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Although the initial reception is largely positive, early indicators suggest that the newest chapter of the Game of Thrones saga is struggling to reach the elite critical benchmarks set by its predecessors. At the time of writing, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms holds an 83 percent approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 36 reviews. This debut score is notably lower than the historical averages for the franchise, as every season of the original Game of Thrones maintained a rating above 90 percent until the final season dropped to 55 percent. The pattern of excellence continued with House of the Dragon, which earned a 90 percent for its first season and an 84 percent for its second year. As the critical pool expands in the coming weeks, the score for A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms is likely to fluctuate as more outlets provide their assessments. Nevertheless, given the massive legacy of the previous shows, a modest level of critical disappointment is not entirely surprising as the franchise explores a smaller and more intimate story.
What Critics Are Saying About A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms?

By moving away from the high-stakes political maneuvering of the Iron Throne and the catastrophic threat of dragons, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms allows audiences to experience Westeros through the perspective of the common folk. This transition is a direct reflection of the source material provided by George R.R. Martin in the Dunk and Egg novellas, lighter stories that serve as a companion to the author’s main epic. In our own review for A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, James Hunt praises this approach by saying, “Thereโs expansion here, which was necessary, but it all feels true to the books and the characters, and Iโm relieved they stuck to that tone rather than trying to make it too epic to fit with the rest of the franchise.”








