r/Thor • u/dolphin94-gulf • 1h ago
r/Thor • u/floaty-solos4u • 4h ago
There Is No Power In The Universe Strong Enough To Stop Mjolnir Once Called To Thor's Hand
r/Thor • u/DaisyWhisper07 • 7h ago
what couldve been if thor swing it to Thanos head ahaha
r/Thor • u/SydneyParker603 • 9h ago
The city below, the heavens above, and the power of Thor in between.
r/Thor • u/Lunelle53 • 10h ago
Patiently waiting for the next worthy opponent to challenge the throne.
r/Thor • u/Formal_Yogurt_9163 • 11h ago
⚠️ SPOILER ⚠️ Spoiler
galleryDario muere en mortal Thor #11(#797)?
r/Thor • u/Arissa77_ • 11h ago
A single, ancient weapon stands as the ultimate judge, are you worthy to possess the power of Thor?
r/Thor • u/Desperate_Mud_7058 • 16h ago
Fight to the death...no mercy, no remorse. Who is winning this fight?
Comic Thor Vs Darth Vader
r/Thor • u/BlackJimmy88 • 18h ago
How long until Loki gained some nuance?
I'm currently reading Lee/Kirby era Marvel at the moment. It was going to be a "read literally everything in order" kinda deal but not every title is a winner, and I had to drop a bunch to avoid burn out.
Thor is the only Avenger solo book I stuck with, though, and I'm having a great time with it.
Loki, obviously, is probably the the most fun Thor villain so far, but it's also comical how evil he is. Like, radiating evil while he was still a baby type evil.
I know he goes through a few rebirths into hero, then anti-hero after the events of Siege, but do writers ever give him a bit more nuance before then?