Mótsognir: the Dwarven King
the Bane of Mankind of Veithurgard
Mótsognir was a dwarf who became a king of Midgard, ruling humans from his castle at Konunsgard. Once a good king, his obsession with a legendary dwarven armor drove him to atrocity and madness, and he met his end among the dead he could not escape.
Mótsognir was a dwarf who forsook his own kind to become a king of Midgard, ruling the humans of his lands from the castle at Konunsgard. A good ruler in his beginning, he was driven by his hunger for a legendary armor into cruelty and madness, and remembered ever after as the Bane of Mankind.
Exile from his kind#
Mótsognir was one of the sons of Ivaldi and a brother of Andvari. He was with his father in Niflheim when Ivaldi turned the realm's mists into a weapon and died as a result of his own work. Horrified at what his father had done, Mótsognir left behind a message warning any who traveled to Niflheim to flee, renounced his own kind, and declared his intent to go into exile in Midgard.
The Dwarven King#
In exile Mótsognir rose to become a king, with his own castle and dominion over the humans who lived in his lands. The territory he governed was vast, stretching across two regions. He set his subjects to hunt dragons and other monsters for him, beasts he took pleasure in collecting and keeping within his castle. One of the lands under his rule, Veithurgard, lay under constant assault by the Dark Elves.
For a time he was a good king. But a dream came to drive him toward a single obsession: the legendary dwarven armor Dvegræðikr, which he believed would spare his people a gruesome death.
Atrocity and madness#
To forge the armor, Mótsognir set out to gather its three terrible ingredients. He had three dragons captured to harvest their Fury, and he killed innocent people to harvest their Scream. The third ingredient eluded him, and his failure drove him gradually mad. He ordered his people to keep faith in their king regardless of his failures, and as time passed he became known as the Bane of Mankind.
In the end he understood that he had been a fool, and that only death could atone for what he had done. He traveled to Konunsgard, where he suddenly vanished.
The Ultimate Sacrifice#
Long after, Kratos and Atreus came upon writings about the Dwarven King and chose to investigate his castle, finding it largely in ruins, his captured beasts either still chained or loose and killing those nearby. Resolving to craft the very armor Mótsognir had craved, they gathered its three ingredients. At Konunsgard, Kratos found the king's corpse hidden in a secret room behind his throne. Mótsognir had been killed by Hel-Walkers, becoming the Ultimate Sacrifice, the third ingredient, himself.
Frequently asked questions
- Who was Mótsognir in God of War?
- Mótsognir was a dwarf and son of Ivaldi who went into exile in Midgard and became a king, ruling over the local humans from his castle at Konunsgard. Though he began as a good king, his obsession with a legendary dwarven armor drove him to commit atrocities and ultimately to madness.
- How did Mótsognir die?
- Mótsognir was killed by Hel-Walkers at Konunsgard. In his quest for the legendary armor Dvegræðikr, he became the final ingredient himself, the Ultimate Sacrifice, his corpse hidden in a secret room behind his throne where Kratos later found it.
Sources
- WikiMótsognir — God of War Wiki entry
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Related entries
Andvari: the enchanter trapped in a ring
Andvari was a dwarven enchanter and master of soul magic who created the dreaded Soul Eaters. When one of his own creations turned on him, he sealed his soul inside his ring to survive, and in that form he aided Kratos and Atreus before being lost.
Atreus
Atreus was the son of Kratos and the Jotunn Faye, born in Midgard and given the hidden name Loki. Across two great journeys he grew from a sickly boy into the prophesied champion of the Giants, the god of mischief whose fate was bound to Ragnarok.
Kratos
Kratos was the demigod son of Zeus who rose from a Spartan general to the Greek God of War, destroyed the pantheon of Olympus in a quest for vengeance, and then began again in the Norse realms as a father seeking to leave his bloody past behind.
Dark Elves
The Dark Elves, or Dokkalfar, were one of the two elven peoples of Alfheim, insectoid beings who dwelt in darkness and waged an endless war against the Light Elves for control of the Light. Their conflict ended only in the days of Ragnarok.
Konunsgard
Konunsgard was a region of Midgard once ruled by the dwarven king Motsognir, who built a great stronghold there in pursuit of a legendary armor. His obsession destroyed his people and himself, leaving the land overrun by the vengeful dead.
Midgard
Midgard was the realm of mortals, shaped by Odin from the body of the giant Ymir and set between Asgard and Helheim. It was the home Kratos chose after leaving Greece, the land where Atreus was born, and the realm where the great winter of Fimbulwinter fell.
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