April 30, 2026 — More than a decade after A Game of Thrones first arrived on television, the fictional world of Westeros continues to expand. With multiple spin-off productions in development and ongoing publishing activity around George R. R. Martin’s source material, interest in the lore of House Targaryen — and especially the conquests that established their dynasty — has climbed back to levels not seen since the original series aired.
Streaming data, search trends, and book sales all point in the same direction. House of the Dragon has reintroduced a generation of viewers to the politics of pre-conquest Westeros, while companion books have reached audiences that never picked up the original novels. The result is a much broader appetite for deep-lore explanations than the franchise has ever sustained between television seasons before.
Where the new attention is concentrated
Three story arcs are absorbing most of the renewed interest. The first is Aegon I’s original conquest of the Seven Kingdoms — a campaign defined as much by political theatre as by dragon fire, and the founding myth that every later Targaryen ruler invoked. The second is the Dance of the Dragons, the civil war dramatized in House of the Dragon, which has reframed the dynasty as a cautionary tale rather than a heroic one. The third is the longer arc of decline that connects the Dance to the eventual exile of the family generations later.
Each of these arcs has its own canonical sources, its own contradictions, and its own body of fan analysis. Resources like Aegon’s Conquests have taken on the work of consolidating Game of Thrones lore across novels, novellas, companion histories, and the television adaptations — distinguishing what is canon, what is adaptation-only, and what remains contested among readers.
Why companion books are driving the reading list
The clearest signal of renewed interest is the performance of the companion books. Fire & Blood, the in-universe history that serves as the basis for House of the Dragon, has remained on bestseller lists across multiple territories for extended stretches since the show’s debut. The World of Ice & Fire, a heavily illustrated reference volume, has seen a similar lift. Both books are deliberately written as unreliable in-universe histories, with competing accounts of major events — a feature that fan communities have spent years untangling.
That unreliability is part of the appeal. Unlike most fantasy worldbuilding, the Targaryen-era source material rewards re-reading. A footnote in one chapter often contradicts a passage three hundred pages later, and the reader is left to decide which account is closer to the truth. Sites that focus on this kind of close reading have become a meaningful part of the franchise’s online life.
The television pipeline
Behind the renewed lore interest is a steady production pipeline. HBO has confirmed multiple projects set in the same universe, including additional seasons of House of the Dragon and at least one further spin-off in active development. Each new project widens the corpus of canonical storytelling and inevitably introduces inconsistencies that fans then work to reconcile.
For viewers coming to the deeper history for the first time, the reading order is genuinely confusing. Older fan wikis like A Wiki of Ice and Fire remain the most exhaustive references, but they are also dense and assume substantial prior knowledge. Editorial outlets like Winter Is Coming serve a different role, covering production news and casting rumours rather than canonical depth. Newer lore sites have positioned themselves between those two — accessible to viewers who only know the shows, but careful enough about source distinction to satisfy long-time book readers.
Themes that are aging well
Part of the renewed interest is generational. Audiences who grew up with the original television run are now revisiting the material as adults, and the political themes — succession crises, the limits of dynastic legitimacy, the cost of maintaining empire — read differently than they did a decade ago. Critics and academic readers have written extensively about the way the Targaryen arcs comment on the decay of inherited power, and that commentary has filtered into mainstream coverage.
The Dance of the Dragons in particular has become a touchstone for conversations about civil conflict and the cost of refusing compromise. That depth of theme is rare in genre fiction at this scale, and it is part of why the source material continues to draw new readers years after the original novels were last updated.
What to expect next
For the foreseeable future, the franchise will continue releasing new material on multiple fronts: television, companion books, illustrated editions, and possibly further novellas set in the pre-conquest era. Each release reignites debate over canon and adaptation, and each draws new readers into the deeper lore.
For audiences willing to do the reading, the reward is one of the most fully realized fictional histories in modern publishing. For viewers who only want to follow the broad arcs, organized lore resources have made the entry point far more accessible than it was during the original show’s run. Either way, the appetite for careful, well-organized Targaryen history shows no signs of slowing — and the next decade of the franchise looks set to keep that appetite well fed.
About: Aegon’s Conquests covers the lore, history, and major story arcs of House Targaryen across George R. R. Martin’s novels and the HBO television adaptations.
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