Critic’s Rating: 2.75 / 5.0
2.75
Four episodes in, I’m struggling to understand what the creative minds behind House of the Dragon are doing.
House of the Dragon Season 3 has been up and down, but House of the Dragon Season 3 Episode 4 is a frustrating low point. Unless things change soon, the series risks drifting too far off course.
Let’s start with Rhaenyra because I’m getting the impression the people of King’s Landing are already beginning to regret putting their faith in her.

Despite its flaws, I enjoyed how House of the Dragon Season 3 Episode 3 explored her early days as Queen. She was reflective, compassionate, and determined to rule differently.
One episode later, it feels like all of that progress is unraveling. Corlys has all but checked out, Daemon continues to act in his own interests, and Mysaria somehow remains the only person offering Rhaenyra grounded advice.
We’ll come back to Mysaria in a moment, but what continues to make Rhaenyra compelling is how deeply she reflects on every decision she makes.
It’s obvious she never imagined ruling would be this difficult, and she’s quickly learning that wearing the crown means making choices that conflict with her own ideals.

Ulf’s criticism of the messages appearing across King’s Landing didn’t come out of nowhere. Rhaenyra effectively told him he now belonged to the Crown, stripping away the freedom he’d known his entire life.
Overnight, he went from an ordinary man to someone capable of riding a dragon, yet he still wants to spend time with the people he grew up with and show off how dramatically his life has changed.
House of the Dragon Changes Things Up
We’ve already seen how unhappy he is with his new circumstances, so I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s the first Dragonseed to turn against Rhaenyra when the opportunity presents itself.
If there’s one positive to come from this storyline, it’s that Ulf has graduated from being little more than comic relief into someone who could become a genuinely important player as House of the Dragon heads toward its endgame.

What surprised me most was how quickly Rhaenyra allowed her anger to consume her, sending soldiers into the city to drag innocent people from their homes simply for spreading messages against her.
After laying the foundation to become a fair and thoughtful Queen on House of the Dragon Season 3, watching her slip into fear-driven leadership this quickly didn’t feel earned.
Daemon certainly didn’t help matters.
Returning from the Vale carrying the charred head of someone who most definitely wasn’t Sheepstealer’s rider was certainly… a choice.

Did he seriously think he could casually tell Rhaenyra this was the person responsible for Jace’s death and expect her to thank him before moving on?
Obviously, he was trying to protect Rhaena, but he didn’t think any of this through.
Rhaenyra has spent a long time believing she’d eventually get justice for her son’s death. Having that opportunity seemingly ripped away without her knowledge must feel like another betrayal, especially because Daemon never even attempted to bring the supposed killer back alive.
That’s what frustrates me most about Rhaenyra’s storyline right now.

There are flashes of a fantastic character, but the show can’t seem to decide what to do with her now that she’s sitting on the Iron Throne. She’s Queen, but it rarely feels like she’s actively shaping events instead of simply reacting to them.
Ironically, my favorite scenes involving Rhaenyra were her conversations with Alicent.
After Ormund’s betrayal in sending someone other than Daeron to King’s Landing, Rhaenyra easily could have abandoned their agreement and ordered Alicent and Helaena executed.
Instead, we’re watching a fascinating bond slowly reform between two women navigating entirely different versions of grief, guilt, and responsibility.

Rhaenyra genuinely seems determined to prove to Alicent that she isn’t the monster her former friend believes she’s become, and every conversation between them peels back another layer of both characters.
Alicent admitting she’d wanted Daeron raised as a Hightower, far away from King’s Landing’s endless political games, was especially revealing. It suggests that her doubts about the Greens stretch much further back than we’ve been led to believe.
Is Helaena About to Change Everything?
That said, Helaena’s pregnancy threatens to complicate everything.
If she begins viewing her unborn child as a legitimate heir to the Iron Throne, the fragile trust forming between these women could collapse overnight, sending Rhaenyra into an even deeper spiral.

I’m also eager to see how Alicent and Helaena react when Aegon and Sunfyre inevitably return to reclaim King’s Landing.
Aegon has never been one of my favorite characters, and after everything he’s done, there’s something satisfying about seeing him stripped of every advantage he’s taken for granted.
Without an army or a dragon to protect him, he’s finally being forced to survive on his own.
There’s a beautiful symmetry here. At this same point last season, on House of the Dragon Season 2 Episode 4, he was soaring through the skies on Sunfyre and helping orchestrate the battle that claimed Rhaenys and Meleys. Now he’s clinging to survival at Rook’s Rest with nothing but Larys beside him.

Speaking of Larys, he’s playing the long game exactly as expected.
Even when death seems inevitable, he remains completely composed because he knows his greatest weapon has never been strength. It’s his ability to manipulate everyone around him.
I don’t know how much longer this detour at Rook’s Rest will last, but it’s quietly becoming one of the season’s strongest storylines because it’s forcing Aegon to evolve in ways I never expected.
As for Ormund and everything unfolding at Tumbleton, his hunger for power couldn’t be more obvious.

He’s trying to position Daeron as a future king because doing so strengthens his own ambitions.
Fortunately, Daeron appears to have inherited far more of Alicent’s compassion than Ormund anticipated, as shown by his reluctance to execute a man whose home had just been invaded by their forces.
With Vhagar no longer protecting his campaign, Ormund is becoming increasingly desperate, and desperate people rarely make smart decisions.
House of the Dragon still has all the ingredients to deliver a memorable season, but it’s running out of time to give its central story the momentum it desperately needs.
The performances remain excellent, and several supporting storylines are thriving, yet Rhaenyra’s reign increasingly feels unfocused.

If the show can’t find firmer footing soon, House of the Dragon Season 3 risks becoming a collection of strong moments rather than a compelling story of this HBO drama.
What are your thoughts on how things have slowed down and how that shapes what’s to come?
Let’s keep the conversation going — it’s the only way the good stuff survives.
Say something in the comments, share if you’re moved to, and keep reading. Independent voices need readers like you.
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On House of the Dragon Season 3 Episode 2, Rhaenyra breaks down after learning of her son’s fate, but another battle brews. Let’s discuss.
