Sorry, but no. I'm not forgetting any of those, lolol. And no, not "Technically Jon Snow", dying just to come back from being dead is not a character death. None of the characters you listed are PoV characters in the books, and most are only minor characters in the show. They're disposable and not at all the same as killing a character like Tyrion or Arya, who are "main" characters and major PoV characters in the book.
Try again.
She literally talks about just attacking Kings Landing, it is literally her very first plan of action that she has to be talked out of doing. Explain better how "they needed a whole season to properly build this up", because you're just talking out of your ass. You don't know how 'a whole season to build it up' would even work, because you do not know how writing works. Just spitballing rando "i think this fixes a problem" concepts makes you an idea guy, i.e., the butt of jokes about arrogant people with grand ideas and no way of actually explaining how they're even supposed to work. No one likes idea guys.The problem I had with Dany in season 8 was not that she turned mad but how rushed it was. It really needed a whole season to properly build up her going completely mad and not just go from "yeah sure" in one episode to "BURN THEM ALL!" in the next.
Because we know Dany is spiteful and vengeful, it's been built up for the entire god damned show whether you want to acknowledge it or not. She's angry at the people of Kings Landing for not siding with her, she's angry she doesn't fit in and she isn't being seen the way she wants to be seen. She's angry that the commonfolk of Westeros see her as an invader and would rather pose as human shields for Cersei than side with her. She knows Cersei is using them as shields, she knows Cersei is trying to exploit their weakness of kindness. She wants Cersei to see that she's wrong about that, and it's part of Dany's revenge against her. This is stuff that was laid down in Season 8. It was literally the only arc that actually worked and made sense. Just because it went over your head doesn't mean it wasn't there.If she was so pissed at Cersei why didn't she just fly up to her keep and burn her? Why waste all that time burning the people whom she had no quarrels with? It accomplishes nothing
I think it could have been done a little better, as it was pretty rushed (though the situation at least helped the rush feel more natural as opposed to inorganic for the sake of drama). I don't mind Jaime dying the way he did, especially because it directly and totally subverts the prophecy of Cersei's demise (the phoniness of prophecy being a cornerstone of the entire story).I get the whole Jaime trying to be a better man and failing at it so he decides to go back to where he started but it makes for an unsatisfying ending to a story. To me building Jaime up to be this redeemed honorable guy just to have him go back to Cersei because their both "hateful people" just seems like a waste to me.