I can’t help but imagine how Percy would stack up against Thanos. Percy’s got this insane advantage being the son of Poseidon—water literally bends to his will. Picture this: Thanos shows up with the Infinity Gauntlet, ready to snap, and suddenly he’s drowning in a tidal wave Percy summoned from nowhere. Water pressure could crush even the Mad Titan if Percy goes full force. Plus, Percy’s sword, Riptide, is unbreakable and lethal to monsters—Thanos might not be a monster, but celestial bronze has hurt gods before, so who’s to say it wouldn’t work?
Then there’s Percy’s Achilles’ heel curse from 'The Last Olympian'. If he’s invulnerable except for one spot, Thanos would have a hell of a time landing a hit. Percy’s reflexes are demigod-tier, so good luck grabbing him like he did with Tony Stark. And let’s not forget Percy’s sheer stubbornness—dude survived Tartarus. Thanos might have power, but Percy’s got that Greek hero grit. Team him up with Annabeth for strategy, and they could outsmart Thanos’ brute force. The Infinity Stones are OP, but Percy’s fought gods with cheat codes before. Water manipulation + invulnerability + celestial bronze = one dead Titan.
Thanos is strong, but Percy Jackson’s got tricks up his sleeve that even the Avengers didn’t. His control over water isn’t just for show—he could dehydrate Thanos on a cellular level or flood the battlefield to disable the Gauntlet. Electricity manipulation from water vapor? Percy’s done it before. And if Thanos tries the snap, Percy’s survived worse—remember the Pit of Tartarus? Demigod durability is no joke. Throw in some help from the gods (Zeus’ lightning, Hades’ undead army), and Percy’s not fighting alone. Thanos might have stones, but Percy’s got destiny.
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Book 5 of The Alpha's Mate Who Cried Wolf.
Everything is going great in the world of Mysteria, but not so much in the Celestial world, where the Deities live. Atlanta, jealous of her sister Selene, the Moon Goddess, wants everyone to be punished and suffer from her wrath. Setting Thypon, the God of monsters, free and sends him to Mysteria during the midsummer solstice to destroy the world.
It's now left up to Nina and her friends to vanquish Thypon, but it may take Nina and Magnus more than just magic, but a sudden change of fate in order to save Mysteria.
Blood and pain are all she seeks. After losing her loved ones brutally in an unfaithful night. Amphitrite is on the quest of pure blood bath. After learning to be an assassin for ten whole years she becomes THE ULTIMATE ASSASSIN. She is on the quest to find those that took her loved ones away from her.
She vows to take them down one by one, until her mission is accomplished.
But there's more to her that meets an eye.
My wife, Cassia, was a wood nymph. A cursed one. Forbidden to love mortals.
But she fell for me anyway. Every time her heart fluttered for me, the gods struck her down with agony.
She willingly endured that torture ninety-nine times just for a chance to be with me.
Then, demons dragged me to Tartarus. Hellfire and whips became my sun and moon.
Right as I was about to break, I remembered a prayer Cassia taught me—a desperate whisper to the gods.
It finally worked. But instead of help, I heard Cassia talking to her patron goddess, Hecate.
"Cassia, how could you bargain with the Furies? You let them drag Aiden to Tartarus!"
Cassia's voice choked with desperate tears. "Adonis was supposed to suffer this fate. But he's a fragile mortal. This would destroy his soul! I had no choice if I wanted to save him."
"Aiden is a child of prophecy. His soul is strong. The Fates watch over him. He'll survive."
"Once I save Adonis, I can stay in the mortal realm forever. Then, I'll use my eternal life and all my love to repay the hell he's enduring for me."
My heart shattered.
As the monsters closed in on me, I stopped fighting. I gave up.
Hades was well-cast to rule over the land of the dead. But what if Hades, the fearsome monarch of the Underworld was, in fact, a goddess? Everyone called her, 'Lord of the Dead' out of mockery since she prefers the company of women. She was considered an isolated and violent immortal, who loathed change and was easily given to a slow black rage like no others.
But then everything changed when the dark goddess met the daughter of Demeter, Persephone. Now the tale of Hades and Persephone will be retold with a sprinkle of twists and turns.
I was Apollo’s most devoted follower, the lover he handpicked from a sea of worshippers.
With me, he’d always shed his divine arrogance. He was so tender, so attentive. I actually thought he loved me to the bone.
Until seven days before our Consort Ceremony, when I used my gift of prophecy to peek into our future together.
I expected to see a lifetime of blinding love. Instead, I saw him violently tangled in the sheets with my adopted sister, Cassandra.
Wrapped around him, Cassandra giggled. "You're so good to me, my Lord. Thanks to you, I'll finally get my sister's Sight and take her place as High Priestess."
And Apollo—my god, my lover—smiled down at her with pure adoration. "Whatever makes you happy, little bird. If it weren't for you, I wouldn't have played pretend for this long, let alone allow her to become a god's consort."
In that split second, my heart turned to ash. My faith shattered into a million pieces.
With seven days left until the ceremony, I didn't confront them. Instead, I fell to my knees before the altar of Hades, Lord of the Underworld.
"I offer you my gift of prophecy. I will be your most loyal follower in exchange for your sanctuary."
"Please. Take me away from here. Take me somewhere Apollo can never find me."
Watching 'Thor' and 'Hercules' clash in the MCU would feel like someone finally green-lighted the crossover I'd been sketching in margins for years.
I'd open the scene in a ruined Asgardian palace — thunder rumbling, lightning making the broken columns glitter. 'Thor' would come in with grief-hardened focus, using everything he learned fighting the Hulk, Hela, and Gorr: speed, lightning mastery, and a willingness to take monumental hits. 'Hercules' would be introduced as this swaggering, lived-in gladiator of the gods — canonically ferocious and confident, with raw, centuries-honed technique that isn't just muscle but honed combat intuition.
Tactically, I'd bet Thor leans into ranged lightning and the environment, while Hercules tries to close distance and turn it into a messy, classical brawl. If it goes cosmic — collapsing moons, mountain-top throws — Thor's durability and control over storms give him an edge. But if it's a grounded duel of will and unarmed technique, Hercules could start dominating. I imagine it ending without a clean knockout: mutual respect, both staggered, the fight paused by an external threat or a diplomatic interruption, leaving room for rematches and a lot of fan debate. I'd be grinning in the theater the whole time.