
5. I Want to Go Home
Both Robb Stark and Daenerys Targaryen start off their character arcs as reluctant heroes. Robb Stark is thrust into the political chaos caused by the attack on his brother Bran, and the subsequent kidnapping of Tyrion Lannister by his mother. He is further pushed into war when Joffrey Baratheon recklessly calls for the head of Ned Stark, with the death of the Stark patriarch, rallying the North into rebellion. Daenerys is likewise handed cards that she has little control over, with the burden of preserving the family name resting solely upon her and her brother Viserys. Daenerys arguably has the worst share of this burden, as it is up to her to marry an utter stranger in a foreign land in order to secure an army. “I want to go home”, she confesses, a line later echoed by Robb Stark as he explains that he is not fighting for glory or for songs to be sung about him.
4. Questioning Their Power as Young Warriors Proving Their Worth
The two young warrior rulers are desperate to prove their worth. They continually question what sort of influence they truly hold and whether or not they are worthy of it. “How can I call myself King if I can’t hold my own castle? How can I ask men to follow me..” Robb cries to Roose Bolton in his encampment after the Greyjoy invasion of Winterfell. In Mereen, Daenerys explains to Jorah that she needs to be more than just the mother of dragons; she needs to be someone that can inspire people and keep order. Both characters are hungry to prove something not only to their people, but to themselves.
3. Not the Kind of King/Queen I’m Going to Be
2. A Passion for Justice
Robb Stark and Daenerys Targaryen have a passion for justice. Robb Stark establishes that justice is his central motivation for fighting against the Lannisters. When his future wife Talisa expresses disapproval for the selfish motives of war, to which Robb explains that he fights for justice. Not only do the Lannisters have his sisters, but he must have them answer for the death of his father. Daenerys shares this passion as she witnesses the treatment of the slaves in Astapor. She explains her decision to crucify the masters as “I will answer injustice with justice”.