Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. Features

House of the Dragon season 3 trailer is here, and it is every bit as brutal as we hoped

After two seasons, the Dance of the Dragons looks brutal and bloody

Add as a preferred source on Google
rhaenyra-house-of-the-dragon-season-3-trailer
Warner Bros Discovery

Season 2 of House of the Dragon was a slow-motion tragedy. Seasons 1 and 2 were packed with misunderstandings, power plays, and a civil war that kept threatening to explode but never quite did.

Eight episodes of carefully arranged chess pieces, and by the time the finale arrived, the most dramatic thing that happened was Alicent sneaking off to Dragonstone to strike a secret deal with Rhaenyra to put an end to the Targaryen civil war.

Recommended Videos

It was a good scene, but it also meant the actual war everyone tuned in for was still waiting in the wings. The season ended with armies on the march and no way to avoid what was coming next.

What does the House of the Dragon season 3 trailer reveal?

The trailer opens with Daemon telling Rhaenyra, “You now have the power no man has ever wielded. You will have an empire unassailable, and our children will rule it forever and a day.” It hits differently, especially coming from a man who clearly wanted that power for himself.

Meanwhile, Aegon II, heavily scarred after his dragon clash at Rook’s Rest, has fled the Red Keep for Braavos with Larys Strong. But do not mistake that for surrender. He makes his intentions clear in the trailer: “I’m going to kill my brother,” he says of Aemond, “or die in the attempt.”

That leaves Aemond running the show in King’s Landing, sitting on the Iron Throne like a man who has been waiting his whole life for exactly this moment. Alicent, for her part, is still trying to hold things together, warning whoever sits on the throne that ruling will require them to do things their heart would have once recoiled from.

Daemon, who spent much of season 2 isolated at Harrenhal, caught in deeply unsettling visions, appears to be back in the thick of things. In true Daemon fashion, he is covered in blood and standing in the middle of a battlefield. Rhaenyra gets the final word, declaring, “There will be no doubt who the gods have chosen to rule.”

Is the Battle of the Gullet going to be everything fans have been waiting for?

That is the big question, and the trailer makes a pretty convincing case for yes. The Battle of the Gullet was supposed to happen in season 2, but got bumped when the episode count was cut from ten to eight, a decision that did not exactly land well with fans. Ryan Condal acknowledged the frustration directly and promised that the wait would be worth it.

He called the Gullet the second most anticipated action event in all of Fire and Blood, and said it deserved the time and space to be done properly. Season 3 is already being billed as the biggest they have ever made by any margin, and the trailer seems to back that up.

We catch glimpses of the naval battle, Daemon in the middle of combat, and Rhaenyra on the verge of what looks like victory. Though, as anyone who follows this story knows, nothing in Westeros comes easy. Season 3 is the penultimate chapter in a planned four-season run, so the stakes have never been higher.

When is House of the Dragon season 3 coming out?

Season 3 premieres on June 21, 2026, on HBO and Max. New episodes will air weekly at 9 p.m. ET/PT, running for eight episodes until the season finale on August 9, 2026. It picks up directly after the season 2 finale and continues the Dance of the Dragons civil war.

House of the Dragon season 3 cast: who is returning and who is new?

Most of the core cast is back, with a few new faces thrown into the chaos. Here is the full breakdown:

Returning cast:

  • Emma D’Arcy as Rhaenyra Targaryen
  • Matt Smith as Daemon Targaryen
  • Olivia Cooke as Alicent Hightower
  • Ewan Mitchell as Aemond Targaryen
  • Tom Glynn-Carney as Aegon II Targaryen
  • Steve Toussaint as Lord Corlys Velaryon
  • Rhys Ifans as Ser Otto Hightower
  • Fabien Frankel as Ser Criston Cole

New additions:

Ryan Condal returns as showrunner, with George R.R. Martin as executive producer.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
Comcast’s breakup is the bluntest warning yet that the cable bundle is losing its grip
Peacock and Xfinity customers should see stability now as NBCUniversal's split rewires the logic behind future streaming perks.
Logo, Text

Comcast's breakup sounds like an alarm bell for Peacock, Xfinity, and the monthly internet bill. At the service level, the answer is calmer. Current customers shouldn't expect subscriptions, billing, or broadband plans to change while the company works through the split.

NBC News reports that Comcast plans to spin NBCUniversal and Sky into a separate public company, moving Peacock, Universal, NBC, Telemundo, Bravo, theme parks, and Sky away from the broadband and wireless business. The separation is expected to take about a year.

Read more
The painfully loud streaming ads interrupting your show are finally getting toned down
California bans streaming platforms from running ads louder than the shows they interrupt.
A hand holding the Amazon Fire TV remote in front of the Amazon Fire TV Omni Mini-LED TV.

If you have ever scrambled for the remote because a commercial is suddenly blasting twice as loud as the show you were watching, relief is on the way.

Starting July 1, California is making it illegal for streaming platforms to run ads louder than the content they interrupt. Governor Gavin Newsom signed the bill, known as SB 576, back in October 2025, and it finally takes effect this week.

Read more
3 underrated Apple TV shows you should watch this weekend (June 26-28)
3 critically loved Apple TV+ shows that somehow still fly under the radar.
the-big-prize-door-underrated-tv-show-apple-tv

Apple TV makes excellent shows that somehow never break into the mainstream conversation the way Severance or Ted Lasso did. These three picks all share that frustrating pattern, stacked with critical praise, loved by the people who found them, and still criminally underwatched.

Between them, you get a mystery comedy, a sweeping historical drama, and a sharp workplace sitcom, which is proof that Apple's range goes way beyond its biggest hits. If you're looking for something genuinely great that flew under your radar, start here.

Read more