They had the bodies and faces of twisted old women, with writhing snakes for hair, runny eyes, and tattered black clothing. They punished their victims with a wild paralytic song that aroused intense feelings of guilt and remorse—essentially, the Furies drove criminals mad by exposing them to their own guilt and fear.
Known especially for pursuing people who had murdered family members, the Furies punished their victims by driving them mad. When not punishing wrongdoers on earth, they lived in the underworld , or land of the dead, and tortured the damned.
The Roman goddesses of vengeance, the Furies lived in the underworld, where they tortured sinners. The children of Gaea and Uranus, they were usually characterized as three sisters: Alecto (“unceasing”), Tisiphone (“avenging murder”), and Megaera (“grudging”). Their counterparts in Greek mythology are the Erinyes.
In Orestes Pursued by the Furies, Orestes is being tormented and humiliated by the Furies. The Furies includes three sisters, Allecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. As stated in Hesiod's Theogony, they were born from Uranus' blood that had fallen onto the earth after he was castrated (Morford et al.
The Underworld is the Greek realm of the dead. As goddesses of vengeance, the Furies were sent out to bring justice to people who committed crimes. According to mythology, they focused on punishing children who disrespected or murdered their parents, people who lied, killers, and people who sinned against the gods.
The Eumenides, or the Furies, were the Greek deities of divine vengeance and retribution. Because they were so terrifying, the Greeks sometimes referred to them as “The Kindly Ones,” not wanting to mention their names directly.
Anger, grudging, and avenging were their internal weaknesses.
In response to this tragedy, Kratos renounced Ares, breaking his blood oath to the god. Kratos was, therefore, imprisoned and tortured by the three Furies, guardians of honor and enforcers of punishment.
According to the Greek poet Hesiod, they were the daughters of Gaea (Earth) and sprang from the blood of her mutilated spouse Uranus. In the plays of Aeschylus, they were the daughters of Nyx; in those of Sophocles, they were the daughters of Darkness and of Gaea.
She promises to give the Furies a home in Athens, where they will be honored as divinities. But, in return, they must promise not to destroy the Athenians' crops, and so on. Then Athena repeats her promise to make the Furies goddesses in Athens.
Powers & Abilities
Immortality - The Furies are older than the Earth itself and like the Olympians and Titans, are immortal; yet can still be killed by the same circumstances; either by a god or a god's weapon.
THE ERINYES (Furies) were three goddesses of vengeance and retribution who punished men for crimes against the natural order. They were particularly concerned with homicide, unfilial conduct, offenses against the gods, and perjury. A victim seeking justice could call down the curse of the Erinys upon the criminal.
Apollo enters again and orders the Furies to leave his temple at once lest he set loose the power of his sacred arrows against them. He warns that his temple is too holy a place for them to defile by their presence and says that their rightful place is wherever blood is being shed and people are suffering.
Children of the Furies can bend darkness and shadows to their will, as their grandmother is Nyx. They are also more powerful at night. Children of the Furies are grandchildren to Ouranos, the primordial of the sky.
The male and female Light Furies look the same, but males are bigger and a bit bulkier. The shape of its tail and ears look off because they are in motion. Technically, in the HTTYD world, there is no real physical difference between males and females except maybe for males being a bit bulkier like Thorndrum said.
Alecto is the Queen of the Furies and so has the greatest amount of power. She has shown to posses the following abilities: Superhuman Agility: Alecto is able to evade people with an incredible speed.
They lived in the underworld and ascended to Earth to pursue and torment the wicked. They are depicted as having snakes for hair and as weeping human blood. The name of the Furies comes from the Latin word Furiae.
As the temple burned, a village oracle cursed Kratos and condemned him to wear the "mark of his terrible deed"; the ashes of his family, which turn his skin pale white, earning him the title "Ghost of Sparta".
Kratos brings the Blades of Chaos with him to the Norse realms, but instead of wielding them, he initially hides them under the floorboards of his family's home. The blades remind him too much of the past and the monster he was, so it is understandable that he doesn't want to see them, much less use them.
Similar to the Mímir of Norse mythology, he spends the majority of the game as a reanimated severed head but differs in that he is an enemy of Odin and was beheaded by Kratos to free him from Odin's captivity.
Light Furies greatly resemble Night Furies, but they are sleeker and less heavy with lighter coloring and glimmering textures that include white, blue, and pink. They possess a long, single spine running down the center of their back and light blue eyes.
Ares then leaves, giving Percy the Helm of Darkness. Percy tosses it to the Furies, and they take it back to Hades.
Lashina is the field leader of the Furies.
They were generally depicted as birds with the heads of maidens, faces pale with hunger and long claws on their hands. Roman and Byzantine writers detailed their ugliness. Pottery art depicting the harpies featured beautiful women with wings.
In Hesiod the Cyclopes were three sons of Uranus and Gaea—Arges, Brontes, and Steropes (Bright, Thunderer, Lightener)—who forged the thunderbolts of Zeus. Later authors made them the workmen of Hephaestus and said that Apollo killed them for making the thunderbolt that slew his son Asclepius.