Game of Thrones Characters

When you play the game of thrones, you win or you die. Explore every character from HBO's Game of Thrones — from the honor-bound Starks of Winterfell and the scheming Lannisters of Casterly Rock to Daenerys's dragon-fueled conquest and the existential threat of the Night King.

Last reviewed on 2026-05-02

Jon Snow Stark

King in the North

The brooding, honor-bound bastard of Winterfell who joined the Night's Watch, was murdered by his brothers, resurrected, and became King in the North — before discovering he was actually Aegon Targaryen, heir to the Iron Throne. Jon's story is Game of Thrones' central hero arc: a man defined by duty, repeatedly punished for his integrity, whose final act is a mercy killing that saves the world.

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Daenerys Targaryen Targaryen

Mother of Dragons

The exiled princess who built an army from nothing, hatched three dragons, freed thousands of slaves, and crossed an ocean to claim her family's throne — before her final descent into the Mad Queen her father always was. Daenerys's arc from terrified girl to liberating conqueror to destruction is GoT's most contested narrative, a tragedy whose final act remains the series' most debated storytelling choice.

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Tyrion Lannister Lannister

The Imp

"I drink and I know things." The brilliant, wine-loving dwarf of House Lannister — simultaneously the family's greatest asset and most despised member. Tyrion's wit, his political intelligence, and his ability to survive despite everyone's contempt make him Game of Thrones' most consistently compelling character. His trial for Joffrey's murder and his killing of his own father are the series' defining dramatic peaks.

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Cersei Lannister Lannister

Queen of the Seven Kingdoms

The calculating, fiercely protective Queen whose love for her children and hunger for power drive her every action. Cersei's arc — from king's wife to queen regent to queen in her own right — charts a brilliant political mind working within a system built to exclude her. Her wildfire destruction of the Sept of Baelor is the series' most operatically satisfying villainy, and her eventual death feels almost anticlimactic for such a towering presence.

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Arya Stark Stark

No One / Assassin

The youngest Stark daughter who refused to become a proper lady and instead became one of the deadliest assassins in Westeros. Arya's training with the Faceless Men, her list of names to kill, and her ultimate delivery of the Night King's death blow made her the show's most action-driven protagonist. Her needle, her wolf Ghost (briefly), and her final westward voyage give her story a satisfying sense of open horizon.

Jaime Lannister Lannister

The Kingslayer

The golden knight who killed the king he swore to protect — and carried that shame for years before his journey with Brienne revealed why: he saved half a million lives Aerys would have burned. Jaime's arc from villain to one of the series' most complex heroes is Game of Thrones' greatest character reversal. His final return to Cersei remains the most divisive decision in the show's final season.

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Sansa Stark Stark

Queen in the North

The eldest Stark daughter who came to King's Landing dreaming of knights and glory — and survived Joffrey, Littlefinger, Ramsay Bolton, and the game of thrones itself. Sansa's transformation from naive girl to the shrewdest political operator in Westeros is GoT's most underappreciated character journey, ending with her as the only character who gets exactly what she wanted: an independent North.

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The Night King

Leader of the White Walkers

The ancient, silent leader of the White Walkers — the existential threat the entire series builds toward. The Night King's ability to resurrect the dead, his pointed eye contact with Bran, and his destruction of Daenerys's dragon Viserion are the series' most chilling moments. His sudden death at Arya's hands in the Battle of Winterfell remains Game of Thrones' most debated climax.

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Joffrey Baratheon Baratheon

The Boy King

The petulant, sadistic boy king whose cruelty — executing Ned Stark, tormenting Sansa, ordering massacres on a whim — established Game of Thrones as a show willing to kill anyone. Joffrey's purple wedding death (poisoned at his own feast) is one of television's most cathartic villain deaths, made all the more satisfying by how long the show made viewers endure him.

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Ned Stark Stark

Lord of Winterfell

The honorable, stoic Lord of Winterfell who came to King's Landing to serve as Hand of the King — and whose execution at the end of Season 1 announced that Game of Thrones plays by no one's rules. Ned's death is the single most important moment in the series: it established that protagonists die, honor doesn't protect you, and no one is safe. Everything GoT became traces back to that moment on the Sept steps.

About Game of Thrones

Game of Thrones was created by David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, based on George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire novel series. It aired on HBO from 2011 to 2019, spanning 8 seasons and 73 episodes.

The show redefined prestige television — its massive production scale, willingness to kill major characters, and political complexity attracted audiences that had never watched fantasy before. Despite the contested reception of its final season, it remains one of the most-watched and culturally significant TV series ever made. Prequel series House of the Dragon (2022–) continues the Targaryen storyline.

GoT is the canonical modern POV ensemble — analysed alongside other large-cast structures in ensemble casts in long-form stories. Ned Stark's execution is one of the most-cited examples of how character death establishes the rules of a serialized world; see character deaths in serialized stories.

House of the Dragon as a Targaryen prequel sits inside the patterns explored in sequels and spin-offs explained.