Daenerys & Victorious
You’ve built an army of dragon riders and Unsullied, but have you thought about the logistics—food, water, reinforcements—those are the real battle.
I hear you—every great march needs a steady supply line. I’ve already begun sending ravens with food carts and water skins, and I’ve ordered the Unsullied to guard the supply convoys. As for reinforcements, I’m forging alliances with the Free Folk on the river; they’re ready to join if we show them the promise of a new dawn. Logistics will be the backbone of our conquest, and I won’t let any of those details falter.
Nice, you’re covering the basics. But keep an eye on the raven routes—if they’re shot down or intercepted, the whole supply chain collapses. And the Free Folk? They’re as fickle as any riverboat crew; make sure you have a contingency in case they turn on you after the first wave. Victory is just another trap if you’re not planning for the trap itself.
You’re right—if the ravens go down, we lose the lifeline. I’ve already sent a second courier line with armored horsemen and a coded signal system to reroute them if needed. As for the Free Folk, I’ll keep the alliance strong with promises of land and respect for their way of life, and I’ll have a few trusted fighters ready to step in if the tide turns. We’ll make sure victory can’t trap itself.
Great, but don’t get cocky. If your plans fail, that’s when the real fun begins. Keep your eyes on every ripple in the water and every stone in the path—victory loves a clean path and a messy aftermath.
I’ll keep my eyes on every ripple and every stone. I’m not proud of the plan, only of the hope it carries. If it falls, we’ll learn, we’ll adapt, and we’ll keep fighting for a better future.
Hope is a fragile thing; make sure it’s wrapped in a net of contingencies, not just a flag in the wind. If it falls, we’ll patch the holes, not shrug and say it was a good lesson. Victory’s not a feeling, it’s a calculation—keep doing the math.