@occultiscool
@EntEarth
I don't understand the point of your comment. Gods and folkloric figures appear in narratives all over literary drama, science fiction, and fantasy. I don't think the original folkloric/mythological Thor's hammer even had the "worthy of lifting" aspect that this post is about.
@occultiscool
@EntEarth
Yeah, but the real mjolnir is less "who is morally worthy" and more "who's powerful enough to hold this thing without instantly being vaporized".
@occultiscool
@EntEarth
Mjolnir from Marvel is the one with the “worthy to lift “rule, so it’s inferred they are specifically talking about the MCU Thor.
@occultiscool
@EntEarth
True but they do own the version of Thor where only the worth can wield mjolnir. In the actual mythology Thor is the only one capable of using mjolnir because its super heavy and hes the only one who can properly lift it.
@occultiscool
@EntEarth
Not sure how to tell you, the Indo-European skyfather you're referring to didn't have a hammer with lifting restrictions the way it does in Marvel.
@occultiscool
@EntEarth
but in the original norse mythology, you dont need to be "worthy" to wield mjolnir, you just need to be strong, that the first mistake.