🚨 TARGARYEN DOOM FORETOLD: Why Egg FREAKS OUT Over the Fortune Teller’s Deadly Prophecy While Dunk Just LAUGHS It Off! 😱🔥🐉
Episode 3’s Creepy Fortune Scene Just Hit Like a Dragon’s Breath: The mysterious woman tells Dunk he’ll be “richer than a Lannister” – he chuckles like it’s a joke. Then she turns to Egg… “You shall be king… and die in a hot fire… worms shall feed upon your ashes… and ALL who know you shall rejoice in your dying.”
Dunk brushes it off as nonsense. Egg? Pale as death, sweating, whispering “Why would she say that?” – total PANIC MODE!
But WHY the massive difference? One knows the DARK FAMILY SECRET that makes this prophecy hit WAY too close to home… The other has NO CLUE he’s traveling with a hidden prince destined for the throne AND a fiery end!
The Chilling Reason Behind Egg’s Terror – And How It Ties to Summerhall’s Horror – is EXPLODING BELOW! 👇 Spoilers Incoming – Click NOW Before the Next Episode Burns It All Down! 🩸 Don’t Scroll Past This Heartbreaker!

HBO’s A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms continues to blend gritty medieval realism with subtle hints of the larger Game of Thrones mythology, and Episode 3, “The Squire,” delivered one of its most unsettling moments yet. Amid the bustling tents of the Ashford Meadow tourney, Ser Duncan the Tall (Peter Claffey) and his young squire Egg (Dexter Sol Ansell) encounter a hooded fortune teller who offers starkly different glimpses of their futures. Dunk receives a lighthearted prediction of wealth and success, which he dismisses with a hearty laugh. Egg, however, hears something far darker: “You shall be king, and die in a hot fire, and worms shall feed upon your ashes, and all who know you shall rejoice in your passing.”
The contrast in their reactions is immediate and telling. Dunk finds the whole exchange amusing, treating it as the ramblings of a charlatan. Egg, by contrast, turns pale, breaks into a sweat, and mutters in distress, “Why would she say that?” – a moment of genuine panic that lingers long after the scene ends. This difference isn’t random; it stems directly from the characters’ knowledge, backgrounds, and the hidden truths that separate a lowborn hedge knight from a secret Targaryen prince.
Spoiler Warning: This explanation draws on events from Episode 3 and George R.R. Martin’s source material, including major revelations about Egg’s identity and fate. Proceed with caution if you haven’t watched.
The fortune teller’s words land differently because Dunk and Egg occupy entirely different worlds. Dunk, born a commoner from Flea Bottom with no knowledge of noble lineages or court intrigue, hears only absurdity. Becoming king? Dying in flames while everyone celebrates? To him, it’s laughable fantasy – the kind of over-the-top doom a street performer might invent for coin. His optimistic, straightforward nature reinforces this dismissal; Dunk lives in the moment, focused on survival, honor, and the next fight. Prophecies feel like fairy tales, not threats.
Egg’s terror, however, is rooted in terrifying plausibility. By Episode 3’s end, viewers learn what Dunk does not yet fully grasp: Egg is no orphan stable boy. He is Prince Aegon Targaryen, youngest son of Prince Maekar Targaryen and grandson of King Daeron II – a distant but legitimate heir to the Iron Throne. Though far down the line of succession (behind uncles, older brothers, and cousins), the possibility of ascending has always loomed over him, especially in a family plagued by madness, tragedy, and sudden deaths. The fortune teller’s opening line – “You shall be king” – isn’t vague mysticism to Egg; it’s a mirror held up to his deepest fears and suppressed ambitions.
The rest of the prophecy cuts even deeper. “Die in a hot fire” evokes the Targaryen obsession with dragons and flame – a heritage Egg knows intimately. His family’s history is littered with fiery ends, from dragon battles to self-immolation attempts. But the final clause – “all who know you shall rejoice in your passing” – lands like a gut punch. It implies not just death, but unpopularity, failure, or betrayal so profound that even allies cheer his demise. For a boy already alienated from his cruel brother Aerion “Brightflame” (Finn Bennett) and dysfunctional family, this prophecy feels personal and prophetic, not playful.
In Martin’s lore (expanded in The World of Ice & Fire and referenced across the franchise), the fortune teller’s words prove eerily accurate. Egg does become King Aegon V Targaryen – “Aegon the Unlikely” – after a string of family tragedies clears his path to the throne. He rules as a reformer, championing the rights of smallfolk and attempting bold changes. Yet his reign ends in catastrophe at Summerhall, a royal castle where, decades later (around 259 AC, roughly 50 years after Ashford), Egg tries to hatch dragon eggs using wildfire and ancient rituals in hopes of restoring Targaryen power and enforcing his reforms. The experiment goes horribly wrong: a massive blaze engulfs the site, killing Egg, his son Prince Duncan the Small, Lord Commander Duncan the Tall (Ser Duncan), and others. The Tragedy of Summerhall remains shrouded in mystery – some accounts suggest accident, others hint at deliberate sabotage or even Egg’s own hubris – but the fire is undeniable.
The “rejoice” element ties into the aftermath. Aegon V’s progressive laws alienated many powerful lords, who saw them as threats to their privileges. His grandson, Aerys II (the future Mad King and Daenerys’ father), quickly undid much of Aegon’s work upon ascending. To the nobility who chafed under Egg’s rule, his death – while tragic – removed an obstacle, allowing a return to the status quo. The prophecy’s cruelty lies in its truth: a good man’s fiery end brings relief to those who opposed him.
Showrunners have used this scene (a show-original addition, as the fortune teller doesn’t appear in the novellas) to foreshadow Egg’s arc without spoiling too much for newcomers. Actor Dexter Sol Ansell, in interviews, has teased awareness of Egg’s fate, noting the irony of a boy warned against fire later pursuing dragons. Peter Claffey, playing Dunk, emphasized the humor in his character’s obliviousness, highlighting the class divide: Dunk sees prophecy as nonsense because royal destinies are alien to him.
Fan discussions on Reddit, X, and forums have exploded since the episode aired. Many praise the scene for layering dread into an otherwise lighthearted series, with one viral post noting, “Egg’s face when she says ‘rejoice’ – that’s pure horror because he knows his family’s capable of worse.” Others debate whether the fortune teller is a legitimate seer (like Maggy the Frog) or simply eerily perceptive.
As Season 1 builds toward its finale, the prophecy hangs over Egg like a shadow. Dunk remains blissfully unaware of its full weight, but viewers know better. A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms isn’t just telling a tale of unlikely friendship – it’s quietly tracing the seeds of Targaryen downfall, from a boy’s panicked sweat at Ashford to the flames at Summerhall.
Stream Episode 3 now on HBO and Max. The tourney rages on, but for Egg, the real battle – against destiny itself – has only begun.