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The Witcher Season 4’s ending changes that. The finale, “Baptism of Fire,” sees Geralt and his cohorts – or “hanza” – fight in the Battle for the Bridge on the Yaruga, where he helps the forces of Lyria and Rivia defeat the Nilfgardians. As a result of his heroic actions, Geralt gets something he’d always wanted: he becomes a knight. Queen Meve of Lyria and Rivia officially dubs him Geralt of Rivia, meaning that the name he had long carried, and chosen somewhat at random, now fully makes sense, but there’s a catch.
What Geralt Becoming “Geralt of Rivia” Really Means For The Witcher

Despite it once being a dream of his, the witcher’s reaction to becoming a knight is not a happy one, with Liam Hemsworth delivering a customary Geralt “f**k” after it happens. But the reason for that isn’t so much that he’d given up on wanting to be a knight, but more what it means. These are Meve’s exact words to him in this scene: “Serve us faithfully, Sir Geralt of Rivia, with courage and valor, with allegiance to me, and only me. In the days ahead… and for all of time.”








