


Jon is playing a tricky game with history here, relying on his ties to both Sansa (Sophie Turner) and Arya Stark (Maisie Williams) to swear them to secrecy when he informs them of his true parentage.

Let’s start with maybe the craziest of all Game of Thrones theories, one that even show star Isaac Hempstead-Wright recently refuted: the idea that Bran Stark might somehow end up as the Night King.Most consequential is the one between Jon, the women who believe themselves to be his sisters and Bran, who knows what Jon is about to tell them. The user starts to readjust their decision-making, building toward a consensus. As the user sees the puck move toward an outcome, it triggers a psychological response. This is where our swarm of users began to form a hive-mind. Also, the closer a user puts the magnet to the puck, the greater the pulling force. As you can see in the animation below, each participant controlled a little golden magnet and used it to drag the puck toward the answer they thought was the most likely outcome. This use of so-called swarm intelligence has produced some scarily accurate results in the past, so let’s take a quick look at how it works. to enlist a swarm of 50 Game of Thrones fans to predict the show’s final season. To figure this out, Inverse partnered with Unanimous A.I. There are still wilder theories out there to consider, and the upcoming final season might even prove some of them true. G ame of Thrones has already confirmed one of the biggest longstanding fan theories, as seasons six and seven have left no doubt about the long-suspected truth of Jon Snow’s true parentage.
