Experience is a meme. Just quit your training early and you'll like instantly become an expert or something

Experience is a meme. Just quit your training early and you'll like instantly become an expert or something.

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Experience is a cope for talentlets. Top athletes, fighters, artists, scientists etc were born better than others, they were better than 99% of human race in their respective fields by the time their balls dropped. No one ever hardworked their way into greatness

>No one ever hardworked their way into greatness
lol

Don't confuse training with experience. Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach.

The characters on GoT have neither. Basically every character quits their training or jobs to get thrust into a fast track that makes them an expert overnight by Season 6-7.
>Arya
>Bran
>Sam
Arguably Jon and Danny are the only two who sort of fumble their way through learning their jobs.

>overnight
>by season 6-7
Okay.

Why do people seem to forget Arya was trained when she was with the assassin group?

>Top athletes, fighters, artists, scientists etc were born better than others
Yes and... just so happen to work harder at their crafts their entire lives than most people can reasonably imagine.

Everyone who was ever great had a leg up or a pathway handed to them to achieve that, be it money, wealth, family connections, enhanced physical capability, etc.

>danny

So was that sword designed specifically to NOT be able to stab someone?

it's magically linked with her. the tip used to have a point but it recedes with her hairline.

Is that how you cope with being a lazy dead end?

They may have been born better, but if they didn’t work hard and gather experience, they’d be nobodies (just like (You))

Arya is a completely different character when she crosses the Narrow Sea back to Westeros from Braavos. Literally one episode to the next. It's so dramatic that it gave rise to tinfoil that she was actually the Waif wearing Arya's skin.

Overnight.

Same thing happens to Bran, although the show sort of references it when Frogfu says "you died in that cave", making him have an abrupt transition somewhat plausible.

Sam is probably the worst character - as a GRRM self-insert - he's literally better than all the other Maesters because he "read the text and followed the directions" to cure Ser Jorah. Shits absurd.

Arya was never really with the Faceless Men. We literally see her fail or quit every mission she's given. The show wants us to believe that getting smacked with a stick 1000 times = training to become a master assassin but that is in no way believable. By S7 she is behaving like someone who has had at least 10 years of experience as an operator. It's just not believable. Way to smug and self-confident.

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>Wearing plate armour that is established to be made of a super duper metal that can't be dented
>Oh my god, is that a small girl with a 5 inch dagger? AAAAGGHHH SAVE ME STANNIS

the fatman was a simp

dex vs str

>Sam is probably the worst character - as a GRRM self-insert

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speedwatchers are everywhere here user

aaaggghhh...

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Even if they were the same age and had the same experience I refuse to believe a 3 ft tall gremlin with a knife could be a giantess with a long sword. Just weed wack that little ankle biter.

They never actually show her being trained to do the shit we see her do. She becomes a seasoned expert at like 16 or 17 and we're just supposed to take their word for it because she got smacked in the head with a stick a few times.

>The show wants us to believe that getting smacked with a stick 1000 times = training to become a master assassin but that is in no way believable.

My memory is fuzzy, but I'm pretty sure by the end of her training she becomes competent and she eventually kills her trainer. It's implied she trained longer than was shown and she could've kept practicing off-camera after she left the city.

>and she could've kept practicing off-camera after she left the city.
If the audience is left to assume that then it's bad storytelling. Show don't tell. Literally storytelling 101.