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And the winner of the ‘Game of Thrones’ is …

May 20, 2019 | 2:35 AM

LOS ANGELES — Winter has come and winter has gone, thelast of the heads have been lopped off and the last of the dragon fire has been spit as “Game of Thrones” aired its 73rdand final episode Sunday night.

While the results of the game were a split decision as they were in most other episodes in the show’s eight seasons — the finale brought some clear winners, at least one clear loser, and a major upset.

(MAJOR SPOILERS AHEAD.)

Brandon Stark, who until recently appeared happy to remain a mystic philosopher forever, instead becomes philosopher-king, Bran the Broken.

Yet he doesn’t get to sit on the Iron Throne — a dragon melted that — or rule the Seven Kingdoms — his sister Sansa broke one off to become queen of an independent Winterfell.

And Daenerys Targaryen became the last of the show’s many, many major character deaths, given a Shakespearean send-off by Jon Snow, who watched her burn thousands of innocents and believed she had become a mad tyrant.

“You are my queen, now and always,” Jon says to Daenerys as he shoves a dagger into her, giving her what may have been the shortest reign of any monarch in Westeros.

The show was very much a split decision for critics and the public too. The finale had a 57 per cent fresh score among reviewers on Rotten Tomatoes.

And while thousands of viewers aired their gripes on social media as they did all season, plenty of others thought it was a fitting end.

Regardless of how they felt about it, they watched. When ratings are released on the show Monday, it will almost certainly be the most-viewed episode in the show’s history, which would make it the most viewed episode of any kind in HBO history.

And they made memes — substituting new text for Brienne of Tarth’s writing of the history of Jaime Lannister was the early front-runner for favourite from the finale.

Daenerys had always vowed to “break the wheel” of Seven Kingdoms rulers, and in some ways she did, yet the show came full circle anyway. Bran’s surprise ascent to the throne would have been no shock at all to viewers just after the show’s first episode — where he is clearly marked as a chosen figure, forced to witness a beheading by a father teaching him the ways off the world, and pushed to his near-death from a high window only to survive, paralyzed.

He then over several seasons became a mystical seer known as the Three-eyed Raven, with an essential role but distant presence and personality. He was even written out of the series for an entire season before returning, hard to recognize after serious bout of puberty.

A council of the remaining nobles of Westeros in King’s Landing votes for Bran after a suggestion and major speech from Tyrion Lannister on the value of having a king who was both infinitely wise and incapable of having terrible offspring.

While saying that he didn’t really want the job, Bran accepts it without hesitation.

“Why do you think I came all this way?” he says, and quickly rewards his nominator Tyrion by making him hand of the king.

Before Bran is chosen, Samwell Tarly earnestly suggests democracy as a possibility. He is quickly laughed off.

Jon Snow also came full circle on the show. As punishment, the queen-slayer returns to the great northern Wall, the same journey he made when the series began, and is reunited with his dire wolf Ghost, whom he met in episode one.

Sansa’s crowning as queen of Winterfell was as predictable as the finale got — she’d clearly been headed for the role for a while.

While the night brought a big end for “Thrones” fans, its universe was far from over.

Author George R.R. Martin still intends to finish and release two more books in the series after the show passed him by years ago.

And spin-offs are in the planning stages. One pilot in production takes place in the same realm thousands of years earlier, but HBO has said others are in consideration.

The finale might have hinted at another possibility.

Arya Stark, who saved humanity early in the season, decides to sail on to unknown lands, and her departure on a ship is among the series’ final images.

“What’s west of Westeros?,” she asks her Stark siblings.”No one knows. It’s where all the maps stop. It’s where I’m going.”

Andrew Dalton, The Associated Press