Skip to main content

The first 4 episodes of ‘Game of Thrones’ season 5 leak online

Well, that’s put something of a downer on the day for HBO: TorrentFreak is reporting that the first four episodes of the new Game of Thrones series are showing up on major torrenting sites. Season five premieres tonight (Sunday, April 12) in the U.S., but eager fans prepared to overlook copyright laws can get started as soon as they like.

The show already holds the title of the world’s most pirated television program, but the timing will hurt HBO, particular with the Web-only HBO Now service waiting in the wings. If company executives were hoping to stem the tide of piracy with their new service, it looks like they’re going to end up disappointed — hundreds of thousands of people downloaded the available episodes in the first few hours.

Recommended Videos

“The copies were first spotted on the private torrent tracker IPT, but they soon made their way to more public sites such as The Pirate Bay, RARBG, and KickassTorrents,” explains TorrentFreak’s Ernesto Van der Sar. “One source informs TF that the leak most likely originates from review copies sent to the press.” The leaked content is only in standard definition, however.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

HBO hasn’t yet responded to the leak, but the company is unlikely to be pleased after so much carefully managed build-up to the new season and its new efforts to try and fight back against the pirates. The fact that the final six episodes remain unleaked will be little consolation.

It also gives viewers and fans a problem: Spoilers. If you want to wait to see what happens at the start of Game of Thrones season five then you might want to stay off the Internet for the rest of the day.

David Nield
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Dave is a freelance journalist from Manchester in the north-west of England. He's been writing about technology since the…
Every upcoming Game of Thrones spinoff you need to know about
Ser Duncan the Tall walks in a village in A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms.

HBO's Game of Thrones prequel, House of the Dragon, wrapped up its second season earlier this month. The series isn't expected to return with its third — and apparently penultimate — season until 2026, meaning that viewers may have another two whole years to wait before they finally get to see House of the Dragon start delivering on some of the major moments that it has spent its first 18 episodes setting up. That doesn't, however, mean that Game of Thrones fans will have to wait two years to return to the franchise's fictional fantasy world.

On the contrary, HBO has a number of other Thrones spinoffs in development in addition to House of the Dragon season 3, including one that is filming right now. It may not, in other words, be long before viewers get to start making a lot more frequent return trips to Westeros, as well as the seas and lands that surround it.
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms (2025)

Read more
Kit Harington opens up about controversial Game of Thrones ending, Jon Snow spinoff
Jon Snow looks and smirks as he stares.

Kit Harington has heard the criticism about the controversial ending to Game of Thrones. Now, he's opening up about what went wrong.

In a new interview with British GQ, Harington addressed the Game of Thrones season 8 ending, acknowledging that the show committed several mistakes. Harington, who starred as fan favorite Jon Snow, also knew the show had to end due to the physical, mental, and emotional toll it took on everyone's lives.

Read more
5 questions we have after House of the Dragon’s season 2 finale
Daemon Targaryen walks through a crowd of soldiers in House of the Dragon season 2.

The second season of HBO's House of the Dragon came to an end this past Sunday, and to say that its finale installment has gotten people talking would be an understatement. The Game of Thrones prequel's latest episode, titled The Queen Who Ever Was, has already been heavily criticized by both casual viewers and TV critics alike, many of whom have been quick to deem it a deeply frustrating, lackluster, and anticlimactic finale. Even those who enjoyed the episode don't seem particularly interested in downplaying its flaws.

That's because The Queen Who Ever Was doesn't wrap up many of its season's ongoing storylines. Instead, it pushes multiple important subplots right up to the point of no return, but never beyond it. As a result, while the episode isn't a very satisfying one, it has left us with plenty of questions about what we should expect when House of the Dragon returns.
1. When will Rhaenyra take King's Landing?

Read more