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{{Quote|Kratos, before you reach Athens, there is a task you must complete. This beast, this Hydra, it has terrorized my seas for far too long.|[[Poseidon]].}}{{Infobox_gods|||species = Monsters|status = Deceased|location = [[Aegean Sea]]|alias = N/A|birthplace = N/A|family = *[[Typhon]] (grand father)
{{Infobox_gods||image = [[File:Hydra3.jpg|250px]]
 
 
*[[Hydra King]] (father) †
|Unknown = Hydra
 
  +
*[[Hydra Queen]] (mother)|caption = [[File:Attachment.jpg|250px]]|gender = Female|voice actor = None|appears in = [[God of War]]}}
|died = [[Aegean Sea]]
 
|lives = [[Aegean Sea]]
 
|species = Monsters
 
|status = Deceased
 
|eye = Pale
 
|family = *[[Typhon]] (father) †
 
*Echidna (mother)
 
*[[Hydra King]] (brother) †
 
*[[Cerberus]] (siblings)
 
*[[Chimera]] (siblings)
 
*[[Sphinx]] (siblings)
 
|first = [[God of War]]
 
|last = [[God of War III]] (flashback)||loyalties = [[Hydra King]]}} {{Quote|Kratos, before you reach Athens, there is a task you must complete. This beast, this Hydra, it has terrorized my seas for far too long.|[[Poseidon]].}}
 
   
 
==Greek Mythology==
 
==Greek Mythology==
In [[Greek]] myth, the '''Hydra''' was a serpentine monster that lived in a swamp beyond the city of Lerna. It was then killed by [[Hercules]] as his second labor. In some stories, the Hydra's heads differed from five, seven, or one hundred heads, as in the myths, when one head was cut off, two would grow from the stump in its stead.
+
In [[Greek]] mythology, the '''Hydra''' was a multi-headed serpent monster that lived in a swamp beyond the city of Lerna. It is usually depicted with nine heads, but some stories gave it as few as five, or as many as one hundred. In all of the stories, it was extremely poisonous (many accounts claim that the very air around it could kill a man in seconds), and had the ability to regrow its heads when severed. Some stories elaborated that the Hydra grew two heads for every head that was lost, and that one of its heads (thought to be its "original" and/or largest head) was immortal.
   
  +
The Hydra was killed by [[Hercules]] (or Heracles in Greek) as his second Labor. Holding his breath to avoid breathing in the beast's toxins, he cut off its heads and burned the necks with a torch (provided by his charioteer Iolaus in most stories) to prevent them from regenerating.
==In God of War Series==
 
  +
===God of War===
 
  +
Following its death, the Hydra was placed in the stars as a constellation. Hercules was also said to have dipped his arrows in its poisonous blood, giving them unmatched lethality.
  +
 
==In the ''God of War'' series==
 
===''God of War''===
 
[[File:Hydra.jpg|thumb|left|The attack of the Hydra.]]
 
[[File:Hydra.jpg|thumb|left|The attack of the Hydra.]]
  +
In ''[[God of War]]'', the Hydra is a massive multi-headed sea serpent roughly the size of a small island. The [[Hydra King]] is the dominant, central head that controls the smaller serpent heads around it - if it falls, the entire beast dies with it.
Before reaching Athens, [http://godofwar.wikia.com/wiki/Poseidon Poseidon], Greek God of the seas, earthquakes and horses, gives Kratos a task: to kill one of the most terrorizing and powerful monsters in the Greek mythology; the Hydra. Which seems slightly odd, since Poseidon has the power to kill it himself, yet he sends Kratos to do so. It may have been a part of the Gods' plan to make Kratos the greatest Greek warrior, trained by the Gods, but a mortal.
 
  +
  +
As the game's main narrative begins, [[Kratos]] has been assigned by [[Poseidon]], [[Gods|god]] of the sea, to kill the beast, which has been challenging his sovereignty by destroying ships and killing sailors. It can be seen attacking [[Kratos' Fleet]] as they approach Athens.
  +
  +
Kratos first battles one of the Hydra's lesser heads when it smashes through the side of his ship below the deck. Kratos manages to severly wound it by stabbing its eye and smashing it around with his [[Blades of Chaos|blades]]. Another head is seen above deck, attacking another ship alongside a flock of Harpies. After devouring or completely eating a few sailors, it smashes through the ship and starts attacking Kratos, who slays it in turn.
   
  +
Kratos' final encounter with the Hydra occurs on another ship's deck, where he battles the Hydra King and two of its lesser heads. He finally kills the beast by driving the ship's mast through its main head.
In [[God of War]], The Hydra is a massive multi-headed sea serpent roughly the size of a small island. The [[Hydra King]] is the dominant, central Hydra head, and it controls the smaller serpents. The other heads the Hydra King controls are less powerful and much smaller. The first little one appears below the ship's deck. Kratos manages to seriously wound it by stabbing its eye and smashing it around with his [[Blades of Chaos|blades]]. The second is on another ship above deck. It smashes through and starts attacking Kratos before he kills it. As the game's main narrative begins, [[Kratos]] has been assigned by Poseidon, [[Gods|god]] of the sea, to kill the beast, which has been challenging his sovereignty by destroying ships and killing sailors. It can be seen attacking [[Kratos' Fleet]]. Kratos kills the beast by driving the ship's mast through its head, retrieves the [[Key of the Captain]], and then continues in his quest to [[Athens]]. The Hydra is the first boss in God of War and is very powerful.
 
   
===God of War II===
+
===''God of War II''===
 
The Hydra does not make an actual appearance, but the unlockable [[Hydra Armor (Costume)|Hydra Armor]] costume appears to have been made from the carcass of the one killed in the first game.
 
The Hydra does not make an actual appearance, but the unlockable [[Hydra Armor (Costume)|Hydra Armor]] costume appears to have been made from the carcass of the one killed in the first game.
  +
===God of War III===
 
 
===''God of War III''===
 
The Hydra appears in a flashback after Kratos is betrayed by [[Gaia]] and after he awakened [[Hope]] from within him. In both sequences Kratos beheads the Hydra King and the two other Hydra heads with the [[Blades of Chaos]].
 
The Hydra appears in a flashback after Kratos is betrayed by [[Gaia]] and after he awakened [[Hope]] from within him. In both sequences Kratos beheads the Hydra King and the two other Hydra heads with the [[Blades of Chaos]].
   
 
==Hydra Skin==
 
==Hydra Skin==
After Kratos became the [[God of War (God)|God of War]], and entered the temple on [[Olympus]], he found it decorated with statues of his past enemies. [[Pandora's Guardian]], [[Ares]], and even the Hydra's skin, which was hung behind the throne. Cut off from the lower part of its neck, it displayed the long, serpentine neck, as well as the head, sitting high above the throne. Later, in God of War II, one of the costumes, the Hydra Armor, carries the description:'' "I always wondered what they did with the body."''
+
After Kratos became the [[God of War (God)|God of War]], and entered the temple on [[Olympus]], he found it decorated with statues of his past enemies. [[Pandora's Guardian]], [[Ares]], and even the Hydra's skin, which was hung behind the throne. Cut off from the lower part of its neck, it displayed the long, serpentine neck, as well as the head, sitting high above the throne. Later, in ''God of War II'', one of the costumes, the Hydra Armor, carries the description:'' "I always wondered what they did with the body."''
   
 
== Trivia ==
 
== Trivia ==
* As revealed in the novel, the original Hydra was killed by Hercules when Kratos was still a child. The Hydra Kratos faces is a new one born from Typhon and Echidna, according to[[ Athena]].
+
* As revealed in the novel, the original Hydra was killed by Hercules when Kratos was still a child. The Hydra Kratos faces is a new one born from Typhon and Echidna, according to [[Athena]]. This proves the theory that more Hydras exist in Kratos' world of ancient Greece.
  +
**However, the ''God of War'' novel stated Hercules had originally killed the hydra, but it was later resurrected by Athena to trick Poseidon into empowering Kratos.
* It is interesting to note that after being questioned by Poseidon for sending the Hydra, Ares states that he had no intentions in killing Kratos because his torment amuses the God of War. Ares would eliminate Kratos himself, rather than sending someone else to do this job. He suggests that it was in fact Athena who sent the Hydra in a clever attempt to trick Poseidon into giving [[Poseidon's Rage]] to Kratos.
+
* It is interesting to note that after being questioned by Poseidon for sending the Hydra, Ares states that he had no intentions in killing Kratos because his torment amuses the God of War. Ares would eliminate Kratos himself, rather than sending someone else to do this job. He suggests that it was in fact Athena who sent the Hydra in a clever attempt to trick Poseidon into giving [[Poseidon's Rage]] to Kratos. It is also possible that the Hydra was in the Aegean sea at the same time as Kratos by chance.
* Oddly, after defeating the Hydra, if you backtrack, you can still see a head attacking a group of sailors in the background.
 
  +
** Ares made good on that promise in ''God of War'', as when Kratos retrieves [[Pandora's Box]], Ares impaled him to the wall with a giant pillar.
 
* Oddly, after defeating the [[Hydra King]], if Kratos backtracks, a lesser head is still seen attacking a group of sailors in the background. This was highly likely caused by a developer error.
  +
* The Hydra, along with the Hydra King, appear as a stage hazard in ''[[PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale]]'' in the stage of Metropolis, along with Captain Qwark, both from the ''Ratchet and Clank'' series.
  +
* In the ''Bibliotheca'', the immortal head of the Hydra was disposed of by Hercules by pinning it under a massive rock.
  +
* The Hydra is mentioned in ''[[God of War (2018)|God of War ]]''[[God of War (2018)|(2018)]], in one of the treasure maps. The map's creator talks of a key, and how the "boat captain" lies in the creature's belly, suggesting that the map is quite old, as well as perhaps Greek in origin. The map appears to be referencing the captain from ''God of War''.
  +
* The official God of War II artbook states that the Hydra was born from Typhon, much like the myths portray.
   
 
==Gallery==
 
==Gallery==
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big-boss-of-the-day-god-of-wars-hydra-20091211022950587-000.jpg
 
big-boss-of-the-day-god-of-wars-hydra-20091211022950587-000.jpg
 
h.jpg
 
h.jpg
  +
big-boss-of-the-day-god-of-wars-hydra-20091211022941525-000.jpg
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Hydra Promo GoW.jpg|God of War Hydra Promo
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
   
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==Related Pages==
 
==Related Pages==
 
*[[Hydra King]]
 
*[[Hydra King]]
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[[de:Hydra]]
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[[de:Hydra]]
 
[[Category:Monsters]]
 
[[Category:Monsters]]
 
[[Category:Bosses]]
 
[[Category:Bosses]]
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[[Category:God of War III]]
 
[[Category:God of War III]]
 
[[Category:God of War Collection]]
 
[[Category:God of War Collection]]
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[[Category:God of War Series]]
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[[Category:God of War: Saga Collection]]
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[[Category:Deceased]]
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[[Category:Greek Mythology]]
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[[Category:Greek Monsters]]

Revision as of 01:31, 5 April 2019

Kratos, before you reach Athens, there is a task you must complete. This beast, this Hydra, it has terrorized my seas for far too long.

Poseidon.

Template:Infobox gods

Greek Mythology

In Greek mythology, the Hydra was a multi-headed serpent monster that lived in a swamp beyond the city of Lerna. It is usually depicted with nine heads, but some stories gave it as few as five, or as many as one hundred. In all of the stories, it was extremely poisonous (many accounts claim that the very air around it could kill a man in seconds), and had the ability to regrow its heads when severed. Some stories elaborated that the Hydra grew two heads for every head that was lost, and that one of its heads (thought to be its "original" and/or largest head) was immortal.

The Hydra was killed by Hercules (or Heracles in Greek) as his second Labor. Holding his breath to avoid breathing in the beast's toxins, he cut off its heads and burned the necks with a torch (provided by his charioteer Iolaus in most stories) to prevent them from regenerating.

Following its death, the Hydra was placed in the stars as a constellation. Hercules was also said to have dipped his arrows in its poisonous blood, giving them unmatched lethality.

In the God of War series

God of War

Hydra

The attack of the Hydra.

In God of War, the Hydra is a massive multi-headed sea serpent roughly the size of a small island. The Hydra King is the dominant, central head that controls the smaller serpent heads around it - if it falls, the entire beast dies with it.

As the game's main narrative begins, Kratos has been assigned by Poseidongod of the sea, to kill the beast, which has been challenging his sovereignty by destroying ships and killing sailors. It can be seen attacking Kratos' Fleet as they approach Athens.

Kratos first battles one of the Hydra's lesser heads when it smashes through the side of his ship below the deck. Kratos manages to severly wound it by stabbing its eye and smashing it around with his blades. Another head is seen above deck, attacking another ship alongside a flock of Harpies. After devouring or completely eating a few sailors, it smashes through the ship and starts attacking Kratos, who slays it in turn.

Kratos' final encounter with the Hydra occurs on another ship's deck, where he battles the Hydra King and two of its lesser heads. He finally kills the beast by driving the ship's mast through its main head.

God of War II

The Hydra does not make an actual appearance, but the unlockable Hydra Armor costume appears to have been made from the carcass of the one killed in the first game.

God of War III

The Hydra appears in a flashback after Kratos is betrayed by Gaia and after he awakened Hope from within him. In both sequences Kratos beheads the Hydra King and the two other Hydra heads with the Blades of Chaos.

Hydra Skin

After Kratos became the God of War, and entered the temple on Olympus, he found it decorated with statues of his past enemies. Pandora's Guardian, Ares, and even the Hydra's skin, which was hung behind the throne. Cut off from the lower part of its neck, it displayed the long, serpentine neck, as well as the head, sitting high above the throne. Later, in God of War II, one of the costumes, the Hydra Armor, carries the description: "I always wondered what they did with the body."

Trivia

  • As revealed in the novel, the original Hydra was killed by Hercules when Kratos was still a child. The Hydra Kratos faces is a new one born from Typhon and Echidna, according to Athena. This proves the theory that more Hydras exist in Kratos' world of ancient Greece.
    • However, the God of War novel stated Hercules had originally killed the hydra, but it was later resurrected by Athena to trick Poseidon into empowering Kratos.
  • It is interesting to note that after being questioned by Poseidon for sending the Hydra, Ares states that he had no intentions in killing Kratos because his torment amuses the God of War. Ares would eliminate Kratos himself, rather than sending someone else to do this job. He suggests that it was in fact Athena who sent the Hydra in a clever attempt to trick Poseidon into giving Poseidon's Rage to Kratos. It is also possible that the Hydra was in the Aegean sea at the same time as Kratos by chance.
    • Ares made good on that promise in God of War, as when Kratos retrieves Pandora's Box, Ares impaled him to the wall with a giant pillar.
  • Oddly, after defeating the Hydra King, if Kratos backtracks, a lesser head is still seen attacking a group of sailors in the background. This was highly likely caused by a developer error.
  • The Hydra, along with the Hydra King, appear as a stage hazard in PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale in the stage of Metropolis, along with Captain Qwark, both from the Ratchet and Clank series.
  • In the Bibliotheca, the immortal head of the Hydra was disposed of by Hercules by pinning it under a massive rock.
  • The Hydra is mentioned in God of War (2018), in one of the treasure maps. The map's creator talks of a key, and how the "boat captain" lies in the creature's belly, suggesting that the map is quite old, as well as perhaps Greek in origin. The map appears to be referencing the captain from God of War.
  • The official God of War II artbook states that the Hydra was born from Typhon, much like the myths portray.

Gallery

Video

thumb|200px|left

Related Pages