

While there are no specific swords made from the mythical material known as dragonglass, the sheer abundance of dragonglass weaponry introduced in the series since the middle of the seventh season clearly signals that this substance will play a key role in the Battle of Winterfell.Ĩ. From the very beginning of the series, the dagger that once belonged to Petyr Baelish, also known as Littlefinger, has turned up at very key moments.ħ. When Sam and Gilly visited the Tarly family home in Horn Hill in the sixth season, Sam stole his family's ancestral sword, Heartsbane, as revenge in a way for his father's cruel treatment of him and his beloved.Ħ.



Heartsbane is a perfect example of a truly beneficial weapon that the series has been keeping quiet about for quite some time. While Ser Jorah Mormont now holds the ancestral Tarly family sword, the ancestral Mormont family sword has belonged to none other than the rightful heir to the Iron Throne himself, Jon Snow, for much of the series.ĥ. The fourth season premiere of Game of Thrones, "Two Swords," finds the malevolent Tywin Lannister having the ancestral sword of the Stark family, a Valyrian steel sword called Ice, melted down and re-forged into two new swords.Ĥ. The other blade belongs to the newly knighted Ser Brienne of Tarth, the first female knight in the history of the Seven Kingdoms.ģ. The first of the swords forged from the melted down Valyrian steel of the ancestral Stark sword Ice is Ser Jaime's Widow's Wail. But at the end of the day, one of the most efficient and least troublesome ways to dispatch of any of the White Walkers is to simply burn them alive.Ģ. Valyrian steel is well and good and all, and dragonglass isn't too shabby either. Ranked: All The Swords In Game Of Thrones ScreenRant
