Game of Thrones: Catch up with EW's season 1 episode guide

Ahead of the eighth and final season of Game of Thrones, here’s a refresher of everything you need to know from season 1. (Check out our guides for seasons 2-7 and our list of essential episodes down below.)

Episode 1: “Winter Is Coming”

Writers: David Benioff and D.B. Weiss
Director: Tim Van Patten
Plot: After the death of his right-hand man, King Robert Baratheon travels north to Winterfell to ask his old friend Lord Eddard “Ned” Stark to assume the role. The queen, Cersei; her twin brother, Jaime Lannister; and their brother Tyrion Lannister arrive with the king. The two families intermingle to devastating result: Bran (the second youngest of the Stark children) interrupts Jaime and Cersei having incestuous sex, so Jaime pushes him from a tower window to silence him. Across the Narrow Sea in Pentos, exiled prince Viserys Targaryen forces his sister, Daenerys, to wed Khal Drogo, the leader of a Dothraki tribe, in exchange for an army so he can return to Westeros and reclaim his father’s Iron Throne.
Introduces: Everyone, plus White Walkers (the undead entities that live Beyond the Wall), the Starks’ pet direwolves, their ward Theon Greyjoy, and the treacherous prince Joffrey.
Historic moment: Dany receives three petrified dragon eggs as a wedding gift.
Grade: A–

Episode 2: “The Kingsroad”

Episode 3: “Lord Snow”

Writers: David Benioff and D.B. Weiss
Director: Brian Kirk
Plot: In King’s Landing, Lord Petyr “Littlefinger” Baelish, a former childhood friend of Catelyn, helps Lady Stark when she arrives seeking Ned. He claims Bran’s would-be-assassin’s dagger belongs to Tyrion. Ned and Catelyn enlist his help to find the truth. Across the Narrow Sea, Dany — now pregnant with her husband’s child — bonds with exiled knight Ser Jorah Mormont as she settles into her role as Khaleesi (a Queen of the Dothraki), to her brother’s annoyance. Arya begins sword-fighting classes with a renowned trainer from Braavos.
Introduces: The Small Council: a conniving motley crew consisting of the king’s brother, Lord Renly; the eunuch Lord Varys; Grand Maester Pycelle; and the Master of Coin, Littlefinger.
Historic moment: We learn that Jaime killed the “Mad King” Aerys Targaryen (Dany’s father), and is therefore known as “Kingslayer.”
Grade: B+

Episode 4: “Cripples, Bastards, and Broken Things”

Writer: Bryan Cogman
Director: Brian Kirk
Plot: Tyrion stops at Winterfell with a gift for paralyzed Bran: blueprints for a saddle that allows him to ride without the use of his legs. Samwell Tarly arrives at the Wall and Jon takes pity on his weakness. At King’s Landing, Ned looks into the previous Hand of the King Jon Arryn’s death. He meets an armorer’s apprentice, Gendry, King Robert’s bastard son. On the road back north, Catelyn runs into Tyrion. She accuses him of conspiring to murder her son Bran, and announces she’s taking him back to Winterfell to await the King’s justice.
Introduces: Gendry: one legitimate heir to the throne, and the suggestion that Robert’s blond-haired offspring are unlikely to have come from his “strong seed.”
Historic moment: Dany stands up to her brother.
Grade: B

Episode 5: “The Wolf and the Lion”

Writers: David Benioff and D.B. Weiss
Director: Brian Kirk
Plot: Catelyn takes Tyrion to the Eyrie where her sister/Jon Arryn’s widow, Lysa, resides. Lysa has become unhinged and still breastfeeds her preadolescent son. At King’s Landing, Varys warns Ned that Robert’s life is in jeopardy, believing Jon Arryn was poisoned. The king hears (via Jorah, who is trading secrets in exchange for a pardon) that Dany is pregnant and calls for her assassination. Ned refuses to have any part in it and gives up his position as Hand. He plans to leave for Winterfell, but first visits a brothel on Littlefinger’s suggestion, where he finds another of Robert’s illegitimate children. On leaving, Ned is surrounded by Jaime — angry that Catelyn has taken his brother prisoner — and his men.
Introduces: Ser Loras Tyrell, the “Knight of Flowers” and Renly Baratheon’s lover.
Historic moment: The Stark/Lannister tension comes to a head when Jaime and Ned fight, almost to the death.
Grade: B+

Episode 6: “A Golden Crown”

Writers: Jane Espenson, David Benioff, and D.B. Weiss
Director: Daniel Minahan
Plot: Ned wants Jaime brought to justice for butchering his men, but Robert won’t act against his source of wealth. Ned is reinstated as Hand and summons the Lannister patriarch, Tywin, to court to answer for attacking the Riverlands. Bran is set upon by Wildlings in the woods but saved by his older brother Robb and Theon. Tyrion demands a trial by combat and a champion to fight on his behalf; the mercenary Bronn volunteers, fights dirty, wins, and Tyrion is freed. Elsewhere, Dany proves herself to be one of the Dothraki by eating a horse’s heart. A jealous Viserys drunkenly demands a crown from Khal Drogo. Drogo pours molten gold on Viserys’ head, thereby crowning and killing him — painfully.
Introduces: Osha, a Wildling who later looks after the younger Stark children.
Historic moment: Viserys’ death proves he was no dragon; fire can’t kill a dragon.
Grade: B+

Episode 7: “You Win or You Die”

Episode 8: “The Pointy End”

Writer: George R.R. Martin
Director: Daniel Minahan
Plot: After Ned’s arrest, Arya narrowly escapes, and Cersei forces Sansa to write to her family, telling Robb to swear fealty to Joffrey. Robb calls for his bannermen to march on King’s Landing instead. Catelyn meets Robb on the road, while Tyrion joins his father at the Lannister encampment. King Joffrey names his grandfather, Tywin, his Hand and uncle/dad, Jaime, Lord Commander of the Kingsguard. The Dothraki sack a village to help fund Drogo’s throne quest. Dany saves some women from rape, and Drogo is injured defending her honor.
Introduces: Sam’s knowledge that White Walkers can be killed by fire.
Historic moment: Two dead rangers are brought back to Castle Black. They reanimate as wights (zombie-like beings), and Jon saves Commander Mormont from their attack.
Grade: B+

Episode 9 “Baelor”

Episode 10: “Fire and Blood”

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