Apple TV’s The Wheel Of Time Replacement Has Already Fixed 1 Fatal Flaw


Apple TV’s upcoming fantasy will replace The Wheel of Time live-action series, and the show has already fixed one fatal flaw that doomed the Prime Video adaptation. When it comes to modern epic fantasy, few stories are as beloved as The Wheel of Time books by the late Robert Jordan, who wrote the first 11, and Brandon Sanderson, who wrote the last 3. Jordan brought us brilliant characters and a compelling magical world. As such, book fans were thrilled to learn that Prime Video would bring the series to life. Unfortunately, the show completely failed.

The first season could get a little leeway due to COVID-19, an actor’s departure, and budget constraints. However, they had no real excuse for the poor adaptation in seasons 2 and 3. If a person were to enter the Prime Video original show completely unfamiliar with the source material, I’m sure it would be enjoyable. However, as a fan, I was initially gutted and now have to think of it as entirely separate from the books.

















From Westeros to Middle-Earth to the Continent · Eight Questions
How Well Do You Know Fantasy TV?
“The night is dark and full of terrors.”

🪨Game of ThronesWinter is coming

👑Rings of PowerOne ring to rule

🗡️The WitcherToss a coin

Wheel of TimeThe Pattern weaves

👻The SandmanLord of Dreams

01

HBO’s Game of Thrones — the pop-culture juggernaut that made fantasy TV prestige — premiered with the episode “Winter Is Coming.” Across eight seasons it picked up a record 59 Emmy wins. In which year did its first episode air?




✓ Correct! 2011 — April 17, to be exact. The unaired pilot was so notoriously poor (after a friends-and-family screening, novelist George R.R. Martin reportedly told showrunners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss they had a real problem) that nearly all of it was reshot before broadcast. The retooled premiere immediately became HBO’s biggest hit since The Sopranos. The series ran 73 episodes across eight seasons through 2019.

✗ Wrong. The answer is 2011. 2009 is when the original pilot was filmed (and largely reshot). 2013 is when Season 3’s Red Wedding episode aired. 2014 is when Season 4’s “The Watchers on the Wall” reset what TV could do with effects. GoT debuted April 17, 2011.

02

Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon and the upcoming A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms are all adapted from the sprawling A Song of Ice and Fire universe. Name the author whose unfinished novels (the next book has been pending since 2011) underpin every adaptation.




✓ Correct! George R.R. Martin (born 1948). The first ASOIAF novel A Game of Thrones came out in 1996; the most recent in the main sequence (A Dance with Dragons) in 2011. The Winds of Winter is now over 13 years overdue. Martin has remained heavily involved in the HBO universe through House of the Dragon, the upcoming A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms (2026), and an in-development Aegon’s Conquest series.

✗ Wrong. The answer is George R.R. Martin. Brandon Sanderson is the Cosmere/Stormlight Archive author (and the writer Robert Jordan’s estate hired to finish Wheel of Time). Patrick Rothfuss is the Kingkiller Chronicle author with his own infamous-publication-delay reputation. Joe Abercrombie writes the First Law series. ASOIAF is Martin’s.

03

Netflix’s The Witcher (2019–) adapted Andrzej Sapkowski’s novels with a lead actor who’s a famously hardcore fan of the source material — he wore the white wig, did much of his own swordplay, and personally pushed back against Lauren Schmidt Hissrich’s scripts before departing after Season 3. Name him.




✓ Correct! Henry Cavill. He played Geralt of Rivia for three seasons before exiting in 2022 over creative differences with the show’s writers’ room (the books-vs-show approach being the open wound). Liam Hemsworth was announced as his replacement and takes over from Season 4 (2025). Cavill’s exit was widely treated as a major moment of fan-vs-streamer tension and contributed to the late-2022/2023 Netflix-fantasy-slate scrutiny.

✗ Wrong. The answer is Henry Cavill. Liam Hemsworth replaces him as Geralt from Season 4 (2025) onward. Aidan Turner played Kili in The Hobbit films. Sam Heughan is Outlander’s Jamie Fraser. The Witcher’s original Geralt is Henry Cavill, through Seasons 1–3.

04

House of the Dragon — the Game of Thrones prequel chronicling the Targaryen civil war known as the Dance of the Dragons — is set how long before the events of the original series?




✓ Correct! Approximately 200 years before A Game of Thrones (172 years before Robert’s Rebellion, more precisely). The series adapts material from George R.R. Martin’s Fire & Blood (2018), a fictionalised in-universe history of the Targaryen dynasty. House of the Dragon premiered in August 2022, drew 9.99 million viewers across HBO’s simultaneous-platform debut and Season 2 followed in 2024 with the Battle of Rook’s Rest as its climactic setpiece.

✗ Wrong. The answer is ~200 years. The Targaryen kings featured (Viserys I, Aegon II, Rhaenyra) reign during the Dance of the Dragons (129–131 AC), which is roughly 172 years before Robert’s Rebellion in the original series. Martin’s Fire & Blood is the in-universe history that the show mines for source material.

05

The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power — reportedly the most expensive TV series ever made, with a five-season commitment from its streamer at well over $1 billion total budget — is set in Middle-earth’s Second Age, thousands of years before The Hobbit. Which streaming service is it on?




✓ Correct! Amazon Prime Video. Amazon paid $250 million just for the rights from the Tolkien Estate in 2017, then committed to a five-season run with reported per-season budgets of $400–$465 million on Season 1 alone. Showrunners J.D. Payne and Patrick McKay were given access to the appendices of The Lord of the Rings (specifically the Second Age material) but not The Silmarillion proper, leading to many adaptation choices that have divided Tolkien purists.

✗ Wrong. The answer is Amazon Prime Video. Netflix has The Witcher and Sandman. HBO Max has Game of Thrones and HotD. Apple TV+ has Foundation. Rings of Power is Amazon’s flagship original drama and reportedly its single biggest production-budget bet.

06

Amazon’s The Wheel of Time (2021–) is adapted from a 14-novel epic fantasy series running from 1990 to 2013. The series’ original author died in 2007 after completing only 11 of the planned books; Brandon Sanderson was hired by the estate to finish the final three. Who was the original author?




✓ Correct! Robert Jordan — pen name of James Oliver Rigney Jr. He started The Wheel of Time in 1990 with The Eye of the World and worked on the series for 17 years before dying of cardiac amyloidosis in 2007 with three books left to go. His widow Harriet McDougal hired Brandon Sanderson, then a young Mistborn-era novelist, on the strength of a eulogy he wrote for Jordan; Sanderson finished the series across The Gathering Storm, Towers of Midnight and A Memory of Light.

✗ Wrong. The answer is Robert Jordan (James Oliver Rigney Jr.). Terry Brooks wrote the Shannara saga. Raymond E. Feist wrote the Riftwar Saga. Terry Pratchett wrote the Discworld series. The Wheel of Time is Jordan’s, with Brandon Sanderson finishing the last three books from his notes.

07

Netflix’s The Sandman (2022–) adapts a beloved 75-issue DC/Vertigo comic that ran 1989–96 about Morpheus, the Lord of Dreams, and his troubled siblings — the Endless. Whose comics is the show based on?




✓ Correct! Neil Gaiman. The 75-issue Sandman ran at DC’s mature-readers Vertigo imprint from 1989 to 1996 (with later spinoffs Sandman: Overture, etc.) and is widely cited alongside Watchmen and Maus as proof of comics’ literary potential. Gaiman’s direct involvement was central to the Netflix show’s development. Note that ongoing public controversies around Gaiman from 2024 onward have shaped the show’s future and Season 2’s framing.

✗ Wrong. The answer is Neil Gaiman. Alan Moore wrote Watchmen, V for Vendetta and From Hell. Grant Morrison wrote Doom Patrol, The Invisibles and All-Star Superman. Mike Mignola is the creator of Hellboy. Sandman is Gaiman’s.

08

Netflix’s Shadow and Bone (2021–23) wove together the Shadow and Bone trilogy (Alina Starkov, the Sun Summoner) with the Six of Crows duology (Kaz Brekker’s Crows heist crew). Both source novel series are set in the same imagined Tsarist-Russia-coded fantasy world. Whose books are they?




✓ Correct! Leigh Bardugo. Her Grishaverse spans the Shadow and Bone trilogy (2012–14), the Six of Crows duology (2015–16), the King of Scars duology (2019–21) and various short fiction. Netflix’s adaptation merged plotlines from the two main series simultaneously and was cancelled after two seasons in 2023, with a Six of Crows-focused spinoff that had been in development at one point also abandoned.

✗ Wrong. The answer is Leigh Bardugo. Sarah J. Maas writes the Throne of Glass and ACOTAR series (the latter has a Hulu show in development). Cassandra Clare writes the Shadowhunters Chronicles (which also got a TV adaptation, on Freeform 2016–19). Marie Lu writes Legend and Warcross. The Grishaverse is Leigh Bardugo’s.

The Maester’s Verdict · Final Tally
Your Realm Standing

🪨

/ 8

Lord of the Realm — or smallfolk in the keep?

Prime Video recently announced a second life for The Wheel of Time, including an animated TV show, movies, and video games. Hopefully, they will be more faithful this time around. However, one upcoming Apple TV show feels like it’s the proper replacement for The Wheel of Time.

Brandon Sanderson’s The Stormlight Archive is coming to life on the screen, and it’s already off to a better start. Prime Video’s The Wheel of Time failed in so many ways, but one of the most fatal was its really shallow worldbuilding. Luckily, Apple TV’s The Stormlight Archive won’t have this issue because of one key difference.

The Wheel Of Time Failed To Fully Capture The Books’ Intense Worldbuilding

A group of seven people wearing fantasy costumes in Prime Video’s The Wheel of Time.

Both the late Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson are known for their intense worldbuilding, and it continued to grow from the first book to the last. The world of Randland felt complex and lived-in. However, the show made the world feel considerably more generic and small. Their exterior filming locations looked so similar that the places in The Wheel of Time had less personality.

They provided some depth with inclusions like the Legend of Manetheren, but they cut out the crucial prologue. Their filming style did Randland no favors, making it feel tiny in season 1 and only marginally better in seasons 2 and 3. They cut storylines and locations, like the quest for the Horn of Valere and Caemlyn, which would have expanded the scope and provided more cultural context. It did get better with each season, but that doesn’t mean it’s good. It just means that it’s less bad. The saddest part is that they didn’t have to fail this way.

Jordan passed, which is why Sanderson took over the series in the first place, meaning the original author wasn’t available to help. However, they had Brandon Sanderson ready to help with the TV show’s plot and worldbuilding, and they didn’t involve him in The Wheel of Time any meaningful way, despite wanting his name attached. Sanderson had to become an expert in these stories to write the final three books, and he could have helped save the doomed fantasy show. They just chose to largely ignore him, which is technically their right but a really foolish decision for a book series as long and complex as The Wheel of Time. Luckily, this won’t be an issue with The Stormlight Archive.

Brandon Sanderson’s Hands-On Involvement Guarantees The Cosmere Will Look Right

Brandon Sanderson standing in front of a lamp
Brandon Sanderson standing in front of a lamp
Credit: Octavia Escamilla

From the time that the TV adaptations of The Stormlight Archive and Mistborn were announced, we knew that Brandon Sanderson would have unprecedented creative control over the onscreen versions of his stories. The announcement from The Hollywood Reporter confirmed that he would write, produce, and consult. However, it wasn’t clear just how much of the writing he would do himself and how much would be delegated. He previously suggested that he’d want to write a lot of the scripts for adaptations, though.

Now, Sanderson shared that the first season of The Stormlight Archive will be 10 episodes long, which seems like a small number for such a dense story, but if anyone can handle it, it’s Brandon Sanderson. This is especially true because he will write a good chunk of the scripts and serve as the head writer on both The Stormlight Archive and Mistborn. This news completely eliminates any concern about the worldbuilding intensity and depth.

From an outside perspective, Sanderson seems obsessive, in a good way, about worldbuilding. It’s one of the biggest things he’s known for. The fact that he’s writing a good chunk of the show means that he can depict the various worlds and cultures within the Cosmere as they’re meant to be. There’s little to no chance that he will flatten the world of Roshar and make it feel less real in The Stormlight Archive. Similarly, he can ensure Mistborn‘s Scadrial is book-accurate in the movie trilogy.



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