God of War: Greek Mythology in Video Games

Introduction

Since its debut in 2005, Sony's God of War franchise has become one of the most commercially successful and culturally influential video game series in history, and one of the most prominent vehicles through which Greek mythology has reached mainstream popular culture in the 21st century.

The series follows Kratos, a Spartan warrior who is tricked by Ares into killing his own family, becomes the God of War himself, and ultimately wages a devastating war against the entire Greek pantheon. Later entries expand the mythology to Norse gods, but the Greek trilogy, God of War (2005), God of War II (2007), and God of War III (2010), remains foundational. The series blends genuine mythological material with bold reinvention, creating a version of ancient Greece that is simultaneously familiar and radically transformed.

Kratos: Mythology's Most Unlikely Hero

Kratos himself is not drawn from any specific figure in ancient Greek mythology, though his name is real. In ancient Greek, kratos means "power" or "strength", it appears as a personified deity in Hesiod's Theogony and notably in Aeschylus's Prometheus Bound, where Kratos (Power) and Bia (Force) are servants of Zeus who chain Prometheus to the rock.

The game's Kratos owes more to the tradition of the tragic Greek hero, especially figures like Heracles and Ajax, than to any single mythological source. Like Heracles, he is a mortal of extraordinary strength who enters the service of a god, is driven to kill his own family through divine manipulation, and must complete seemingly impossible labors as a consequence. Like Ajax, his defining characteristic is a rage that ultimately turns destructive. The games are, in this sense, more mythological in spirit than in detail.

His epithet "the Ghost of Sparta", referring to the ash of his murdered family that stained his skin white, has no ancient source but captures the mythological logic of a hero haunted by his past crimes.

Mythological Elements the Games Get Right

Despite heavy creative reinvention, the God of War series incorporates a surprising amount of genuine mythological material. The basic family relationships of the Olympian gods, Zeus as king, Poseidon as god of the sea, Hades as ruler of the underworld, Ares as god of war, Athena as goddess of wisdom, are accurately rendered. The games use the correct Roman-Greek equivalences and reflect the actual hierarchy of the divine order.

The Titans and the Titanomachy receive substantial treatment. Cronos (Kronos), Atlas, Gaia, and Prometheus all appear in roles consistent with their mythological identities. Atlas holding up the sky, Prometheus chained and tormented for giving fire to humanity, the ancient enmity between Titans and Olympians, these are drawn from genuine sources including Hesiod's Theogony.

The monsters and creatures are particularly well-realized. Medusa, the Hydra, the Cyclops, the Minotaur, Cerberus, Charon, the Fates (Moirai), and the Furies (Erinyes) all appear in forms consistent with their mythological descriptions. The geography of the Underworld, Elysium, the Rivers Styx and Lethe, Tartarus, follows ancient accounts closely.

The Blades of Chaos, Kratos's signature weapons, are invented, but the concept of divine weapons forged for specific purposes by Hephaestus reflects genuine mythological thinking about divine armaments.

Where the Games Depart from Myth

The most fundamental departure is the treatment of the Olympian gods as straightforwardly villainous. In ancient Greek religion, the gods were capricious and dangerous, they could punish mortals for perceived slights and were not bound by human moral standards, but they were not simply evil antagonists to be killed. The concept of a mortal waging war on Olympus and slaying the gods one by one would have been impious to an ancient Greek in a way that goes beyond anything in the mythological tradition.

Individual characterizations are significantly altered for dramatic purposes. Zeus, while authoritarian in myth, becomes a paranoid tyrant who murders his own son. Hera is reduced to a drunken figure of contempt. Hephaestus, in mythology a masterful craftsman who, though wronged by the gods, retained his place on Olympus, is depicted as a broken, enslaved figure. Hermes loses the wit and complexity of the mythological trickster in favor of a wisecracking courier.

The timeline of the games also compresses and conflates myth in ways that serve the narrative. Events from widely separated mythological traditions, the Titanomachy, the labors of Heracles, the myth of Pandora's box, are woven into a single continuous story with Kratos at the center, erasing the distinct cultural and temporal origins of each myth.

Pandora's box receives particularly dramatic reinvention: in the original myth, it is a jar (pithos) containing evils that escape into the world when Pandora opens it out of curiosity; in the game, it is the object that contains the power to kill Zeus. The shift from passive receptacle of misfortune to active weapon reflects the games' general tendency to repurpose mythological objects for action-game needs.

The Greek Trilogy's Mythological Arc

Taken as a whole, the Greek trilogy of God of War games can be read as an extreme version of the Greek tragic arc: a hero who suffers a terrible wrong, seeks violent revenge, and ultimately brings catastrophe not only on his enemies but on the entire world. This structure closely parallels ancient tragedy, particularly Euripides' portrayals of figures like Heracles and Medea, whose justified grievances lead to monstrous outcomes.

The ending of God of War III, in which Kratos's actions destroy the gods and leave Greece in ruins, can be read as a grimly logical conclusion to the cycle of divine violence and retribution that runs through so much of Greek myth. The gods who wronged Kratos are punished; the mortals of Greece suffer for it. This is not so different from the logic of, say, Euripides' The Trojan Women, in which the Greeks' violence against Troy is followed by the gods' destruction of the Greek fleet.

God of War (2018) and Norse Mythology

The 2018 reboot, simply titled God of War, transplants Kratos to the realm of Norse mythology, specifically the world of the Prose Edda, the 13th-century Icelandic compilation of Norse myth. Kratos is now living in exile in Midgard with his son Atreus, and their journey takes them through a mythology that is depicted with considerable care and fidelity.

The Norse entries, God of War (2018) and God of War: Ragnarök (2022), have been praised for their mythological research. Figures such as Freya, Mimir, the world tree Yggdrasil, Thor, Odin, and the events of Ragnarök are drawn with genuine attention to the source material, even as the games introduce their characteristic liberties.

The juxtaposition of Greek and Norse mythologies in the same character's story has prompted many players to explore and compare the two traditions, an unintended but genuine contribution to popular mythology literacy.

Cultural Impact and Mythology Education

The God of War series has introduced millions of players to the names, relationships, and stories of Greek mythology. While the games' versions of these myths are heavily filtered through an action-game lens, the underlying names, Ares, Aphrodite, Hermes, Poseidon, Hades, Persephone, the Fates, Prometheus, have become familiar to a generation of players who might not otherwise have encountered them.

Educators report a complicated relationship with the franchise: on one hand, students who have played the games arrive with strong prior associations (often violent and negative) for figures like Zeus and Ares; on the other hand, they have associations at all, and those can be redirected toward the richer ancient sources. The games' broadly accurate treatment of the Underworld, the Titans, and many monsters gives teachers real material to work with.

Game designer David Jaffe, the creator of the original God of War, has cited Greek tragedy, specifically the structure of the tragic hero, as a direct inspiration for Kratos's arc. This conscious engagement with the tradition, even in a dramatically transformed form, distinguishes the series from purely decorative uses of mythological imagery.

Legacy and Ongoing Influence

The God of War franchise has sold over 35 million copies worldwide and spawned comics, novelizations, and adaptation discussions. Its visual design, particularly its depictions of Greek temples, divine weapons, mythological creatures, and the architecture of Olympus, has shaped how an entire generation visualizes ancient Greek myth.

The series has also influenced countless other games and media that draw on mythology. Its success demonstrated that ancient mythological material could sustain a major modern franchise, paving the way for games like Hades, Assassin's Creed Odyssey, and others that engage with Greek mythology in varying degrees of fidelity.

Whatever its liberties with the ancient sources, God of War has achieved something that classical scholarship rarely manages: it has made the gods of Olympus feel urgent, dangerous, and alive to audiences who would never read Hesiod or Pindar. That is no small achievement, and it is a genuinely mythological one.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is God of War based on real Greek mythology?
God of War draws heavily on real Greek mythology for its gods, monsters, locations, and story structure, but takes major creative liberties. The Olympian gods, Titans, Underworld geography, and creatures like Medusa and Cerberus are based on genuine mythological sources. The character of Kratos himself is a fictional creation, though his name means 'power' in ancient Greek. The games' treatment of the gods as villains to be killed goes well beyond anything in the ancient tradition.
Is Kratos a real figure in Greek mythology?
The name Kratos is real in Greek mythology, it refers to a minor deity personifying power or strength, who appears in Hesiod's Theogony and as a character in Aeschylus's Prometheus Bound. The Spartan warrior Kratos of the video games, however, is a fictional creation by game designer David Jaffe and Santa Monica Studio, not a figure from the ancient sources.
What Greek myths appear in God of War?
The God of War series incorporates many genuine myths, including the Titanomachy (war between Titans and Olympians), Prometheus chained for giving fire to humanity, Atlas holding up the sky, Pandora's box, the labors of Heracles, and the geography of the Underworld with the rivers Styx and Lethe. Creatures from myth including Medusa, the Hydra, the Minotaur, the Cyclops, and Cerberus all appear in forms broadly consistent with ancient sources.
How does God of War portray Ares?
In the original God of War (2005), Ares is the primary antagonist, the god who tricks Kratos into killing his family and whom Kratos must ultimately destroy. This portrayal aligns with Ares' ancient character as the most feared and least loved of the Olympian gods, associated with brutal, destructive warfare. The ancient Greeks themselves rarely celebrated Ares as heroic; he was honored more in Sparta than elsewhere and was generally portrayed as dangerous and treacherous.
Does God of War accurately depict the Greek Underworld?
The God of War series depicts the Greek Underworld with reasonable fidelity to the ancient sources. The basic geography, Elysium (for the heroic dead), the rivers Styx and Lethe, Tartarus (for punishment), and Charon ferrying souls, follows ancient accounts. Cerberus as the three-headed guardian, and Hades as the stern ruler, are consistent with mythology. The games add invented locations and mechanics for gameplay purposes, but the underlying structure reflects genuine ancient beliefs.

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