Simply put, when you boil Thor's long history and broad characterization down to the most simplistic terms, Thor is the Norse God of Thunder. That's an inherently magical concept, taking the magic away from that would compromise the entire basis for the character that we love.
It doesn't. It also doesn't try to explain the Asgardians as scientific beings. It just doesn't call them gods outright except through the mouthpiece of the ancient Norse peoples. It leaves their true nature ambiguous, and I'm fine with that. It's the suggestions that the Asgardians absolutely must be unequivocally explained as sci fi aliens that I take issue with.
The only thing supernatural(magical) about Thor is his power to command the weather. (Hence why he was worshipped mostly by Viking farmers)
Everyone here going on about how will Thor's "magic" be mixed with Iron man's "science tech" in the same movie. Very simple. Think Star Wars
Iron man = Han Solo = scientist/mechanic/atheist
Thor = Luke Skywalker= mysticism/supernatural force/religion
Yeah, I was going to edit my post as such but was lazyI agree though I'd add an "overtly" to your "only thing supernatural" statement, all of Thor's powers stem from his supernatural/magical origins.

But all things in Asgard are labeled magical in the comics and all of those rules still apply. "Magic" does not equal "anything goes," necessarily. The root of Thor's powers are magic, but they still follow certain rules. He's only so strong, he can only fly with his hammer, etc. As long as you have internal consistency throughout Thor's appearances, you're fine. You can call it magic or science; it'll still follow certain rules. In terms of fictional narratives, an "anything goes" mentality is usually just flat-out bad writing, like Superman (a sci fi alien hero) developing new powers on a whim for no reason back in the '50s.Well........they would be "scientific" beings in their dimension.
The impact of Thor's hammer would be consistent with the force he uses, they bleed when cut, they age, they die, they eat, i.e there would be rules or science to their existance, and some of our science would also apply. Without Mjolnir Thor will succumb to gravity.
See for me once you label all things Asgardian magical, all bets are off.
But all things in Asgard are labeled magical in the comics and all of those rules still apply. "Magic" does not equal "anything goes," necessarily. The root of Thor's powers are magic, but they still follow certain rules. He's only so strong, he can only fly with his hammer, etc. As long as you have internal consistency throughout Thor's appearances, you're fine. You can call it magic or science; it'll still follow certain rules. In terms of fictional narratives, an "anything goes" mentality is usually just flat-out bad writing, like Superman (a sci fi alien hero) developing new powers on a whim for no reason back in the '50s.


Volstagg implied that the Asgardians don't have indoor plumbing in one of JMS' issues of Thor. That doesn't really make much sense to me, given the level of the Asgardians' civilization, but it wasn't a big deal.![]()


You can say arc-reactors and radioactive dudes are as outrageous as Asgardians, but that's not true. What is sci-fi? Science made fictitious, i.e. we take what we know for a fact and then we blow it up. Science-fiction is grounded in something real and tangible. Thor's completely imaginary in every sense. He's made-up. Thors and Odins don't exist on any level in reality. Crying suspension-of-disbelief here is a cop-out. Would you accept James Bond partnering with the Egyptian god Thoth in his next movie? No, because James Bond is established as something not fantastical in that sense.
The Marvel Movieverse has established itself as hardline sci-fi. You can't change the game midstream. It breaks the suspension of disbelief.
So, yeah, they can't just 'be' gods. It'd be silly and audiences would think its silly.
That's actually a pretty great comparisonIron man = Han Solo = scientist/mechanic/atheist
Thor = Luke Skywalker= mysticism/supernatural force/religion

The only thing supernatural(magical) about Thor is his power to command the weather. (Hence why he was worshipped mostly by Viking farmers)
Everyone here going on about how will Thor's "magic" be mixed with Iron man's "science tech" in the same movie. Very simple. Think Star Wars
Iron man = Han Solo = scientist/mechanic/atheist
Thor = Luke Skywalker= mysticism/supernatural force/religion
Thor is actually a lot more like Anakin Skywalker, come to think of it. Starts off a good, idealistic boy, becomes arrogant due to his own power, gets taken down a peg by his father-figure, and ultimately reforms. Only Thor doesn't die like right after he turns good again.That's actually a pretty great comparison
Except where Luke Skywalker started off as the farm boy, Thor was always the badass![]()
