HBO Triples Down on Game of Thrones With Three New Projects

The big pop culture event of the weekend was the Snydercut. HBO Max came through and released the 4-hour version of Justice League that was promised last year after Snyder’s initial vision for the superhero epic was derailed by family tragedy and Joss Whedon. HBO Max arrived to resurrect the film, and social media was abuzz with new requests.
This is presumably exactly what HBO wanted, and pretty much what they’ve been seeking since Game of Thrones went off the air.
Which explains why they are developing three more GoT spin-offs.
Thrones is largely considered the last TV show to capture “everyone’s” attention. In a world with countless options available via too many streaming platforms, the big monocultural event, in which everyone watches the same thing, is slipping away into the past. HBO is hoping the GoT universe, despite the lackluster ending to the original series, remains compelling enough for audiences that at least one of their multiple projects hits big.
We already know that the Targaryen-focused series, House of the Dragon, is in production, but now, on top of that, come three more shows set in and around Westeros.
The three shows are:
- 9 Voyages, which is about Lord Corlys Velaryon, aka The Sea Snake, the Lord of the Tides and head of House Velaryon. This is a character who will be introduced in House of the Dragon.
- 10,000 Ships, about Princess Nymeria, an ancestor of House Martell who founded the kingdom of Dorne, set roughly 1,000 years before the events in Game of Thrones.
- A show about Flea Bottom, the King’s Landing slum that we got occasional glimpses of on GoT when we weren’t hanging with the power brokers.
These shows are a long way from being on HBO Max and join the previously announced Dunk and Egg series as potential Game of Thrones shows that will grace our screens over the next few years. We will definitely see House of the Dragon in 2022, and the further development of these new projects may depend on the success of that show.
The good news is regardless of whether these series come to fruition, we’ll always have the books.