
The implication of the scene in House of the Dragon season 2’s ending is that Daenerys is the Prince That Was Promised, the prophesied hero who will lead Westeros to salvation and help them win the day against the coming darkness, aka the White Walkers. Game of Thrones’ ending didn’t make her the ultimate savior, so why is Daemon’s vision ostensibly showing her in that way? The real reason likely connects to a major failing of not only Daemon, but many other Targaryens.
Why Daemon Targaryen Saw Daenerys In House Of The Dragon
It Fits House Targaryen’s Game Of Thrones History
Daemon seeing Daenerys isn’t just about the future of House Targaryen, but also about the family’s long ingrained sense of superiority. We as viewers know Dany isn’t the Prince That Was Promised in Game of Thrones (though she could still be in George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire books), and yet Daemon envisages a Targaryen as the prophesied hero all the same. He buys fully into the notion that Winter is coming, and that Rhaenyra must sit on the Iron Throne to lead to this coming savior.
It highlights how the Targaryens’ belief in themselves being superior to others is driving them forward, so, but to doom, not glory.
With that context, it becomes a more interesting choice to show Daemon having a vision that suggests Daenerys is the Prince That Was Promised, when we know she isn’t. Of course he sees the hero as coming from his and Rhaenyra’s own lineage. It highlights how the Targaryens’ belief in themselves being superior to others is driving them forward, so, but to doom, not glory.
The Targaryens Turned Aegon’s Dream Into Their Own Doom
The Conqueror’s Prophecy Was Really More Of A Curse
House of the Dragon season 3 has been confirmed, and is expected on HBO and Max in 2026.
Rhaenyra and Aegon are dividing Westeros with the Dance of the Dragons, the exact opposite of what Aegon’s dream wants to happen, and both are defined by the prophecy in different ways. Aegon sits the throne thanks to a misunderstanding regarding the dream; Rhaenyra is emboldened by it, her own increasing god complex supported by the notion that she is not just the realm’s rightful ruler, but its savior (or at least they will come from her line).
The worst part of this for the Targaryens isn’t just the many deaths or the war-torn, divided realm, but that it leads to the dying of the dragons.
Daemon’s vision of Dany, and the idea of her being the Prince That Was Promised, only adds to this. The point of the vision is to lead him back to supporting Rhaenyra, and he does so with proclamations of now believing in Aegon’s dream. Thanks to this new vision, then the war will only intensify even further; any chance for peace long since dead.