The House of the Dragon Facts Fans Can’t Ignore

Things to know about House Of The Dragons

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By : Caitlin
2/Jun/2026

The House of the Dragon isn’t just a TV show — it’s a full-blown family implosion with 17 dragons, more silver wigs than a drag show, and enough incest to make your therapist retire early. HBO dropped this Game of Thrones prequel on us in August 2022 and the internet has never been the same.

Set roughly 200 years before Daenerys Targaryen hatched her eggs, the show chronicles the Targaryen civil war known as the Dance of the Dragons — two factions of the same platinum-haired family tearing each other apart over who gets to sit on a very uncomfortable chair made of swords. Priorities, people.

Based on George R.R. Martin’s book Fire & Blood, the series was co-created by Martin himself and Ryan Condal. It blew up on day one and hasn’t stopped burning since. Buckle up.

Cast and Characters

Side-by-side portrait profiles of Emma D'Arcy as Queen Rhaenyra and Olivia Cooke as Queen Alicent.

The cast of The House of the Dragon is stacked. We’re talking former Time Lords, Doctor Who veterans, and Australian rising stars all wearing silver contact lenses and pretending to ride invisible CGI dragons. Here’s your cheat sheet:

Paddy Considine

King Viserys I Targaryen

Delivered the most gut-wrenching Season 1 performance — rotting alive on his throne and still showing up to work. His death created the war that destroys everything.

Emma D’Arcy

Queen Rhaenyra Targaryen

Non-binary actor who uses they/them pronouns. Earned a Golden Globe nomination for Season 2. Their gin-and-tonic interview with Olivia Cooke broke the internet.

Matt Smith

Prince Daemon Targaryen

Former Doctor Who. Spent all of Season 2 haunted in a castle, which fans were vocally unhappy about. Calls himself and Milly Alcock “mates” despite filming that brothel scene.

Olivia Cooke

Queen Alicent Hightower

Her “negroni, sbagliato… with prosecco in it” moment with Emma D’Arcy became a meme. Her Season 2 finale breakdown is peak acting chaos.

Milly Alcock

Young Rhaenyra (S1)

Australian actress who said watching herself on screen made her feel like she “can’t do this job.” She’s now a huge star. The imposter syndrome was wrong.

Emily Carey

Young Alicent (S1)

Only 19 years old during filming. Brought remarkable emotional depth to a character navigating impossible choices — then got aged out mid-season.

Ewan Mitchell

Prince Aemond Targaryen

Has one eye (wore a sapphire prosthetic) and rides the biggest dragon Vhagar. Fan-favorite villain who kills Rhaenyra’s son Lucerys — accidentally or not remains debated.

Tom Glynn-Carney

King Aegon II Targaryen

Plays history’s worst king. Gets badly burned at Rook’s Rest in Season 2. The show makes him pitiable AND monstrous — it’s genuinely impressive.

Steve Toussaint

Lord Corlys Velaryon

Refused to read Fire & Blood because his character’s book arc sometimes got changed anyway. Wise man. Very dignified. Commands the biggest navy in Westeros.

Rhys Ifans

Otto Hightower

The original mastermind. Played with such cold calculation that fans cheer when he gets sidelined. If this were Succession, he’d be Logan Roy.

The Plot

Here’s the tea on the actual plot: King Viserys I Targaryen names his daughter Rhaenyra as heir to the Iron Throne — a revolutionary move in a deeply sexist medieval fantasy world. This doesn’t sit well with, well, almost everyone.

When Viserys dies (after a Season 1 arc that is genuinely heartbreaking), his second wife Alicent’s son Aegon II gets crowned instead. And so begins the Dance of the Dragons — the Targaryens versus themselves. Team Black (Rhaenyra’s side) vs. Team Green (Aegon’s side). It’s basically a Thanksgiving dinner that escalated to nuclear war.

Season 1 — 2022

Milly Alcock and Emily Carey as the younger versions of Princess Rhaenyra and Lady Alicent in Season 1.

 

King Viserys names Rhaenyra his heir. Political marriages, time jumps, a brothel visit, and the death that starts it all.

10 episodes. Covers about 30 years via time jumps.

The Inciting Incident

Ewan Mitchell as Prince Aemond Targaryen wearing a black leather eye patch in House of the Dragon.

Aemond’s dragon Vhagar kills Rhaenyra’s son Lucerys over Shipbreaker Bay. War is now inevitable.

“Blood and Cheese” revenge follows in Season 2 — fans knew it was coming and were STILL horrified.

Season 2 — 2024

Full civil war. Dragon battles. Daemon loses his mind at Harrenhal. Rhaenyra finds new dragonriders. Alicent’s world crumbles.

8 episodes. Premiered June 16, 2024. Over 7 million viewers on premiere day.

Season 3 — Coming Soon

Production began March 31, 2025. New cast includes Tommy Flanagan and Dan Fogler. The Dance of the Dragons intensifies.

8 episodes expected. Emma D’Arcy kicked off filming with a video for fans.

R.I.P Corner

King Viserys I Died of his progressive, mysterious rotting disease after seasons of suffering. Most heartbreaking death. Everyone cried.
Lucerys Velaryon Eaten by Vhagar (and Aemond) mid-storm. The death that lit the fuse on the whole war. Fans wept.
Jaehaerys (infant prince) The Blood and Cheese scene. Murdered in retaliation. So brutal the show’s writer confirmed it well in advance, and fans still weren’t ready.
Laena Velaryon Chose to burn herself via her dragon Vhagar rather than die in childbirth. A choice that shook everyone.
Laenor Velaryon Apparently killed, but actually faked his death and escaped to live his best life. One of the show’s few happy endings. Sort of.
Harwin Strong Burned alive at Harrenhal. Widely mourned for being the only genuinely decent man in the show.
Rhaenys Targaryen Died at the Battle of Rook’s Rest in Season 2. The Queen Who Never Was finally rode to war — and paid for it.

Behind the Dragon Curtain

The Brothel Scene Nobody Will Stop Talking About

In Season 1, Episode 4, Daemon takes his teenage niece Rhaenyra to a brothel. Matt Smith himself called the scene “hard” and said you have to strip away modern-day morality to understand it. But here’s the twist — he and Milly Alcock were reportedly laughing hysterically the entire time between takes. “Pissing our pants the whole time, laughing,” said Smith. Professionalism.

Even wilder: neither Smith nor Alcock was allowed to see the brothel set before filming. They walked in cold, surrounded by extras performing simulated acts — on purpose, to capture genuine shock. It worked. Milly Alcock described the experience as “shocking” and “gnarly.”

Controversy Alert
Matt Smith publicly criticized trigger warnings in TV, saying, “Isn’t being shocked, surprised, stirred the point?” This followed backlash over the show’s graphic content in Episode 1. His comments sparked a whole separate discourse about creative intent vs. viewer safety.

The Showrunner Swap

After Season 1 wrapped, co-showrunner Miguel Sapochnik — who directed some of the most acclaimed episodes — quietly stepped down. No official reason was ever given. Ryan Condal became the sole showrunner for Season 2, with veteran director Alan Taylor stepping in as an executive producer. The behind-the-scenes regime change was very on-brand for a show about regime changes.

Filming Locations: A European Tour with Dragons

Season 1 was shot across Cornwall and Hertfordshire in England, Cáceres in Spain, and the Castle of Monsanto in Portugal. Season 2 added Wales, Spain, and London. So if you’ve ever wanted to visit fictional Westeros, just book a flight to Southwestern Europe and squint.

Awards Won, Nominations Lost & Emmy Scandal

The House of the Dragon has had a complicated awards journey — celebrated by critics and audiences, repeatedly snubbed by voters, and once literally barred from Emmy eligibility due to a calendar technicality. Only in Westeros.

  • Golden Globe — Best Drama Series (2022)
  • Saturn Award — Best Fantasy TV Series (Season 2)
  • Emmy — Outstanding Visual Effects
  • Emmy Nominated — Outstanding Drama Series
  • Golden Globe Nom — Emma D’Arcy, Best Actress Drama (S2)
  • ZERO Acting Emmy Nominations (Season 1)
  • Ineligible for 2024 Emmys entirely

Yes, you read that right. Season 2 couldn’t compete at the 2024 Emmy Awards at all because the Television Academy requires at least six episodes to air before May 31 — and Episode 6 didn’t drop until July 14. So the cast simply… didn’t go. No nomination, no ceremony, no after-party. Brutal bureaucracy, Targaryen style.

The Great Emmy Acting Snub of 2023

Despite massive critical praise, not a single cast member — not Paddy Considine, not Matt Smith, not Emma D’Arcy, not Olivia Cooke — picked up an Emmy nomination for acting in Season 1. The internet lost its mind. The show’s Outstanding Drama Series nomination made it even more baffling.

The Controversies That Kept Fans Fed

It Was Too Dark to See. Literally.

Matt Smith as Prince Daemon Targaryen in a heavily shadowed, low-light dramatic scene.

Season 1, Episode 7 aired, and half the audience couldn’t see what was happening on screen. The scenes involving Rhaenyra and Daemon were almost pitch-black. Fans flooded social media. HBO’s official response via their Help account? “The dimmed lighting of this scene was an intentional creative decision.” Fans were not satisfied. The internet roasted them for weeks.

The Targaryen Banner Has the Wrong Dragon

According to George R.R. Martin’s books, dragons have only two legs — their wings act as front limbs. Yet the three-headed Targaryen sigil shown throughout the show has four-legged dragons. Even the creator of the source material didn’t fully approve the heraldry. This sent book readers into forensic meltdown mode.

Daemon’s Season 2 Arc: The Fan Wars

Matt Smith’s Daemon spends the majority of Season 2 trapped at Harrenhal, experiencing increasingly unhinged hallucinations. Fans were divided. Some called it profound psychological storytelling. Others — and there were many — felt the show sidelined its most charismatic character for seven episodes of fever dreams. Matt Smith himself acknowledged it was a “drawn-out” period for the character.

The Incest Debate (Yes, Really)

The show features multiple incestuous relationships — some romantic, some explicitly sexual. Season 2 included a graphic scene involving Daemon and a mysterious silver-haired woman in his visions that prompted headlines about “crossing every limit.” Critics argued these scenes served the story; detractors argued the show was gratuitous. The debate continues on every online forum. Westeros has always had this energy.

Season 2 Was Too Short, Say Fans

Season 2 had just 8 episodes compared to Season 1’s 10. Critics noted the shorter run contributed to pacing issues — characters’ arcs felt rushed or, conversely, padded. Showrunner Ryan Condal confirmed Season 3 will also have 8 episodes, to the mild displeasure of viewers who want MORE dragon content.

Random Trivia

  • Matt Smith previously played the Eleventh Doctor in Doctor Who, which means he went from piloting a time machine to riding a dragon. Honestly, an upgrade. He’s also been vocal about disliking trigger warnings, which generated its own news cycle.
  • Emma D’Arcy — who plays adult Rhaenyra — is non-binary and uses they/them pronouns. Their casting was groundbreaking, and their performance was universally praised. The gin-and-tonic exchange with Olivia Cooke in a press junket became one of the most viral HBO clips ever. The internet demanded a “Negroni, sbagliato” crossover immediately.
  • Milly Alcock, who played young Rhaenyra, has spoken publicly about her imposter syndrome while watching herself on screen. The Australian actress, who now appears in other major productions, essentially used House of the Dragon as a launchpad into Hollywood stardom — while being terrified the whole time.
  • Paddy Considine hinted that Season 2’s storytelling would echo the rhythms of Greek and Shakespearean tragedy. He was right. He was also too good for this show and it genuinely misses him.
  • Steve Toussaint, who plays Corlys Velaryon, wisely chose not to read the source material. His reasoning? You read it, get excited about something your character does — and then Ryan Condal tells you it’s been cut. Emotional self-preservation. Valid.
  • Martin co-created the show and co-wrote several Season 1 episodes. By Season 2, the writers were “operating on their own.” Martin has publicly expressed frustration with certain creative choices — including the Targaryen family sigil’s dragon anatomy issue — but remains an executive producer. He also still hasn’t finished Winds of Winter. Just saying.
  • Season 1 uses significant time jumps — sometimes skipping years between episodes — which meant two actresses (Milly Alcock → Emma D’Arcy for Rhaenyra; Emily Carey → Olivia Cooke for Alicent) were replaced mid-season by older counterparts. Some viewers found it disorienting. Others found it bold. The pacing criticism appeared in nearly every review alongside massive praise for everything else.
  • One of the most talked-about behind-the-scenes details is the show’s use of intimacy coordinators for every sex scene. Matt Smith specifically praised the coordinator as “really good” — not just for the brothel scene but throughout production. This became a talking point about how modern TV productions handle intimate content differently from the original Game of Thrones era.
  • Unlike Game of Thrones, where you rooted against clear villains, The House of the Dragon has no real heroes. The fandom split into Team Black (Rhaenyra supporters) and Team Green (Alicent/Aegon supporters) — and they go at each other online with the energy of actual medieval warfare. Both sides have valid points. Both sides are insufferable about it. It’s wonderful.
  • Fans shipped Rhaenyra and Alicent — collectively “Daenyra” — as a romantic pairing. This got so prevalent that showrunner Ryan Condal actually addressed the fandom theories. Olivia Cooke later said a romantic relationship between the two characters would “bring more conflict to the realm.” Which is either a flat denial or the most in-character possible answer about two women who ruined a continent together.

What’s Next in the Realm

The House of the Dragon Season 3 officially entered production on March 31, 2025. Emma D’Arcy kicked off filming day with a video message for fans. New additions to the cast include Tommy Flanagan (Sons of Anarchy, Gladiator) as Ser Roderick Dustin and Dan Fogler (Fantastic Beasts) as Ser Torrhen Manderly. James Norton joins as Ormund Hightower.

The returning ensemble includes Matt Smith, Emma D’Arcy, Olivia Cooke, Steve Toussaint, Rhys Ifans, Ewan Mitchell, Tom Glynn-Carney, and basically everyone who survived Season 2 — which, admittedly, is fewer people than when we started.

Season 3 is expected to run 8 episodes — consistent with Season 2’s format. It is officially scheduled to premiere on June 21, 2026.

Is The House of the Dragon Worth Your Time?

The competing green and black Targaryen family crest banners from House of the Dragon.

Look — The House of the Dragon has flaws. The time jumps are disorienting. Season 2 left fans wanting more. Daemon spent too long going mad in a castle. The screen was literally too dark to see in Episode 7. And not a single actor got an Emmy nomination in Season 1 despite turning in some of the best work on television.

But here’s the thing: the performances — particularly from Emma D’Arcy, Olivia Cooke, Matt Smith, and Paddy Considine — are extraordinary. The dragon sequences are visually stunning. The politics are genuinely complex. And unlike its predecessor, every character has a point of view that makes sense from where they’re standing.

This isn’t a show about heroes and villains. It’s about two women — former best friends — watching their relationship and their world burn because of choices made around them, and then making choices that burn it further. 


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