Yeah that’s how I thought about it too, a Kratos that was content with being a weapon. That said Odin didn’t pull any mook shit and make Thor kill Sif and his kids whiiiich is a factor for rebellion if I’ve ever seen one
I imagined Thor is what Kratos would become if Lysandra and Calliope were still alive. He'd still be the devoted lapdog of Zeus and Ares despite his wife constantly warning him.
@@CCD2938 Actually it was Ares that pulled the little trick on Kratos and made him kill his own family. Zeus was ok with Kratos killing Ares for revenge (also Ares was becoming a threat to Olympus too). The reason why Kratos killed Zeus and the rest of the Olympians was something completely different and pretty much was caused by Kratos himself.
@Dimitris4110 Zeus was okay with it because he wanted his son Kratos to be the God of War, making said God of War easier to control as Ares was a crazy beast who didn't listen to reason. Ares used to travel to the Egyptian world and terrorize cities there to make Zeus angry (it was also believed Ares was looking for the Norse giants there to build an army to overthrow Olympus) so you can imagine that Zeus wanted Ares off of the throne.
What broke my heart the most about this is how little time it took for Odin to kill him. No hesitation whatsoever. If Broks death didn't hammer it home for me enough, Thor's death certainly did.
Hammer it home huh? See what you did there 😏 But definitely- the way he just does it without any remorse or emotions shows how Odin truly sees knowledge as the only valuable thing in his eyes. Even his offsprings are nothing but means to an end
@@asafakiva1619 it's terrifying when you consider that for years even decades, Thor has killed hundreds of thousands of people under his Odin's orders and has only been met with insults and belittlement no matter how well he does that he views kindness as a threat when Atreus tries reaching out to him, and then the one and only time Thor stands up and denies him and not even in any large capacity just a simple 'no' was all it took for a father to end his own son's life without any hesitation.
He, didn't care if Magni and Modi were killed, he had no problem replacing Baldur the moment Atreus proved useful and had no problem quickly killing Thor in a instance.
Yup. Thors lived for longer than any human, slaughtered in Odins name, but the moment he puts down mjolnir and says he won’t fight (not even fighting against Odin directly) it takes him less than 30 seconds to go from appearing to actually killing his own son. Odin saw Thor as a living weapon, the moment he wasn’t pointed at his enemy’s he’d kill him just to avoid the possibility he’d be aimed at him. He never respected or lived him and he made no effort to hide that. He wanted him strong, stupid and to talk as little as possible so he wouldn’t question him. How Odin uses him isn’t unique to Thor, he’s just more honest about it compared to others who require more subtlety
Honestly fingers crossed and have hope friend, even zeuss didnt stay conpletly dead in the series and kratos came back twice, Thor could come back like it was nobodies business
"What is this?! Are you broken?!" Just goes to show that Odin looked at his own son as nothing more than a toy he could throw at whoever he hated. The lack of hesitation he has when killing Thor is pure psychopathic; Thor's refusal was a direct insult to Odin's obsessive aspect of control, and with that insult, Odin instantly chose death. Odin may have looked and sounded dumb as all hell lmfao, but he could really flip the switch and turn sadistic in a heartbeat. At least Thor actually did, while buried, have care for his children!
I actually liked the way Odin was portrayed, because this is what he was like in the mythology. He wasn’t an enforcer like Thor, he was manipulative, cunning, and someone of high authority. Don’t let Marvel blind you, Santa Monica did their research.
I think that was the point. Every character he's wronged has said that he canturn on the charm. The Atreus section is proof that the Affable nature is life times of psychosis and every action he's engaged in proof the guy has DPD. He legit thinks his family is is not screwed up because of him. Thor is the way he is because Thor is just a screw up. People compare Odin to a mafia boss ala the godfather and I think that was the inspiration here. The Godfather and even other mafia style movies shows how the family is meaningless when it comes to business or personal goals. Family is just a collection of tools that is defended out of spite of others but killed out of spite for one's self.
The worst part is how there is absolutely no hesitation. Thor says "No", Odin instantly stabs him. He didn't care if he was his son or not, the moment he disobeyed him was the moment he had to be put down. Odin might not have been as powerful or imposing as Zeus, but he was absolutely terrifying if you look at him from this point of view. He was master and everyone else was his puppet.
I also feel like Odin feared Thor being his enemy as well. Even Though Odin was smarter and more manipulative, Thor was one of the few that knew enough about Odin’s secrets and weaknesses to take him down if he wanted to. Thor may would’ve even gotten wiser if he was given a chance to follow a path he chooses to and not what someone chooses for him.
@@childishe60 Odin literally casually one-shots him in the video mate; the difference in power between them is such that it doesn't matter if Thor was twice as powerful and twice as smart. He'd still be little more than a salvaged tool to Odin. There is nothing to fear from Thor, the reason Odin continuously insists on him "not thinking" isn't because he's afraid of Thor "wising up" (I mean, we see in the video exactly what happens the moment he does "wise up" LMAO), but rather because Thor is genuinely just stupid lol; and when stupid people try to solve problems they usually just end up causing more of them.
@@KevinJohnson-cv2no And also remember, It took three people ( four if you cont mimir) to take down odin. People seem to underastimate the guy, but if the lack of raw power that odin has is compesated by his cheer knowledge with spells. My man wasn't a bigger threat than zeus, he was on the same level
I am sadden that Thor died. It just felt like he really some what regretted doing all those terrible things and tried to seek a better life just like Kratos.
Regret doesn’t feel like the right word. He’s sees himself irredeemable. He does bad things and that’s who he is. Until Kratos, someone who by all accounts is just as destructive as Thor, forces him to realize he can be better.
Best part of this whole exchange “Don’t you know, what I’ve done?” “YES! But what will you do now?” Coming from Kratos himself, a guy who’s ran down an entire pantheon and killed his family, he understands influence from a narcissistic father, grief and rage better than anyone. It wouldn’t have hit Thor if it came out of anyone else’s mouth. If Kratos could change for the best, there was hope for Thor too. Wish we could’ve seen more of it
Odin is fucking evil in this game in so many aspects. He seems like this down to earth guy who is charming, caring and chill. But this facade drops every now and then. He sees everyone purely as his toys he can use whenever he wants to get what he wants and sees no use for them afterwards. He kills his own son the second he decides to deny his orders and immediately starts trying to manipulate Thrüd in a hurry but upon realizing he doesn't have enough time to do so, he just smacks her with her father's hammer to get her out of his way. I love how seemingly harmless but actually evil he is
I also thought he was actually such a chill, charming character. He's very well written, I found myself actually really liking Odin at points but like you said, he's actually just playing a big game with everyone, very evil.
@@aidenralston4328 the earlier parts with Atreus and Odin actually made him feel convincing to an extent, sure you know he’s the big bad guy but he’s compelling. Then as the story goes on you find out just how twisted he is and how deep his deceit runs. People who hate on Odins character don’t understand that even from the Norse mythology he is a God of deceit and manipulation. His character is perfect imo.
I know Odin killing his own son is bad enough but it’s so fucked how he did it with basically no hesitation at all, the second he realised Thor wasn’t going to just blindly act as his weapon anymore he saw no use in him at all.
He might be worse than Zeus. Zeus at least have Kratos a final chance to submit. Not to mention Kratos had already shown his utter contempt for Zeus’ rule. But Odin. The second Thor said no, that was it.
I’d say he was worse than Zeus. At least Zeus gave Kratos several chances to back down and was infected by Pandora’s box. I’m pretty sure he even let Kratos kill him in the end.
@@loganbaxter4685 Yep-Pandora's Box after it was opened toward the end of the very first God of War game in the original trilogy, released the dozens of powers and secrets that should never have been revealed to the world. Zeus, unfortunately, was corrupted by the force of Paranoia-which is a devouring illness in that Greek Mythos. Before that, Zeus actually wasn't a bad person. I can guarantee had he not been infected by the Paranoia in Pandora's Box, he'd have never have killed Kratos in GoW2 with his own blade out of a paranoid fear of him and begin the spiral of Vengeance that led to the Pantheon's destruction. It's why we see Paranoia leave Zeus as a blackened mist as Kratos is killing him. But Kratos was too driven and blinded to see it.
I would've loved if Kratos came in quick and grabbed the spear like weapon, And looked at Odin And they both look at each other, Kratos then says *"no."* And hits Odin with a mean hit and then Thor hits him with his hammer afterwards, Then the fight goes on from there.
I know Thor had a horrible attitude and done some bad things in the past, but he realized what he had done wrong within those 30 seconds without ever being able to change his ways. Thor didn’t deserve to die.
I agree, but I don't think he realized everything "in 30 seconds". He had caring family and caring wife. If you listen to his dialoges in Asgard you would hear that he is willing to change but as Kratos he is somewhat stuck with the "i only destroy things" narrative (or in his own words "god of thunder is only good for 2 things: killing giants and pissing mead"). Kratos didn't had that many encounters with people whi believed that there was good in him and it took him A LOT of years to finally realize that his ways are not the ultimate ways and that he can forgive himself. Thor had a caring family, therefore his "transition" from "destroyer" to someone who understands that he ca change was faster. I mean if we never had all those info on Thor and scenes with him, than yeah it would've looked like a cheap move from the devs. But knowing everything we know about him and Odin that was something like a final realization that enough is enough. Anyway yeah, it was sad seing him die... I was hoping that he would live after all...
The fact that Thor realized his mistakes and teamed up with Kratos only to die by his own Father’s hands seconds later in front of his own Daughter is seriously one of the saddest moments in the entire God of War Franchise. R.I.P. team Kratos & Thor. Odin got what he deserved. 😭💔😡
This is where the prophecy was subverted. Had Kratos killed Thor, Thor’s wife and daughter would have attempted to take revenge and Odin would have popped in and speared Kratos when he was distracted. Loki would then have donned the mask to see if he could learn how to bring his father back but he would have instead been driven mad (or turned into Jim Carrey)
@@prismaticstetsons6601 maybe he changed it, the norns said there is no grand design its just that everyone's actions are so predictable they don't change so it's easy to predict what will happen, so because of kratos choices in the past the predictable choice would've been kratos killing thor like he did with so many gods, but instead he spares him and changes fate?
I think the turning point was when kratos told artreus to open his heart and then went to try and save the people from midgard. This led to sif finding that other kid and convincing thrud not to kill artreus (I imagine kratos would have killed thrud if she continued) with thrud alive Thor has a reason to be better and not to be a destroyer
@@Beserker69 Not necessarily, Neither had to die but just did it for the "sad moment", I would've loved if Kratos came in quick and grabbed the spear like weapon, And looked at Odin And they both look at each other, Kratos then says *"no."* And hits Odin with a mean hit and then Thor hits him with his hammer afterwards, Then the fight goes on from there.
As much as that is an awesome idea, the LAST thing Kratos would want is another son killing his father. Thor may have had a good reason, but he isn't another Bauldr.
The thing that fucks me up the most is Odin immediately jumping into the “I didn’t want this, why did you make me hurt you” act after literally impaling his own son. Peak abusive behavior, that instant switch to an unearned “I hurt you, but now you need to forgive me”
"You don't talk. You don't think. I think. You kill. It's a simple f*cking concept!" This line stood out to me because Odin tried to remind Thor he can never be anything more than the ruthless, lumbering muscle that enjoyed killing and destroying all this time. As soon as Thor tried to change for the better, Odin couldn't accept that so he killed him. That's what makes this such a great scene. Nearly everyone was capable of letting go and changing, but Odin couldn't. Just like Heimdall. Just like Zeus and most of the Pantheon.
He does this multiple times to Thor. "Jeez I liked you better when you were a drunk" while Thor was actively in recovery and all he had to do was walk to the bar to across the way to relapse. It took great restraint to not just walk in and get free alcohol but Odin continuously reminds him he was better as a drunk killing machine
I think this scene is a masterclass in how to write a complex villain. And it's best shown when Thrud arrives. Odin didn't just kill Thor because he refused an order. Odin is a strategist. He will sacrifice his pawns when he knows he has more pieces to play. Before Thrud got there, Odin was in control. He killed Thor without thought or question, because Thor was just a tool to him. Odin just needs someone strong to execute his whims on the realms. And at the end of the day, Thrud is Thor's successor. She's strong, capable, young and much more trusting of Odin. That's why Odin killed Thor, because he thought he could just replace him with Thrud. But when Thrud arrives, you can hear the panic in Odin's voice. He was banking on Thrud being his new destroyer, but now she's just witnessed him kill her father and has shattered any sense of faith or loyalty she had. He tries to haphazardly gaslight her, shift the blame and twist the narrative, and you can hear him struggling; "This was all their fault." But the damage is done. Odin doesn't have a destroyer to fight his battles for him. He's lost a powerful player in Thrud, and now he's overplayed his hand. It kinda reminds of that scene in the Lion King where Scar badmouths the Hyenas to save his ass, only to be thrown to those Hyenas, and desperately tries to talk and connive his way out of the situation before being torn apart. It's difficult to do, but it's great when what you think is a villain's greatest strength becomes the seed to their own downfall.
1000%, nice analysis. If Odin had won Ragnarok he would totally have told all of the Aesir that Thor died fighting Kratos and pin a lot of other heinous shit on him too. Always a step ahead, just let his obsession over knowledge get the better of him.
You've just made Odin seem that much more grotesque and horrific than he already was, that he may really have been ready to turn his own granddaughter down the path of her father as an unthinking, abused weapon.
No one else but Kratos could have convinced Thor it was possible to move beyond being a killing machine. He knows what Kratos did and just thought men like them were hopeless and doomed to a life of destruction. When he saw that Kratos had managed to overcome this, he realized he could too. Then Odin offed him…
@@benginaldclocker2891 well they made loki kratos’s son so he couldn’t really die even if it’s accurate to the mythology not everything in this game is accurate
"I did not want this, I did *not* WANT this!" He's not talking about killing Thor. He's talking about Thor's refusal. He did not want Thor to disobey him. Killing Thor is something he doesn't care about the slightest, Odin only cares about himself
Nah, he’s talking about killing Thor, but only because he didn’t want Thor to stop being useful and this bring about death, I also think he’s still manipulating Thor because of how much of a narcissist Odin is
@@connor4435 Kratos is attacking Asgard, they are there to kill Odin????? What??? He's is the king, Thor is basically kings guard. Not defending the king isn't treason? Then what is it? Even if it's not treason, disobeying the king is punishable by death.
Thor didn't... he didn't die the same way Heimdall or Baldur went out. Visually, I mean, he faded into blue light instead of leaving behind a gory corpse. Something tells me that's important.
Good catch another thing I would of also loved is if Kratos came in quick and grabbed the spear like weapon, And looked at Odin And they both look at each other, Kratos then says *"no."* And hits Odin with a mean hit and then Thor hits him with his hammer afterwards, Then the fight goes on from there.
He turned selfless in the last moments just like Athena sacrificing herself to save Olympus. Thor went to higher existence. They said Norse saga was done they did not said Thor is done. Just like how Athena makes a cameo
As well-written as Thor's arc and character is, part of me wishes he had a redemption arc in the next Loki story. Loki going to find the Giants, with Thor tagging along and confronting the horrors of his past would have made for a wonderful story.
That'd be such a wonderful parallel to Kratos's story as well. Where Atreus would help Thor the same way Kratos helped him and Freya, passing on many of the same lessons.
@@AimForMyHead81 I would have preferred Thor lived. But say they bring him back, they could think of a reason. They brought Kratos back from the dead before. He also destroyed Greece.
"what is this? Are you broken?" Idk why but this one line pisses me off and makes me hate Odin so much. The sheer ignorance and carelessness towards his own child. No, not a child, a weapon, a tool, a toy. And if it breaks, trash it and move on to the next (Atreus was probably his new favorite "toy"). It's disgusting and infuriating and he deserved so much worse than what he got. Great villain 😂.
Exactly, even though some people don’t like Odin, I think the portrayal is very good. Odin isn’t supposed to be a big enforcer like Thor or Zeus, he’s supposed to be cunning and manipulative, someone of high authority, which this game captures perfectly.
@@Howlingburd19 agreed. I was honestly expecting Zeus 2.0. maybe with more magic and less lightning but still the same. I'm pleasantly surprised by what we got. And now I'm itching to see what they do with the Egyptian pantheon if they go there.
"dont you know what i have done" Thor know the monster he is but Odin blinds his path and make him think he cant change. Until now RE: Until he meet his equal, Kratos the ghost of sparta, the slayer, a monsters just like him but with the difference that Kratos change, is no more a peon of other gods.
2:38 What fucking cold stare he gives. No hatred, no disgust, or even disappointment. Just... indifference. The second Thor said no Odin was like "Fine" and then proceeds to stab Thor his only regret being that Thor defied him.
Lol not even close. Prime Kratos pulled out the head of sun God because he wanted a flashlight. Prime Kratos killed literally an entire pantheon by himself just to get revenge
man, this portrayal of odin is just very scary. he doesn't seem grandiose, he just seems like an absolute lunatic, it feels like such a person could exist.
People like that do exist, and he wouldn't be categorized as a lunatic but rather megalomania and some sort of antisocial personality disorder that makes him lacking in empathy like NPD.
@@Thrillkilled same it’s usually the ones that preach unconditional love, you learn pretty quickly that the moment you question them that unconditional love comes with a few conditions
It's nothing short of insanity how Odin still saw himself as a 'good person' after having just put a spear through his own son's heart because he didn't want to be a tool of violence anymore. In the diseased mind of a narcissistic psychopath, it's always someone else's fault even when they are holding the murder weapon in their very hand.
I would've loved if Kratos came in quick and grabbed the spear like weapon, And looked at Odin And they both look at each other, Kratos then says *"no."* And hits Odin with a mean hit and then Thor hits him with his hammer afterwards, Then the fight goes on from there.
I think the words "I have never seen a man so broken" could also be used to describe Thor here...just a man beyond abused and just used like a tool...there is like shred of a person left and trying to regain control
I've been re-watching this over and over and I cant get enough of it. The way Richard Schiff says: "I didnt want this. I did not want this" is just amazing. At first one would think that its Odin telling Thor that he didnt want to kill him but, the more I listen to it, the more Im convinced that Odin is actually telling Thor: "This is punishment. You should've done what Ive told you to do"
The "are you broken?" question somehow feels even colder than the actual kill to me... We already knew that Odin didn't care for his son, but this really and truly drives it home. Like Thor is just a toy for him, to be used and disposed of the second it's no longer functional...
*The lore behind what happened prior to Kratos arriving in Midgard* is worth a prequel TV series.. it was literally GOT but instead of Sword Fights it was world shattering, super powered gods fighting
@@marioss2167 A guy called Mimir comes to the Norse Lands... he tries to get the attention of Odin, the King of The Aesir (The King of the gods of the land) by capturing a giant whale and it works and he is promoted to his advisor.. A guy called Tyr, the God of War, travels to other lands like Egypt and Greece to learn from other gods.. he tries to lead by peace. Tyr, tries to help The Giants before it's too late and is tbh the Ned Stark of the story and is killed by Odin in a fit of paranoia that he was scheming against him. Cocky and arrogant, Mimir, thinks he can have it all in money, fame and wives until he realizes, Odin, is insane and in a mad scramble for knowledge - he commits genocide - murdering Giants and enslaving kingdoms (basically The Mad King from GOT) Mimir is horrified but it's too late to get out and he is imprisoned on a tree tortured daily for the rest of his life. Kratos, the guy who murdered like 25 Gods arrives years later - after the bad guys have won.. The Aesir press him - asking what he's doing on their land - and it's the first time Odin realizes he may have made a mistake.. because a GOD KILLER just landed in his garden.
if you pay attention your realize that Odin was planning for this. He stabs Thor and he instantly evaporates meaning Odin had a spell ready for this scenario. Thats why Odin is such a a-hole to him because really, hes just afraid of him. Kind like how Zeus was afraid of Kratos and also stabbed and killed him.
Both are completely different things. Zeus was afraid of kratos because of the prophecy. But when the great war evils released and consumed all gods. Only then Zeus fear started to show. In oden's case. It looks like a rush thing. Who is in their right mind kills their strongest weapon. Even if Thor refused to kill kratos. That doesn't mean he completely turned against Odin. By the end game developers must have decided to put all the blame on Odin and gave Thor a tragic death.
It's carzy how quickly Odin killed his son. I know he mostly just used him as a tool, but he didn't hesitate for even a second. Even worse because you could tell Thor was slowly changing his ways, standing up against Odin, caring about his family and even getting close to Atreus in the short time they spent.
@WESLEY TAULE na, Zeus was crap before too. He gave Ares the go-ahead to kidnap and torture deimos (a kid, and kratos' brother) for decades, driving him insane, all over a prophecy fulfilled by Kratos That and he cursed Kratos' mom to never reveal his father 's name, basically turning her into a trigger weapon
Thor mirrored Kratos in many ways both being violent monsters both regretting past acts both killed by their own father it seems the cycle didn't end after all
It's interesting how Thor saying "don't you know what I've done" breaks a lot of preconceptions about his character. The sadism and love for destroying things was always a facade he told himself to disguise the guilt he felt for the people he hurt. He convinced himself he was a weapon and that was what he was made to do to hide his shame and his wish for death because he feels death is the only way to bring justice to his crimes.
Yes we all did brother I miss him to I WOULD OF LOVED TO SEE THOR COUNTER ODIN AND FIGHT WITH KRATOS IMAGINE THE GOD OF WAR AND THE GOD OF THUNDER TEAMING UP AGAINST ODIN THATS THE ROUTE I WISHED SANTA MONICA WOULD TAKE but a man can still dream can’t he
Sad that we don't get to see Thor develop more after this, but I gotta say...hearing Thor tell Odin "no" was extremely cathartic for me. At last, a soft yet all too stern word of defiance. He had finally had enough. I love that moment, and I keep watching it.
What makes this scene so sad is that when Thor stood up to his father their was no hesitation to stab him and as he dies his last thoughts were about his daughter
The fact Thor didnt look Odin in the eye when he got stabbed just shows how much regret and sorrow he felt at the time... Rip Thor, I hope they find a way to bring him back 😭
@@viloetmarsh3467 The thing is Thor had a good amount of time to react, We saw how he was dodging Kratos in their first fight with Kratos going easy on Thor, He should've easily been able to dodge Odin as slow as he was moving with that Spear, But it is what it is I suppose he'll most likely come back the next game anyway, Considering how particles left instead of showing his body.
There are many different stories depicted of the Allfather. This one is damn impressive. From the start, he had this Godfather-like vibe to him. In the end… He’s a control freak, a psychopath, a coward… And a monster.
Because he was standing in front of THOR; The very same guy that politely offered him a drink and conversation about being "calm and reasonable"..... but still swiftly fucking uppercutted Kratos' fucking ass through his own fucking roof high into the fucking skies with none other than motherfucking Mjölnir⚒️
The thing that really gets me. Odin is not ignorant of how evil he is, he's not blinded by arrogance, he's cunning, intelligent and has massive experience of all walks of life. It's how he's managed to manipulate the Norse realm so thoroughly that it's almost a meat grinder slowly churning everything down to mulch while he sieves through the bottom for whatever nugget pops out. He knows who he is, what his path is and most importantly he _chose_ to walk that path, maybe not gleefully, but completely willingly using whatever extremes he deemed necessary. So killing Thor? That shit happened a loooooooong time ago, before Thor was even a twinkle in his eye.
Odin kept Thor ignorant, drunk, and constantly killing, because with his power, if his intelligence was cultivated, he would've been a threat to Odin, not his tool
My brother pointed out that Odin killed Thor like how Zeus killed Kratos in God of War 2 both were impaled and Odin says "I did not want this" and Zeus said "It did not have to be this way my son"
Notice the cinematography. The decision to change the camera angle from behind Kratos to behind Thor once Kratos grounds him. Which, to those of you who don’t understand, dissipates electricity effectively cutting off Thors lightning powers. Ending the fight because in that moment Thor could not defend himself. The perspective to change to behind Thors back was done deliberately. In that moment Kratos relates exactly to everything he’s feeling and saying. And Thor attains total clarity when Kratos tells him that they must grow past their own monstrosity in order to be the best possible fathers to their children. For one moment, Thor begins to seek his own redemption the same way Kratos sought his. This game is nothing shy of a cinematic masterpiece.
Thor had it so bad. He was abused by Odin and used as no more than a tool He never received any praise from his father despite his incredible achievements He was put aside like nothing when atreus arrived He made promises he couldn’t keep He argued with her daughter badly while drunk His two kids were killed His brother was killed He wasn’t allowed to kill the man behind their slaughter Once he finally broke free from odin he was killed in cold blood by his own father
Thor was right. He fought his life believing he couldn't change, afraid of what Odin would do. He knew his father was a monster, and that no matter what he did, Odin wouldnt let him be more than what he was designated for. In his last moments he was convinced that he could break those chains and be free, only to be proven right, to be shown that he was far beyond freedom. However, even in death, he had autonomy. Odin may have controlled his life, but he could never truly control Thor. Atleast he realized that in the end.
Missed opportunity to have Thor to approach Odin only to fall over after nine steps. Rather than Odin out right murdering his son. Causing a gray area in the next events.
@@anudeepkhadka6053 In the real life Ragnarök mythology, Thor and Jörmungandr are supposed to kill each other: After killing Jörmungandr, Thor is supposed to take nine steps before succumbing to the venom of Jörmungandr
That’s the same way Zeus talked to Kratos. Imagine if Kratos was under Zeus control he’d be just like Thor.. if Thor lives He goes on to be a good friend of Kratos