His punishment was being sent back to the Night's Watch. However, the final shot of Jon Snow in Game of Thrones season 8 showed him leading a group of Wildlings back beyond the Wall. What happens to Jon Snow is essentially a happy ending.
After Daenerys' death, Jon was taken prisoner by the Unsullied. They would not agree to his unconditional release, but eventually, a deal was struck that he could return to the North and ostensibly to the Night's Watch. It's left a bit open-ended and somewhat of a mystery as to what Jon's fate ultimately will be there.
Jon regretted his decision to kill her deeply, questioning whether it was right, but ultimately acted for the good of the realm, egged on by Tyrion and Arya. So he approached her, called her queen, kissed her, and plunged a knife in her heart.
Kit Harington has suggested that his Game Of Thrones character Jon Snow is “not okay” following the show's finale. The hit HBO fantasy series came to an end in 2019, with Snow banished back to the Night's Watch after assassinating Daenerys Targaryen (Emilia Clarke) in the finale.
At the end of Game of Thrones, Jon Snow is sentenced to the Night's Watch for killing Daenerys Targaryen. He seems to leave to join the Wildlings instead, however.
At the end of Thrones, Jon—who's discovered he's a Targaryen and reluctantly killed his hookup partner/aunt Dany—has been banished to the Night's Watch by his biological cousin/adoptive half-brother Bran, the new king of the Six Kingdoms.
As theorised by Samwell Tarly in the finale, the dragon flew her to Volantis, where she'd grown up in exile after the death of her father, and cremated her body in line with family tradition.
If you're wondering why Rhaegal allows Jon to ride him in the first place, it's because the former King in the North has Targaryen blood flowing through his veins — his mother is Lyanna Stark and his father is Rhaegar Targaryen. (Something Sam finally fills Jon in about in the premiere, FYI.)
He was a good man who always tried to do right by the Realm, no matter the personal cost, and in the end he was rewarded for his service by finally being allowed to stop living for everyone else. He was given his freedom and the chance to find peace.
Weiss said, “Seeing Jon and Dany on the dragons together is a Jon and Dany moment, but it also seeds in the idea these creatures will accept Jon Snow as one of their riders.” So when Rhaegal and Drogon stare at Jon, it's not anything malicious. It's pure respect.
But then came “Eastwatch,” in which we saw a stunned Daenerys observe Drogon allow Jon Snow to get up close and touch his face–the only other person we've ever seen do that is Daenerys herself. Drogon knows what Sam missed, that Jon is the blood of the dragon and his family.
Like the Stark he at least half is, Jon did the hard but right thing and kill Daenerys. He hugged her, told her she would always be his queen, and then stabbed her.
Game of Thrones Daenerys Targaryen was pregnant by Jon Snow in finale ending | TV & Radio | Showbiz & TV | Express.co.uk.
Despite being saved by Daenerys from being raped by the tribe's warriors, however, the priestess betrays her and the magic ritual results in Daenerys's unborn child being stillborn and leaves Drogo in a catatonic state. Because Drogo will never recover, Daenerys smothers him with a pillow.
EMILIA TO NOT RETURN AS DAENERYS
The sequel of Games of Thrones will follow Jon Snow's (Kit Harington) life post the events of the series finale. Emilia Clarke, whose character Daenerys, dies in the final episode, confirmed that she's probably not reprising her role.
Will a Jon-Dany offspring ever sit on the Iron Throne? Before launching into the implications of a Targaryen baby for Westeros and the future of the throne, let's get one question out of the way: Is it even possible for Daenerys to have children? According to the mother of dragons, the answer is no.
While Jon Snow returned from the dead, it's highly unlikely that this process actually made him immortal. Jon is still a mortal man, but was brought back through the magic of the Lord of Light.
No, the Night King is not a Targaryen.
In the books, however, the story of the Night King is slightly different. The Night King isn't the leader of the White Walkers. Instead, he's a legendary historical figure who supposedly betrayed the Night's Watch to marry a “corpse queen” and then crowned himself a king.
Sansa develops a crush on the well-liked and handsome knight Loras Tyrell in Season 3. Olenna and Margaery plot to marry Sansa to Loras and extend their power over the North.
In fact, Martin outright said as much during a Q&A back in 1999, calling the idea that Targaryens were magically immune to fire a “common misconception.” “TARGARYENS ARE NOT IMMUNE TO FIRE!” the author emphatically stated. “The birth of Dany's dragons was unique, magical, wonderous, a miracle.
Drogon knows Jon killed his mother, but instead of taking revenge on him, the dragon turns his wrath on the Iron Throne and melts it into molten slag. According to Djawadi, it's intended to represent Drogon destroying the thing that led to his mother's downfall.
While the general consensus within the world of Game of Thrones is that only those with Valyrian or Targaryen blood in their veins can tame a dragon, the validity of that assertion is ambiguous. Conversely, not everyone who comes from the dragonrider bloodline is capable of steering a dragon.
4. Arya Kills Drogon to Fulfill Her Prophecy.
The last dragon belonging to House Targaryen died young in 153 AC, during the later part of the reign of King Aegon III, who was called the Dragonbane. Her death marked the extinction of dragons in Westeros and beyond, until Daenerys Targaryen managed to hatch three dragons around a century and a half later.
Vhagar and Meraxes have been described as female, so presumably they both laid eggs to be known as such (unless the Valyrians could sex dragons in a way that has not been described), and presumably Balerion was the father.