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God of War
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Key Takeaways
- Kratos has a colorful past filled with justified and unjustified kills, but he seeks redemption and has changed his approach to killing.
- Some of Kratos' justified kills include those who posed a threat to Sparta, those who sought revenge, and those who were a danger to the world.
- Kratos' justified kills were motivated by self-defense, saving the world, and protecting his loved ones.
At the end of 2018’s God of War, Kratos admits to his son Atreus that “I have killed many who were deserving and many who were not." Both that and the sequel, God of War Ragnarok, saw the Ghost of Sparta filled with regret about his past, looking for redemption as the Norse apocalypse drew near.
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As Kratos grapples with his past in God of War Ragnarok: Valhalla, players take a trip down memory lane along with him.
Though Kratos wants to put his colorful past behind him, it's difficult for fans to forget the brutal life he once led. To a certain degree, he still leads this kind of life, but his approach to killing has changed.
Updated on February 8, 2024, by David Heath: God of War Ragnarok's Valhalla DLC saw Kratos confront his past and come to terms with his regrets and the decisions he made, seeking sense in the ones he thought were indefensible and learning from his mistakes in order to be better and make a fresh start.
Many of his decisions usually involved who should live or die, with many falling in the 'die' category. So, this list has been updated with more of Kratos' justified and unjustified kills, with some extra info, some tweaks here and there, and rearrangements to make it easier for readers to navigate it. This time, the reasonable ones have been put at the top, and the blatant brutalities are at the bottom.
20 Justified: Alrik
Reasons: Killed Most of the Spartan Army and Almost Killed Kratos
- King of the Barbarians and boss in God of War 2
Aside from the time he was revived to stop Kratos in GoW 2, Alrik the Barbarian King was largely seen in flashbacks and extra media like the tie-in comic by DC Comics. But he's perhaps the most important NPC in the series, as he and his hordes were the force responsible for turning Kratos from a Spartan captain into the Ghost of Sparta.
Seeking revenge for their fight in the prequel comic, Alrik and his army had the Spartan army all but defeated, and Kratos was moments away from becoming a bloody stain on Alrik's hammer. If Kratos had died, Alrik would've destroyed Sparta and its people. Understandably, Kratos had to pray to one god or another to save his beloved city-state, and aiding soldiers in battle was part of Ares' M.O. It led to a lot of damage in the long run, but at that moment, it was something Kratos had to do to survive.
19 Justified: The Furies
Reasons: Self-Defense, Freedom from Bondage, and Saving Olympus
God of War: Ascension
Hack and Slash
- Platform(s)
- PS3
- Released
- March 12, 2013
- Developer(s)
- Santa Monica Studio
- Goddesses of vengeance and bosses of GoW: Ascension
GoW: Ascension isn't most fans' favorite game, and many see its story as unnecessary. But that's not exactly true. It could've been better implemented perhaps, but oaths and filial piety were a big deal in the ancient world. Greek mythology is full of stories about the horrors that awaited people who broke their word, where they'd often be tortured and tormented by the Furies until they either died or had another god save them.
So, why would they let Kratos off lightly when he broke his devotion to Ares? They devised the blood tasks that sealed Kratos' oath, and Ares helped him (unknowingly) complete them by tricking him into killing his family. Once Kratos tried to quit, the Furies would torture him until he complied with their plot to overthrow Olympus. The only regret Kratos had was that he also had to kill Orkos, on his request, to fully break free from the oath. The oathstone held in his body would become one of the key items in Ragnarok's Valhalla DLC.
18 Justified: Persephone
Reasons: Self-Defense, Saving the World, and Rescuing Helios.
God of War: Chains of Olympus
Hack and Slash
- Platform(s)
- PSP , PS3
- Released
- March 4, 2008
- Developer(s)
- Ready at Dawn
- Queen of the Underworld, wife of Hades, and the final boss of GoW: Chains of Olympus
Persephone didn’t want to be the 'Queen of the Underworld.' Like the original legend, she was tricked by Hades into spending half her lifetime in the realm of the dead as his wife. With Olympus unable and unwilling to help, she wanted revenge. She freed the titan Atlas from Tartarus, and together, they kidnapped Helios, let Morpheus trap the people and gods alike into a dreamy slumber, and then tried to destroy the World Pillar.
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Its destruction would've destroyed every realm in Greece from Olympus to Tartarus. She thought she could neutralize Kratos by using his late daughter Calliope to trick him into de-powering himself. Instead, he trapped Atlas in the pillar's place, killed Persephone, freed Helios, and saved the realm. This resulted in him being separated from Calliope forever.
17 Justified: Ares
Reasons: Tricked Kratos into Killing his Family, Destroyed Cities Across Greece, and Tried to Destroy Olympus
God of War
Hack and Slash
- Platform(s)
- PS2
- Released
- March 22, 2005
- Developer(s)
- Santa Monica Studio
- Olympus' god of war and final boss of GoW (2005)
The original game was about Kratos trying to stop Ares from destroying Athens and threatening Olympus. The original Greek god of war was a dangerous and manipulative character. While he gave Kratos his second chance at victory on the battlefield, he also tricked him into killing his wife and daughter to devote himself fully to Ares’ cause.
That cause ultimately was the conquest of Olympus itself via his plan with the Furies in God of War: Ascension. While it didn’t work, he still laid waste to cities across the continent for his own desires. Kratos killing him in combat brought peace to everyone, save for Kratos himself as he remained cursed by Ares’ trick. He was given Ares’ old job, but it wasn’t enough.
16 Justified: The Sisters of Fate
Reasons: To Change his Fate and Avoid Dying at Zeus' Hands
God of War 2
Action
- Platform(s)
- PlayStation 2 , PlayStation 3
- Released
- March 13, 2007
- Developer(s)
- Santa Monica Studio
- Controllers of time and fate and bosses in GoW 2
After being betrayed by the gods in the original GoW and GoW: Ghost of Sparta, Kratos used his new godly status to help Sparta's military efforts against the rest of Greece. Fearing his power, Zeus tricked Kratos into giving up his godhood and forced him to swear loyalty to him or die. Kratos chose death and was only brought back when the Titan Gaia offered him a path to revenge.
But instead of directly attacking Zeus, she told him to face off against the Sisters of Fate instead. With them controlling his thread of fate, he'd be doomed to die again if he tried to threaten Zeus directly, and they had no interest in changing his path. So, Kratos had to take the direct route, risking his own survival in the past, to be able to control his future.
15 Justified: Zeus
Reasons: Lied and Tormented Kratos Since Childhood and Destroyed Sparta and its Citizens
God of War 3
Action
Adventure
- Platform(s)
- PS4 , PS3
- Released
- March 16, 2010
- Developer(s)
- Santa Monica Studio
- King of Olympus, the chief god of Greece, and the final boss of GoW 2 and GoW 3
While the Ruler of Olympus seems benevolent in the first God of War, there were always cracks in this facade. GoW 3 argues Zeus was corrupted by the fear released from Pandora’s box. However, even before this, his manipulation of the architects Pathos Verdes III and Daedalus showed he was willing to lie, gaslight, and take lives to get his way.
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He was ruled by his fear long before the box was opened, too. Acting on a prophecy that he'd be taken down by "a marked warrior," he had Ares and Athena kidnap Kratos' birthmark-covered brother Deimos by mistake, giving Kratos his 'mark' (eye scar) in the process. Then, he cursed Kratos’ mother to keep her from revealing he was Kratos' father. Killing his son and destroying Sparta were just additional insults to injury.
14 Justified: Magni
Reasons: Self-Defense and to Protect Atreus
God of War (2018)
Action
Adventure
- Platform(s)
- PC , PlayStation 4
- Released
- April 20, 2018
- Developer(s)
- Santa Monica Studio
- Norse god of force and brutality and co-boss in GoW (2018)
The sons of Thor, Magni and Modi, were sent by Odin to be Baldur's lackeys in his pursuit of Kratos, Atreus, and their path to Jotunheim. Magni's strength and blond hair made him the favorite of their father, while Modi was treated like the proverbial red-headed stepchild. Nonetheless, the two were devoted to the Allfather and his cause and did their best to stop Kratos and Atreus in their tracks.
In the end, all it did was cost Magni his life when Kratos stopped him permanently with his axe. However, unlike his past self, Kratos grew concerned about the consequences of taking this life. It didn't cause any natural disasters like the deaths of the Olympians, but it led to Modi trying to get revenge, only to be beaten by his father off-screen, and to Atreus growing ill, recovering, and killing his first god, too.
13 Justified: Baldur
Reasons: Constant Threat to Kratos and Atreus, Tortured Mimir, and Tried to Kill Freya
- Norse god of light, joy, and tragedy. Recurring boss in GoW (2018)
The big bad guy of the first Norse game was as much a victim as well as a villain. Baldur used to be a relatively innocent Aesir, the young son of Odin and Freya. But once his mother, fearing his death, made him invulnerable via a spell without his consent, it twisted him. The spell made him unable to feel pleasure as well as pain. Any little thing that gave him joy and made him feel alive now left him as numb as everything else.
Feeling betrayed and driven mad by the spell, he sided against her and gave in to his rage and brutality. Even after the spell was undone, he couldn’t let go of his bitterness. Freya’s attempts at reason led to her offering herself as a sacrifice to his whims. Kratos, seeing Baldur make the same bad choices he once did, intervened and finished him off permanently. In the short term, he could've handled it better, but Kratos' decision proved right in the long term.
12 Justified: Heimdall
Reasons: Persistent Threat to Kratos and Atreus and a Devoted Agent of Odin
God of War: Ragnarok
Action
Adventure
- Platform(s)
- PS4 , PS5
- Released
- November 9, 2022
- Developer(s)
- Santa Monica Studio
- Norse god of foresight and boss in GoW Ragnarok
There are few characters more aggravating than the all-seeing watchman of the Aesir. Heimdall had a case for being wary of Atreus but not for deliberating taunting him and Thor’s daughter Thrud for kicks. He’s snotty towards everyone and even more so to those who oppose Asgard. If the Norns hadn’t predicted he’d try to kill Atreus, Kratos would’ve likely killed him for getting on his last nerve like Hermes.
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Yet he actually showed him mercy, offering Heimdall a chance to walk away, much like he did for Baldur. But just like his half-brother, Heimdall couldn’t let go. Kratos’ pity offended him even more. With no willingness to stop, Kratos had to make that decision for him. It left him feeling conflicted, concerned he'd never be more than a killer. But most players likely wished they could've killed him much earlier.
11 Justified: Odin
Reasons: Threat to the Other Norse Realms and their People and a Master Manipulator
- The Allfather, King of the Aesir, and main antagonist and final boss of GoW Ragnarok
Technically, Kratos wasn't the one who landed the killing strike on Odin. After all his machinations, deceptions, using people against each other, and powerful magical attacks, it was Atreus who sealed Odin's soul into a metal marble. Then, a grief-stricken Sindri smashed said marble to avenge his late brother Brok. But Kratos played his part in fighting off the Allfather, softening him up in the final battle until he was a weak, bloody figure.
Like Baldur and Heimdall, he was offered mercy and given the option to give up, disappear, and live out his life. But Odin was too devoted to his paranoia and his need to see beyond the veil, no matter the cost to himself and those around him. By then, Atreus, Freya, and Kratos had let go of the pain he caused them and would've held his marble for safekeeping. But Sindri was not so forgiving.
10 Unjustified: The Boat Captain
Reasons: Needed His Key But Didn't Need Him
- Minor, recurring NPC throughout the series
In the opening stage, Kratos had to fight a Hydra that had eaten the Boat Captain, the only man with a key he needed to progress. Luckily for him, even after killing the beast, the captain was still alive, struggling at the precipice of the monster’s throat. Kratos pulled him up, only to reveal he wasn’t there to save him.
He just pulled the key off of him, then dropped him down the Hydra's throat to his doom. He'd then kick him down into the River Styx later in the game and kill him a second time after he was revived in God of War 2. Kratos would later admit in a note in Ragnaro k that he regretted killing the poor guy. He had no reason to drop him other than because he could.
9 Unjustified: Civilians
Reasons: Obstacles That Kratos Decided to Kill Instead of Using Other Means
- Recurring NPCs across the series
It didn’t take much for Ares to manipulate Kratos into doing his dirty work. Before their deal, Kratos would lead the Spartan Army into new territory, conquering for the good of Sparta. Once he offered his service to Ares, he only became more brutal, killing civilians for the war god’s whims. As far as Kratos was concerned, if a non-combatant was in the way, they had to be removed.
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A cowardly man holding a bridge back? Blasted with lightning to open it up. A wounded soldier? Fed him into moving gears to open the way. Poseidon’s Princess pleading for her life? Crushed in a wheel so Kratos could talk to Pandora. This indiscriminate, brutal approach is how Ares was able to make Kratos kill his own family, and it was one he wasn’t able to shake off until he reflected on his choices in Midgard.
8 Unjustified: Athena
Reasons: Not Strictly Kratos' Fault but a Casualty of his Rage Nonetheless
- Greek goddess of wisdom, and NPC throughout the series
The Goddess of Wisdom had been Kratos’ guiding light for most of the series. Athena offered him the path to redemption in GoW: Chains of Olympus and the original GoW, tried to apologize for her part in his brother’s abduction in GoW: Ghost of Sparta, and tried to keep him from giving in to his rage in GoW 2. She didn’t want Kratos to lose himself, nor for Olympus and Greece to suffer as a result of it.
But her sacrifice to save Zeus cost her dearly. She came back as a corrupted ghost in GoW 3, willing to take her father’s place as another tyrant doling out false hope. Her death was accidental, yet Kratos regretted it all the same. His guiding light became a taunting specter, a symbol of everything that went wrong for him in his quest for revenge, and a reminder to be better.
7 Unjustified: Peirithous
Reason: Kratos Preferred This Brutal Way of Getting Peirithous' Bow Instead of Freeing Him
- Ally of Theseus and NPC in GoW 3
Peirithous was a friend of Theseus who joined him on his journey to Hades to woo Persephone. Hades (the god) tricked the two into sitting in chairs that latched onto them, intending to trap them in the underworld forever. Theseus was rescued by Hercules, but Peirithous was left behind. By GoW 3, he was surrounded by flammable bramble to make his rescue even more difficult.
He pleaded with Kratos to free him in exchange for his bow. There was no reason to doubt him, as he was just an ordinary mortal seeking freedom. Instead, Kratos freed a fire-breathing Cerberus dog to roast Peirithous alive and get his bow anyway. Perhaps after his experience with the gods, the Ghost of Sparta ran out of patience for making deals.
6 Unjustified: Helios
Reason: Kratos Needed his Power to Open Passageways
- Greek god of the sun, NPC, and item
Being a video game, some figures in GoW 3 had to die just to open up the rest of the game. Without killing Poseidon and Hades, Kratos would be stuck in the underworld, twiddling his thumbs. They were also bosses where Kratos had to fight back or die. Helios is another matter, as he was busy fighting the Titans. Left gravely injured, Helios had offered to help Kratos repay the debt he owed him for helping him in GoW: Chains of Olympus, but he was still loyal to Olympus.
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He tried to trick Kratos into burning himself alive by telling him to step into the Flame of Olympus. But he was too weak and bloody to do anything truly threatening. Kratos could've left him, but he needed his head for gameplay, so he took it in brutal fashion. Helios would come back as an apparition in the Valhalla DLC, where Kratos would try to apologize to him, to little effect.
5 Unjustified: Hermes
Reasons: Deliberate Goading, Self-Defense, and Kratos Needed his Boots
- God of speed, medicine, and messengers and a boss in GoW 3
Until Heimdall's debut in Ragnarok, Hermes was perhaps the most intentionally aggravating figure in the series. But ultimately, all he did was be annoying, "a fly from the ass of Zeus" that was not worth Kratos' time. Hermes decided otherwise and kept messing with the proverbial bull, thinking he wouldn't get the business end of its horns.
It led to a chase across Olympus, and a short battle against the injured Hermes where all the god had left were taunts. Kratos could've been the bigger man and left him alone. But, like Helios, Kratos needed the Boots of Hermes for gameplay progression. Instead of just pulling them off, Kratos lopped his legs off instead. It may have been satisfying to swat this fly, but Kratos didn't need to kill him.
4 Unjustified: Cronos
Reasons: Self-Defense and Tricked into Retrieving a Stone from his Stomach
- King of the Titans, a level in GoW (2005), and a boss in GoW 3
Cronos is a unique case, as his death isn't solely Kratos' fault. In a bid to save his daughter, Hephaestus tricked Kratos into looking for the Omphalos Stone in Tartarus. He knew the stone was in Cronos' stomach, but Kratos didn't. At best, he hoped he'd be stuck there, and at worst, that he'd be killed by the great Titan.
Cronos also wanted revenge for getting trapped in Tartarus after Kratos retrieved the box from the temple chained to his back. Fighting back against that would've been fine as self-defense. But after getting swallowed by the Titan and cutting his way free, Kratos got the stone and could've left Cronos alone. Instead, he made his way up to his head and killed him with the Blade of Olympus just to pay him back.
3 Unjustified: Hephaestus
Reasons: Self-Defense and Game Progression
- God of blacksmiths, fire, and craftwork and an NPC in GoW 3
Hephaestus was friendly towards Kratos, giving him advice, tips, and exposition. He even saved his life indirectly, as his knowledge of the Flame of Olympus and its deadly touch stopped Kratos from believing Helios' lie about stepping into it. However, to snuff it out entirely and free Pandora's box, Kratos needed to sacrifice Hephaestus' surrogate daughter Pandora herself. Then, he'd have the power to kill a god once again.
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This made Hephaestus trick Kratos into fighting Cronos, before trying to electrocute him to death. In return, Kratos gave him a taste of his own medicine, stunning him with electricity. He could’ve left him alone after that as he was trapped in his underworld prison. Instead, he killed Hephaestus with his own mechanism, leaving him pleading for Pandora's life. Kratos would understand why Hephaestus did what he did and regret his death in Ragnarok.
2 Unjustified: Hera
Reason: Insulted Pandora
- Goddess of grain and marriage and an NPC in GoW 3
It would take a threat like Kratos to put Hera and Hercules, the child of Zeus she hated the most in mythology, on the same page. Driven to drink by Zeus' extra-marital affairs, she sent Hercules out to finish Kratos off while she watched, chalice of wine in hand. The game didn't show her reaction to the final battle, but whoever died was likely a win-win situation for her.
By their second meeting, Kratos had blocked out the sun, wrecked the seas, and caused disease from the gods he killed, and all Hera could do was drunkenly berate him. If she cursed Kratos alone, he likely would've ignored her. But then she insulted Pandora, which was a step too far. He broke Hera's neck with one hard shake and would use her body as a tool to escape her garden.
1 Unjustified: Daedalus
Reason: Kratos Needed to Complete the Labyrinth and Reach Pandora
- Architect of the Labyrinth and an NPC
Zeus may have been the one who forced Daedalus to complete the labyrinth with false promises and then stuck him in a death trap at its center. But it was Kratos who set it off. The King of Olympus commissioned Daedalus to create the labyrinth, promising to reunite him with his lost son Icarus if he completed it. By the time it was assembled, Zeus chained him up as its first prisoner.
Yet Daedalus would still think up ways to keep constructing it and hope Icarus would reach him. However, Kratos dropped Icarus into Tartarus back in GoW 2 and told the old man he was dead. He only had a few moments to grieve until Kratos set off the final mechanism, bringing the labyrinth together and killing Daedalus in the process. Callously, Kratos would use him as an example of what hope really brings: bitter sadness and death.
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