, it makes complete sense in the specific context of Jon.
As for the other characters, their fates are far less clear. Littlefinger must have one last important role to play, or he would be dead already. Sansa and Arya too, not to forget the Brotherhood Without Banners, which otherwise could have been safely forgotten this season. The current Lannister faction seems likely to be crushed by the end of this season, along with Euron, but I would not place any bets on it. Cersei might end up being killed by Jamie just before the white walkers storm the city and she is about to light it up (rather than waiting for the dragons), for example.
[i]It is a joyful thing indeed to hold intimate converse with a man after one’s own heart, chatting without reserve about things of interest or the fleeting topics of the world; but such, alas, are few and far between.[/i]
– Yoshida Kenko (1283-1350), [i]Tsurezure-Gusa[/i] (1340)