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It started, as most legendary incidents do, with a misunderstanding… and a little ego.
Thor Odinson — the God of Thunder, wielder of Mjölnir, part-time Avenger — was enjoying a dramatic lightning storm over Metropolis. Dark clouds. Thunder cracks. Cinematic entrance. Very on-brand.
Suddenly, a red-and-blue blur zipped past him.
“Nice weather effects,” said Superman casually, hovering mid-air. “Is this for a movie or something?”
Thor blinked.
“I am not special effects,” he boomed. “I am the storm.”
Superman smiled politely. “Right. Of course. My bad.”
And that’s when Thor decided this alien farm boy needed a small… educational demonstration.
The Demonstration
Thor spun Mjölnir. Lightning exploded across the sky. Windows rattled. Car alarms panicked. Somewhere, a cat reconsidered its life choices.
Thor shouted, “Behold! The fury of Asgard!”
Superman crossed his arms. “That’s adorable.”
Adorable.
Thor nearly dropped his hammer.
With theatrical intensity, Thor summoned the largest thunderbolt he could muster — a blinding pillar of electricity crashing directly onto Superman.
The city gasped.
Smoke cleared.
Superman was standing there.
Not fried.
Not even mildly toasted.
His cape fluttered slightly.
“That tickled,” he said. “Do it again.”
The Ego Crisis
Thor floated down, visibly confused.
“You… felt nothing?”
“Well,” Superman shrugged, “I once sneezed and accidentally moved a planet. This is kind of like static electricity.”
Thor stared at Mjölnir.
Mjölnir stared back (metaphorically, but with judgment).
Thor muttered, “Perhaps you are resistant to lightning.”
Superman grinned. “You want to see a trick?”
Before Thor could object, Superman flew into the upper atmosphere, inhaled deeply, and exhaled with such force that the storm clouds Thor had spent ten dramatic minutes arranging simply… evaporated.
Clear skies.
Sunshine.
Birds resumed normal operations.
Thor slowly lowered his hammer.
“You… dispersed my storm.”
“Vitamin D is important,” Superman said cheerfully.
The Unexpected Twist
Now mildly offended, Thor decided to escalate.
“If lightning does not humble you,” he declared, “perhaps worthiness will!”
He dramatically held out Mjölnir.
“Lift it.”
Superman hesitated. “Isn’t that rude?”
“Lift. It.”
Superman grabbed the hammer.
Nothing happened.
He pulled harder.
Still nothing.
He used both hands.
Thor smirked.
For the first time that day, Superman looked confused.
“What’s the trick?”
“No trick,” Thor said proudly. “Only the worthy may wield Mjölnir.”
Superman scratched his head. “I save planets. I rescue kittens. I recycle.”
Thor nodded. “Yes. But have you ever drunkenly challenged Hulk to arm wrestle at 3 a.m. out of sheer confidence?”
“…No?”
“Then you are not ready.”
Superman sighed. “Fair.”
The Real Winner
Just as tension was about to return, a small kid from Metropolis shouted from below:
“HEY! CAN YOU GUYS STOP FLEXING AND HELP FIX THE BRIDGE?”
Both heroes looked down.
The bridge was collapsing.
Without another word, Thor and Superman moved.
Lightning reinforced steel beams.
Super-speed stabilized falling debris.
Cape and hammer worked in synchronized chaos.
Bridge saved.
Crowd cheered.
Thor looked at Superman.
Superman looked at Thor.
They both nodded.
“Lunch?” Superman asked.
Thor grinned. “Only if you can handle Asgardian spice.”
Superman smirked. “I eat solar radiation for breakfast.”
Thor blinked.
“…Fair enough.”
Moral of the Incident
When a god of thunder meets a solar-powered alien, the real battle isn’t strength.
It’s who gets the last dramatic line.
And that day?
The kid who yelled about the bridge won.

