The execution was intentionally awkward because neither Rhaenyra nor Otto got the ending they thought they deserved. Otto spent decades playing the greatest political game in Westeros, only to die not in a grand battle of wits, but as another casualty of the war he helped create. Rhaenyra, meanwhile, had dreamed of a triumphant return to King’s Landing, yet by then she was exhausted, grieving, and burdened by impossible choices. The lack of a dramatic payoff is the payoff,it shows that the Dance robs everyone of the glorious ending they imagined.
If we’re being serious, though, House of the Dragon often avoids giving major characters “hero moments.” The Dance is written as a tragedy, so many important deaths are abrupt, uncomfortable, or emotionally unsatisfying on purpose. Instead of celebrating victory, the story emphasizes how hollow it has become.