Thor loses his eye during the earlier parts of the final battle sequence with this goddess. She casually and effortless beats him around the throne room, and then the moment happens. Hela strikes Thor across the face with her sword, literally slicing the eye from out his head right then and there. Brutal.
In order to help him, Rocket gave Thor the eye he had stolen in order to replace the one Thor had lost to Hela. Thor put the prosthesis in his eye's socket, much to Groot's interest, although Rocket told Thor that he should have washed it first due to how he had to smuggle it out of Contraxia.
The purpose of losing his eye is to emphasize how powerful Hela really is and the purpose of losing his weapon is for Thor to learn his real abilities, that the hammer is not the thing that grants him strength but it is in him plus the decimation of his hammer could also serve as the thing on why Thor was not able to ...
When he is traveling with Rocket and Groot, Rocket gives Thor a cybernetic eye that he stole. The eye is a different color to Thor's original eye color, being brown rather than blue, but presents a part of his character journey as Thor begins to bond with the Guardians and continues his effort to defeat Thanos.
As explained in ULTIMATE X-MEN (2001) #11, Ultimate Fury was transporting Weapon X through Kuwait when their convoy was ambushed. He lost his left eye in the explosion but was ultimately saved by the man who would become Wolverine. And, he's worn the eyepatch ever since!
Marvel race-swapped Nick Fury because, in the Ultimate series of Marvel Comics in 2002, Earth-1610's Nick Fury was black and inspired by Samuel L. Jackson. The writer of Ultimate Comics, Mark Millar, designed the alternate version of Nick Fury with Samuel L.
Unfortunately for Fury, Goose does not like being treated like a cat. When Fury tries to cuddle him again at the end of the movie, Goose scratches his eye. Fury initially says that it's just a scratch, but by the end of the film, he's perusing glass eyes.
Thor doesn't actually get his eye back, but he gets a new eye in 'Avengers: Infinity War. '
Three years ago, in the pages of Original Sin, Nick Fury whispered something into Thor's ear that made the Odinson unworthy, and incapable of wielding his hammer, Mjolnir. In The Unworthy Thor #5, which released in comic shops today, the words Nick Fury said were finally revealed. "Gorr was right."
Thor: Love and Thunder, even though it was released in the summer and played in theaters up until its Disney+ release, left fans displeased and unsatisfied, angry about not living up to expectations, its use (or, more correctly, misuse) of characters, and humor that didn't land.
Hela is the child of Loki, God of Mischief, and the giantess Angrboda. Hela's face is withered and decayed because she was mystically born half dead, but wears a cloak that conceals this imperfection, and while wearing it, she appears to be a beautiful woman.
Hela Odinsdottir was the ruler of Hel, the daughter of Odin Borson, the older half-sister of Thor Odinson, and the adoptive older sister of Loki Laufeyson.
Thor, the god of Thunder, was undoubtedly the most powerful member of the original Avengers. His power continues to grow in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Thanos didn't lift Mjolnir, Captain America did
With Mjolnir's worthiness enchantment resulted in Thor being able to lift the hammer only if he is considered to be worthy, but likewise, the enchantment is not discriminatory in nature, and anyone who is deemed worthy is able to lift the hammer.
In the aftermath of his failure, Thor had a new-found determination to kill Thanos and undo the Snap. The remaining Avengers converged on the Titan's home to find him wounded and the Infinity Stones destroyed. Seeking vengeance, Thor raised Stormbreaker and, with one fell swoop, beheaded Thanos.
Having been adopted by Thor, Gorr's daughter has seemingly become the new owner of the weapon forged to defeat Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War. In Thor: Love and Thunder's ending, Love carried it into battle alongside Thor, who was once again wielding Mjolnir.
A secret we learn in this week's issue that stretches back to Jason Aaron and Esad Ribic's "Godbomb" run on "Thor: God of Thunder." Now we know: Fury simply whispered, "Gorr was right."
Later in the film, a flashback to when Jane and Thor were still a couple shows exactly how she was able to wield Mjolnir. In a moment of wistful affection for his girlfriend, Thor asked his trusty hammer to always protect Jane, and in doing so unwittingly enchanted Mjolnir to do just that.
Due to Thanos' power upgrade, he's actually stronger than the Hulk, as, unlike his opponent, he can seemingly control his rage. The preview ends with Hulk being warned that if he loses control again as he did earlier in the series, the Eye of the Kraken will take him over.
During the sibling fight, Hela sliced out Thor's right eye and then brought him outside so he could see Fenris fighting Hulk, the dead warriors taking down Valkyrie's ship and their dire fate.
To raise his spirits, Rocket gave Thor a functioning, artificial eye he had stole from a hapless mark sometime earlier, heavily implying that he had smuggled the prosthetic in his anus.
Nick Fury's Eye Patch
He has 95% vision loss in his injured left eye, over which he wears a cosmetic eyepatch. The injury was revealed to have been is due to an injury to his left eye from a grenade during World War II.
And here is the answer. Captain America gave Nick Fury money because they had a bet. When Cap woke up after being frozen for 70 years, Fury came to him with a mission to stop Loki and retrieve Tesseract. He explained to him that the world had become even weirder than it was before.