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  • Main Page
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    • Main Page
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In: The Avengers

THOR (Earth-7)

Thor Odinson, prince of Asgard and son of Odin, began his life as a proud, reckless warrior who believed the universe revolved around him. After his arrogance threatened the balance of the realms, Odin stripped him of his divine gifts and banished him to Midgard (Earth) to learn humility. Through trials, battles, and betrayals—particularly by his brother Loki—Thor discovered the value of protecting not only great kingdoms but also the small and fragile lives that make up the cosmos. Though his destiny was shaped by gods, wars, and ancient prophecies, Thor ultimately chose humanity and compassion over pride, carrying both the burdens and the lessons of his Asgardian heritage.

Biography 

Early Life

 As the heir to Odin and Asgard, Thor grew up surrounded by privilege and triumph. He wielded Mjolnir, the enchanted hammer, which affirmed his sense of invulnerability. Failure and loss were foreign concepts to him—Asgard’s history was written in victories, and Thor absorbed its pride. His self-centered and reckless nature only grew stronger, as he never needed to struggle for his place or his power.

 Tired of his son’s arrogance, Odin stripped Thor of his divine gifts and banished him to Midgard. The punishment was meant to humble him, forcing Thor to experience life without privilege or power. 

Trials

Over time, Thor discovered that the human body he inhabited was Donald Blake, a divine anchor that functions as a mortal counterpart to a god, used when he wishes to manifest.

Two parallel lives and one soul: in Donald Blake, Thor found the experience of fragility that made him understand humanity. he learned that the universe did not revolve around him and that smaller, fragile lives deserved protection. 

 During this time, Thor also met mortals who profoundly affected his outlook. Jane Foster, a S.H.I.E.L.D. recruit assigned to observe him, became his closest human connection. She noted that Thor never stopped talking to her, not because he was boastful, but because for the first time in his life, he needed to be heard and understood.

Yet his exile was not safe. Odin’s enemies discovered Thor’s weakened, mortal state and hunted him. His vulnerability could have ended him, but his companions, the Warriors Three, defended him until he could stand again. These threats forced Thor to act not as a god, but as a man who had to earn respect and survive without privilege.

During this time, Odin entered his deep hibernation cycle and could not intervene. Seizing the chance to prove himself worthy, Thor led an expedition across the Nine Realms with his allies, seeking to reach Asgard again.

  This journey shattered the myths he had been raised to believe. The “monsters” he expected to face were not soulless beasts, but families, cultures, and civilizations with their own traditions and histories—lives that had been broken by Asgard’s conquests. Thor was confronted with the truth that Asgard had not brought peace, but ruin.

Loki's Betrayal

The final leg of Thor’s expedition brought him to Jotunheim, a wasteland of ice and emptiness left scarred by Odin’s wars. It was here that Loki betrayed him, revealing Thor’s location to Asgard’s enemies. Thor forgave him, but Loki did not seek forgiveness—he demanded justice for those Asgard had wronged. This fracture defined their relationship: Thor longed to embrace his brother again, while Loki clung to vengeance.

Returning to Earth

Though his banishment ended, Thor never fully returned to Asgard. To him, the golden realm became a land of lies and forgotten truths, unworthy of blind loyalty. Earth, however, showed him humility, love, and a cause worth protecting. Thor chose to spend more of his life among mortals than gods, watching over a world fragile yet precious.

From then on, Thor chose Midgard as his true home, returning to Asgard only out of duty, not devotion.

THOR

Name: Thor Odinson / Donald Blake

Aliases: The Mighty Thor

Affiliation and Relationships

Affiliation: The Avengers

Pets: 

Relatives: Frigga (Mother) Odin (Father) Loki (Brother-Sister) Angela (Sister) Hela (Niece)

Allies: Jane Foster, Lady Sif, Heimdall, The Warrios Three

Origin and Living Status

Origin: Asgardian

Living Status: Alive

Marital Status: Single

Identity: Secret

Occupation: Doctor and Super-Hero

Base of Operations: Birmingham and The Nine Realms

The Prophecy of the End

There is no longer room for debate or denial: Ragnarok is coming. The warning reaches Thor through Balder, who brings not only the news of the coming end, but judgment as well—condemnation for Thor’s long abandonment of his role as an Asgardian guardian and his estrangement from his divine origins. The message echoes what Frigga herself had foreseen in her prophetic dreams: the End of the Gods would not come as a noble twilight, but as retribution born from cruelty long ignored.

Frigga’s visions revealed the origin of Asgard’s doom. She saw a mortal man—enslaved, sick, and broken—whose family and people were erased by plague and conquest. His suffering was not the result of his own sins, but of his bloodline, descended from those conquered, dehumanized, and discarded by the Asgardians themselves. His cries went unanswered. His race vanished without record or mourning, and the gods, deaf to his anguish, never even acknowledged his existence. Refusing to disappear quietly, the man walked to the Edge of the Universe, to the primordial waters of Jormungandr, where he found the promised blade—not through prophecy, but through sheer will. From that moment, the God Butcher was born.

In the days that followed, the God Butcher moved with terrifying purpose. He allied himself with Asgard’s ancient enemies, hunting deities across realms to torture and execute them as living symbols of his oath: the death of all gods. Hodr, Hermod, Vali, and Tyr fell among the Aesir. With each death, Asgard’s defenses weakened. Sygin now stands alone as the final triad sustaining the realm’s mystical protection, while her sisters—Loki and Amora—remain exiled on Midgard, unable to intervene as their home collapses.

Thor hesitates, torn between duty and despair. It is Jane Foster, his mortal love, who ultimately sends him forward. Confined to a hospital bed and dying from a malignant tumor in her brain, Jane urges Thor to act. She reminds him that if he has ever been able to shape his own legend, then now is the moment—because history may yet remember him not as the harbinger of doom, but as the Breaker of Ragnarok.

Ragnarok

Thus, Thor journeys to the Edge of the Universe to uncover the true origin of the blade wielded by the God Butcher. But the path is barred. Jormungandr, furious and ancient, rises to challenge him, determined to prevent Thor from interfering with a fate long set in motion. As thunder meets the end of all things, one truth becomes clear: the coming battle will decide not only the fate of Asgard, but whether the gods deserve to survive the reckoning they have brought upon themselves.

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