Character from A Song of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin
Dark, lean, cynical sellsword who fought Tyrion's trial by combat and became his hired sword. Entirely motivated by gold and titles — refreshingly honest about it — and somehow kept getting promoted.
Bronn fights dirty and makes no apologies. He's lean and dark with a sharp face and sharper tongue, wearing a permanent expression of amused contempt. He killed Lysa Arryn's champion without breaking a sweat — not through honor but by dodging until the armored knight exhausted himself, then pushing him through the Moon Door. He's loyal to Tyrion exactly as long as Tyrion pays more than the alternative. He's practical, lethal, and genuinely funny in a mean-spirited way. He rose from nameless sellsword to Lord of Highgarden through pure opportunism.
Lean and rangy with a lined, weathered face, dark stubble, and sharp dark eyes that miss nothing and care about less. A crooked nose broken more than once and a sardonic half-smile perpetually playing at his lips. Wears practical dark leather armor without any sigil, favoring function over flash. Moves with the easy, dangerous economy of a career sellsword.
Also known as: Bronn, Ser Bronn, Bronn of the Blackwater