Loki (2026)
When you hear the name "Loki," what comes to mind? For most modern audiences, it’s Tom Hiddleston’s charming, horned-helmeted antihero from the Marvel Cinematic Universe—a tragic figure of sibling rivalry and reluctant redemption.
Let’s pull back the curtain on the God of Mischief. Before Marvel, Loki was not a frost giant raised by Asgardians. In the Prose Edda and Poetic Edda (our primary sources for Norse myth), Loki is the son of two giants (Fárbauti and Laufey). He is not Odin’s son, but his blood-brother . When you hear the name "Loki," what comes to mind
In pop culture, he represents the outsider, the neurodivergent mind, the person who doesn't fit into a rigid system. He lies because he’s been hurt. He schemes because he’s been overlooked. And ultimately, he chooses to write his own story. Whether you prefer the cruel, monstrous trickster of Icelandic sagas or the sad, stylish antihero of the MCU, Loki serves one purpose: to hold a mirror up to the gods (and to us). Before Marvel, Loki was not a frost giant
But the real Loki—the one from ancient Norse mythology—is far stranger, more dangerous, and arguably more fascinating. He isn't just Thor's annoying brother. He is the catalyst for Ragnarök, the mother of monsters, and a shape-shifting trickster who blurs every line between hero and villain. In pop culture, he represents the outsider, the
This fluidity makes Loki impossible to categorize. He isn't "evil" so much as he is anarchy —the necessary chaotic force that breaks rules and forces change. The gods finally turn on Loki after the death of Baldr. They capture him and bind him to three rocks using the entrails of his own son (yes, mythology gets dark). A venomous serpent is placed above his face, dripping poison onto him. His faithful wife, Sigyn, holds a bowl to catch the venom, but whenever she leaves to empty it, the poison strikes Loki’s face, causing earthquakes as he writhes in agony.
In mythology, he represents the uncontrollable forces of nature—wildfire, chaos, the breakdown of social order. Without Loki, the gods would become stagnant. Without his trickery, Thor wouldn't have Mjolnir. Without his betrayal, there would be no Ragnarök, and thus no rebirth of the world.