
The way they did this was by having you interact with the actors from the show more than the other members of House Forrester. While the previous Game of Thrones episode is told from these same perspectives, the developers and writers seemed to try and convince you that the game completely fits within the world HBO has brought to life. In fact, this is where “The Lost Lords” truly shines over the premiere episode: letting the Forrester family take front and center in the story. Through this character, however, you start to relive some of the same scenarios you witnessed in “Iron From Ice,” though I daresay some of the episode’s strongest scenes comes while surrounded by Forrester Ironwood. I wondered how the situation in Ironrath would continue since the pivotal scene between Lord Ethan and Ramsay Snow at the end of the last episode, and Telltale seemed eager to quickly tie up the loose ends in the North. As a cart carrying corpses rolls along, I felt a little disappointed when I didn’t heard Eric Idle shouting “Bring out your dead!” A lost character, previously thought to be dead comes back and while the introduction of this character seems to feel a little forced and trope-y, it’s not unwelcome. Immediately after this first scene I’m brought back to my old Monty Python memorizing days. Asher and Beskha are two of the more likeable characters within the second episode of Game Of Thrones: A Telltale Game Series. Martin has a way of making you feel as though the worst will come, and towards the end of their story arc this episode you start to get the feeling that those seeds are being sown (Apparently Beskha doesn’t like Meereen), but it’s sure to be a fun ride whenever you’re with those two. Beskha seems enamored with the Westerosi, laying her dreams for their future out as plain as the ale in front of them. Asher is funny and charismatic, quick on his feet and pretty much carefree. The two have a chemistry that seemed lost in the first episode of the series, and the whole rest of “The Lost LordS” I felt myself wondering what they were doing now. You immediately introduced to Asher Forrester, the exiled son of House Forrester, as well as his quite likeable compatriot, Beskha. “The Lost Lords” opens up with a wideshot of Yunkai in Essos, just a few days since Daenarys Targaryen liberated the Slaver’s Bay city. Read on, unless you want to experience everything with a clean slate first!Īfter about twenty minutes into the second episode of Telltale’s Game of Thrones Episode 2, the meaning of the name became instantly clear. Warning: This Review will contain spoilers to Telltale’s Game of Thrones episodic series, referencing events from episode 1 and the newly released episode 2.
