Witch The TV show says a perfect fun romp however, it is difficult to understand because of its many dimensions. Fortunately, there is now a reuniona timeline of major events and character-based shows that break the exhibition's world building into a series of easily formed blouts.
Going to adapt to Netflix, from video game videos and game-based books, I figured I had a good time getting an idea of where the hell was going. I played 2.5 games, plus a heavy card game, and read several chapters of the first book and most of the wiki installations. But even I was lost for most of it.
Meeting the Spheres? The Curse of the Black Member? The show doesn't give much background to these events, perhaps mysteriously because of how beautiful they sound, which makes it difficult to feel good about math and the fact that some of the world's greatest power transformers The Witch behind. It doesn't help that the show has appeared off-line either, and the back-to-back episodes have been separated for decades, something that was unclear until the end of the first season.
Released by Netflix a brief summary of the timeline the show is running on tson last week, but has since met more in depth which you can click on. That timeline is mapped to a needy map in the northern part of the exhibition land, the Continent. The timeline begins at the link to the Spheres reunion that existed sometime before the 500th year (about 230 BR, in the book's edition of the book), and concludes with Geralt's meeting with Ciri finally in 1263. That's a whole millenium to get a handle on.
The first event to take place in the exhibition, meanwhile, is the forced entry of Yennifer into the magetu academy, which the timeline says occurred in 1206. All the events of the 50-year period, in other words, something timeline does a much better job of conveying than the show, because Geralt and Jennifer themselves are not that old.
In addition to setting a timeline for engagement on the timeline, the timeline also shows when all this happened. The kingdom of Cintra is large and the only dead end between Nalfgard and the North Kingdoms, which is why it is so important. And there are some pictures for each place in the timeline. When Geralt accidentally kills the crowd he finds the royalist "Butcher of Blaviken," it is raining, because you know, sad times.
Most useful are the black velvet pins that pop up when you click on the Spheres Summit, which clearly help to show the type of cat -lydacssm people on the face of the earth The Witch consider bringing humans and monsters to a continent previously inhabited only by elves, distances, and so on. The timeline doesn't really go away from events that aren't considered in the show, but does a pretty good job of explaining everything else.