http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/ReferencedBy/NorseMythology

Next to the Shout-Outs to Shakespeare, (if not surpassing it) are the Shout Outs to Norse Mythology as a whole. Maybe because everything sounds badass, cool or just awesome by naming someone/something after a Norse deity such as Thor, Odin or Loki.

Keep in mind that if several people or things in the same work are all named in reference to Norse Mythology, it's Theme Naming, not a whole lot of shout-outs.

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See also Religious and Mythological Theme Naming.

There's a huge list in That Other Wiki.

Examples:

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Anime & Manga

Slayers has "Ragna Blade" spell. Appropriately enough, it invokes the power of the creator deity living in primal Chaos and as such can harm or kill anything in the world, including Gods and Dark Lords providing "lesser" spells of White Magic and Black Magic. The incantation itself fits well too.

fits well too. .hack//Liminality mentions the The Ring of the Nibelung from Wagner's opera as the source of the power of the World.

The Galactic Empire in Legend of Galactic Heroes uses plenty of Norse Mythology, from given names to the names of starships and planets. Their capital planet is named after Odin, and characters repeatedly talk about heading to Valhalla after they die in battle.

Elbaf, the island of giants in One Piece, has so far been implied to have predominant Norse trappings; there's a gigantic tree in the center of the island, and its ruler is named Loki (Loki being a giant is accurate to the myths, but he's probably not meant to be that Loki, given that the Blackbeard in this world is not Edward Teach).

The Ring of the Neibelung plays a prominent role in Harlock Saga.

The Goddesses of Ah! My Goddess, Belldandy, Urd, and Skuld, were based on the Norns, with Belldandy being a corruption of Verthandi.

Comic Books

Thor himself is a prominent superhero in the Marvel Universe, and is usually a member of The Avengers.

Putting aside that Hellboy has probably met creatures from Norse mythology somewhere along the line, in The Storm and Fury he gets mistaken for both Thor (on account of his hammer-like fist) and Odin (as he's recently given Baba Yaga his eye ). For a follow up, he battles a dragon on a field called Vigrid, where Ragnarok is prophesied to take place. Ragnarok is also the name of the project that brought him into our reality.

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Fan Fiction

The Borderworld is a My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic fanfiction series that takes heavy cues from Norse mythology compared to the show's Greek analogues. The draconequui that exists in this series particularly seem to be very Norse based, as they are the ones who gave many of the Nine Realms (where the Borderworld takes place in) their Norse names.

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Literature

Aesir: Cross Wars is an Affectionate Parody of it.

Janine in Dinoverse names a Quetzalcoatlus that she thinks of as a "tricky sucker" Loki.

Discworld has a trickster god called Hoki, who was banished from Dunmanifestin for "pulling the old exploding mistletoe trick". The gods wage war against the Ice Giants, and the final battle between them is the Teatime of the Gods.

Tolkien's Legendarium Gandalf's habit of traveling in a grey cloak and staff, disguised as an ordinary old man, to test certain people's hospitality, is a direct reference to Odin, who did this kind of thing exactly in Norse sagas. Many of the dwarves in The Hobbit have Norse-derived names, although they're named for Dwarves, not for gods. Gandalf is also the name of a Dwarf in Norse Mythology, though this name is given to the wizard in the original draft Gandalf was the name given to Thorin.

In John Myers Myers' Silverlock, the tramp freighter Shandon is traveling on at the very beginning is mentioned in passing to have been named the "Naglfar". When it sinks, his adventure begins, and it's the first of dozens, if not hundreds of references to literature and mythology scattered through the book.

The redheaded giant Alanna befriends in In the Hand of the Goddess is named Big Thor.

A character all but stated outright to be Odin appears in The Dresden Files. Donar Vadderung note which translates to Thor Father-King runs a mercenary company called Monoc Securities (which name itself referencing Odin) whose employees are hinted to be Valkyries; his office building has portals to strange realms on each floor, referencing Yggdrasil, and he has two raven-haired secretaries named Huginn and Muninn (Harry calls them "birdbrains"). Oh, and he has an eyepatch, and is a powerful magic user. Kris Kringle- i.e., Santa Claus himself in Cold Days gives Harry a lecture about Becoming the Mask before winking at him hard enough that one of his eyes seems to disappear. In future books he makes absolutely no bones about the fact that he is the same guy as Donar.

American Gods have Mr. Wednesday, an American transplant of Odin, As well as Loki, while the main character, "Shadow", is heavily implied to be Baldr.

Live-Action TV

During the Sylvester McCoy era of Doctor Who, the Doctor battled the Gods of Ragnarok and the Wolves of Fenric.

Ragnarok (2020), a Danish Norwegian-language series about a teenager who receives the powers of Thor, draws heavily from Norse Mythology.

Star Trek: Picard: In "Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2", Cristóbal Rios directly compares the Romulan myth Ganmadan ("the Day of Annihilation") to Ragnarök.

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Tabletop Games

The Space Wolves of Warhammer 40,000 are Vikings IN SPACE! on giant wolves, so naturally they get a lot of this. Their recruits are chosen among the critically-wounded in the perpetual tribal warfare of their homeworld Fenris. The natives believe that these lucky few are taken by the Sky Warriors into the halls of their gods in the sky, where they will fight forevermore. This being 40K, they do just that, and could not be happier. One special character is Lukas the Trickster, an obvious Loki analog (except this Lukas is a jovial prankster, albeit one who has a statis bomb in his body that will force his killer to stare into his laughing face for all eternity). The Rune-priests and Wolf-priests can take psyber-ravens called Choosers of the Slain to help them find potential recruits. The Valkyrie is a troop transport commonly used by the Guard (though instead of ferrying the recently-alive from the battlefield, they bring the soon-to-be dead onto it).

Warhammer: Age of Sigmar: The Old World upon destruction gets rebuilt into nine Mortal Realms, which map pretty well to those in Yggdrasil's neighborhood. Azyr = Asgard note Ruled by a god who wields a hammer and collects the souls of warriors to form into powerful immortal soldiers , Ghyran = Vanaheim, Hysh = Alfheim, Ulgu = Svartalfheim, Aqshy = Muspelheim, Shyish = Helheim, Ghur = Jotunheim, Chamon = Nidavellir. The odd one out is Midgard, which might correlate with the Realm of Chaos (remnants of the Old World). Some of the survivors of End Times who achieved godhood are good stand-ins for Norse gods; Sigmar is a cross between Thor and Odin, Alarielle is Freya, etc.

In Dino Attack RPG, there is a Dino Attack agent named Loki. Although more directly named after the mech from MechAssault, there is also a Mutant T-Rex with the name Ragnorok, a name that fits the Dino Attack rather well.

Heroscape features generals called "Kyrie" who build armies made from all the greatest warriors of every time period, a clear nod to Valkyries and Valhalla.

Video Games

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Webcomics