
Govee is bringing Westeros into the living room with a new collaboration with HBO’s House of the Dragon. They are introducing three themed lighting scenes. These are designed to sync your home ambience with the fantasy world of dragons, dynasties, and fire-lit power struggles.
Timed with the arrival of the show’s new season, the partnership adds another pop-culture crossover to Govee’s growing list of entertainment tie-ins. The company has previously worked with Warner Bros. on Dune: Part Two lighting scenes and Disney on Zootopia 2 effects. However, this latest collaboration leans fully into high fantasy spectacle.
The new scenes are designed to work best with Govee’s TV Backlight range, including the TV Backlight 3, 3 Lite, and 3 Pro. These systems use a 4MP dual-camera setup to sample on-screen colours in real time. As a result, they project the colours onto surrounding walls to extend the visual experience beyond the TV frame. The result is a more immersive viewing environment. Now, the room itself reacts to what’s happening on screen.
For House of the Dragon, Govee and HBO have created three distinct lighting presets. “Dracarys” is built around molten amber and ember tones, evoking dragon fire and explosive intensity. “Fire & Blood” shifts into deeper crimson and obsidian shades. These reflect the Targaryen legacy and its darker political undertones. “Green Reign” takes a contrasting direction with green and gold hues inspired by rival factions and shifting power dynamics across Westeros.
All three scenes are accessible through the Govee Home app and can be applied across compatible devices within the ecosystem, not just TV backlights. In fact, users can switch between them depending on the tone of each episode. Alternatively, they can even customise them further within broader lighting setups.
To complement the experience, Govee has also added a themed interface skin in its app. This ties lighting controls more closely to the House of the Dragon aesthetic.
It’s a small but effective extension of Govee’s strategy. It turns entertainment into an environmental experience, where lighting doesn’t just illuminate the room, it reacts to the story unfolding inside it.
