One of the most legendary shows ever put to the small screen turns 15 today. A lot has and continues to be said about it, especially how it ended. But since it aired, and left, imho no show has been able to reach up to its greatness. Game of Thrones debuted at a time when the likes of Mad Men and Breaking Bad were ruling TV. Lost had just ended a year before. And between all this, a mature fantasy show with dragons came and made its name and captured a massive audience worldwide as well as won a plethora of awards. In later era Thrones, each new episode used to light up social media discussion like a major sports event does.
It became a show which had the respect of the casuals and more critical watchers alike. It married grand, spectacle based storytelling with complicated plotlines and complex character development of a prestige show. The credit for all of that of course goes to the genius of George RR Martin, whose books boast an even better version of the story. But to bring the books to life, with a budget and resources which were middling at the start compared to where it went, was an incredible feat. The first 4 seasons are arguably the best TV you can find, and seasons 5 and 6 have greatness too. Has there been a greater back to back on TV since "Battle of the Bastards" and "Winds of Winter"? Even the highly controversial S8 had the "Knight of the Seven Kingdoms" episode which had great dialogue writing and my hot TV take is that episode 5 of S8 "The Bells" has astonishingly good direction from Miguel Sapochnik, but that's a discussion for another day.
And GOT changed TV too. GoT showed that TV could be a place to tell "cinematic" or spectacle based stories based on IP. Would we get a LOTR show, a HP show, a Last of Us show or a Star Wars show if GOT wasn't the success it became? Eventually it would have been the case as streaming became so popular, but GOT speedtracked the whole thing. How many times have we heard "let HBO handle such and such IP for a TV show"?
And from what I have noticed, new viewers are much more accepting of the ending, since they did not have years of expectations or assumptions about the ending. But that's a whole different topic.
Game of Thrones is the first TV show that I watched where it felt like I was watching a movie every week.
13
Low-Vehicle5458Apr 17, 2026
+6
facts, production value was insane
6
AusGenoApr 17, 2026
+3
Every week id rewatch the last weeks episode before I watched the latest one.
3
I-Have-MonoApr 17, 2026
+5
Yeah, I respectfully wouldn’t go that far…
5
Boss452Apr 17, 2026
+1
what's wrng with what I said?
1
AnotherJasonOnRedditApr 17, 2026
+2
>*And GOT changed TV too. GoT showed that TV could be a place to tell "cinematic" or spectacle based stories based on IP. Would we get a LOTR show, a HP show, a Last of Us show or a Star Wars show if GOT wasn't the success it became? Eventually it would have been the case as streaming became so popular, but GOT speedtracked the whole thing*
I agree, Boss.
Game of Thrones wasn't the first "epic" TV series.
I mean, there's Rome (most obvious example, since it's HBO and shares so many cast members) just for starters.
But GoT showed that there was potential for a **successful** scale that hadn't been seen on the small screen before.
HBO wanted ten seasons. George R R Martin wanted at least twelve. The series was a massive hit.
As you say, we would've eventually have got to where we are now - TV nowadays (House of the Dragon, Stat Trek Strange New Worlds, etc) are almost indistinguishable from theatrical movies.
But Game of Thrones helped immensely in setting the stage for our current era.
2
Boss452Apr 17, 2026
+1
glad for your comment. V true as you say.
1
Batel_FrontApr 17, 2026
Personnellement, je trouve que les séries de la décennie actuelle sont très décevantes
0
Few-Hair-5382Apr 17, 2026
I think the Golden Age of Television is over. Nothing in the last ten years compares to the first few seasons of GoT, The Wire, Breaking Bad, The Sopranos, Deadwood or Mad Men.
TV has definitely changed for the better thanks to these trailblazing shows. Long gone are the c**** production values, endless filler episodes and ropey performances of TV from the early-90s and prior. But it seems there are no frontiers left to conquer. And most "prestige" TV shows these days are either franchise pieces (like the endless GoT spinoffs) or exceptionally well-made genre entries like The Pitt.
0
SkavauApr 17, 2026
+1
>And most "prestige" TV shows these days are either franchise pieces (like the endless GoT spinoffs) or exceptionally well-made genre entries like The Pitt.
"Genre" is usually a term used to describe sci-fi/fantasy shows. Which The Pitt isn't. So that's a weird way to use the term.
1
Few-Hair-5382Apr 17, 2026
+1
"Medical drama" is a well-defined TV genre.
1
SkavauApr 17, 2026
+1
But then everything is "genre TV" then
1
Few-Hair-5382Apr 17, 2026
+1
If you are making a TV show in the same vein as many others (ER, House, New Amsterdam, The Knick, etc, etc) then it is fair to call it a genre series. Just as "cop show" is a genre.
I love The Pitt, in terms of quality it is far superior to most others of its genre. But it is still a genre show.
1
SkavauApr 17, 2026
+1
I mean I agree in the sense that every show has a genre. But specifically "genre TV" has always been colloquial used to refer to sci-fi/fantasy/speculative fiction shows in my experience
1
Few-Hair-5382Apr 17, 2026
+1
Fair enough
1
Batel_FrontApr 17, 2026
+1
I realize I'm just rewatching shows from the last two decades over and over.
Currently, between the worthless storylines, seasons with a maximum of 10 episodes, and a new season every two or three years, it's a waste of time.
Also, comedy series have taken the biggest hit; we don't see Brooklyn Nine-Nine, 2 Broke Girls, Big Bang Theory anymore. I'm not really sure why.
1
SkavauApr 17, 2026
+2
>Currently, between the worthless storylines, seasons with a maximum of 10 episodes, and a new season every two or three years, it's a waste of time.
Almost all of the highly-rated prestige shows have betwen 8 and 12 episodes a season. Including Game of Thrones notably.
2
Batel_FrontApr 17, 2026
+1
Except it's a whole package; if the episodes are bad and we have to wait much longer for them, it's just not possible.
1
SkavauApr 17, 2026
+2
I don't agree that all TV shows have bad episodes or seasons now
The last three seasons were absolute shit, though.
0
boomosaurApr 17, 2026
-1
Wheel of Time could have been that with showrunners that just followed the source material.
-1
NiljaApr 17, 2026
+2
And if the camera work wasn't atrocious
2
herewego199209Apr 17, 2026
+2
Shows like Wheel of Time really expose how important having great showrunners are that can pick the right directors and pick the overarching crews. So many of these studios that greenlight these GOT competitors just never get it right with the showrunners or the directors they bring in.
24 Comments