President Trump’s promise on Tuesday to show North Korea “fire and fury” if the rogue nation continues to issue threats against the United States added a bit of theatrics to increasingly tense relations between the two countries.

The imagery the president offered seemed to add a sense of urgency of the situation, and underscored the stakes of a conflict between two nuclear armed rivals. Wasting no time, meme lords on the internet drew comparisons between Trump’s ominous warning and the first use of dragons in battle on this week’s episode of Game of Thrones. While ridiculous and over the top, the memes characterize the hysterics with which we are approaching the North Korea issue well.

A large part of the conversation on social media and in the news centers on how “things are different now” with Trump in the White House. That having the United States’ nuclear arsenal at the fingertips of a reality television star adds a certain level of instability and danger to a situation that is seemingly spinning out of control. But, is it really?

North Korea has threatened Guam, and other parts of the United States before. In August 2016, North Korea said Guam and every other military asset in the Pacific would “face ruin in the face of all-out and substantial attack.” In 2013, Kim Jong-un reportedly ordered plans drawn up to attack Guam, South Korea, Hawaii, and the continental United States. That incident led to the United States deploying its Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD missile systems to Guam.