Warning: Huge spoilers for "Game of Thrones" season seven. If you aren't caught up on the series or the season, read at your own risk.
Season seven of "Game of Thrones" was action-packed and exciting. But it was also frustrating given the introduction of new travel speeds, and a really convoluted plot with the Stark sisters in Winterfell.
So much happened this season, and Jon Snow traveled so much (and so quickly), that it's a little hard to remember some of the biggest moments from the earlier episodes.
We collected the best of the bunch, including dragon battles, shocking deaths, poop scooping, the cure of an incurable disease, and some partial nudity.
Here's our recap of "Game of Thrones" season 7:
SEE ALSO: 7 things you can expect from the 8th and final season of 'Game of Thrones'
Episode 1: "Dragonstone"
Winter comes for House Frey.

Arya poisons the Freys! Basically all of them, except the women.
At first, it seems like Walder Frey's speech is a flashback of the Red Wedding, or something similar. But as Frey continues talking about how he was responsible for brutally murdering the Starks, it gets more obvious what is happening. Especially when Arya (as Walder Frey) says, "leave one wolf alive and the sheep are never safe."
Ed Sheeran!

Ed Sheeran's cameo includes a reference to the books and to a song about Tyrion Lannister, who kills Shae in the season four finale, "The Children."
Sheeran and his Lannister soldier friends, who Arya runs into in the premiere, sing, "For hands of gold are always cold, but a woman's hands are warm."
The song is actually from the books, and chronicles Tyrion's murderous exit from King's Landing in season four. The hands of gold refer to Tyrion using Tywin's Hand of the King chains to kill Shae right before killing his father on the toilet.
In her time with these Lannister soldiers, Arya learns that Lannisters can be good people, as not all of them are Cersei or Tywin. They offer Arya food and comfort, and they enjoy her incredibly funny joke about how she's headed to King's Landing to murder the queen.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider