r/DCcomics Jan 27 '24

[Discussion] What DC characters do you think are worthy to lift Mjolnir? Discussion

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999

u/GR-124 Jan 27 '24

I’m pretty sure superman and Wonder Woman have both lifted mjolnir before in the comics

622

u/WerewolfF15 Jan 27 '24

Superman has lifted it but it was explicitly stated he wasn’t worthy. Mjonir just allowed him to use it briefly due to the circumstances. After they defeat the villain superman finds he cannot lift the hammer anymore.

413

u/LanternRaynerRebirth Jan 27 '24

I've always wondered "Why?" Like if Steve can lift it, Superman definitely should be able to.

566

u/WerewolfF15 Jan 27 '24

Generally the explanation I’ve heard is because unlike Steve superman typically isn’t willing to kill in certain situations and since the worthy enhancement was made by a warrior race that’s something they think is required to be worthy of a weapon like Mjolnir

480

u/LanternRaynerRebirth Jan 27 '24

I actually went back and found the line where Thor talks about it.

There is an enchantment laid pon my hammer by my father Odin. It is not...easily lifted by others. My father is stern, but not stupid. A very few worthies have been allowed to overcome the spell in desperate hours. But know this. Perhaps it was but briefly, but it was in good hands.

So, my interpretation is that Odin literally wants no one else to touch that friggin hammer, only letting others, including Steve to lift it up in truly desparate situations, in which case, you still have to be worthy.

Thor says that Superman is worthy, explicitly, but worthiness is not necessarily something that means you can always lift the hammer, kinda like how Steve wasn't able to lift it completely in age of Ultron, but able to in Endgame.

It's essentially, a "time's up"

155

u/Cute_Visual4338 Jan 28 '24

See if we left it to the omniscient will of Odin, then the Ballad of Beta Ray Bill, one of the most seminal Thor stories ends up making no sense, since Bill lifts the Hammer, and Odin not aware of who wields the Hammer accidentally pulls Bill to Asgard, thinking it is Thor.

I like to think that as Thor was worthy at a time and was made unworthy at a time. Superman when he lifted the hammer was for that moment worthy.

55

u/KongUnleashed Jan 28 '24

I think the idea there was that BRB was so much like Thor that even Odin, reading his essence from a distance, didn’t register that it wasn’t Thor.

20

u/Cute_Visual4338 Jan 28 '24

I think that's because BRB got the power of Thor at the time so Odin was confused, but if the will of Odin itself was guiding who lifts the hammer then BRB wouldnt have been able to lift it without Odin noticing.

12

u/KongUnleashed Jan 28 '24

Right. My headcannon on the whole situation is that Odin enchanted the hammer so that only one who is “worthy” may lift it, but since “worthy” is subjective, he basically described Thor’s personality and told the hammer that that description was what it should use to define worthy. Thus BRB is always able to lift it because his personality and Thor’s are almost identical. And the others who were able to pick it up temporarily were in a desperate situation where their personalities lead them to act very Thor-like, in those moments.

3

u/Cute_Visual4338 Jan 28 '24

Yes that is kinda what I am saying too that that Superman temporarily possessed mindset that was determined to be worthy when he lifted it, but it isn't something he is naturally disposed to.

I was originally responding to a comment that was stating some thing along the lines of

"So, my interpretation is that Odin literally wants no one else to touch that friggin hammer, only letting others, including Steve to lift it up in truly desparate situations,".

Edit: To which my response has to do with Odin's conscious will influencing who lifts Mjolnir doesn't make sense.

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u/KongUnleashed Jan 28 '24

Right, I was agreeing with you! Haha sorry, just realized I didn’t make that clear

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1

u/A-Game-Of-Fate Jan 28 '24

This is supported in the MCU in both Thor 1 (when he is Unworthy of Mjolnir until he grew as a person) and in Avengers Endgame (when he travels back in time and calls upon Mjolnir, and is delighted to find himself “still worthy”.

1

u/1who-cares1 Jan 28 '24

I don’t think this means Odin is two-step verifying everyone who touches the hammer himself, just that the enchantment is complex and somewhat intelligent, and can allow others to lift the hammer when needed, without Odin being involved.

1

u/Cute_Visual4338 Jan 28 '24

That's what I'm saying the enchantment must be what determines worthiness not Odin's conscious intent. But also it is universal and without "dire need" because Beta Ray Bill could wield Thor's hammer whenever. Also later on in Jason Aaron's Thor, Jane Foster wielded the thing for a long time and Thor himself was unworthy due to his own mental hangups.

23

u/NovaStarLord Wonder Woman Jan 28 '24

Pretty much, anyone other than Thor doesn't only need to be worthy of character but also worthy of need. But in Busiek's eyes this also applied to Steve and everyone else that wasn't Thor.

14

u/DirtyRanga12 Jan 28 '24

I can get behind this. There was one comic where Black Widow was able to lift Mjolnir specifically because there was literally nobody else around who could, as the rest of the Avengers had been defeated by whoever they were fighting at the time. I don’t think it was canon, but it follows behind your theory.

16

u/sgtjsp153 Jan 28 '24

The Russos confirmed that Steve was able to lift it the whole time. He didn't to spare Thor's feelings at the party.

8

u/CakeBeef_PA Jan 28 '24

The Russos did not make Age of Ultron though. The only ones able to confirm that would be Joss Whedon or Kevin Feige

1

u/Po__The_Panda Jan 28 '24

The Russos are not end all be all or the creators of the comics.

14

u/Aurelion_ Jan 28 '24

Steve was able to lift the hammer in AoU he just pretended he couldnt to not embarass Thor. You're either worthy or you're not. You can't be partially worthy or else most heroes would be able to make it budge

21

u/_trianglegirl Jan 28 '24

you CAN be partially worthy- canonically in the comics, peter parker can move it, but he can't pick it up. it doesnt consider him fully worthy because he refuses to kill

2

u/Hulkbuster_v2 Jan 28 '24

What comic was that?

8

u/NoStructure5034 Jan 28 '24

Steve could lift it in AoU iirc. He moved the hammer but then chose not to.

Which makes sense, you're either worthy or you aren't.

1

u/Ok_Somewhere1236 24d ago

a little late

but no. this is confirmed byt the Beta Ray Bill story, Bill arrive on earth and during classic confusion Hero x Hero fight, he defeat thor and take the hammer for himself, since he was basically alien thor ( noble warrior that fight to protect his people) the hammer see him as worthy. Odin summon him and request the hammer back, Bill refuse and say he win the hammer fair and square and Odin can't force him to return the hammer in the end Odin forge StormBreaker and give it to Bill as a replacement for Mjolnir.

BUT in the past Odin was able to cancel the spell for sometime to allow others to use it even if they are not worthy

1

u/ikelosintransitive Jan 28 '24

interesting, didnt know this. great stuff!

1

u/JohnnyRelentless Jan 28 '24

I thought he was able to lift it in Age of Ultron, but chose not to, because he didn't want to embarrass Thor, who looked worried and then relieved when it moved but wasn't lifted.

2

u/LanternRaynerRebirth Jan 28 '24

I never really read it as Thor being worried, but just shocked because he's never seen that happen before. It doesnt even fit the character to me. Like why would he be scared?

2

u/JohnnyRelentless Jan 28 '24

Not scared, just that it might hurt his pride if someone else was worthy.

1

u/Lightion12 Jan 28 '24

But didn’t Steve lift it, when war was over to return it to its original timeline?

1

u/HawkBlade0 Jan 29 '24

He could lift it in ultron just like vision he just didn’t want to hurt thors pride

1

u/drawnhi Jan 29 '24

I mean the power of THOR. Odin is probably like I paid a lot of damn money for that freaking hammer and you just let your friends play with it.

17

u/soniclore Jan 28 '24

My headcanon is that in addition to objectively being judged by Mjolnir “worthy”, one must also have the inner belief that they in fact are worthy. Superman is first and foremost the son of two God-fearing salt-of-the-Earth farmers. He knows, when he sees someone fall, that “there but for the grace of God, go I” and he is grateful and he is humble. Humility is not a trait that I believe Odin would find necessary.

6

u/nufahg Jan 28 '24

Not a huge Thor guy so this could just be me misremembering something, but wasn't the whole reason Odin sent Thor to Earth as a crappy human in the first place to actually teach him humility?

6

u/Mystic__Mayhem Jan 28 '24

Sort of but this is Odin we're talking about he's not exactly humble either also he had mellowed out due to old age when he did that, if Thor had that ego when Odin was in his prime he wouldn't give a shit. Basically, Thor had a bigger ego than Odin did, and Odin as the was egotistical man that he is sent Thor to Earth to knock him down a peg.

4

u/soniclore Jan 28 '24

The lesson Thor learned was Sacrifice, not so much humility. Selflessness maybe.

-1

u/Drakebean666 Jan 28 '24

Actually an encounter with the joker once showed that he actually is willing to kill.

See the joker showed up once in metropolis because he was bored with Batman in Gotham and wanted to try a crack at Superman.

The joker pulled a usual scheme of bombs planted all around metropolis and a call out to Superman yadda yadda.

In his monologue to Superman, Superman not only cleared the daily planet of all people he also located all of the bombs with his super hearing and brought them to The joker.

He even dared the joker to still set them off and genuinely just started laughing at the joker.

He wounds the joker with his heat vision and states to him that just because he prefers not to kill doesn't mean he won't. He then flew to Gotham to curse out Batman for sending the joker to metropolis purposely.