The mother of dragons will soon be ditching the nomadic lifestyle on Game of Thrones and getting her own house. But not just any house, an 800-foot pyramid topped with a throne room.

YouTube Completely Explodes With News Of King's Joffrey's Death!

Daenerys (Emilia Clarke) and her army of slaves have conquered the city of Meereen in last Sunday's Oathkeeper, and she's ready to move in. Sunday's Entertainment Weekly caught a sneak peek of set photos of the majestic pad she's moving into.

With a throne to sit on and a city to rule, Daenerys is one step closer to taking over Westeros - especially since King Joffrey left the iron throne vacant (by dying).

Showrunner David Benioff dished on the Herculean task of designing Daenerys's new Pyramid throne room:

"It was maybe the biggest challenge [production designer] Deborah Riley faced and was probably the [set] we were most nervous about," he says of the pyramid and its interior sets.

"It's really easy to go into a big sci-fi territory. It's really a testament to Deb. She designed both the audience chamber, where it's a grand room where Dany sits on her bench, and her personal quarters at top of the pyramid - they're just gorgeous. Incredibly experienced crew people were gasping."

Instead of going CG, Benioff, Riley and the crew stuck to old Hollywood:

"More and more things are CG. But we've done these lavish huge sets and there something old Hollywood about that that I love. As much as we have an incredible [special effects] team, the best in the world, and we rely on them for so many things, for the actors there's something different about walking into a real environment and being in a room that has the power you're trying to convey. It's almost like the way cathedrals were designed to create awe. If you were a peasant and been working in fields your whole life and never seen a city, you'd walk into a cathedral for the first time and you walk inside and that's a religious experience - because you've never seen anything like this."

And speaking of things never seen, the Cersei / Jaime sibling rape scene still has tongues wagging.

Somebody Had To Do It: Completely Breaking Down That Cersei / Jaime Rape Scene

This is even more important now that Jaime has left the dark side and returned to the light in Oathkeeper. He pledges his support of his captive brother Lord Tyrion (whom Cersei blames for Joffrey's death), and even gives his new Valyrian steel sword to Brienne to defend Sansa Stark (whom Cersei also wants dead for the death of Joffrey). Brienne names the sword "oathkeeper" and promises to find Sansa, "for Lady Catelyn, and for you."

Tune into Game of Thrones' next episode First Of His Name Sunday night on HBO.

Promo of Game Of Thrones "First of His Name"