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* ''VideoGame/{{Grime}}'': The surreal world with all its weird lifeforms...that's actually the body of the dead god Vered the Worldparent. You are the Chiseled One, who's the prophesied Endgiver and child of the Worldparent. While the Chisel One, a vaguely humanoid being with a black hole for its head, isn't a god yet - they are on a quest to succeed their mother and achieve true godhood.

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* ''VideoGame/{{Grime}}'': The surreal world with all its weird lifeforms... that's actually the body of the dead god Vered the Worldparent. You are the Chiseled One, who's the prophesied Endgiver and child of the Worldparent. While the Chisel One, a vaguely humanoid being with a black hole for its head, isn't a god yet - they are on a quest to succeed their mother and achieve true godhood.
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Wick cleaning


* In ''Anime/{{CodeGeass}}'' the being referred to as "God" is left extremely nebulous and complicated, but it is clear that this God is an anthropocentric concept. It is actually known as the "collective human unconsciousness" and represents the collective mind, spirit and soul of humanity. It is not supreme or omnipotent, as [[spoiler:Charles zi Britannia wants to destroy it to [[AssimilationPlot unite all of humanity into one collective soul]], and Lelouch uses his CompellingVoice on it to kill Charles.]] Its most common physical manifestation is a Jupiter-like planet with a strange tower connected to it.

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* In ''Anime/{{CodeGeass}}'' ''Anime/CodeGeass'' the being referred to as "God" is left extremely nebulous and complicated, but it is clear that this God is an anthropocentric concept. It is actually known as the "collective human unconsciousness" and represents the collective mind, spirit and soul of humanity. It is not supreme or omnipotent, as [[spoiler:Charles zi Britannia wants to destroy it to [[AssimilationPlot unite all of humanity into one collective soul]], and Lelouch uses his CompellingVoice on it to kill Charles.]] Its most common physical manifestation is a Jupiter-like planet with a strange tower connected to it.



* ''Art/TheApotheosisOfWashington'': Apparently, really good [[UsefulNotes/ThePresidentsOfTheUnitedStates Presidents]] become gods when they die. In this {{painting}}, an ascended Washington sits besides Victory and Liberty in a FluffyCloudHeaven looking down upon an {{Anthropomorphic Personification}} of Freedom and the [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek gods]], who now seem to serve the Celestial-In-Chief.

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* ''Art/TheApotheosisOfWashington'': Apparently, really good [[UsefulNotes/ThePresidentsOfTheUnitedStates Presidents]] become gods when they die. In this {{painting}}, an ascended Washington sits besides Victory and Liberty in a FluffyCloudHeaven looking down upon an {{Anthropomorphic Personification}} AnthropomorphicPersonification of Freedom and the [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek gods]], who now seem to serve the Celestial-In-Chief.



* In Franchise/TheDCU gods tend to range from being incredibly powerful superhuman individuals more akin to physical gods (Most of the New Gods, Onimar Syn, the classical gods, Lobo, etc.) to nigh omnipotent but still human minded individuals (Anansi and several classical gods, etc.) to basically omnipotent cosmic forces (The Endless, Lucifer, Comicbook/TheSpectre, Michael, etc.) right up to a single Omnipotent God who may or may not be split into several aspects (The Presence, The Source, etc.). Those who fall in the second category are incredibly difficult to kill by mortal hands as they just return a bit weakened unless they are already so faded their death unavoidable, which is why Franchise/WonderWoman has never balked at killing them. Then of course you have entities who are essentially Omnipotent for all purposes but are at best physical gods since they aren't really religious or worshipped individuals (Mr. Mxyzptlk and other denizens of the 5th dimension).\\

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* In Franchise/TheDCU gods tend to range from being incredibly powerful superhuman individuals more akin to physical gods (Most of the New Gods, Onimar Syn, the classical gods, Lobo, etc.) to nigh omnipotent but still human minded individuals (Anansi and several classical gods, etc.) to basically omnipotent cosmic forces (The Endless, Lucifer, Comicbook/TheSpectre, ComicBook/TheSpectre, Michael, etc.) right up to a single Omnipotent God who may or may not be split into several aspects (The Presence, The Source, etc.). Those who fall in the second category are incredibly difficult to kill by mortal hands as they just return a bit weakened unless they are already so faded their death unavoidable, which is why Franchise/WonderWoman has never balked at killing them. Then of course you have entities who are essentially Omnipotent for all purposes but are at best physical gods since they aren't really religious or worshipped individuals (Mr. Mxyzptlk and other denizens of the 5th dimension).\\



** Gods in the Franchise/MarvelUniverse tend to be fairly powerful, and may or may not be powered by belief DependingOnTheWriter. Then there are the [[CosmicEntity Cosmic Entities]], which rank ''above'' most gods, and are often [[AnthropomorphicPersonification Anthropomorphic Personifications]]. They have a distinct hierarchy to them, though it has a tendency to be in constant flux.

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** Gods in the Franchise/MarvelUniverse tend to be fairly powerful, and may or may not be powered by belief DependingOnTheWriter. Then there are the [[CosmicEntity Cosmic Entities]], which rank ''above'' most gods, and are often [[AnthropomorphicPersonification Anthropomorphic Personifications]].{{Anthropomorphic Personification}}s. They have a distinct hierarchy to them, though it has a tendency to be in constant flux.



*** Most are still lower on the totem-pole than the various entities that govern the universe- Comicbook/{{Galactus}}, Eternity, Death, Infinity, Oblivion, etc.- who are abstract beings that represent fundamental aspects of existence, e.g. Eternity personifies Time, Infinity personifies Space etc, and they are all aspects of beings that personify them across the multiverse, with each verse having it's counterpart for them [[note]] Eternity has claimed that Chthon is a threat to him; Dormammu's power fluctuates and on a good day he can at least give any these guys a serious fight; and Shuma-Gorath may be stronger than everyone listed so-far as he rules more than a ''hundred'' universes. Galactus's power also tends to fluctuate (depending on how well-fed he is) and he has sometimes been so weak he can be defeated by teams of human heroes, and both gods and mortals can increase their power to the level of an Abstract or beyond with the use of certain {{Amplifier Artifact}}s, such as the Infinity Gauntlet / Gems, the Heart of the Universe and others, or in the case of certain beings might actually have particular superpowers on-par with these entities, or even beyond.[[/note]]. The Phoenix Force, which is also worshiped in some places, guards the M'Krann Crystal and hence the Multiverse, and is stronger than Galactus, whose existence is necessary to keep imprisoning OmnicidalManiac Abraxas, a nigh-omnipotent being that threatens the multiverse. Celestials and the Watchers are {{Sufficiently Advanced Alien}}s that wield godlike power, the former so much that even supposed omnipotents feel beneath them. Random all-powerful beings like the Beyonder and the Stranger pop up from time to time. And of course, the Living Tribunal.

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*** Most are still lower on the totem-pole than the various entities that govern the universe- Comicbook/{{Galactus}}, ComicBook/{{Galactus}}, Eternity, Death, Infinity, Oblivion, etc.- who are abstract beings that represent fundamental aspects of existence, e.g. Eternity personifies Time, Infinity personifies Space etc, and they are all aspects of beings that personify them across the multiverse, with each verse having it's counterpart for them [[note]] Eternity has claimed that Chthon is a threat to him; Dormammu's power fluctuates and on a good day he can at least give any these guys a serious fight; and Shuma-Gorath may be stronger than everyone listed so-far as he rules more than a ''hundred'' universes. Galactus's power also tends to fluctuate (depending on how well-fed he is) and he has sometimes been so weak he can be defeated by teams of human heroes, and both gods and mortals can increase their power to the level of an Abstract or beyond with the use of certain {{Amplifier Artifact}}s, such as the Infinity Gauntlet / Gems, the Heart of the Universe and others, or in the case of certain beings might actually have particular superpowers on-par with these entities, or even beyond.[[/note]]. The Phoenix Force, which is also worshiped in some places, guards the M'Krann Crystal and hence the Multiverse, and is stronger than Galactus, whose existence is necessary to keep imprisoning OmnicidalManiac Abraxas, a nigh-omnipotent being that threatens the multiverse. Celestials and the Watchers are {{Sufficiently Advanced Alien}}s that wield godlike power, the former so much that even supposed omnipotents feel beneath them. Random all-powerful beings like the Beyonder and the Stranger pop up from time to time. And of course, the Living Tribunal.



*** This trope was put to a more literal test during ''Comicbook/SecretInvasion'', when a strike team of Earth gods went to kill the Skrull gods.

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*** This trope was put to a more literal test during ''Comicbook/SecretInvasion'', ''ComicBook/SecretInvasion'', when a strike team of Earth gods went to kill the Skrull gods.



* In ''Hangwire'' a urban fantasy/LovecraftLite novel by Adam Christopher, the gods of Earth not only included the usual ones from various world's mythology like Zeus, Thor and etc. but they also had [[Film/Ghostbusters1984 Gozer the Gozerian]] among their numbers. The gods came from the beginnings of the universe and almost of them are CosmicEntities with tremendous RealityWarper powers, Bob (who's actually the Polynesian death god Kanaloa) is only an intermediate god but he knows he can rewrite the laws of physics in the universe. While they aren't dependent on [[GodsNeedPrayerBadly prayer and belief]], they can be greatly augmented by it and each god is almost completely immortal even [[YourSoulIsMine devouring a god's soul]] isn't lethal. The only thing that may cause a god to permanently die is if they annihilate themselves. As of the book, almost all the gods have left to their respective afterlife realms and have formed a [[FantasyPantheon bureau of gods]] that Bob refers to as "Them". "Them" regulate what the few gods that remain on Earth can or cannot do. The deities featured in ''Hangwire'' are an indie journalist turned mystery man acrobat and is possessed by the bit power and spirit remaining from Nezha the Chinese god of thieves after the god's old avatar was murdered, a handsome and unaging beach bum named Bob who's really Kanaloa, and Tangun the Founder (the legendary founding figure/[[GodEmperor godking]] of Korea) who is residing in a young Korean-American woman who's the last "golden child" (a bloodline of hereditary Korean shamans who are mediums for the godking). When {{EldritchAbomination}}s threatened the world, these monstrosities found out they are not AboveTheGods and received a lethal CurbstompBattle from Bob for their efforts.

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* In ''Hangwire'' a urban fantasy/LovecraftLite novel by Adam Christopher, the gods of Earth not only included the usual ones from various world's mythology like Zeus, Thor and etc. but they also had [[Film/Ghostbusters1984 Gozer the Gozerian]] among their numbers. The gods came from the beginnings of the universe and almost of them are CosmicEntities with tremendous RealityWarper powers, Bob (who's actually the Polynesian death god Kanaloa) is only an intermediate god but he knows he can rewrite the laws of physics in the universe. While they aren't dependent on [[GodsNeedPrayerBadly prayer and belief]], they can be greatly augmented by it and each god is almost completely immortal even [[YourSoulIsMine devouring a god's soul]] isn't lethal. The only thing that may cause a god to permanently die is if they annihilate themselves. As of the book, almost all the gods have left to their respective afterlife realms and have formed a [[FantasyPantheon bureau of gods]] that Bob refers to as "Them". "Them" regulate what the few gods that remain on Earth can or cannot do. The deities featured in ''Hangwire'' are an indie journalist turned mystery man acrobat and is possessed by the bit power and spirit remaining from Nezha the Chinese god of thieves after the god's old avatar was murdered, a handsome and unaging beach bum named Bob who's really Kanaloa, and Tangun the Founder (the legendary founding figure/[[GodEmperor godking]] of Korea) who is residing in a young Korean-American woman who's the last "golden child" (a bloodline of hereditary Korean shamans who are mediums for the godking). When {{EldritchAbomination}}s {{Eldritch Abomination}}s threatened the world, these monstrosities found out they are not AboveTheGods and received a lethal CurbstompBattle from Bob for their efforts.



** The Dawn Gods are a group of extraterrestrial higher beings who journyed to this world and uplifted humanity to help them fight the monsters that were preying on them called Glories. These Gods have an etherial and otherworldly appearance.

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** The Dawn Gods are a group of extraterrestrial higher beings who journyed journeyed to this world and uplifted humanity to help them fight the monsters that were preying on them called Glories. These Gods have an etherial and otherworldly appearance.



* In Robert Jordan's Literature/TheWheelOfTime series there are two godlike creatures. The Creator and The Dark One respectively. They both seem to exist outside of known reality and it is implied that they might be incarnations of Order and Chaos. However it is shown that in this universe human beings are capable of reaching this level of power as well through the proper tools.

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* In Robert Jordan's Literature/TheWheelOfTime ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'' series there are two godlike creatures. The Creator and The Dark One respectively. They both seem to exist outside of known reality and it is implied that they might be incarnations of Order and Chaos. However it is shown that in this universe human beings are capable of reaching this level of power as well through the proper tools.



* ''VideoGame/HyperdimensionNeptunia'' has its residents from the four worlds worship their goddesses fervently. The catch? Three of the goddesses are caricatures of [[UsefulNotes/PlayStation3 the three]] [[UsefulNotes/XBox360 seventh-generation]] [[UsefulNotes/{{Wii}} video game consoles]] and the fourth one is a Sega console that never got released (Sega Neptune).

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* ''VideoGame/HyperdimensionNeptunia'' has its residents from the four worlds worship their goddesses fervently. The catch? Three of the goddesses are caricatures of [[UsefulNotes/PlayStation3 [[Platform/PlayStation3 the three]] [[UsefulNotes/XBox360 [[Platform/XBox360 seventh-generation]] [[UsefulNotes/{{Wii}} [[Platform/{{Wii}} video game consoles]] and the fourth one is a Sega console that never got released (Sega Neptune).



* In ''VideoGame/{{Touhou}}'' the word "God" (well, OK, "[[ImprobablyFemaleCast Goddess]]") doesn't carry too much weight. Thanks to the fact that monsters and even humans are practically {{Physical God}}s, anyway, the OddJobGods are little more than {{Butt Monkey}}s of the game universe. Even the truly powerful goddesses can merely go toe-to-toe with some of the more powerful {{youkai}}, and Reimu canonically kicks in the door of TheRival Moriya Shrine, defeats its [[{{Miko}} Shrine Maiden]], and its [[PalsWithJesus Live-in Goddesses]]. You'd think that would hurt the ol' donation drive, to have your deity publicly beaten in her own temple by a rival deity's priestess? That said, this seems to mostly apply to the "lower gods"; the ones that inhabit the Earth and are part of the Myriad Gods. Yorihime is such an overpowered character because she's capable of summoning gods of far greater power than previously shown, which allowed her to effortlessly defeat every single character that went against her (including Reimu). Also, one must bear in mind that the Spell Card rules that everyone follows specifically limits how much power the characters can use in a fight, and it's always non-lethal.

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* In ''VideoGame/{{Touhou}}'' ''Franchise/TouhouProject'' the word "God" (well, OK, "[[ImprobablyFemaleCast Goddess]]") doesn't carry too much weight. Thanks to the fact that monsters and even humans are practically {{Physical God}}s, anyway, the OddJobGods are little more than {{Butt Monkey}}s of the game universe. Even the truly powerful goddesses can merely go toe-to-toe with some of the more powerful {{youkai}}, and Reimu canonically kicks in the door of TheRival Moriya Shrine, defeats its [[{{Miko}} Shrine Maiden]], and its [[PalsWithJesus Live-in Goddesses]]. You'd think that would hurt the ol' donation drive, to have your deity publicly beaten in her own temple by a rival deity's priestess? That said, this seems to mostly apply to the "lower gods"; the ones that inhabit the Earth and are part of the Myriad Gods. Yorihime is such an overpowered character because she's capable of summoning gods of far greater power than previously shown, which allowed her to effortlessly defeat every single character that went against her (including Reimu). Also, one must bear in mind that the Spell Card rules that everyone follows specifically limits how much power the characters can use in a fight, and it's always non-lethal.
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Fixing indentation


* ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei'': Like ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' and ''Literature/AmericanGods'', all supernatural beings seem to exist on and draw power from the principals of ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve and GodsNeedPrayerBadly. That said, most if not all can be taken down [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu with a good old-fashioned ass-beating]], though the belief of their followers [[DeathIsCheap can still bring them back]]. Certain evidence likewise implies that [[GodIsEvil YHVH]] and [[{{Satan}} Lucifer]] are the paragons of [[OrderVersusChaos Law and Chaos]] insofar as they don't need worship explicitly to exist - neither can truly die [[AsLongAsThereIsEvil as long as there are people who yearn for salvation or freedom]].
** In the ''Franchise/{{Persona}}'' sub-series, this is such a prevalent theme that it has [[OurGodsAreDifferent/{{Persona}} an entire subpage]].
* Master Hand and Crazy Hand from the ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBros'' series are said to be the personifications of humanity's creativity (Master Hand) and destructiveness (Crazy Hand). Though any fighter in the roster can beat them in combat if the player is good enough. There's also Master Core, apparently the true form of one or both of the Hands, and Tabuu, who is some kind of god of another dimension who defeated and imprisoned Master Hand. [[VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosForNintendo3DSAndWiiU The fourth game]] escalates this by including [[VideoGame/KidIcarus Palutena]] and [[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Rosalina]], though they are not stronger than any other character.

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* ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei'': Like ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' and ''Literature/AmericanGods'', all supernatural beings seem to exist on and draw power from the principals of ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve and GodsNeedPrayerBadly. That said, most if not all can be taken down [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu with a good old-fashioned ass-beating]], though the belief of their followers [[DeathIsCheap can still bring them back]]. Certain evidence likewise implies that [[GodIsEvil YHVH]] and [[{{Satan}} Lucifer]] are the paragons of [[OrderVersusChaos Law and Chaos]] insofar as they don't need worship explicitly to exist - neither can truly die [[AsLongAsThereIsEvil as long as there are people who yearn for salvation or freedom]].
**
freedom]]. In the ''Franchise/{{Persona}}'' sub-series, this is such a prevalent theme that it has [[OurGodsAreDifferent/{{Persona}} an entire subpage]].
* ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBros'':
**
Master Hand and Crazy Hand from the ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBros'' series are said to be the personifications of humanity's creativity (Master Hand) and destructiveness (Crazy Hand). Though any fighter in the roster can beat them in combat if the player is good enough. There's also Master Core, apparently the true form of one or both of the Hands, and Tabuu, who is some kind of god of another dimension who defeated and imprisoned Master Hand. [[VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosForNintendo3DSAndWiiU The fourth game]] escalates this by including [[VideoGame/KidIcarus Palutena]] and [[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Rosalina]], though they are not stronger than any other character.
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Part of this is because, in real life, "god" is one of those categories that ended up being applied fairly arbitrarily to the supreme entities, nature spirits, and culture heroes of many unrelated mythologies. Thus, it includes, among other things, the physical but literally immortal ''theoi'' of Greek myth, the intensely physical ''Aesir'' of Norse myth who could be maimed or slain like any other being, the supreme and omnipotent spiritual creator of Abrahamic theology, the Japanese ''kami'' that could range from the spirit of a single plant to the rulers of the universe, and many others besides. Consequently, modern fiction's depictions of gods can vary very widely depending on which sources they're drawing from.

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Part of this is because, in real life, "god" is one of those categories that ended up being applied fairly arbitrarily to the supreme entities, nature spirits, and culture heroes of many unrelated mythologies. Thus, it includes, among other things, the physical but literally immortal ''theoi'' of Greek myth, the intensely physical ''Aesir'' of Norse myth who could be maimed or slain like any other being, living beings, the supreme and omnipotent spiritual creator of Abrahamic theology, the Japanese ''kami'' that could range from the spirit of a single plant to the rulers of the universe, and many others besides. Consequently, modern fiction's depictions of gods can vary very widely depending on which sources they're drawing from.
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None


*** Things are made ''even'' more complicated by the Abrahamic God, who tends to appear mainly in ''ComicBook/GhostRider'', though it's implied he coordinates with the Skyfathers as well as being more powerful than them, including Odin. He even appears in person at one point in, of all things, ''ComicBook/HowardTheDuck'', where he indicates that he isn't the top authority in existence, equating his role in creation more to that of a project director, than a supreme being.

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*** Things are made ''even'' more complicated by the Abrahamic God, who tends to appear mainly in ''ComicBook/GhostRider'', though it's implied he coordinates with the Skyfathers as well as being more powerful than them, including Odin. He even appears in person at one point in, of all things, ''ComicBook/HowardTheDuck'', where he indicates that he isn't the top authority in existence, equating his role in creation more to noting that of he did not "create" the universe so much as he "contributed" to it, and that he was just a project director, than participant in what could best be described as a supreme being.group effort.



*** Sitting at the very top of the Marvel cosmic hierarchy (so far) is the One-Above-All, who fills a role akin to God. That being said, in contrast DC, which is more overt in its association of the Presence with the Abrahamic god, Marvel has been reluctant to clearly associate the One-Above-All with any distinct religion, and its exact relation is much more ill-defined, and much like the prior examples, seems to hinge on the [[DependingOnTheWriter writer's own view]]. Indeed, some associate them more with the [[AuthorAvatar writer/artist of the comic]], then any percise deity; in their first appearane, they, fittingly enough, appear as Jack Kirby, who is indicated to have a partner (implied to be Stan Lee). At any rate, the One even muses at one point on the possibility that there may yet be something above even them, even if they could never understand it, which they are perfectly fine with.

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*** Sitting at the very top of the Marvel cosmic hierarchy (so far) is the One-Above-All, who fills a role akin to God. That being said, in contrast DC, which is more overt in its association of the Presence with the Abrahamic god, Marvel has been reluctant to clearly associate the One-Above-All with any distinct religion, and its exact relation is much more ill-defined, and much like the prior examples, which (again) seems to hinge on the [[DependingOnTheWriter writer's own view]]. Indeed, some associate them more with the [[AuthorAvatar writer/artist of the comic]], then any percise deity; in their first appearane, they, fittingly enough, appear as Jack Kirby, who is indicated to have a partner (implied to be Stan Lee). At any rate, the One even muses at one point on the possibility that there may yet be something above even them, even if they could never understand it, which they are perfectly fine with.

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** Gods in the Franchise/MarvelUniverse tend to be fairly powerful, and may or may not be powered by belief DependingOnTheWriter.

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** Gods in the Franchise/MarvelUniverse tend to be fairly powerful, and may or may not be powered by belief DependingOnTheWriter. Then there are the [[CosmicEntity Cosmic Entities]], which rank ''above'' most gods, and are often [[AnthropomorphicPersonification Anthropomorphic Personifications]]. They have a distinct hierarchy to them, though it has a tendency to be in constant flux.



*** Things are made ''even'' more complicated by the Abrahamic God, who tends to appear mainly in ''ComicBook/GhostRider'', though it's implied he coordinates with the Skyfathers as well as being more powerful than them, including Odin.

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*** Things are made ''even'' more complicated by the Abrahamic God, who tends to appear mainly in ''ComicBook/GhostRider'', though it's implied he coordinates with the Skyfathers as well as being more powerful than them, including Odin. He even appears in person at one point in, of all things, ''ComicBook/HowardTheDuck'', where he indicates that he isn't the top authority in existence, equating his role in creation more to that of a project director, than a supreme being.



*** Most are still lower on the totem-pole than the various entities that govern the universe- Comicbook/{{Galactus}}, Eternity, Death, Infinity, Oblivion, etc.- who are abstract beings that represent fundamental aspects of existence, e.g. Eternity personifies Time, Infinity personifies Space etc, and they are all aspects of beings that personify them across the multiverse, with each verse having it's counterpart for them [[note]] Eternity has claimed that Chthon is a threat to him; Dormammu's power fluctuates and on a good day he can at least give any these guys a serious fight; and Shuma-Gorath may be stronger than everyone listed so-far as he rules more than a ''hundred'' universes. Galactus's power also tends to fluctuate (depending on how well-fed he is) and he has sometimes been so weak he can be defeated by teams of human heroes, and both gods and mortals can increase their power to the level of an Abstract or beyond with the use of certain {{Amplifier Artifact}}s, such as the Infinity Gauntlet / Gems, the Heart of the Universe and others, or in the case of certain beings might actually have particular superpowers on-par with these entities, or even beyond.[[/note]]. The Phoenix Force, which is also worshiped in some places, guards the M'Krann Crystal and hence the Multiverse, and is stronger than Galactus, whose existence is necessary to keep imprisoning OmnicidalManiac Abraxas, a nigh-omnipotent being that threatens the multiverse. Celestials and the Watchers are {{Sufficiently Advanced Alien}}s that wield godlike power, the former so much that even supposed omnipotents feel beneath them. Random all-powerful beings like the Beyonder and the Stranger pop up from time to time. And of course, the Living Tribunal. The One Above All, however, is essentially analogous to God and is above and in charge of everyone and everything else else. Appropriately enough, he looks like Jack Kirby, and hints that he has a writing partner presumed to be Stan Lee.

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*** Most are still lower on the totem-pole than the various entities that govern the universe- Comicbook/{{Galactus}}, Eternity, Death, Infinity, Oblivion, etc.- who are abstract beings that represent fundamental aspects of existence, e.g. Eternity personifies Time, Infinity personifies Space etc, and they are all aspects of beings that personify them across the multiverse, with each verse having it's counterpart for them [[note]] Eternity has claimed that Chthon is a threat to him; Dormammu's power fluctuates and on a good day he can at least give any these guys a serious fight; and Shuma-Gorath may be stronger than everyone listed so-far as he rules more than a ''hundred'' universes. Galactus's power also tends to fluctuate (depending on how well-fed he is) and he has sometimes been so weak he can be defeated by teams of human heroes, and both gods and mortals can increase their power to the level of an Abstract or beyond with the use of certain {{Amplifier Artifact}}s, such as the Infinity Gauntlet / Gems, the Heart of the Universe and others, or in the case of certain beings might actually have particular superpowers on-par with these entities, or even beyond.[[/note]]. The Phoenix Force, which is also worshiped in some places, guards the M'Krann Crystal and hence the Multiverse, and is stronger than Galactus, whose existence is necessary to keep imprisoning OmnicidalManiac Abraxas, a nigh-omnipotent being that threatens the multiverse. Celestials and the Watchers are {{Sufficiently Advanced Alien}}s that wield godlike power, the former so much that even supposed omnipotents feel beneath them. Random all-powerful beings like the Beyonder and the Stranger pop up from time to time. And of course, the Living Tribunal. The One Above All, however,
*** Sitting at the very top of the Marvel cosmic hierarchy (so far)
is essentially analogous the One-Above-All, who fills a role akin to God God. That being said, in contrast DC, which is more overt in its association of the Presence with the Abrahamic god, Marvel has been reluctant to clearly associate the One-Above-All with any distinct religion, and its exact relation is above much more ill-defined, and much like the prior examples, seems to hinge on the [[DependingOnTheWriter writer's own view]]. Indeed, some associate them more with the [[AuthorAvatar writer/artist of the comic]], then any percise deity; in charge of everyone and everything else else. Appropriately their first appearane, they, fittingly enough, he looks like appear as Jack Kirby, and hints that he has who is indicated to have a writing partner presumed (implied to be Stan Lee.Lee). At any rate, the One even muses at one point on the possibility that there may yet be something above even them, even if they could never understand it, which they are perfectly fine with.
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Using "Abrahamic religions" because it's a lot quicker than saying "Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and all the other ones" every time.


* YHWH/Yahweh/Jehovah of Literature/TheBible, who spends a large chunk of the DoorStopper trying to convince everyone and their mother that not only is he greater than all other gods, but that almost all of the "gods" he competes for worship with are false idols.
-->"You are my witnesses," is the utterance of Jehovah, "even my servant whom I have chosen, in order that you may know and have faith in me, and that you may understand that I am the same One. Before me there was no God formed, and after me there continued to be none. I—I am Jehovah, and besides me there is no savior." -- '''[[Literature/BookOfIsaiah Isaiah 43:10-11]]'''
** Technically speaking Judaism and Christianity have traditionally believed that other gods ''exist'', just that they aren't ''gods''. For example in [[Literature/BookOfPsalms Psalm 82]], God sits in the divine council among the other gods and begins to enact judgements on them. "You are gods, sons of the Most High, all of you; nevertheless, like men you shall die, and fall like any prince" (Psalm 82:6-7). The reason why Judaism and Christianity are said to only believe in one god is that the definition of "God" has changed over the centuries, once it meant simply any spiritual being that was worshiped, but later on it meant specifically an ontologically distinct being. Definitions like "monotheism" and "polytheism" are [[NewerThanTheyThink actually fairly recent concepts]], in fact the early Christians had argued that the gods of the pagans were lesser spirits ([[OurDemonsAreDifferent "daimones"]]) rather than that they weren't real.
** There has been much confusion created by the concept of The Holy Trinity in the Bible, the idea of one Godhead in three persons. It is an [[MindScrew infamously confusing concept]] that has kept biblical scholars from getting sleep for literal millennia. The Trinity holds that God appears in three persons, The Father (Jehovah/Yahweh/I Am), The Son (Jesus Christ), and The Holy Spirit. Scholars disagree if these figures are different manifestations of one deity or are three individual deities themselves connected by a similar substance. These ideas have challenged Christianity’s place as a “monotheistic” religion, and other Abrahamic faiths have come to label Christian beliefs as polytheistic. Catholic priests often teach Jesus is the direct manifestation of the God who created the Earth in seven days and the are not actually separate, independent, beings. However the concept of direct incarnation has had some doubt thrown on it and has been challenged with scripture from the Bible itself. Quotes such as Matthew 27:46, when Jesus cries “Oh Father, why have you forsaken me” while being crucified shows signs of Jesus and God having separate intentions and independent minds. However, most church goers surprisingly never put much thought into the concept of the Trinity and dismiss it as something humans are unable to understand.

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* YHWH/Yahweh/Jehovah of Literature/TheBible, who spends a large chunk of The Abrahamic God -- sometimes referred to as YHWH/Yahweh/Jehovah, but usually as just whatever the DoorStopper trying language's word for "deity" is -- is understood to convince everyone and their mother that not only is he be a bodyless, spiritual, transcendent entity entirely beyond physical concerns or restraints. Abrahamic faith also deny the existence of any other godly being -- all other beings named as such are either false idols or some other kind of being that, while greater than all other gods, but that almost all of the "gods" he competes for worship with are false idols.
humans, is lesser than God.
-->"You are my witnesses," is the utterance of Jehovah, "even my servant whom I have chosen, in order that you may know and have faith in me, and that you may understand that I am the same One. Before me there was no God formed, and after me there continued to be none. I—I I--I am Jehovah, and besides me there is no savior." -- '''[[Literature/BookOfIsaiah Isaiah 43:10-11]]'''
** Technically speaking Judaism and Christianity Abrahamic religions have traditionally believed that other gods ''exist'', just that they aren't ''gods''. For example in [[Literature/BookOfPsalms Psalm 82]], God sits in the divine council among the other gods and begins to enact judgements on them. "You are gods, sons of the Most High, all of you; nevertheless, like men you shall die, and fall like any prince" (Psalm 82:6-7). The reason why Judaism Judaism, Christianity, and Christianity Islam are said to only believe in one god is that the definition of "God" has changed over the centuries, as it once it meant simply any spiritual being that was worshiped, but later on it meant specifically an ontologically distinct being. Definitions like "monotheism" and "polytheism" are [[NewerThanTheyThink actually fairly recent concepts]], in fact and the early Christians had argued that the gods of the pagans were lesser spirits ([[OurDemonsAreDifferent "daimones"]]) rather than that they weren't real.
** There has been much confusion created by the concept of The the Holy Trinity in the Bible, the idea of one Godhead in three persons. It is an [[MindScrew infamously confusing concept]] that has kept biblical scholars from getting sleep for literal millennia. The Trinity holds that God appears in three persons, The the Father (Jehovah/Yahweh/I Am), The the Son (Jesus Christ), and The the Holy Spirit. Scholars disagree if these figures are different manifestations of one deity or are three individual deities themselves connected by a similar substance.substance (Christian theology formally considers the first one to be the case, but there is disagreement among secular, Jewish, and Muslim scholars about how well this holds in practice). These ideas have challenged Christianity’s place as a “monotheistic” religion, and other Abrahamic faiths have come to label Christian beliefs as polytheistic. Catholic priests often teach Jesus is the direct manifestation of the God who created the Earth in seven days and the they are not actually separate, independent, beings. However the concept of direct incarnation has had some doubt thrown on it and has been challenged with scripture from the Bible itself. Quotes such as Matthew 27:46, when Jesus cries “Oh Father, why have you forsaken me” while being crucified shows signs of Jesus and God having separate intentions and independent minds. However, most church goers surprisingly never put much thought into the concept of the Trinity and dismiss it as something humans are unable to understand.
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* Myth/ClassicalMythology has three levels of gods. The Protogenoi are the consciousnesses of substances and abstract concepts, such as sky (Oranos), light (Aether), earth (Gaia), and destiny (Aithir). From the Protogenoi were born the Titans, who in turn were overthrown by their own offspring, the Olympians. It should be noted that there are other different families of gods too, Daimones embody concepts like justice or happiness, while a whole host of rustic spirits, Satyrs and Nymphs of all types, Harpies, Gorgons, Erinyes, and the Old Sea Deities (Thaumas, Nereus, Cetus) count as particular families of deities. On the other hand, many of these families have no more than three gods.
* Myth/NativeAmericanMythology had most tribes believing in the monotheistic "Great Spirit/Great Mystery/Wakan Tanka/Manitou/Gitche Manitou". However, it's not in the same manner as the European's view of the Christan {{God}} of Literature/TheBible, instead, the "Great Spirit" is often conceptualized to be many things that vary amongst different indigenous tribes; being more than one entity, a force of nature, a life force, the power or the sacredness that resides in everything, etc.
* Myth/NorseMythology is rather vague on what the difference between a god and a giant is. The main rule of thumb appears to have been that gods were associated with the Aesir or Vanir familial groups, while non-god giants[[note]]There were at least two cases where giants ''became'' gods through the simple expedients of getting adopted as a brother and marriage, respectively[[/note]] weren't. It gets better: some sources list [[OurElvesAreDifferent the elves]] and even [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame the dwarves]] as families of the same sort of beings as the Aesir, Vanir, and Jötnar (giants). One triptych goes: the Aesir have power, the Álfar (elves) have skills, and the Vanir have knowledge.

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* Myth/ClassicalMythology has three levels of gods. The Protogenoi are the consciousnesses of substances and abstract concepts, such as sky (Oranos), light (Aether), earth (Gaia), and destiny (Aithir). From the Protogenoi were born the Titans, who in turn were overthrown by their own offspring, the Olympians. The Titans and Olympians were essentially identical in powers and nature; both were understood as immortal beings, that could be harmed only by each other and never truly killed, and as sustaining on things beyond mortal foods. Myths tended to treat them as physical in form, but especially in the Classical and post-Classical periods it became more common for religion and philosophy to depict them as perfect, spiritual entities. It should be noted that there are other different families of gods too, Daimones embody concepts like justice or happiness, while a whole host of rustic spirits, Satyrs and Nymphs of all types, Harpies, Gorgons, Erinyes, and the Old Sea Deities (Thaumas, Nereus, Cetus) count as particular families of deities. On the other hand, many of these families have no more than three gods.
* Myth/NativeAmericanMythology had most tribes believing in the monotheistic "Great Spirit/Great Mystery/Wakan Tanka/Manitou/Gitche Manitou". However, it's not in the same manner as the European's view of the Christan {{God}} of Literature/TheBible, Literature/TheBible; instead, the "Great Spirit" is often conceptualized to be many things that vary amongst different indigenous tribes; tribes, such as being more than one entity, a force of nature, a life force, the power or the sacredness that resides in everything, etc.
* Myth/NorseMythology is rather vague on what the difference between a god and a giant is. The main rule of thumb appears to have been that gods were associated with the Aesir or Vanir familial groups, while non-god giants[[note]]There giants[[note]]there were at least two cases where giants ''became'' gods through the simple expedients of getting adopted as a brother and marriage, respectively[[/note]] weren't. It gets better: some Some sources also list [[OurElvesAreDifferent the elves]] and even [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame the dwarves]] as families of the same sort of beings as the Aesir, Vanir, and Jötnar (giants). One triptych goes: the Aesir have power, the Álfar (elves) have skills, and the Vanir have knowledge. In any case, the gods/giants/elves were all depicted as essentially physical beings that could be and often were maimed or injured by one another or by monsters, which at least one Aesir god, Baldr, dying a physical death by being run through with a spear and descending to Helheimr like all human dead.

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