Dandelion is, canonically, a serial womanizer. He has wooed, charmed, flirted with, and generally courted countless women, and a large number of them have accepted his advances.
4 Love: Dandelion And Priscilla
He has a romance with another singer in this film, a blonde girl named Priscilla. The two of them are endearing, even if it's unclear if they're meant to last.
The most notable example is when he romances Duchess Anna Henrietta. They get together but Dandelion then cheats on the duchess with one of her ladies. Naturally, Anna Henrietta isn't happy about it and she sentences Dandelion to death.
Jaskier, unlike almost everyone else in Geralt's life, is interested in Geralt before he even realizes Geralt's a witcher. While they wind up making each other famous, their relationship begins with Jaskier's simple, blatant interest in the big man who looks like he could snap Jaskier in half.
The important thing in this story is that Dandelion was a friend to Geralt of Rivia – possibly his only true friend. He was Geralt's confidant, advisor, and companion in misery (for it was impossible to experience good fortune in the witcher's company).
As it is shown in the show, the two are often apart, and are certainly not “waiting” for each other the way we think of couples doing. But it is quite clear that Yennefer is the one and only true love for Geralt, and vise versa. Yennefer does love her witcher, too.
Witcher 3's Yennefer Is Geralt's Canonical Lover
Being Geralt's true love in the books, Yennefer is a well-liked character of the series, and many fans were excited to see her in Witcher 3.
One of the big reasons that fans probably ship Jaskier and Geralt is simply how refreshing they are in this show. It has a very dark tone. The initial episode sees Nilfgaard invade Cintra, people tortured and dying, choosing to kill themselves rather than be caught by Nilfgaard soldiers.
Dandelion's real name is actually Jaskier, but it wasn't an easy name to translate. “Jaskier” in English means “buttercup”, but the translator decided that it wasn't a fitting name for the character.
The most popular and possible one was shared by a Reddit user, who suggests that Jaskier made his way to immortality by accidentally drinking a potion, thinking it was wine.
Yennefer is grateful to Dandelion for being Geralt's friend. Even though she and Geralt are not together, she still cares for him and does not wish him to be alone or lonely.
Through the main quest missions, it becomes quite clear that Priscilla and Dandelion share considerable affection for each other; so much so that Dandelion, the notorious ladies man, hopes to settle down with her in Novigrad.
The timeline and story in the game of the third game are set after the book anyway. But, ultimately, a romance between Anna and Geralt would not be part of the book canon.
Dandelion: ESFP, The Entertainer.
Dandelions are both male and female at the same time. For most hermaphroditic flowers, the genders develop at slightly different times to avoid inbreeding. Inbreeding allows negative traits that are normally recessive to become physical traits, which isn't good.
When translated directly from Polish to English, Jaskier means Buttercup, a name that doesn't quite properly fit the bard's personality. So instead of Buttercup, the translator opted to change Jaskier's name to Dandelion, seeing that it better fit the character.
Because he inexplicably looks the same in his early 40s as he did at 18, there are some Witcher theories that Jaskier is immortal, either through a stroke of accidental magic or a yet-unknown parentage. Alternatively, he could simply be a regular human with uncommon youthfulness.
Fandoms: The Witcher (TV)
Jaskier is turned into a Vampire. Not just any Vampire - a Bruxa.
No, Witchers are not immortal but they age at a very, very slow rate.
Listen, we all know Geralt is straight. But this "answer" straight up sounds extremely homophobic.
For the main quest, see It Takes Three to Tango. If you attempt to equally romance both Triss and Yennefer throughout the game you will lose both.
Geralt is a womanizer also in the books. He was an handsome and fit man, and the genetic mutation that made him a Witcher also rendered him sterile, taking out this kind of worry in encounters with occasional partners.
It even got to a point in the books where Yennefer slept with Geralt and Istredd on the same day, with each only finding out after the fact. You don't have to be a witcher or a sorceress to know that that's an unethical way to have an agreed-upon monogamous relationship.
When Geralt lost his memory, Triss kept the truth about his past from him. She didn't tell him about his relationship with Yennefer and let Geralt think they were madly in love. As a result, Geralt didn't look for Yennefer. In the third game, Triss, herself, mentions taking advantage of Geralt when he had amnesia.
The former is Geralt's long-running love interest, and in the books, it's Yennefer who Geralt loves. In other words, this is considered the more canon choice.