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* Cromwell in ''VideoGame/BaldursGateII'', Cespenar in ''VideoGame/ThroneOfBhaal''. They're both quite accessible, to the player's party, that is. Anybody else that wants to make use of Cespenar's services had better learn how to travel to a demonic pocket dimension constructed and held together solely by the main character's will. Furthermore, Cespenar answers to nobody but the protagonist of the story. But the actual Ultimate Blacksmith of the game is probably ''Kerrick the Smith''.

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* Cromwell in ''VideoGame/BaldursGateII'', Cespenar in ''VideoGame/ThroneOfBhaal''.''[[VideoGame/BaldursGateIIThroneOfBhaal Throne of Bhaal]]''. They're both quite accessible, to the player's party, that is. Anybody else that wants to make use of Cespenar's services had better learn how to travel to a demonic pocket dimension constructed and held together solely by the main character's will. Furthermore, Cespenar answers to nobody but the protagonist of the story. But the actual Ultimate Blacksmith of the game is probably ''Kerrick the Smith''.
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*** Garothmuk gro-Muzgub is zig-zagged. If you talk to blacksmiths, they will often tell you to visit Garkthmuk in Suran. The NPCs ''specifically'' say he is "'''not''' a master smith", but that he is the most knowledgeable blacksmith in the land and happy to share his knowledge. Should you swing by his smithy for a chat, you'll find he has various unique dialogue options about a vast breadth of topics, including armor styles, weapon types, and smithing materials and techniques.

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*** Garothmuk gro-Muzgub is zig-zagged. If you talk to blacksmiths, they will often tell you to visit Garkthmuk in Suran. The NPCs [=NPCs=] ''specifically'' say he is "'''not''' a master smith", but that he is the most knowledgeable blacksmith in the land and happy to share his knowledge. Should you swing by his smithy for a chat, you'll find he has various unique dialogue options about a vast breadth of topics, including armor styles, weapon types, and smithing materials and techniques.
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*** Garothmuk gro-Muzgub is zig-zagged. If you talk to blacksmiths, they will often tell you to visit Garkthmuk in Suran. The NPCs ''specifically'' say he is "'''not''' a master smith", but that he is the most knowledgeable blacksmith in the land and happy to share his knowledge. Should you swing by his smithy for a chat, you'll find he has various unique dialogue options about a vast breadth of topics, including armor styles, weapon types, and smithing materials and techniques.
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Added DiffLines:

* ''Webcomic/Aurora2019'' has Tahraim the smith god, who creates unique magical weapons for other deities. His creative process often involves "forging" the would-be wielders of his handiwork, pushing them to earn power through personal growth.
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* ''Anime/DanganRonpa3TheEndOfHopesPeakHighSchool'' has Sounosuke Izayoi, whose literal title is Ultimate Blacksmith, though, he is never seen making weapons as using them.

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* ''Anime/DanganRonpa3TheEndOfHopesPeakHighSchool'' ''Anime/Danganronpa3TheEndOfHopesPeakHighSchool'' has Sounosuke Izayoi, whose literal title is Ultimate Blacksmith, though, he is never seen making weapons as using them.
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** [[AllDwarvesAreTheSame Dwarves, in all versions of the game,]] will have a culture that revolves around smithing and mining. In most campaign settings, the head of the dwarven pantheon is Moradin, god of the forge.

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** [[AllDwarvesAreTheSame [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame Dwarves, in all versions of the game,]] will have a culture that revolves around smithing and mining. In most campaign settings, the head of the dwarven pantheon is Moradin, god of the forge.
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fixed typo


* In the Literature/WhateleyUniverse, there are ''two'': the first of these is Kick-Knack, the [[PhysicalGod incarnation of Hephaestus]], while the second is Eldritch. Eldritch (Caitlin Bardue) is The Artificer, a [[{{Golem}} construct]] magically designed to be The Ultimate Blacksmith. Things that a high-end mage would need months to make, she can make overnight with the right stuff. As for accessibility, she lives in one of the dorms at Whateley Academy, so she's easy to get to.

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* In the Literature/WhateleyUniverse, there are ''two'': the first of these is Kick-Knack, Knick-Knack, the [[PhysicalGod incarnation of Hephaestus]], while the second is Eldritch. Eldritch (Caitlin Bardue) is The Artificer, a [[{{Golem}} construct]] magically designed to be The Ultimate Blacksmith. Things that a high-end mage would need months to make, she can make overnight with the right stuff. As for accessibility, she lives in one of the dorms at Whateley Academy, so she's easy to get to.

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** [[AllDwarvesAreTheSame Dwarves, in all versions of the game,]] will have a culture that revolves around smithing and mining. In most campaign settings, the head of the dwarven pantheon is Moradin, god of the forge.



* In ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'', the [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame Dwarven]] racial archetype for the Cleric class, the Forgemaster, is essentially this. Instead of having some of the usual Cleric abilities, they have abilities relating to craftsmanship and metal. It becomes this trope, rather than merely TheBlacksmith, because it gains the "Craft Magic Arms and Armor" feat at Level 3, while the feat usually is locked until Caster Level 5.

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* In ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'', the [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame Dwarven]] racial archetype for the Cleric class, the Forgemaster, is essentially this. Instead of having some of the usual Cleric abilities, they have abilities relating to craftsmanship and metal. It becomes this trope, rather than merely TheBlacksmith, because it gains the "Craft Magic Arms and Armor" feat at Level 3, while the feat usually is locked until Caster Level 5. Torag, the TopGod of the dwarven pantheon, is himself a blacksmith of truly cosmic skill (and a clear expy for ''Dungeons & Dragons''' Moradin, mentioned above).

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Placed examples in alphabetical order


* Master Michael Kohara from ''Manga/GaRei'', having forged pneumatic blades for both Kagura and Kensuke since Anime/GaReiZero. Said blades range from having shotguns built into the hilts to being able to [[spoiler:''[[RealityWarper cross dimensions]]'' through the PowerOfLove.]]

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* Master Michael Kohara from ''Manga/GaRei'', having forged pneumatic blades for both Kagura and Kensuke since Anime/GaReiZero.''Anime/GaReiZero''. Said blades range from having shotguns built into the hilts to being able to [[spoiler:''[[RealityWarper cross dimensions]]'' through the PowerOfLove.]]



* In ''ComicBook/{{Preacher}}'' the Angel of Death wants to give up his job. When he finds a worthy soul, he melts down his Angelic Sword of Death and allows {{Satan}} to forge it into a pair of Colt revolvers. The result is a pair of pistols that never run out of ammo, never miss, and never fail to kill. The new Angel of Death, now named the Saint of Killers, immediately shoots the Devil in the head and kills him. [[spoiler: He later shoots and kills {{God}}.]]



* Hephaestus maintains this role in ''Franchise/WonderWoman'', having made the same iconic weapons and armor from [[Myth/ClassicalMythology mythology]] as well and crafting new armor and weapons.



* In ''ComicBook/{{Preacher}}'' the Angel of Death wants to give up his job. When he finds a worthy soul, he melts down his Angelic Sword of Death and allows {{Satan}} to forge it into a pair of Colt revolvers. The result is a pair of pistols that never run out of ammo, never miss, and never fail to kill. The new Angel of Death, now named the Saint of Killers, immediately shoots the Devil in the head and kills him. [[spoiler: He later shoots and kills {{God}}.]]
* Hephaestus maintains this role in ''Franchise/WonderWoman'', having made the same iconic weapons and armor from [[Myth/ClassicalMythology mythology]] as well and crafting new armor and weapons.



* Naruto in "Fanfic/AGrowingAffection" just might be this. He forges his staff-blade Kitsune [[MemeticMutation On the side of the road!]] [[Film/IronMan With a bunch of disposable kunai!]] It stands up to Orochimaru's legendary artifact Kusanagi. He creates even more impressive weapons for Hinata and Sakura.



* ''Fanfic/FateRevelationOnline'': Shirou becomes the greatest blacksmith in the game pretty much the second he decides to put his hand to it. The first thing he does is invent steel several floors before it would have naturally become available, and after that he spends all day making swords. After he gets past his ThePerfectionist phase where he'll make a beautiful sword and then immediately break it down for parts, he becomes known as someone who will make a custom weapon for anyone after [[TellMeHowYouFight brutally fighting them to figure out what they need]], then sending them on a FetchQuest for the materials. The only caveat is that he can ''only'' make weapons, and anything too far from a sword is very difficult for him. Since his element is [Sword], he can make swords as easy as breathing, and other bladed weapons with only slightly more difficulty, but maces or staffs are basically impossible. And he's never even tried to make armor.
* Naruto in "Fanfic/AGrowingAffection" just might be this. He forges his staff-blade Kitsune [[MemeticMutation On the side of the road!]] [[Film/IronMan With a bunch of disposable kunai!]] It stands up to Orochimaru's legendary artifact Kusanagi. He creates even more impressive weapons for Hinata and Sakura.
* In ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/4636482/1/Hephaestus Hephaestus]]'' Harry can shape metal into protective sigils and other useful items by ''singing'' while he concentrates his magic.



* In ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/4636482/1/Hephaestus Hephaestus]]'' Harry can shape metal into protective sigils and other useful items by ''singing'' while he concentrates his magic.
* The ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'' fic ''[[http://recordkeeper.tumblr.com/post/27126362541/wrong Wrong]]'' introduces Dibare, who has aspired her whole life to create a living sword. She has discarded dozens of lesser prototypes, including one "generations of rulers might have fought over" simply because they don't achieve this impossible dream. Her skill is what inspires Ligier to offer her an Infernal Exaltation.

to:

* In ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/4636482/1/Hephaestus Hephaestus]]'' Harry can shape metal into protective sigils ''Fanfic/SwordAndClaw'', Kalk is a dwarf blacksmith who's even more skilled than his peers. He's the one who makes new weapons for Adam and other useful items by ''singing'' while he concentrates his magic.
* The ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'' fic ''[[http://recordkeeper.tumblr.com/post/27126362541/wrong Wrong]]'' introduces Dibare,
Lilith, and also maintains the equipment of [[spoiler:Justinia, the hero who has aspired her whole life to create a living sword. She has discarded dozens of lesser prototypes, including one "generations of rulers might have fought over" simply because they don't achieve this impossible dream. Her skill is what inspires Ligier to offer her an Infernal Exaltation.slew the previous Demon Lord.]]



* In ''Fanfic/SwordAndClaw'', Kalk is a dwarf blacksmith who's even more skilled than his peers. He's the one who makes new weapons for Adam and Lilith, and also maintains the equipment of [[spoiler:Justinia, the hero who slew the previous Demon Lord.]]
* ''Fanfic/FateRevelationOnline'': Shirou becomes the greatest blacksmith in the game pretty much the second he decides to put his hand to it. The first thing he does is invent steel several floors before it would have naturally become available, and after that he spends all day making swords. After he gets past his ThePerfectionist phase where he'll make a beautiful sword and then immediately break it down for parts, he becomes known as someone who will make a custom weapon for anyone after [[TellMeHowYouFight brutally fighting them to figure out what they need]], then sending them on a FetchQuest for the materials. The only caveat is that he can ''only'' make weapons, and anything too far from a sword is very difficult for him. Since his element is [Sword], he can make swords as easy as breathing, and other bladed weapons with only slightly more difficulty, but maces or staffs are basically impossible. And he's never even tried to make armor.

to:

* In ''Fanfic/SwordAndClaw'', Kalk is The ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'' fic ''[[http://recordkeeper.tumblr.com/post/27126362541/wrong Wrong]]'' introduces Dibare, who has aspired her whole life to create a dwarf blacksmith who's even more skilled than his peers. He's the living sword. She has discarded dozens of lesser prototypes, including one who makes new weapons for Adam and Lilith, and also maintains the equipment "generations of [[spoiler:Justinia, the hero who slew the previous Demon Lord.]]
* ''Fanfic/FateRevelationOnline'': Shirou becomes the greatest blacksmith in the game pretty much the second he decides to put his hand to it. The first thing he does is invent steel several floors before it would
rulers might have naturally become available, and after that he spends all day making swords. After he gets past his ThePerfectionist phase where he'll make a beautiful sword and then immediately break it down for parts, he becomes known as someone who will make a custom weapon for anyone after [[TellMeHowYouFight brutally fighting them to figure out fought over" simply because they don't achieve this impossible dream. Her skill is what they need]], then sending them on a FetchQuest for the materials. The only caveat is that he can ''only'' make weapons, and anything too far from a sword is very difficult for him. Since his element is [Sword], he can make swords as easy as breathing, and other bladed weapons with only slightly more difficulty, but maces or staffs are basically impossible. And he's never even tried inspires Ligier to make armor.offer her an Infernal Exaltation.



* Hattori Hanzo in ''Film/KillBill'' is the greatest Japanese swordsmith in the world, to the extent that criminals and assassins would consider $1 million a reasonable price for a katana made by him. Eventually, he was tormented that his swords were used to kill people and promised God that he would stop making them. The Bride needs one of his weapons to take on Bill and the Deadly Vipers for her RoaringRampageOfRevenge, so she tracks him down in Okinawa where he's been running a restaurant and convinces him to break his vow in order to make one last sword. He spends a month making it and gives it to her in a highly formal ceremony. "I can tell you with no ego this is my finest sword. If on your journey, should you encounter God, [[BlasphemousPraise God will be cut.]]"
* ''Film/IronMan''
** Tony Stark builds a power suit out of spare weapons parts as a prisoner in a weapons bunker. He later makes several improved versions of the suit, including one that converts into a suitcase. He also manages to create a new element using his own personal particle accelerator. In ''Film/AvengersEndgame'', [[spoiler: Tony Stark cements his role as ''the'' blacksmith of the MCU by replicating Eitri's (also an Ultimate Blacksmith as stated below) feat, not only building a ''replica Infinity Gauntlet'' out of nanotech but doing so without access to [[{{Unobtainium}} Uru]] or [[UltimateForge the heart of a neutron star.]]]]
** Ivan Vanko is Stark's foil, building power suits of his own that stand toe-to-toe with Stark's.
* The serial movie ''Panday'' from the Philippines featured TheStoic protagonist Flavio [[spoiler:played by actor Fernando Poe Jr.]] as the eponymous ''panday'' (blacksmith) who fashioned a mystical sword out of a meteor that crashed in his home village in order to combat the forces of darkness.
* Conan's dad in ''Film/ConanTheBarbarian1982'' was one of sorts (even opening the movie with one of the most epic {{Forging Scene}}s ever put on film). While there is nothing especially ''magical'' about the sword he crafts, it was in a time when ordinary steel was more rare and valuable than gold and mentions to young Conan the "Riddle of Steel" as having been stolen from the gods. Who or whatever forged Conan's ''Atlantean'' sword, however, might fit this trope to a far greater degree.



* Conan's dad in ''Film/ConanTheBarbarian1982'' was one of sorts (even opening the movie with one of the most epic {{Forging Scene}}s ever put on film). While there is nothing especially ''magical'' about the sword he crafts, it was in a time when ordinary steel was more rare and valuable than gold and mentions to young Conan the "Riddle of Steel" as having been stolen from the gods. Who or whatever forged Conan's ''Atlantean'' sword, however, might fit this trope to a far greater degree.



* ''Film/IronMan''
** Tony Stark builds a power suit out of spare weapons parts as a prisoner in a weapons bunker. He later makes several improved versions of the suit, including one that converts into a suitcase. He also manages to create a new element using his own personal particle accelerator. In ''Film/AvengersEndgame'', [[spoiler: Tony Stark cements his role as ''the'' blacksmith of the MCU by replicating Eitri's (also an Ultimate Blacksmith as stated below) feat, not only building a ''replica Infinity Gauntlet'' out of nanotech but doing so without access to [[{{Unobtainium}} Uru]] or [[UltimateForge the heart of a neutron star.]]]]
** Ivan Vanko is Stark's foil, building power suits of his own that stand toe-to-toe with Stark's.
* Hattori Hanzo in ''Film/KillBill'' is the greatest Japanese swordsmith in the world, to the extent that criminals and assassins would consider $1 million a reasonable price for a katana made by him. Eventually, he was tormented that his swords were used to kill people and promised God that he would stop making them. The Bride needs one of his weapons to take on Bill and the Deadly Vipers for her RoaringRampageOfRevenge, so she tracks him down in Okinawa where he's been running a restaurant and convinces him to break his vow in order to make one last sword. He spends a month making it and gives it to her in a highly formal ceremony. "I can tell you with no ego this is my finest sword. If on your journey, should you encounter God, [[BlasphemousPraise God will be cut.]]"
* The serial movie ''Panday'' from the Philippines featured TheStoic protagonist Flavio [[spoiler:played by actor Fernando Poe Jr.]] as the eponymous ''panday'' (blacksmith) who fashioned a mystical sword out of a meteor that crashed in his home village in order to combat the forces of darkness.



* Hank Rearden from ''Literature/AtlasShrugged'' is this trope, transplanted into the context of a modern industrial steel industry. His abilities with steel and the new alloys he invents are just as great as the talents of the medieval-fantasy Ultimate Blacksmith.
* In ''Literature/TheBalancedSword'', the Spiritsmith has practiced his craft for thousands of years, studied under masters of every form of weapon and armor making in the world, and produces work so good that even the gods themselves offer him commissions. When he's not needed elsewhere, he makes his home at the top of a tall mountain in a forbidding mountain range, and even if a person can find out which mountain, there are a bunch of rules about when you can climb it and what equipment you're allowed to use to make sure the only people who make it to his doorstep are ones who are worth his time.
* Vulcan in the ''Literature/BookOfSwords'' series, who made the twelve eponymous swords, each a perfectly made sword with incredibly powerful magical abilities. Played with, perhaps, in that he could only do it once and came to forget how he did it.
* Daja and her teacher Frostpine from ''Literature/CircleOfMagic''. Both of them have power over metal, fire, and smithing, and can create truly amazing pieces of work. Daja in particular produces some impressive stuff out of the living brass growing on her arm.



* ''Literature/FeralTheStoryOfAHalfOrc'' has Char. A half-Orc blacksmith who makes the sort of armor that wouldn't look out of place in most sci-fi stories, and can do some crazy things with limited materials. Over the course of the story, he is responsible for two different armors, both of which enhance physical ability, feature jumpjets that increase leaping height, and one of which increases magical power. He also makes a crude blunderbuss, a knife, and gauntlet that emits electricity, and makes chromoly steel. All in the course of a couple weeks.
* In her time, [[CoolOldLady Sister Lashan]] would've counted herself as merely a very good mage-smith, making very good swords with modest, lasting, useful enchantments on them. Then soldiers overran her home enclave and killed anyone they didn't abduct, and she made a HeroicSacrifice to seal herself into one of her swords and help her apprentice. Thousands of years later, by the time any of the ''Literature/HeraldsOfValdemar'' books actually take place, Need is still going strong and all memory of how to make something like her is gone.
* ''Literature/HisDarkMaterials'': Iorek Byrnison is a polar bear from a culture that believes they forge their own souls when they make their armour. His skill with metalworking is [[ChekhovsGun shown]] in the first book, but later, he's able to reforge the Subtle Knife itself -- a magical, [[AbsurdlySharpBlade infinitely sharp]] DimensionalCutter -- in a cave with only improvised tools.



* In ''Literature/TheIrregularAtMagicHighSchool'', spells are what is smithed. They're a bit like suits: anyone with magical talent and enough power can cast one, but spells tailored to someone's specific eidos signature will always be faster and less exhausting than the generic version. A really good spell engineer can amplify a magician's power several levels beyond what s/he could achieve on their own, which is why engineers are often kept on retainer by wealthy magicians and the ones who have built superweapons have to have their names registered with the government.
** In accordance with trope tradition, one of the world's ''best'' magic-engineers- Tatsuya Shiba- is a cynical, war-hardened veteran who wants only to live in relative isolation with his sister. The main reason he keeps his identity secret is because it's the only way he can get a moment's peace from would-be patrons.
* The smith Volund (see Myth and Legend) shows up in Creator/DavidDrake's ''Literature/{{Northworld}}'' trilogy. As with the myth, he's more a force of nature than a man, whose creative abilities border on godlike.
* Regin, the not entirely human foster-father of Sigurd from the ''Literature/PoeticEdda'' and the ''Literature/SagaOfTheVolsungs'', who forged the sword Gram with which Sigurd sliced an anvil in half and killed the dragon Fafnir.



* ''Literature/{{Renegades}}'' has several prodigies with the ability to forge supernatural objects. Among them is a medieval blacksmith who crafted an amulet that grants IdealIllnessImmunity, Nova's father, who could weave a strange substance into magical items, and Captain Chromium, who can summon and shape his eponymous metal, making it indestructible to all but him in the process. The Renegades have a warehouse full of artifacts made by such prodigies.
* ''Literature/TheReunionWithTwelveFascinatingGoddesses'' has Zesca, the goddess of weapons and warfare. She can make weapons that allow even the unskilled to use the power of Spirits and is also the one who forged Tooi's sword [[CoolSword Zodiac]].
* ''Literature/TheSacredBlacksmith'' has, of course, the blacksmith himself, Luke Ainsworth, thus the title. Two things set him apart: One, he uses higher-quality iron than most smiths in the region and hand-forges rather than casting (which is weaker). Two, he has a magical ability to forge short-lived katanas with the help of his partner Lisa.



* In ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', only the most skilled smiths such as Tobho Mott, the master armorer in King's Landing, know how to work Valyrian steel. He is the smith who [[spoiler:reforged the Starks' Valyrian steel greatsword Ice]] into the swords Widow's Wail and Oathkeeper on Tywin Lannister's request. Mott also claims to be the only armorer in King's Landing who can tint armor without paint.
* Uprox Screl, who forged ''Literature/TheSwordOfShannara'', and subsequently retires and becomes the ancestor of Panamon Creel.
* In Creator/RuthFrancesLong's ''Literature/TheTreacheryOfBeautifulThings'', Wayland. Which is why Jack goes to him for a sword. He gives him one and then says the price would cover more, so gives him something for Jenny. It is a jack (as in the game).
* ''Literature/TheUnexploredSummonBloodSign'' character Kyousuke, at the age of ten, created a device enabling the permanent summoning of gods into the human world. He didn't think to include an off switch, which caused [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt a lot of problems for everyone]], but in purely scientific terms it was an unsurpassed accomplishment. He would go on to [[spoiler:overwrite the existing magic system ''twice'', and create a new god, which is like hacking the universe's laws of physics and putting your own code in.]]
* ''Literature/{{Uprooted}}'': Alosha the Witch specializes in smithing. She forges magical blades for Polya's elite troops, but her ''magnum opus'' is a sword that she spent a full century imbuing with the power to ''drink life''. Her name even means "The Sword" in the LanguageOfMagic.



* The smith Volund (see Myth and Legend) shows up in Creator/DavidDrake's ''Literature/{{Northworld}}'' trilogy. As with the myth, he's more a force of nature than a man, whose creative abilities border on godlike.
* Regin, the not entirely human foster-father of Sigurd from the ''Literature/PoeticEdda'' and the ''Literature/SagaOfTheVolsungs'', who forged the sword Gram with which Sigurd sliced an anvil in half and killed the dragon Fafnir.
* ''Literature/HisDarkMaterials'': Iorek Byrnison is a polar bear from a culture that believes they forge their own souls when they make their armour. His skill with metalworking is [[ChekhovsGun shown]] in the first book, but later, he's able to reforge the Subtle Knife itself -- a magical, [[AbsurdlySharpBlade infinitely sharp]] DimensionalCutter -- in a cave with only improvised tools.
* In Creator/RuthFrancesLong's ''Literature/TheTreacheryOfBeautifulThings'', Wayland. Which is why Jack goes to him for a sword. He gives him one and then says the price would cover more, so gives him something for Jenny. It is a jack (as in the game).
* Uprox Screl, who forged ''Literature/TheSwordOfShannara'', and subsequently retires and becomes the ancestor of Panamon Creel.
* Daja and her teacher Frostpine from ''Literature/CircleOfMagic''. Both of them have power over metal, fire, and smithing, and can create truly amazing pieces of work. Daja in particular produces some impressive stuff out of the living brass growing on her arm.
* Hank Rearden from ''Literature/AtlasShrugged'' is this trope, transplanted into the context of a modern industrial steel industry. His abilities with steel and the new alloys he invents are just as great as the talents of the medieval-fantasy Ultimate Blacksmith.
* Vulcan in the ''Literature/BookOfSwords'' series, who made the twelve eponymous swords, each a perfectly made sword with incredibly powerful magical abilities. Played with, perhaps, in that he could only do it once and came to forget how he did it.
* In ''Literature/TheBalancedSword'', the Spiritsmith has practiced his craft for thousands of years, studied under masters of every form of weapon and armor making in the world, and produces work so good that even the gods themselves offer him commissions. When he's not needed elsewhere, he makes his home at the top of a tall mountain in a forbidding mountain range, and even if a person can find out which mountain, there are a bunch of rules about when you can climb it and what equipment you're allowed to use to make sure the only people who make it to his doorstep are ones who are worth his time.
* In ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', only the most skilled smiths such as Tobho Mott, the master armorer in King's Landing, know how to work Valyrian steel. He is the smith who [[spoiler:reforged the Starks' Valyrian steel greatsword Ice]] into the swords Widow's Wail and Oathkeeper on Tywin Lannister's request. Mott also claims to be the only armorer in King's Landing who can tint armor without paint.
* ''Literature/FeralTheStoryOfAHalfOrc'' has Char. A half-Orc blacksmith who makes the sort of armor that wouldn't look out of place in most sci-fi stories, and can do some crazy things with limited materials. Over the course of the story, he is responsible for two different armors, both of which enhance physical ability, feature jumpjets that increase leaping height, and one of which increases magical power. He also makes a crude blunderbuss, a knife, and gauntlet that emits electricity, and makes chromoly steel. All in the course of a couple weeks.
* ''Literature/TheReunionWithTwelveFascinatingGoddesses'' has Zesca, the goddess of weapons and warfare. She can make weapons that allow even the unskilled to use the power of Spirits and is also the one who forged Tooi's sword [[CoolSword Zodiac]].
* ''Literature/{{Renegades}}'' has several prodigies with the ability to forge supernatural objects. Among them is a medieval blacksmith who crafted an amulet that grants IdealIllnessImmunity, Nova's father, who could weave a strange substance into magical items, and Captain Chromium, who can summon and shape his eponymous metal, making it indestructible to all but him in the process. The Renegades have a warehouse full of artifacts made by such prodigies.
* ''Literature/{{Uprooted}}'': Alosha the Witch specializes in smithing. She forges magical blades for Polya's elite troops, but her ''magnum opus'' is a sword that she spent a full century imbuing with the power to ''drink life''. Her name even means "The Sword" in the LanguageOfMagic.
* In ''Literature/TheIrregularAtMagicHighSchool'', spells are what is smithed. They're a bit like suits: anyone with magical talent and enough power can cast one, but spells tailored to someone's specific eidos signature will always be faster and less exhausting than the generic version. A really good spell engineer can amplify a magician's power several levels beyond what s/he could achieve on their own, which is why engineers are often kept on retainer by wealthy magicians and the ones who have built superweapons have to have their names registered with the government.
** In accordance with trope tradition, one of the world's ''best'' magic-engineers- Tatsuya Shiba- is a cynical, war-hardened veteran who wants only to live in relative isolation with his sister. The main reason he keeps his identity secret is because it's the only way he can get a moment's peace from would-be patrons.
* In her time, [[CoolOldLady Sister Lashan]] would've counted herself as merely a very good mage-smith, making very good swords with modest, lasting, useful enchantments on them. Then soldiers overran her home enclave and killed anyone they didn't abduct, and she made a HeroicSacrifice to seal herself into one of her swords and help her apprentice. Thousands of years later, by the time any of the ''Literature/HeraldsOfValdemar'' books actually take place, Need is still going strong and all memory of how to make something like her is gone.
* ''Literature/TheSacredBlacksmith'' has, of course, the blacksmith himself, Luke Ainsworth, thus the title. Two things set him apart: One, he uses higher-quality iron than most smiths in the region and hand-forges rather than casting (which is weaker). Two, he has a magical ability to forge short-lived katanas with the help of his partner Lisa.
* ''Literature/TheUnexploredSummonBloodSign'' character Kyousuke, at the age of ten, created a device enabling the permanent summoning of gods into the human world. He didn't think to include an off switch, which caused [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt a lot of problems for everyone]], but in purely scientific terms it was an unsurpassed accomplishment. He would go on to [[spoiler:overwrite the existing magic system ''twice'', and create a new god, which is like hacking the universe's laws of physics and putting your own code in.]]



* ''Series/ParksAndRecreation'' has an odd and humorous example. While Ron Swanson is something of a handyman as a whole, he's treated as the Ultimate Woodworker- his creations are generally of award-winning quality and astounding, sometimes incredible sturdiness.
-->'''Ron:''' It's the crib I built, I'm giving it to [Chris] and Ann. It's perfectly safe, I tested it by hitting it with my truck. ''(points to heavily-damaged truck)''



* ''Series/ParksAndRecreation'' has an odd and humorous example. While Ron Swanson is something of a handyman as a whole, he's treated as the Ultimate Woodworker- his creations are generally of award-winning quality and astounding, sometimes incredible sturdiness.
-->'''Ron:''' It's the crib I built, I'm giving it to [Chris] and Ann. It's perfectly safe, I tested it by hitting it with my truck. ''(points to heavily-damaged truck)''



* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
** ''TabletopGame/{{Eberron}}'': A high-level Artificer will eventually fall into this. As well, House Cannith which possesses the Mark of Making generally has the appropriate reputation -- the most famously skilled craftsman alive is Merrix d'Cannith, one of the heads of the house, who spends most of his time furthering his ancestor's research into developing the warforged, a race of intelligent constructs they invented. [[spoiler:Though actually it was more like a race they cribbed from bits and pieces left behind in the ancient giants' ruins.]]
** Salamanders are usually this -- not only do they have a [[ProudWarriorRace strong warrior culture]], meaning weapons are in high demand but being [[ElementalEmbodiment fire elementals]] means that they can heat their forges to absurd temperatures and sculpt molten metal with their bare hands.



* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': Three of the Primarchs (basically living gods that were the super-templates for the SpaceMarines) were definitive Ultimate Blacksmiths. Vulkan was raised in a community where blacksmithing was everything, and he made his mark by fighting off an entire horde of Dark Eldar raiders with nothing but a pair of smithing hammers; he was only ever equaled by Fulgrim, a fellow Primarch, whose quirk of choice was being absolutely perfect at ''everything''. [[BilingualBonus Ferrus Manus]] (there are a lot of {{Meaningful Name}}s in ''Warhammer 40k''), meanwhile, once fought a silver dragon and beat it by ''dunking it into a volcanic lava flow''. When he lifted out, his hands were coated in living metal (hence, while never outright stated, the "dragon" is assumed to have actually been a cybernetic god known as a C'tan) that let him forge objects by hammering the materials with his sort-of-bare hands. Ferrus Manus and Fulgrim once actually competed to see who was ''the'' Ultimate Blacksmith. Fulgrim made an awesome warhammer and Ferrus Manus made an awesome sword; upon seeing each others' creations, they both declared the other was the superior smith and swapped weapons.

to:

* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': Three ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'': Purphoros, Theros' god of the Primarchs (basically living gods that were forge and an {{Expy}} of the super-templates Greek Hephaestus, is this by default. [[spoiler: He even forged the [[ImmortalBreaker Godsend]]]]. Like his inspiration, his primary forge is in a volcano, but as an AnthropomorphicPersonification of [[HotBlooded Red mana]], he's much more prone to following his whims, forging masterpieces in a fit of passionate inspiration only to dash them to pieces and reforge them into something else.
* In ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'', the [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame Dwarven]] racial archetype
for the SpaceMarines) were definitive Ultimate Blacksmiths. Vulkan was raised in a community where blacksmithing was everything, Cleric class, the Forgemaster, is essentially this. Instead of having some of the usual Cleric abilities, they have abilities relating to craftsmanship and he made his mark by fighting off an entire horde of Dark Eldar raiders with nothing but a pair of smithing hammers; he was only ever equaled by Fulgrim, a fellow Primarch, whose quirk of choice was being absolutely perfect at ''everything''. [[BilingualBonus Ferrus Manus]] (there are a lot of {{Meaningful Name}}s in ''Warhammer 40k''), meanwhile, once fought a silver dragon metal. It becomes this trope, rather than merely TheBlacksmith, because it gains the "Craft Magic Arms and beat it by ''dunking it into a volcanic lava flow''. When he lifted out, his hands were coated in living metal (hence, Armor" feat at Level 3, while never outright stated, the "dragon" feat usually is assumed to have actually been a cybernetic god known as a C'tan) that let him forge objects by hammering locked until Caster Level 5.
** Before
the materials with his sort-of-bare hands. Ferrus Manus and Fulgrim once actually competed to see who was ''the'' Ultimate Blacksmith. Fulgrim made an awesome warhammer and Ferrus Manus made an awesome sword; upon seeing each others' creations, they both declared the other Forgemaster, there was the superior smith non-racial Soul Forger archetype for the Magus. While it doesn't receive the "Craft Magic Arms and swapped weapons.Armor" feat automatically and can't select it early, Soul Forgers get a large bonus to their skill checks when crafting items and can repair damaged or destroyed magic items ''much'' more easily than most craftsmen.
** The Warpriest class has the Forgepriest archetype, which also gets "Craft Magic Arms and Armor" at level 3 and gains a bonus to crafting checks, albeit a smaller one than what a Soul Forger gets. They also can give their weapons and armor a greater enhancement than most Warpriests can, provided they crafted the items themselves.
* In ''TabletopGame/{{Reign}}'', the Dindavarans have this reputation due to their secret school of magic, which allows them to produce magical swords. They guard their secrets jealously and with good reason since the greatest of weapons require a HumanSacrifice.



* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
** ''TabletopGame/{{Eberron}}'': A high-level Artificer will eventually fall into this. As well, House Cannith which possesses the Mark of Making generally has the appropriate reputation -- the most famously skilled craftsman alive is Merrix d'Cannith, one of the heads of the house, who spends most of his time furthering his ancestor's research into developing the warforged, a race of intelligent constructs they invented. [[spoiler:Though actually it was more like a race they cribbed from bits and pieces left behind in the ancient giants' ruins.]]
** Salamanders are usually this -- not only do they have a [[ProudWarriorRace strong warrior culture]], meaning weapons are in high demand but being [[ElementalEmbodiment fire elementals]] means that they can heat their forges to absurd temperatures and sculpt molten metal with their bare hands.
* In ''TabletopGame/{{Reign}}'', the Dindavarans have this reputation due to their secret school of magic, which allows them to produce magical swords. They guard their secrets jealously and with good reason since the greatest of weapons require a HumanSacrifice.
* In ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'', the [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame Dwarven]] racial archetype for the Cleric class, the Forgemaster, is essentially this. Instead of having some of the usual Cleric abilities, they have abilities relating to craftsmanship and metal. It becomes this trope, rather than merely TheBlacksmith, because it gains the "Craft Magic Arms and Armor" feat at Level 3, while the feat usually is locked until Caster Level 5.
** Before the Forgemaster, there was the non-racial Soul Forger archetype for the Magus. While it doesn't receive the "Craft Magic Arms and Armor" feat automatically and can't select it early, Soul Forgers get a large bonus to their skill checks when crafting items and can repair damaged or destroyed magic items ''much'' more easily than most craftsmen.
** The Warpriest class has the Forgepriest archetype, which also gets "Craft Magic Arms and Armor" at level 3 and gains a bonus to crafting checks, albeit a smaller one than what a Soul Forger gets. They also can give their weapons and armor a greater enhancement than most Warpriests can, provided they crafted the items themselves.
* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'': Purphoros, Theros' god of the forge and an {{Expy}} of the Greek Hephaestus, is this by default. [[spoiler: He even forged the [[ImmortalBreaker Godsend]]]]. Like his inspiration, his primary forge is in a volcano, but as an AnthropomorphicPersonification of [[HotBlooded Red mana]], he's much more prone to following his whims, forging masterpieces in a fit of passionate inspiration only to dash them to pieces and reforge them into something else.

to:

* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
** ''TabletopGame/{{Eberron}}'': A high-level Artificer will eventually fall into this. As well, House Cannith which possesses the Mark of Making generally has the appropriate reputation -- the most famously skilled craftsman alive is Merrix d'Cannith, one
''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': Three of the heads of Primarchs (basically living gods that were the house, who spends most of super-templates for the SpaceMarines) were definitive Ultimate Blacksmiths. Vulkan was raised in a community where blacksmithing was everything, and he made his time furthering his ancestor's research mark by fighting off an entire horde of Dark Eldar raiders with nothing but a pair of smithing hammers; he was only ever equaled by Fulgrim, a fellow Primarch, whose quirk of choice was being absolutely perfect at ''everything''. [[BilingualBonus Ferrus Manus]] (there are a lot of {{Meaningful Name}}s in ''Warhammer 40k''), meanwhile, once fought a silver dragon and beat it by ''dunking it into developing a volcanic lava flow''. When he lifted out, his hands were coated in living metal (hence, while never outright stated, the warforged, a race of intelligent constructs they invented. [[spoiler:Though "dragon" is assumed to have actually it been a cybernetic god known as a C'tan) that let him forge objects by hammering the materials with his sort-of-bare hands. Ferrus Manus and Fulgrim once actually competed to see who was more like a race ''the'' Ultimate Blacksmith. Fulgrim made an awesome warhammer and Ferrus Manus made an awesome sword; upon seeing each others' creations, they cribbed from bits and pieces left behind in both declared the ancient giants' ruins.]]
** Salamanders are usually this -- not only do they have a [[ProudWarriorRace strong warrior culture]], meaning weapons are in high demand but being [[ElementalEmbodiment fire elementals]] means that they can heat their forges to absurd temperatures and sculpt molten metal with their bare hands.
* In ''TabletopGame/{{Reign}}'', the Dindavarans have this reputation due to their secret school of magic, which allows them to produce magical swords. They guard their secrets jealously and with good reason since the greatest of weapons require a HumanSacrifice.
* In ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'', the [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame Dwarven]] racial archetype for the Cleric class, the Forgemaster, is essentially this. Instead of having some of the usual Cleric abilities, they have abilities relating to craftsmanship and metal. It becomes this trope, rather than merely TheBlacksmith, because it gains the "Craft Magic Arms and Armor" feat at Level 3, while the feat usually is locked until Caster Level 5.
** Before the Forgemaster, there
other was the non-racial Soul Forger archetype for the Magus. While it doesn't receive the "Craft Magic Arms superior smith and Armor" feat automatically and can't select it early, Soul Forgers get a large bonus to their skill checks when crafting items and can repair damaged or destroyed magic items ''much'' more easily than most craftsmen.
** The Warpriest class has the Forgepriest archetype, which also gets "Craft Magic Arms and Armor" at level 3 and gains a bonus to crafting checks, albeit a smaller one than what a Soul Forger gets. They also can give their weapons and armor a greater enhancement than most Warpriests can, provided they crafted the items themselves.
* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'': Purphoros, Theros' god of the forge and an {{Expy}} of the Greek Hephaestus, is this by default. [[spoiler: He even forged the [[ImmortalBreaker Godsend]]]]. Like his inspiration, his primary forge is in a volcano, but as an AnthropomorphicPersonification of [[HotBlooded Red mana]], he's much more prone to following his whims, forging masterpieces in a fit of passionate inspiration only to dash them to pieces and reforge them into something else.
swapped weapons.



* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy''
** A dwarf makes a powerful sword in some of the games.
** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIV'' has two for the Pink Tails / Adamantine equipment: the nameless Tail Guy, who gives you trinkets for bringing him tails ([[RandomlyDrops which drop from monsters at an absolutely disgusting rate]]), including Adamant Armor and Onion Swords, and the nugget of [[GreenRocks adamantite]] he gives you for bringing him the Rat Tail. You take the adamantite to Kokkol (who lives at the edge of the underworld, and yes, there are dragons where he hangs around), and a few plot events later, your dear old SwordOfPlotAdvancement has become the [[InfinityMinusOneSword Excalibur]].
** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIX'' has one, in the form of Hades, situated in the FinalDungeon, and he's actually a GOD, and you have to beat him up. And he is also ''hidden'' somewhat offscreen nicely, so you could easily skip him without a guide if you're not rummaging every single corner.
** A Goblin fulfills this task in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXI'' for the Relic Weapons, the most powerful weapons that exist... except for the very last upgrade, which is done [[EmpathicWeapon by the weapon itself]](oddly enough, the ''weapon'' charges more than the [[HonestJohnsDealership ripoff artist]]).
** Gerolt from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'' takes up the mantle of the Relic Weapon maker. He's, simply put, a lazy drunkard who swears like a sailor and sends you run errands in every single corner of the world just to get you off his back for a couple of minutes, but he's also the best craftsman the world has ever known, no joke. Have some ancient worn-out armor that was the cream of the crop back then? Just toss it in his furnace with some items and ''the armor will travel back in time'' until when it was pristine. Need to restore a very powerful and ancient weapon? Go do an enormous FetchQuest and come back to him, just to hear him say he made up the quest so you'll leave him alone, but since you went through it, might as well take ''a couple minutes'' off his "drink and snooze" agenda to restore your weapon. Need to fix some ancient technology that makes the current one look like wind-up toys and puzzles even the greatest scholars? ''No problem'' as long as you piss off and leave him alone after that.
* In ''VideoGame/GranblueFantasy'', Sierokarte is the one who forges and upgrades your Bahamut, Revenant, Xeno, Seraphic, Atma/Ultima, and Class Champion weapons.
* In ''VideoGame/HeroesOfMightAndMagic III: Armageddon's blade'', one of these makes the [[FantasticNuke eponymous weapon]] for [[VillainProtagonist Xeron]].
* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'':
** Biggoron, who made the Biggoron Sword from ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime'' and ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOracleOfSeasons'', the strongest weapon in the games. In ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTheMinishCap'', you get the [[spoiler: Mirror Shield]] from him, instead.
** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast'': The Dwarves Swordsmiths are uniquely able to temper Link's Master Sword into a more powerful blade. Making the sword even better requires no less [[spoiler:than the magic of the Pyramid's Great Fairy]].
** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOracleGames'': The Subrosan Smithies are the only ones who can prepare certain items for Link, including the Pirate's Bell and higher-level shields.
** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaPhantomHourglass'': Zauz, who lives on a secret island. He makes the [[spoiler:Phantom Sword, which is the only way you can defeat the Phantoms, as opposed to merely avoiding them]].
** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkBetweenWorlds'': The Blacksmith in Kakariko Village claims to be the greatest smith in the world, and is the only one who can temper the Master Sword into the stronger Red Sword. Having done that, he remarks that he will likely never make another weapon so fine in his life, and that it could only be improved by someone even better at smithing than he -- but, again, he's the best smith in the world. He's in fact correct, since Link needs to go to another world to find someone who can further temper his blade into the Golden Sword -- the Smith's own Lorulean counterpart, who won't spare more than a contemptuous glance at the Master Sword until it's improved by his alternate self, whose work is the only one fine enough to get him excited at the prospect of smithing again.
--->''"That sword is my masterpiece! That blade couldn't get any sharper. No way, no how. Well, maybe if there was someone better at this than me. But I'm the best blacksmith in the world. So that's that."''
* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'':
** In In the "vanilla" era of the game, it was so that one of the best Blacksmithing sets was made entirely of Dark Iron. Thing is, you had to get the recipes by sucking up to the Thorium Brotherhood Dwarves by collecting iron scraps and iron dust for them. And it took eight pieces of Dark Iron Ore to make one bar of Dark Iron. And you had to go into a ''fucking dungeon'' so that you could smelt the stuff in a furnace hooked up to the freaking ''lava flow''.
** Similarly, when there was only one expansion out, the point of becoming a specialised weaponsmith was that you could forge a special weapon of your chosen type at maximum level. It would start out as a maximum-level practically maximum-quality (ie. "epic") weapon, and then could be upgraded twice after that to make it an even better maximum-level epic, requiring very expensive components but making it pretty [[PenultimateWeapon penultimate]] as far as weapons went. That they didn't automatically add level 80 counterparts in the second expansion must have represented a huge nerfing of the whole specialisation thing.
** There's also a [[http://www.wowpedia.org/David_Wayne lonely blacksmith]] at the literal edge of the world in Terokkar forest, who will forge you a nifty demon-slaying sword after you've jumped through enough hoops and supplied copious amounts of [[AppliedPhlebotinum Phlebotinum]]. While the sword itself isn't all that powerful, he definitely fits the trope.
** The last content patch of Wrath of the Lich King introduces the Ashen Verdict, which, according to Blizzard, is an ''entire faction'' of Ultimate Blacksmiths. In addition to some of the best armor and ammo, you can complete a long-winded quest chain to obtain Shadowmourne, the best two-handed axe so far. It actually starts as a slightly weaker axe, which itself requires more time and money than the entire leveling experience it took to get that far.
** The true Ultimate Blacksmith in the Warcraft story is Khaz'goroth, a member of the Pantheon, the ruling body of the Titans; while he hasn't been involved in the creations of any ultimate weapons(though his smithing hammer is more powerful than any known weapon on the planet), what he has crafted are the earthen(protodwarves), the mountain giants, and, oh yea, the ''mountains themselves''.
** Another important figure who fits into this trope would be none other than King Magni Bronzebeard, who lead the dwarves of Ironforge until ''World of Warcraft: Cataclysm''. It was by his hand that the Ashbringer- a holy blade which shattered [[EvilWeapon Frostmourne]] in the final confrontation with the Lich King- had been created. He also created a weapon for Prince Anduin Wrynn called Fearbreaker. It was the only object that remained within the blast radius of the mana bomb dropped on Theramore.
* ''VideoGame/WorldOfMana'':
** Watts in several of the games. He forges and upgrades the many types of weapons SD is known for.
** The player character himself in ''VideoGame/LegendOfMana''. With the right materials, you can make just about any kind of equipment imaginable, from joke items like a [[CherryTapping cotton sword]] to [[GameBreaker weapons powerful enough to one-shot pretty much everything.]]
* Melchior from ''VideoGame/ChronoTrigger'' is one of the earliest video game examples.
* ''VideoGame/ChronoCross'' had two alternate universe versions of their ultimate blacksmith, Zappa, one of whom can join your party. If you bring playable-Zappa to talk with NPC-Zappa, they'll combine forces and figure out how to forge the rainbow shell into powerful weapons, most of which are [[InfinityPlusOneSword infinity-plus-one swords]].
* In the ''VideoGame/{{Suikoden}}'' series:
** There's always an Ultimate Blacksmith for you to recruit. He's always the only one capable of upgrading weapons to the max level. For the most part, he starts out somewhat worse, but gets better as you bring him better hammers... and of course, the Golden Hammer is the best one. Somehow.
** The first, original, ''VideoGame/{{Suikoden|I}}'', however, did things differently - you recruited a whole ''bunch'' of smiths, each better than the last, and finally had to go find the Ultimate Smith (who was, indeed, hidden in a hut at the end of forever) - and bring all of the other smiths with you since they're all students of his. Together, they persuade him to join you!
* Ryu-kan from ''VideoGame/SkiesOfArcadia''. He even lives on a tiny remote island up until you recruit him.

to:

* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy''
** A dwarf makes a powerful sword in some of the games.
** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIV'' has two for the Pink Tails / Adamantine equipment: the nameless Tail Guy, who gives you trinkets for bringing him tails ([[RandomlyDrops which drop from monsters at an absolutely disgusting rate]]), including Adamant Armor and Onion Swords, and the nugget of [[GreenRocks adamantite]] he gives you for bringing him the Rat Tail. You take the adamantite to Kokkol (who lives at the edge of the underworld, and yes, there are dragons where he hangs around), and a few plot events later, your dear old SwordOfPlotAdvancement has become the [[InfinityMinusOneSword Excalibur]].
** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIX'' has one, in the form of Hades, situated in the FinalDungeon, and he's actually a GOD, and you have to beat him up. And he is also ''hidden'' somewhat offscreen nicely, so you could easily skip him without a guide if you're not rummaging every single corner.
** A Goblin fulfills this task in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXI'' for the Relic Weapons, the most powerful weapons that exist... except for the very last upgrade, which is done [[EmpathicWeapon by the weapon itself]](oddly enough, the ''weapon'' charges more than the [[HonestJohnsDealership ripoff artist]]).
** Gerolt from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'' takes up the mantle of the Relic Weapon maker. He's, simply put, a lazy drunkard who swears like a sailor and sends you run errands in every single corner of the world just to get you off his back for a couple of minutes, but he's also the best craftsman the world has ever known, no joke. Have some ancient worn-out armor that was the cream of the crop back then? Just toss it in his furnace with some items and ''the armor will travel back in time'' until when it was pristine. Need to restore a very powerful and ancient weapon? Go do an enormous FetchQuest and come back to him, just to hear him say he made up the quest so you'll leave him alone, but since you went through it, might as well take ''a couple minutes'' off his "drink and snooze" agenda to restore your weapon. Need to fix some ancient technology that makes the current one look like wind-up toys and puzzles even the greatest scholars? ''No problem'' as
As long as you piss off and leave him alone after that.
* In ''VideoGame/GranblueFantasy'', Sierokarte is the one who forges and upgrades your Bahamut, Revenant, Xeno, Seraphic, Atma/Ultima, and Class Champion weapons.
* In ''VideoGame/HeroesOfMightAndMagic III: Armageddon's blade'', one of these makes the [[FantasticNuke eponymous weapon]] for [[VillainProtagonist Xeron]].
* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'':
** Biggoron, who made the Biggoron Sword from ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime'' and ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOracleOfSeasons'', the strongest weapon in the games. In ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTheMinishCap'', you get the [[spoiler: Mirror Shield]] from him, instead.
** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast'': The Dwarves Swordsmiths are uniquely able to temper Link's Master Sword into a more powerful blade. Making the sword even better requires no less [[spoiler:than the magic of the Pyramid's Great Fairy]].
** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOracleGames'': The Subrosan Smithies are the only ones who can prepare certain items for Link, including the Pirate's Bell and higher-level shields.
** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaPhantomHourglass'': Zauz, who lives on a secret island. He makes the [[spoiler:Phantom Sword, which is the only way you can defeat the Phantoms, as opposed to merely avoiding them]].
** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkBetweenWorlds'': The Blacksmith in Kakariko Village claims to be the greatest smith in the world, and is the only one who can temper the Master Sword into the stronger Red Sword. Having done that, he remarks that he will likely never make another weapon so fine in his life, and that it could only be improved by someone even better at smithing than he -- but, again, he's the best smith in the world. He's in fact correct, since Link needs to go to another world to find someone who can further temper his blade into the Golden Sword -- the Smith's own Lorulean counterpart, who won't spare more than a contemptuous glance at the Master Sword until it's improved by his alternate self, whose work is the only one fine enough to get him excited at the prospect of smithing again.
--->''"That sword is my masterpiece! That blade couldn't get any sharper. No way, no how. Well, maybe if there was someone better at this than me. But I'm the best blacksmith in the world. So that's that."''
* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'':
** In In the "vanilla" era of the game, it was so that one of the best Blacksmithing sets was made entirely of Dark Iron. Thing is, you had to get the recipes by sucking up to the Thorium Brotherhood Dwarves by collecting iron scraps and iron dust for them. And it took eight pieces of Dark Iron Ore to make one bar of Dark Iron. And you had to go into a ''fucking dungeon'' so that you could smelt the stuff in a furnace hooked up to the freaking ''lava flow''.
** Similarly, when there was only one expansion out, the point of becoming a specialised weaponsmith was that you could forge a special weapon of your chosen type at maximum level. It would start out as a maximum-level practically maximum-quality (ie. "epic") weapon, and then could be upgraded twice after that to make it an even better maximum-level epic, requiring very expensive components but making it pretty [[PenultimateWeapon penultimate]] as far as weapons went. That they didn't automatically add level 80 counterparts in the second expansion must
have represented a huge nerfing of the whole specialisation thing.
** There's also a [[http://www.wowpedia.org/David_Wayne lonely blacksmith]] at the literal edge of the world
items, Gordon in Terokkar forest, who will ''VideoGame/AgarestSenki2'' can forge you a nifty demon-slaying sword after you've jumped through enough hoops and supplied copious amounts of [[AppliedPhlebotinum Phlebotinum]]. While the sword itself isn't all that powerful, he definitely fits the trope.
** The last content patch of Wrath of the Lich King introduces the Ashen Verdict, which, according to Blizzard,
ultimate weapon whatsoever.
* Black Gnarl from ''VideoGame/AnvilOfDawn''
is an ''entire faction'' of Ultimate Blacksmiths. In addition to some of the best armor and ammo, you can complete a long-winded quest chain to obtain Shadowmourne, the best two-handed axe so far. It actually starts as a slightly weaker axe, which itself requires more time and money than the entire leveling experience it took to get that far.
** The true
basically Ultimate Blacksmith in the Warcraft story is Khaz'goroth, a member The Videogame. Most of the Pantheon, the ruling body game consist of the Titans; while he hasn't been involved in the creations gathering items for forging of any ultimate weapons(though his smithing hammer is more powerful than any known weapon on the planet), what he has crafted are the earthen(protodwarves), the mountain giants, and, oh yea, the ''mountains themselves''.
** Another important figure who fits into this trope would be none other than King Magni Bronzebeard, who lead the dwarves of Ironforge until ''World of Warcraft: Cataclysm''. It was by his hand that the Ashbringer- a holy blade which shattered [[EvilWeapon Frostmourne]] in the
final confrontation with the Lich King- had been created. He also created a weapon for Prince Anduin Wrynn called Fearbreaker. It was the only object that remained within the blast radius of the mana bomb dropped on Theramore.
* ''VideoGame/WorldOfMana'':
** Watts in several of the games. He forges and upgrades the many types of weapons SD is known for.
** The player character himself in ''VideoGame/LegendOfMana''. With the right materials, you can make just about any kind of equipment imaginable, from joke items like a [[CherryTapping cotton sword]] to [[GameBreaker weapons powerful enough to one-shot pretty much everything.]]
* Melchior from ''VideoGame/ChronoTrigger'' is one of the earliest video game examples.
* ''VideoGame/ChronoCross'' had two alternate universe versions of their ultimate blacksmith, Zappa, one of whom can join your party. If you bring playable-Zappa to talk with NPC-Zappa, they'll combine forces and figure out how to forge the rainbow shell into powerful weapons, most of which are [[InfinityPlusOneSword infinity-plus-one swords]].
Macguffin. Forging scene even have some catchy singing [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGwnmlglEi0 as seen here]]
* In ''VideoGame/ArxFatalis'', the ''VideoGame/{{Suikoden}}'' series:
** There's always
book theorizing on creating an Ultimate Blacksmith for you Weapon deems dwarves as these, as they possess the best equipment and skills. However, upon arriving to recruit. dwarven settlement, Am Shaegar finds them [[spoiler: all mauled and eaten by the Black Beast they [[DugTooDeep accidentally unearthed]]]]. Luckily, what he also finds is [[spoiler: a fully automated smelter and forge, so he can just mine a chunk of mithril in the Beast's lair and make the sword himself]].
* Boutell in ''VideoGame/{{Avernum}} 1''.
He's always the only one capable of upgrading weapons to the max level. For the most part, he starts out somewhat worse, but gets better as you bring him better hammers... and of course, the Golden Hammer is the best one. Somehow.
** The first, original, ''VideoGame/{{Suikoden|I}}'', however, did things differently - you recruited a whole ''bunch'' of smiths, each better than the last,
blacksmiths around, and finally had to go find the Ultimate Smith (who was, indeed, hidden in a hut at the end of forever) - and bring all of the other smiths with you since they're all students of his. Together, they persuade him to join you!
* Ryu-kan from ''VideoGame/SkiesOfArcadia''. He even lives on a tiny remote island up until you recruit him.
he knows it.



* ''[[VideoGame/MarioAndLuigiSuperstarSaga Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga]]'' has the Hammerhead Bros., who can turn Hoohoo Blocks into hammers.

to:

* ''[[VideoGame/MarioAndLuigiSuperstarSaga Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga]]'' has Along with being an accomplished swordsman, Rath from ''VideoGame/{{Battleborn}}'' is an accomplished bladesmith.
** According to various lore challenges of his, he crafted
the Hammerhead Bros., who can turn Hoohoo Blocks into hammers.phasic blades he and his order Keepers of the Blade use, including Rath's Axiom and Praxis. After his confrontation with Rendain, Rath sought out and killed the other twenty Keepers as they decided to remain in Rendain's service rather than honor their vow to the Empress. Having defeated the Keepers, Rath used their blades and Rendain's own dagger which Rath tried to kill Rendain with to forge his massive {{BFS}} which Rath named "Precept".
** In addition to his own blades and the blades he once forged for his former fellow Keepers, Rath also forged Caldarius' phasic blade according to another one of Rath's lore challenges.
** It's also speculated in one of Galilea's lore that Rath may have had a hand in crafting Galilea's {{BFS}} Shadowcry as her sword uses the hilt of a standard-issue Arbiter energy weapon, but its blade appears to have been modified after its initial fabrication with informed speculation suggesting Jennerit influence in the blade's design.



* Ulgrim in ''VideoGame/{{Brawlhalla}}'' is a blacksmith from Asgard, so he has designed many weapons and armors (including [[MysteriousPast Orion's armor]] and many of the gadgets used in-game. As a playable character, he participates in the Valhalla tournament to both test and show off his creations.
* The player character in ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaCurseOfDarkness''. You get to buy some majorly weaksauce weapons and get one or two handed out to you early on. Then you make the rest, of your ENTIRE ARSENAL, by using a crafting system involving some [[RandomlyDrops rather rare]] materials.
* ''VideoGame/CaveStory'' had the Hermit Gunsmith, from whom you [[KleptomaniacHero steal]] the first weapon, and if you [[MagikarpPower hang on to it through some of the toughest fights in the game]], he'll turn it into an [[InfinityPlusOneSword Infinity Plus One]] [[HandCannon Pistol]] for you.
* ''VideoGame/ChronoCross'' had two alternate universe versions of their ultimate blacksmith, Zappa, one of whom can join your party. If you bring playable-Zappa to talk with NPC-Zappa, they'll combine forces and figure out how to forge the rainbow shell into powerful weapons, most of which are [[InfinityPlusOneSword infinity-plus-one swords]].
* Melchior from ''VideoGame/ChronoTrigger'' is one of the earliest video game examples.
* High levels of the Forge aspect in ''VideoGame/CultistSimulator'' come with this benefit. Repairing broken magical artifacts is just the beginning, for the masters of Forge work with materials [[InsubstantialIngredients far more subtle than mere steel]]. The true Forge aspirant can reforge their very ''selves'' into something [[HumanoidAbomination altogether greater and more terrible]].
* ''VideoGame/DarkSouls'':
** In ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsI'', each blacksmith you come across specializes in a particular weapon ascension path, so whomever you decide is the "ultimate" one depends on your playstyle. Usually though, it's a toss-up between Andre of Astora and the Giant Blacksmith in Anor Londo.
*** Andre is the first blacksmith you'll meet if you play the game along the expected path and specializes in the BoringButPractical Normal ascension path, as well as [[HolyHandGrenade Divine]] and [[CastingAShadow Occult]] weapons useful for Faith specialists and to [[TurnUndead counter necromancy.]]
*** The Giant Blacksmith, on the other hand, is relatively difficult to reach compared to the other three blacksmiths and he is the only smith able to forge unique weapons with boss souls. He can also infuse normal weapons with lightning, the element associated with the GodEmperor Gwyn himself.
*** Rickert describes himself as the "best blacksmith in all of [[TheMagocracy Vinheim]]" and can ascend Magic weapons that scale with Intelligence, fittingly useful for sorcerers.
*** Vamos is the only smith who can create [[FlamingWeapon Fire]] and [[EntropyAndChaosMagic Chaos]] weapons, the latter of which [[MinmaxersDelight scales with liquid humanity instead of levelled stats]], making it a favorite of the [[Memes/DarkSouls Giantdad]] build and other players who want to avoid levelling Strength or Dexterity beyond the minimum needed to wield their weapons.
** ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsII'' splits it up. Lenigrast will say, if asked, that no modern blacksmith knows how to use an Ember to ascend weapons anymore, but some searching will reveal [=McDuff=], who does remember that ancient art and can infuse weapons with any element provided he has the proper materials. Unfortunately, he's also completely insane. Ornifex, meanwhile, is the only blacksmith that knows how to forge unique weapons out of boss souls (Straid can also trade unique weapons for boss souls, but he's a sorcerer, not a blacksmith).
** In ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsIII'', Andre [[TheBusCameBack returns]] and becomes this trope by virtue of being the ''only'' blacksmith in the game, giving him not only his old ascension paths but those once used by his peers from the first game as well, including the Giant Blacksmith.



* ''Franchise/DragonAge'':
** ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins'' has Wade of Wade's Emporium. He considers himself to be more of an artist than a businessman ([[TalkerAndDoer his partner is the one stuck worrying about money]]) and jumps at the chance to forge powerful armor with Drake [[spoiler: and Dragon]] Scales. Although he will forge the armor sets free of charge, paying him enough extra gold nets you superior armor.
*** The ''Warden's Keep'' DLC has Mikhael Dryden, who will appear at the Soldier's Peak after you beat the associated quest. Given a lump of Meteor Metal, he'll forge Starfang, a Longsword, or a Greatsword that is superior to pretty much every other weapon in its class in the unmodded original game.
*** Wade and Herren return in ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOriginsAwakening'' and have apparently expanded into forging weapons, too. Give Wade the materials he needs and he will forge [[InfinityPlusOneSword Vigilance]], a sword so powerful it even merits a mention in the epilogue.
*** Branka of House Branka was such an extraordinary smith that she was made a noble and elevated to a Paragon, the divine ancestors of the dwarves, during her lifetime. The actual achievement that got her the honor wasn't smithing directly, it was developing a form of "smokeless coal" which increased city-wide production and ended the scourge of Black Lung. However, even she is by far surpassed by the Paragon Caradin, who created a magical forge to craft the Golems used by the Ancient Dwarven Empire to combat the Darkspawn, but his Thaig and his secrets [[LostSuperweapon were lost]] during the First Blight. Two years before the start of the game, Branka led her entire house (except for her husband Oghren) into the Deep Roads on an expedition to find it [[spoiler: and is ultimately revealed to have sacrificed them ''all'' either to the Darkspawn or to test the Thaig's defenses, overwhelmed by [[GoldFever her desire to claim the forge]]]].
** Dagna in ''VideoGame/DragonAgeInquisition'' may have chosen to study magic as an artificer and rune crafter, but she's still a former member of the Dwarven Smith Caste. Smithing is in her blood and it shows; she is able to forge Masterwork equipment ''and'' craft runes for you. Much to the chagrin of Haven's former blacksmith Herritt, who finds himself OvershadowedByAwesome. And while she isn't able to [[ReforgedBlade reforge]] a LegendaryWeapon like a typical Ultimate Blacksmith when given the pieces, she is able to use them as inspiration to forge a new sword. Played with in that she isn't the best master smith or best master enchanter, but she is the world's only expert on the interactions between the two fields and the scientific examination of magic in general.
* ''Franchise/DragonQuest'':
** In ''VideoGame/DragonQuestIII'', the Tool Shop owner in Kol serves this function in an unadvertised capacity: he doesn't say anything about his past as a blacksmith, you only hear about it from other [=NPCs=]. And he makes the Sword of Kings with zero fanfare: you have to sell the Orichalcum to him, leave town and come back some time later, only to find that he's now selling the Sword of Kings for slightly more than he bought that Orichalcum. One Legendary Sword, made to order!
** In ''VideoGame/DragonQuestVI'' after acquiring the [[SwordOfPlotAdvancement legendary sword]], you need to find the blacksmith in Turnscote capable of repairing the sword.
* ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'':
** ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIIMorrowind Morrowind]]'':
*** Yagrum Bagarn, [[spoiler:[[TheLastOfHisKind the last living]] [[OurDwarvesAreDifferent Dwemer]]]]. He was formerly a Master Crafter (combining this trope with the {{Magitek}} of the Dwemer) in service to Lord Kagrenac (the legendary Dwemer MadScientist). He was an in an undescribed "outer realm" when whatever calamity occurred that wiped out his people. He caught [[BodyHorror the Corprus Disease]] at some point after[[note]]it isn't clear ''how'' long after, as he mentions having caught Corprus "a long, long time ago" but also that he spent years searching for other Dwemer survivors before that[[/note]] and now lives in the Corprusarium. If completing the main quest via the "[[TakeAThirdOption Backpath]]" method, he is [[spoiler:the only person capable of "jury-rigging" the [[ArtifactOfDoom Wraithguard]]]] for you to use.
*** Sirollus Saccus is the Master Trainer in the Armorer skill, able to train the player all the way up to the cap of 100. (A bug in the vanilla game causes him to not offer the Training service, but it has been patched.)
** ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]''
*** Eorlund Gray-mane, the Companions' smith and the man in charge of running the legendary Sky-forge, is one. During the Companions' quest line, he will eventually forge you a brand new Skyforge Steel weapon (a DiscOneNuke). Later, he will [[ReforgedBlade reforge]] the [[LegendaryWeapon legendary Wuuthrad]] once the fragments of the ancient axe are gathered. He is also the Master Smithing trainer, meaning he can help you become an Ultimate Blacksmith in your own right. In-universe, he is quite rightly regarded as the best smith in all of Skyrim, although the smiths at the entrance to Whiterun get more business because Eorlund does his work mostly for the pleasure of smithing, particularly for the Companions.
*** His UnknownRival in Windhelm however claims that Eorlund's craftsmanship is less because of his skill and more because of the powers of the Skyforge, although it's unclear whether this is just [[GreenEyedMonster envy talking]] or actually holds a grain of truth. Balimund of Riften is another rival smith, who admits that he's taken to stoking his forge with fire salts to give him an edge and allow him to compete with Eorlund's Skyforge Steel.
*** With ''Skyrim'' being the first game in the series that allows for crafting weapons and armor directly from source materials, [[PlayerCharacter the Dragonborn]] can become an ultimate blacksmith by advancing the Smithing skill enough, to the point where you can forge Daedric armour and weaponry and rediscover how to create Dragonscale or Dragonplate armours. With the ''Dawnguard'' and ''Dragonborn'' DLC installed, the Dragonborn is also able to craft Dragonbone weaponry as well as expand their repertoire to become the Ultimate Blacksmith of Solstheim as well.
* Nikolai, the amnesiac blacksmith in ''VideoGame/ExitFate''. If you introduce him to every other blacksmith in the game, he can, unlike any NPC blacksmith, upgrade any weapon to its highest level (each character has a signature weapon you improve, rather than replace with better versions). Since your 75-man army carry some really mixed weaponry, this means Nikolai is immensely versatile, at least - any regular blacksmith can improve a sword or an axe, but a harp? A pen? A ''Handbag''? A set of ''teeth, still attached to the dog wielding them''?



* Boutell in ''VideoGame/{{Avernum}} 1''. He's one of the best blacksmiths around, and he knows it.
* ''VideoGame/ShiningSeries'':
** The Dwarven Blacksmith in ''VideoGame/ShiningForceII'' was the only one who could turn pieces of mithril into the ultimate weapons for each character. Of course, the fact that he randomly decided which weapon to make also meant that he was also classified as a ScrappyMechanic.
** Happens in ''VideoGame/ShiningForceIII'' where (in Part 1 at any rate) there are only two blacksmiths that could work with {{Mithril}}. One hidden at around 3/4 of the way through the game and another right at the end of the game. The player is expected to find and keep all the mithril they've throughout the game to get the best weapons in the game. Once again the weapons you get were randomised.
* In ''VideoGame/DragonQuestIII'', the Tool Shop owner in Kol serves this function in an unadvertised capacity: he doesn't say anything about his past as a blacksmith, you only hear about it from other [=NPCs=]. And he makes the Sword of Kings with zero fanfare: you have to sell the Orichalcum to him, leave town and come back some time later, only to find that he's now selling the Sword of Kings for slightly more than he bought that Orichalcum. One Legendary Sword, made to order!

to:

* Boutell ''Franchise/FinalFantasy''
** A dwarf makes a powerful sword
in ''VideoGame/{{Avernum}} 1''. He's one some of the best blacksmiths around, and he knows it.
* ''VideoGame/ShiningSeries'':
games.
** The Dwarven Blacksmith ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIII'' got one in ''VideoGame/ShiningForceII'' was the only DS remake - she's the one who could turn pieces of mithril into makes the Ultima Sword. She also makes the ultimate weapons gear for each character. Of course, job class once they reach job level 99.
** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIV'' has two for
the fact that he randomly decided Pink Tails / Adamantine equipment: the nameless Tail Guy, who gives you trinkets for bringing him tails ([[RandomlyDrops which weapon drop from monsters at an absolutely disgusting rate]]), including Adamant Armor and Onion Swords, and the nugget of [[GreenRocks adamantite]] he gives you for bringing him the Rat Tail. You take the adamantite to make also meant that he was also classified as a ScrappyMechanic.
** Happens in ''VideoGame/ShiningForceIII'' where (in Part 1
Kokkol (who lives at any rate) the edge of the underworld, and yes, there are only two blacksmiths that could work with {{Mithril}}. One hidden at around 3/4 of dragons where he hangs around), and a few plot events later, your dear old SwordOfPlotAdvancement has become the way through the game and another right at the end of the game. The player is expected to find and keep all the mithril they've throughout the game to get the best weapons [[InfinityMinusOneSword Excalibur]].
** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIX'' has one,
in the game. Once again form of Hades, situated in the weapons you get were randomised.
* In ''VideoGame/DragonQuestIII'', the Tool Shop owner in Kol serves this function in an unadvertised capacity: he doesn't say anything about his past as
FinalDungeon, and he's actually a blacksmith, you only hear about it from other [=NPCs=]. And he makes the Sword of Kings with zero fanfare: GOD, and you have to sell beat him up. And he is also ''hidden'' somewhat offscreen nicely, so you could easily skip him without a guide if you're not rummaging every single corner.
** A Goblin fulfills this task in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXI'' for
the Orichalcum Relic Weapons, the most powerful weapons that exist... except for the very last upgrade, which is done [[EmpathicWeapon by the weapon itself]](oddly enough, the ''weapon'' charges more than the [[HonestJohnsDealership ripoff artist]]).
** Gerolt from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'' takes up the mantle of the Relic Weapon maker. He's, simply put, a lazy drunkard who swears like a sailor and sends you run errands in every single corner of the world just
to him, leave town get you off his back for a couple of minutes, but he's also the best craftsman the world has ever known, no joke. Have some ancient worn-out armor that was the cream of the crop back then? Just toss it in his furnace with some items and ''the armor will travel back in time'' until when it was pristine. Need to restore a very powerful and ancient weapon? Go do an enormous FetchQuest and come back to him, just to hear him say he made up the quest so you'll leave him alone, but since you went through it, might as well take ''a couple minutes'' off his "drink and snooze" agenda to restore your weapon. Need to fix some time later, only to find ancient technology that he's now selling makes the Sword of Kings current one look like wind-up toys and puzzles even the greatest scholars? ''No problem'' as long as you piss off and leave him alone after that.
* ''VideoGame/GodOfWar'':
** In ''VideoGame/GodOfWarPS4'', Sindri and Brok show up in this game and are just as skilled as their mythological counterparts. They were the ones who forged the Leviathan Axe as a gift
for slightly more than he bought Faye [[spoiler:to make up for their creation Mjolnir being used to slaughter her people the Giants]]. Throughout the game they can further upgrade the Leviathan Axe, making into a truly formidable weapon. Their skill is such that Orichalcum. One Legendary Sword, made they can even [[spoiler:improve upon the Blades of Chaos despite them being weapons imbued with [[WrongContextMagic magic that is foreign to order!Midgard]].]]
** The sequel, ''VideoGame/GodOfWarRagnarok'', introduces the Lady of the Forge; she's such a masterful blacksmith that even Brok is humbled by her presence. He pays her a visit along with Kratos so that she can forge him a weapon capable of killing Heimdall, who is otherwise able to use CombatClairvoyance to dodge all attacks. Following the revelation that she is a mermaid, Mimir comments that he once met [[Myth/ArthurianLegend a lake nymph named Nimue who was also a talented swordsmith]].



* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIII'' got one in the DS remake - she's the one who makes the Ultima Sword. She also makes the ultimate gear for each job class once they reach job level 99.

to:

* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIII'' got one in the DS remake - she's In ''VideoGame/GranblueFantasy'', Sierokarte is the one who forges and upgrades your Bahamut, Revenant, Xeno, Seraphic, Atma/Ultima, and Class Champion weapons.
* In ''VideoGame/HeroesOfMightAndMagic III: Armageddon's blade'', one of these
makes the Ultima Sword. She also makes [[FantasticNuke eponymous weapon]] for [[VillainProtagonist Xeron]].
* The Worker of Secrets in
the ultimate gear ''VideoGame/InfinityBlade'' series is the one who forged the eponymous sword. In the third game [[spoiler:after his role as the true BigBad of the series is revealed]] he forges a bunch of Infinity Weapons that are weaker than the original Blade but still just as capable [[spoiler:of permanently killing Deathless via disrupting their Quantum Identity Patterns (i.e. souls).]] The opening of the third game has a ForgingScene of the Worker forging the Infinity Blade.
* ''VideoGame/KidIcarusUprising'' has Dyntos, the god of the forge. He has created nearly every weapon that Pit uses in-game, including the Three Sacred Treasures and the new Great Sacred Treasure. He can create armies and even entire landscapes indistinguishable from the originals in the blink of an eye. With his powers, he is said to be able to conquer anyone he wishes. Fortunately
for each job class once they reach job level 99.everyone, he's not interested in war.



* ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins'' has Wade of Wade's Emporium. He considers himself to be more of an artist than a businessman ([[TalkerAndDoer his partner is the one stuck worrying about money]]) and jumps at the chance to forge powerful armor with Drake [[spoiler: and Dragon]] Scales. Although he will forge the armor sets free of charge, paying him enough extra gold nets you superior armor.
** The ''Warden's Keep'' DLC has Mikhael Dryden, who will appear at the Soldier's Peak after you beat the associated quest. Given a lump of Meteor Metal, he'll forge Starfang, a Longsword, or a Greatsword that is superior to pretty much every other weapon in its class in the unmodded original game.
** Wade and Herren return in ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOriginsAwakening'' and have apparently expanded into forging weapons, too. Give Wade the materials he needs and he will forge [[InfinityPlusOneSword Vigilance]], a sword so powerful it even merits a mention in the epilogue.
** Branka of House Branka was such an extraordinary smith that she was made a noble and elevated to a Paragon, the divine ancestors of the dwarves, during her lifetime. The actual achievement that got her the honor wasn't smithing directly, it was developing a form of "smokeless coal" which increased city-wide production and ended the scourge of Black Lung. However, even she is by far surpassed by the Paragon Caradin, who created a magical forge to craft the Golems used by the Ancient Dwarven Empire to combat the Darkspawn, but his Thaig and his secrets [[LostSuperweapon were lost]] during the First Blight. Two years before the start of the game, Branka led her entire house (except for her husband Oghren) into the Deep Roads on an expedition to find it [[spoiler: and is ultimately revealed to have sacrificed them ''all'' either to the Darkspawn or to test the Thaig's defenses, overwhelmed by [[GoldFever her desire to claim the forge]]]].
* Dagna in ''VideoGame/DragonAgeInquisition'' may have chosen to study magic as an artificer and rune crafter, but she's still a former member of the Dwarven Smith Caste. Smithing is in her blood and it shows; she is able to forge Masterwork equipment ''and'' craft runes for you. Much to the chagrin of Haven's former blacksmith Herritt, who finds himself OvershadowedByAwesome. And while she isn't able to [[ReforgedBlade reforge]] a LegendaryWeapon like a typical Ultimate Blacksmith when given the pieces, she is able to use them as inspiration to forge a new sword. Played with in that she isn't the best master smith or best master enchanter, but she is the world's only expert on the interactions between the two fields and the scientific examination of magic in general.
* Coaxmetal from ''VideoGame/PlanescapeTorment'' - somewhat hard to get to, but turns out some of the best weapons in the game (including some of the very few swords and [[spoiler:the only weapon in the planes capable of killing ''you'']]). In his words, he [[OmnicidalManiac forges the weapons with which the multiverse will be eventually unmade]], and he's constantly coming up with new implements of destruction because he sees it as necessary and inevitable.
* ''VideoGame/CaveStory'' had the Hermit Gunsmith, from whom you [[KleptomaniacHero steal]] the first weapon, and if you [[MagikarpPower hang on to it through some of the toughest fights in the game]], he'll turn it into an [[InfinityPlusOneSword Infinity Plus One]] [[HandCannon Pistol]] for you.
* The player character in ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaCurseOfDarkness''. You get to buy some majorly weaksauce weapons and get one or two handed out to you early on. Then you make the rest, of your ENTIRE ARSENAL, by using a crafting system involving some [[RandomlyDrops rather rare]] materials.

to:

* ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins'' has Wade of Wade's Emporium. He considers himself Doran used to be more this in ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends'' until he tried to move out of an artist than a businessman ([[TalkerAndDoer his partner secluded retreat. He got kicked in the head by his horse when he was changing the wheel on his cart and suffered severe brain damage. Now he can only make weak, high-quality equipment. One of the few pieces of his ultimate weaponry still in use is the one stuck worrying about money]]) staff Wukong uses.
** Ornn is one, as well,
and jumps at the chance to forge powerful armor with Drake [[spoiler: and Dragon]] Scales. Although he will forge the armor sets free of charge, paying him enough extra gold nets you superior armor.
** The ''Warden's Keep'' DLC has Mikhael Dryden, who will appear at the Soldier's Peak after you beat the associated quest. Given a lump of Meteor Metal, he'll forge Starfang, a Longsword, or a Greatsword that is superior to pretty much every other weapon in its class in the unmodded original game.
** Wade and Herren return in ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOriginsAwakening'' and have apparently expanded into forging weapons, too. Give Wade the materials he needs and he will forge [[InfinityPlusOneSword Vigilance]], a sword so powerful
it even merits a mention in the epilogue.
** Branka of House Branka was such an extraordinary smith that she was made a noble and elevated to a Paragon, the divine ancestors of the dwarves, during her lifetime. The actual achievement that got her the honor wasn't smithing directly, it was developing a form of "smokeless coal" which increased city-wide production and ended the scourge of Black Lung. However, even she is by far surpassed by the Paragon Caradin, who created a magical forge to craft the Golems used by the Ancient Dwarven Empire to combat the Darkspawn, but his Thaig and his secrets [[LostSuperweapon were lost]] during the First Blight. Two years before the start of the game, Branka led her entire house (except for her husband Oghren)
translates into the Deep Roads on an expedition to find it [[spoiler: and is ultimately revealed to have sacrificed them ''all'' either to game as him being the Darkspawn or to test the Thaig's defenses, overwhelmed by [[GoldFever her desire to claim the forge]]]].
* Dagna in ''VideoGame/DragonAgeInquisition'' may have chosen to study magic as an artificer and rune crafter, but she's still a former member of the Dwarven Smith Caste. Smithing is in her blood and it shows; she is able to forge Masterwork equipment ''and'' craft runes for you. Much to the chagrin of Haven's former blacksmith Herritt, who finds himself OvershadowedByAwesome. And while she isn't able to [[ReforgedBlade reforge]] a LegendaryWeapon like a typical Ultimate Blacksmith when given the pieces, she is able to use them as inspiration to forge a new sword. Played with in that she isn't the best master smith or best master enchanter, but she is the world's
only expert on the interactions between the two fields and the scientific examination of magic in general.
* Coaxmetal from ''VideoGame/PlanescapeTorment'' - somewhat hard to get to, but turns out some of the best weapons
champion in the game (including some able to buy (''forge'') items out of the very few swords base, and [[spoiler:the only weapon in the planes capable of killing ''you'']]). In his words, he [[OmnicidalManiac forges the weapons with which the multiverse will be eventually unmade]], and he's constantly coming up with new implements of destruction because he sees it as necessary and inevitable.
* ''VideoGame/CaveStory'' had the Hermit Gunsmith, from whom you [[KleptomaniacHero steal]] the first weapon, and if you [[MagikarpPower hang on
also being able to it through some of the toughest fights in the game]], he'll turn it into an create [[InfinityPlusOneSword Infinity Plus One]] [[HandCannon Pistol]] versions of select items both for you.
himself and his teammates, such as Infinity Edge becoming the Molten Edge (Giving 100 AD instead of 80), Rabadon's Deathcap becoming Rabadon's Deathcrown (Giving 175 AP instead of 135), and so on. One of his lines has him claim to be Doran's mentor.
* Subverted in ''VideoGame/LegaiaIIDuelSaga''. Near the end of the game, the party can access The player character Supreme Weapon Shop and The Ultimate Armor Shop, home of world-class forgers that will sell you powerful weapons. It is subverted in ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaCurseOfDarkness''. You get to buy some majorly weaksauce that said smiths only produces [[InfinityMinusOneSword Infinity -1 class]] weapons and armors; to get the true [[InfinityPlusOneSword best equipment]], the party must take these weapons and [[ItemCrafting forge them one or two handed step further]] using an extremely rare Heaven's Secret.
* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'':
** Biggoron, who made the Biggoron Sword from ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime'' and ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOracleOfSeasons'', the strongest weapon in the games. In ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTheMinishCap'', you get the [[spoiler: Mirror Shield]] from him, instead.
** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast'': The Dwarves Swordsmiths are uniquely able to temper Link's Master Sword into a more powerful blade. Making the sword even better requires no less [[spoiler:than the magic of the Pyramid's Great Fairy]].
** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOracleGames'': The Subrosan Smithies are the only ones who can prepare certain items for Link, including the Pirate's Bell and higher-level shields.
** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaPhantomHourglass'': Zauz, who lives on a secret island. He makes the [[spoiler:Phantom Sword, which is the only way you can defeat the Phantoms, as opposed to merely avoiding them]].
** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkBetweenWorlds'': The Blacksmith in Kakariko Village claims to be the greatest smith in the world, and is the only one who can temper the Master Sword into the stronger Red Sword. Having done that, he remarks that he will likely never make another weapon so fine in his life, and that it could only be improved by someone even better at smithing than he -- but, again, he's the best smith in the world. He's in fact correct, since Link needs to go to another world to find someone who can further temper his blade into the Golden Sword -- the Smith's own Lorulean counterpart, who won't spare more than a contemptuous glance at the Master Sword until it's improved by his alternate self, whose work is the only one fine enough to get him excited at the prospect of smithing again.
--->''"That sword is my masterpiece! That blade couldn't get any sharper. No way, no how. Well, maybe if there was someone better at this than me. But I'm the best blacksmith in the world. So that's that."''
* ''VideoGame/{{Littlewood}}'': Corvus, the sole resident of the Master Forge, turns
out to you early on. Then you make be the rest, one who made the Magic Sword the PlayerCharacter used to defeat the BigBad prior to the beginning of your ENTIRE ARSENAL, by using a the game. In the game proper, his location is the only place where some rare resources can be made into crafting system involving some [[RandomlyDrops rather rare]] materials.materials.
* ''VideoGame/MarioAndLuigiSuperstarSaga'' has the Hammerhead Bros., who can turn Hoohoo Blocks into hammers.



* As long as you have the items, Gordon in ''VideoGame/AgarestSenki2'' can forge you the ultimate weapon whatsoever.
* In ''VideoGame/DragonQuestVI'' after acquiring the [[SwordOfPlotAdvancement legendary sword]], you need to find the blacksmith in Turnscote capable of repairing the sword.



* ''VideoGame/OdinSphere'' has Brom. Even Queen Odette and King Valentine themselves praised his skills, and he's one of the few people able to create a Psypher. Documents in the UpdatedReRelease reveal whole ''teams'' of Ragnanival dwarves armed with superior technology are needed just to match his prowess... and that's ''after'' the fairies had him swear off his forge for years. Still, even he admitted he couldn't create a Psypher as powerful as Odin's [[EpicFlail Balor]]...but one able to destroy it, on the other hand...Brom was also the one who forged the Belderiver which Odette infused with her power. Brom's guilt over what the cursed Belderiver did to its wielders is why he swore off the forge.
* ''VideoGame/TheOuterWorlds'' has Celeste Jolicoeur, a fashion designer whom after completing a [[TwentyBearAsses tedious questline]] for will end up making a fancy new suit for you that happens to be one of the best pieces of unique armor in-game, complete with a substantial bonus to dialog skills. [[spoiler:Sadly, this gets her killed by the Board for thoughtcrimes but at least she finishes the suit before that]].
* ''VideoGame/PathfinderKingmaker'': {{Inverted}} with your dwarf companion Harrim, who ran away from his clan because everything he tried to forge crumbled. During his companion questline it turns out he has [[BlessedWithSuck a rare gift]] from the dwarf god Torag called the Touch of Unmaking, able to dismantle dwarven constructions that have outlived their usefulness.
* Coaxmetal from ''VideoGame/PlanescapeTorment'' - somewhat hard to get to, but turns out some of the best weapons in the game (including some of the very few swords and [[spoiler:the only weapon in the planes capable of killing ''you'']]). In his words, he [[OmnicidalManiac forges the weapons with which the multiverse will be eventually unmade]], and he's constantly coming up with new implements of destruction because he sees it as necessary and inevitable.
* ''VideoGame/RuneScape'' allows you to become this with a high enough smithing level, allowing the player to forge anything from weapons made of the chitin of gigantic scarabs, through armor made of an ancient metal invented by BloodKnight {{Precursors}}, and even reforging a sword made to kill gods.
* ''VideoGame/ShiningSeries'':
** The Dwarven Blacksmith in ''VideoGame/ShiningForceII'' was the only one who could turn pieces of mithril into the ultimate weapons for each character. Of course, the fact that he randomly decided which weapon to make also meant that he was also classified as a ScrappyMechanic.
** Happens in ''VideoGame/ShiningForceIII'' where (in Part 1 at any rate) there are only two blacksmiths that could work with {{Mithril}}. One hidden at around 3/4 of the way through the game and another right at the end of the game. The player is expected to find and keep all the mithril they've throughout the game to get the best weapons in the game. Once again the weapons you get were randomised.
* The Master of the Cathedral of Shadows and Dr. Victor fill the role for the ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei'' series. A bit unusual in that they hardly bother directly working on the blade themselves - they just let their expertise with the MergingMachine fuse demons or materials into the weapons themselves. The amount of NamedWeapons they can provide gives them some major props, though.
** The dwarf you find in Sector Carina in ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiStrangeJourney'' wants to be one, but needs materials to practice. Get him his orders and you will end with the friggin' ''Amenomurakumo''.



* ''Franchise/TouhouProject'': Strongly implied with Suwako: she is a goddess of the earth and can/[[{{Gotterdammerung}} could]] create new soil as she please. She used to own an impressive arsenal of metal weaponry, which she used to pacify the curse-gods of [[GodEmperor her kingdom]]. Unfortunately, it meant little when she fought Kanako, who, being the goddess of rain, rusted all of Suwako's weapons.

to:

* ''Franchise/TouhouProject'': Ryu-kan from ''VideoGame/SkiesOfArcadia''. He even lives on a tiny remote island up until you recruit him.
* In the ''VideoGame/{{Suikoden}}'' series:
** There's always an Ultimate Blacksmith for you to recruit. He's always the only one capable of upgrading weapons to the max level. For the most part, he starts out somewhat worse, but gets better as you bring him better hammers... and of course, the Golden Hammer is the best one. Somehow.
** The first, original, ''VideoGame/{{Suikoden|I}}'', however, did things differently - you recruited a whole ''bunch'' of smiths, each better than the last, and finally had to go find the Ultimate Smith (who was, indeed, hidden in a hut at the end of forever) - and bring all of the other smiths with you since they're all students of his. Together, they persuade him to join you!
* ''VideoGame/TalesOfSymphonia'' featured Altessa. He is notable for ''not'' forging any impossible weapons during the span of game's events, but was the last blacksmith possessing special dwarven smithing arts (Lloyd's stepfather aside, he wasn't noted for such a level of mastery). Said Altessa did something great and horrible in the past though and still retains the knowledge of forging key-crests for exspheres.
* ''Franchise/TouhouProject'':
**
Strongly implied with Suwako: she is a goddess of the earth and can/[[{{Gotterdammerung}} could]] create new soil as she please. She used to own an impressive arsenal of metal weaponry, which she used to pacify the curse-gods of [[GodEmperor her kingdom]]. Unfortunately, it meant little when she fought Kanako, who, being the goddess of rain, rusted all of Suwako's weapons.



* Nikolai, the amnesiac blacksmith in ''VideoGame/ExitFate''. If you introduce him to every other blacksmith in the game, he can, unlike any NPC blacksmith, upgrade any weapon to its highest level (each character has a signature weapon you improve, rather than replace with better versions). Since your 75-man army carry some really mixed weaponry, this means Nikolai is immensely versatile, at least - any regular blacksmith can improve a sword or an axe, but a harp? A pen? A ''Handbag''? A set of ''teeth, still attached to the dog wielding them''?
* ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'':
** ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIIMorrowind Morrowind]]'':
*** Yagrum Bagarn, [[spoiler:[[TheLastOfHisKind the last living]] [[OurDwarvesAreDifferent Dwemer]]]]. He was formerly a Master Crafter (combining this trope with the {{Magitek}} of the Dwemer) in service to Lord Kagrenac (the legendary Dwemer MadScientist). He was an in an undescribed "outer realm" when whatever calamity occurred that wiped out his people. He caught [[BodyHorror the Corprus Disease]] at some point after[[note]]it isn't clear ''how'' long after, as he mentions having caught Corprus "a long, long time ago" but also that he spent years searching for other Dwemer survivors before that[[/note]] and now lives in the Corprusarium. If completing the main quest via the "[[TakeAThirdOption Backpath]]" method, he is [[spoiler:the only person capable of "jury-rigging" the [[ArtifactOfDoom Wraithguard]]]] for you to use.
*** Sirollus Saccus is the Master Trainer in the Armorer skill, able to train the player all the way up to the cap of 100. (A bug in the vanilla game causes him to not offer the Training service, but it has been patched.)
** ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]''
*** Eorlund Gray-mane, the Companions' smith and the man in charge of running the legendary Sky-forge, is one. During the Companions' quest line, he will eventually forge you a brand new Skyforge Steel weapon (a DiscOneNuke). Later, he will [[ReforgedBlade reforge]] the [[LegendaryWeapon legendary Wuuthrad]] once the fragments of the ancient axe are gathered. He is also the Master Smithing trainer, meaning he can help you become an Ultimate Blacksmith in your own right. In-universe, he is quite rightly regarded as the best smith in all of Skyrim, although the smiths at the entrance to Whiterun get more business because Eorlund does his work mostly for the pleasure of smithing, particularly for the Companions.
*** His UnknownRival in Windhelm however claims that Eorlund's craftsmanship is less because of his skill and more because of the powers of the Skyforge, although it's unclear whether this is just [[GreenEyedMonster envy talking]] or actually holds a grain of truth. Balimund of Riften is another rival smith, who admits that he's taken to stoking his forge with fire salts to give him an edge and allow him to compete with Eorlund's Skyforge Steel.
*** With ''Skyrim'' being the first game in the series that allows for crafting weapons and armor directly from source materials, [[PlayerCharacter the Dragonborn]] can become an ultimate blacksmith by advancing the Smithing skill enough, to the point where you can forge Daedric armour and weaponry and rediscover how to create Dragonscale or Dragonplate armours. With the ''Dawnguard'' and ''Dragonborn'' DLC installed, the Dragonborn is also able to craft Dragonbone weaponry as well as expand their repertoire to become the Ultimate Blacksmith of Solstheim as well.
* In ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsI'', each blacksmith you come across specializes in a particular weapon ascension path, so whomever you decide is the "ultimate" one depends on your playstyle. Usually though, it's a toss-up between Andre of Astora and the Giant Blacksmith in Anor Londo.
** Andre is the first blacksmith you'll meet if you play the game along the expected path and specializes in the BoringButPractical Normal ascension path, as well as [[HolyHandGrenade Divine]] and [[CastingAShadow Occult]] weapons useful for Faith specialists and to [[TurnUndead counter necromancy.]]
** The Giant Blacksmith, on the other hand, is relatively difficult to reach compared to the other three blacksmiths and he is the only smith able to forge unique weapons with boss souls. He can also infuse normal weapons with lightning, the element associated with the GodEmperor Gwyn himself.
** Rickert describes himself as the "best blacksmith in all of [[TheMagocracy Vinheim]]" and can ascend Magic weapons that scale with Intelligence, fittingly useful for sorcerers.
** Vamos is the only smith who can create [[FlamingWeapon Fire]] and [[EntropyAndChaosMagic Chaos]] weapons, the latter of which [[MinmaxersDelight scales with liquid humanity instead of levelled stats]], making it a favorite of the [[Memes/DarkSouls Giantdad]] build and other players who want to avoid levelling Strength or Dexterity beyond the minimum needed to wield their weapons.
* ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsII'' splits it up. Lenigrast will say, if asked, that no modern blacksmith knows how to use an Ember to ascend weapons anymore, but some searching will reveal [=McDuff=], who does remember that ancient art and can infuse weapons with any element provided he has the proper materials. Unfortunately, he's also completely insane. Ornifex, meanwhile, is the only blacksmith that knows how to forge unique weapons out of boss souls (Straid can also trade unique weapons for boss souls, but he's a sorcerer, not a blacksmith).
* In ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsIII'', Andre [[TheBusCameBack returns]] and becomes this trope by virtue of being the ''only'' blacksmith in the game, giving him not only his old ascension paths but those once used by his peers from the first game as well, including the Giant Blacksmith.

to:

* Nikolai, Oddly enough, the amnesiac blacksmith in ''VideoGame/ExitFate''. If you introduce him to every other blacksmith [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} Temmie shopkeeper]] in the game, he can, unlike any NPC hidden Temmie village is ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'''s ultimate blacksmith, upgrade any weapon to its highest level (each character has a signature weapon you improve, rather than replace with better versions). Since your 75-man army carry some really mixed weaponry, this means Nikolai is immensely versatile, at least - any regular blacksmith can improve a sword or an axe, but a harp? A pen? A ''Handbag''? A set of ''teeth, still attached to the dog wielding them''?
* ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'':
** ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIIMorrowind Morrowind]]'':
*** Yagrum Bagarn, [[spoiler:[[TheLastOfHisKind the last living]] [[OurDwarvesAreDifferent Dwemer]]]]. He was formerly a Master Crafter (combining this trope with the {{Magitek}} of the Dwemer) in service to Lord Kagrenac (the legendary Dwemer MadScientist). He was an in an undescribed "outer realm" when whatever calamity occurred that wiped out his people. He caught [[BodyHorror the Corprus Disease]] at some point after[[note]]it isn't clear ''how'' long after, as he mentions having caught Corprus "a long, long time ago" but also that he spent years searching for other Dwemer survivors before that[[/note]] and now lives in the Corprusarium. If completing the main quest via the "[[TakeAThirdOption Backpath]]" method, he is [[spoiler:the only person capable of "jury-rigging" the [[ArtifactOfDoom Wraithguard]]]] for you to use.
*** Sirollus Saccus is the Master Trainer in the Armorer skill,
able to train create and sell the strongest armor in the game if the player all the way up to the cap of 100. (A bug in the vanilla game causes him to not offer the Training service, but it has been patched.)
** ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]''
*** Eorlund Gray-mane, the Companions' smith and the man in charge of running the legendary Sky-forge, is one. During the Companions' quest line, he will eventually forge you a brand new Skyforge Steel weapon (a DiscOneNuke). Later, he will [[ReforgedBlade reforge]] the [[LegendaryWeapon legendary Wuuthrad]] once the fragments of the ancient axe are gathered. He is also the Master Smithing trainer, meaning he can help you become an Ultimate Blacksmith in your own right. In-universe, he is quite rightly regarded as the best smith in all of Skyrim, although the smiths at the entrance to Whiterun get more business because Eorlund does his work mostly
pays for the pleasure of smithing, particularly for the Companions.
*** His UnknownRival in Windhelm however claims that Eorlund's craftsmanship is less because of his skill and more because of the powers of the Skyforge, although it's unclear whether this is just [[GreenEyedMonster envy talking]] or actually holds a grain of truth. Balimund of Riften is another rival smith, who admits that he's taken
her to stoking his forge with fire salts go to give him an edge and allow him to compete with Eorlund's Skyforge Steel.
*** With ''Skyrim'' being the first game in the series that allows for crafting weapons and armor directly from source materials, [[PlayerCharacter the Dragonborn]] can become an ultimate blacksmith by advancing the Smithing skill enough, to the point where you can forge Daedric armour and weaponry and rediscover how to create Dragonscale or Dragonplate armours. With the ''Dawnguard'' and ''Dragonborn'' DLC installed, the Dragonborn is also able to craft Dragonbone weaponry as well as expand their repertoire to become the Ultimate Blacksmith of Solstheim as well.
* In ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsI'', each blacksmith you come across specializes in a particular weapon ascension path, so whomever you decide is the "ultimate" one depends on your playstyle. Usually though, it's a toss-up between Andre of Astora and the Giant Blacksmith in Anor Londo.
** Andre is the first blacksmith you'll meet if you play the game along the expected path and specializes in the BoringButPractical Normal ascension path, as well as [[HolyHandGrenade Divine]] and [[CastingAShadow Occult]] weapons useful for Faith specialists and to [[TurnUndead counter necromancy.]]
** The Giant Blacksmith, on the other hand, is relatively difficult to reach compared to the other three blacksmiths and he is the only smith able to forge unique weapons with boss souls. He can also infuse normal weapons with lightning, the element associated with the GodEmperor Gwyn himself.
** Rickert describes himself as the "best blacksmith in all of [[TheMagocracy Vinheim]]" and can ascend Magic weapons that scale with Intelligence, fittingly useful for sorcerers.
** Vamos is the only smith who can create [[FlamingWeapon Fire]] and [[EntropyAndChaosMagic Chaos]] weapons, the latter of which [[MinmaxersDelight scales with liquid humanity instead of levelled stats]], making it a favorite of the [[Memes/DarkSouls Giantdad]] build and other players who want to avoid levelling Strength or Dexterity beyond the minimum needed to wield their weapons.
* ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsII'' splits it up. Lenigrast will say, if asked, that no modern blacksmith knows how to use an Ember to ascend weapons anymore, but some searching will reveal [=McDuff=], who does remember that ancient art and can infuse weapons with any element provided he has the proper materials. Unfortunately, he's also completely insane. Ornifex, meanwhile, is the only blacksmith that knows how to forge unique weapons out of boss souls (Straid can also trade unique weapons for boss souls, but he's a sorcerer, not a blacksmith).
* In ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsIII'', Andre [[TheBusCameBack returns]] and becomes this trope by virtue of being the ''only'' blacksmith in the game, giving him not only his old ascension paths but those once used by his peers from the first game as well, including the Giant Blacksmith.
college.



* Doran used to be this in ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends'' until he tried to move out of his secluded retreat. He got kicked in the head by his horse when he was changing the wheel on his cart and suffered severe brain damage. Now he can only make weak, high-quality equipment. One of the few pieces of his ultimate weaponry still in use is the staff Wukong uses.
** Ornn is one, as well, and it translates into the game as him being the only champion in the game able to buy (''forge'') items out of base, and also being able to create [[InfinityPlusOneSword Infinity Plus One]] versions of select items both for himself and his teammates, such as Infinity Edge becoming the Molten Edge (Giving 100 AD instead of 80), Rabadon's Deathcap becoming Rabadon's Deathcrown (Giving 175 AP instead of 135), and so on. One of his lines has him claim to be Doran's mentor.
* The Master of the Cathedral of Shadows and Dr. Victor fill the role for the ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei'' series. A bit unusual in that they hardly bother directly working on the blade themselves - they just let their expertise with the MergingMachine fuse demons or materials into the weapons themselves. The amount of NamedWeapons they can provide gives them some major props, though.
** The dwarf you find in Sector Carina in ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiStrangeJourney'' wants to be one, but needs materials to practice. Get him his orders and you will end with the friggin' ''Amenomurakumo''.
* Subverted in ''[[VideoGame/LegendOfLegaia Legaia II: Duel Saga]]''. Near the end of the game, the party can access The Supreme Weapon Shop and The Ultimate Armor Shop, home of world-class forgers that will sell you powerful weapons. It is subverted in that said smiths only produces [[InfinityMinusOneSword Infinity -1 class]] weapons and armors; to get the true [[InfinityPlusOneSword best equipment]], the party must take these weapons and [[ItemCrafting forge them one step further]] using an extremely rare Heaven's Secret.
* The Worker of Secrets in the ''VideoGame/InfinityBlade'' series is the one who forged the eponymous sword. In the third game [[spoiler:after his role as the true BigBad of the series is revealed]] he forges a bunch of Infinity Weapons that are weaker than the original Blade but still just as capable [[spoiler:of permanently killing Deathless via disrupting their Quantum Identity Patterns (i.e. souls).]] The opening of the third game has a ForgingScene of the Worker forging the Infinity Blade.
* ''VideoGame/OdinSphere'' has Brom. Even Queen Odette and King Valentine themselves praised his skills, and he's one of the few people able to create a Psypher. Documents in the UpdatedReRelease reveal whole ''teams'' of Ragnanival dwarves armed with superior technology are needed just to match his prowess... and that's ''after'' the fairies had him swear off his forge for years. Still, even he admitted he couldn't create a Psypher as powerful as Odin's [[EpicFlail Balor]]...but one able to destroy it, on the other hand...Brom was also the one who forged the Belderiver which Odette infused with her power. Brom's guilt over what the cursed Belderiver did to its wielders is why he swore off the forge.
* ''VideoGame/TalesOfSymphonia'' featured Altessa. He is notable for ''not'' forging any impossible weapons during the span of game's events, but was the last blacksmith possessing special dwarven smithing arts (Lloyd's stepfather aside, he wasn't noted for such a level of mastery). Said Altessa did something great and horrible in the past though and still retains the knowledge of forging key-crests for exspheres.
* ''VideoGame/RuneScape'' allows you to become this with a high enough smithing level, allowing the player to forge anything from weapons made of the chitin of gigantic scarabs, through armor made of an ancient metal invented by BloodKnight {{Precursors}}, and even reforging a sword made to kill gods.
* In ''VideoGame/ArxFatalis'', the book theorizing on creating an Ultimate Weapon deems dwarves as these, as they possess the best equipment and skills. However, upon arriving to dwarven settlement, Am Shaegar finds them [[spoiler: all mauled and eaten by the Black Beast they [[DugTooDeep accidentally unearthed]]]]. Luckily, what he also finds is [[spoiler: a fully automated smelter and forge, so he can just mine a chunk of mithril in the Beast's lair and make the sword himself]].
* Oddly enough, the [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} Temmie shopkeeper]] in the hidden Temmie village is ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'''s ultimate blacksmith, able to create and sell the strongest armor in the game if the player pays for her to go to college.
* ''VideoGame/KidIcarusUprising'' has Dyntos, the god of the forge. He has created nearly every weapon that Pit uses in-game, including the Three Sacred Treasures and the new Great Sacred Treasure. He can create armies and even entire landscapes indistinguishable from the originals in the blink of an eye. With his powers, he is said to be able to conquer anyone he wishes. Fortunately for everyone, he's not interested in war.
* Along with being an accomplished swordsman, Rath from ''VideoGame/{{Battleborn}}'' is an accomplished bladesmith.
** According to various lore challenges of his, he crafted the phasic blades he and his order Keepers of the Blade use, including Rath's Axiom and Praxis. After his confrontation with Rendain, Rath sought out and killed the other twenty Keepers as they decided to remain in Rendain's service rather than honor their vow to the Empress. Having defeated the Keepers, Rath used their blades and Rendain's own dagger which Rath tried to kill Rendain with to forge his massive {{BFS}} which Rath named "Precept".
** In addition to his own blades and the blades he once forged for his former fellow Keepers, Rath also forged Caldarius' phasic blade according to another one of Rath's lore challenges.
** It's also speculated in one of Galilea's lore that Rath may have had a hand in crafting Galilea's {{BFS}} Shadowcry as her sword uses the hilt of a standard-issue Arbiter energy weapon, but its blade appears to have been modified after its initial fabrication with informed speculation suggesting Jennerit influence in the blade's design.
* High levels of the Forge aspect in ''VideoGame/CultistSimulator'' come with this benefit. Repairing broken magical artifacts is just the beginning, for the masters of Forge work with materials [[InsubstantialIngredients far more subtle than mere steel]]. The true Forge aspirant can reforge their very ''selves'' into something [[HumanoidAbomination altogether greater and more terrible]].
* ''VideoGame/TheOuterWorlds'' has Celeste Jolicoeur, a fashion designer whom after completing a [[TwentyBearAsses tedious questline]] for will end up making a fancy new suit for you that happens to be one of the best pieces of unique armor in-game, complete with a substantial bonus to dialog skills. [[spoiler:Sadly, this gets her killed by the Board for thoughtcrimes but at least she finishes the suit before that]].
* In ''VideoGame/GodOfWarPS4'', Sindri and Brok show up in this game and are just as skilled as their mythological counterparts. They were the ones who forged the Leviathan Axe as a gift for Faye [[spoiler:to make up for their creation Mjolnir being used to slaughter her people the Giants]]. Throughout the game they can further upgrade the Leviathan Axe, making into a truly formidable weapon. Their skill is such that they can even [[spoiler:improve upon the Blades of Chaos despite them being weapons imbued with [[WrongContextMagic magic that is foreign to Midgard]].]]
** The sequel, ''VideoGame/GodOfWarRagnarok'', introduces the Lady of the Forge; she's such a masterful blacksmith that even Brok is humbled by her presence. He pays her a visit along with Kratos so that she can forge him a weapon capable of killing Heimdall, who is otherwise able to use CombatClairvoyance to dodge all attacks. Following the revelation that she is a mermaid, Mimir comments that he once met [[Myth/ArthurianLegend a lake nymph named Nimue who was also a talented swordsmith]].
* Ulgrim in ''VideoGame/{{Brawlhalla}}'' is a blacksmith from Asgard, so he has designed many weapons and armors (including [[MysteriousPast Orion's armor]] and many of the gadgets used in-game. As a playable character, he participates in the Valhalla tournament to both test and show off his creations.
* Black Gnarl from ''VideoGame/AnvilOfDawn'' is basically Ultimate Blacksmith The Videogame. Most of the game consist of gathering items for forging of final Macguffin. Forging scene even have some catchy singing [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGwnmlglEi0 as seen here]]
* ''VideoGame/PathfinderKingmaker'': {{Inverted}} with your dwarf companion Harrim, who ran away from his clan because everything he tried to forge crumbled. During his companion questline it turns out he has [[BlessedWithSuck a rare gift]] from the dwarf god Torag called the Touch of Unmaking, able to dismantle dwarven constructions that have outlived their usefulness.
* ''VideoGame/{{Littlewood}}'': Corvus, the sole resident of the Master Forge, turns out to be the one who made the Magic Sword the PlayerCharacter used to defeat the BigBad prior to the beginning of the game. In the game proper, his location is the only place where some rare resources can be made into crafting materials.

to:

* Doran used to be this ''VideoGame/WorldOfMana'':
** Watts
in ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends'' until he tried to move out of his secluded retreat. He got kicked in the head by his horse when he was changing the wheel on his cart and suffered severe brain damage. Now he can only make weak, high-quality equipment. One several of the few pieces of his ultimate weaponry still in use is games. He forges and upgrades the staff Wukong uses.
many types of weapons SD is known for.
** Ornn is one, as well, and it translates into the game as him being the only champion in the game able to buy (''forge'') items out of base, and also being able to create [[InfinityPlusOneSword Infinity Plus One]] versions of select items both for The player character himself and his teammates, such as Infinity Edge becoming in ''VideoGame/LegendOfMana''. With the Molten Edge (Giving 100 AD instead of 80), Rabadon's Deathcap becoming Rabadon's Deathcrown (Giving 175 AP instead of 135), and so on. One of his lines has him claim to be Doran's mentor.
* The Master of the Cathedral of Shadows and Dr. Victor fill the role for the ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei'' series. A bit unusual in that they hardly bother directly working on the blade themselves - they
right materials, you can make just let their expertise with the MergingMachine fuse demons or materials into the weapons themselves. The amount of NamedWeapons they can provide gives them some major props, though.
** The dwarf you find in Sector Carina in ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiStrangeJourney'' wants to be one, but needs materials to practice. Get him his orders and you will end with the friggin' ''Amenomurakumo''.
* Subverted in ''[[VideoGame/LegendOfLegaia Legaia II: Duel Saga]]''. Near the end of the game, the party can access The Supreme Weapon Shop and The Ultimate Armor Shop, home of world-class forgers that will sell you powerful weapons. It is subverted in that said smiths only produces [[InfinityMinusOneSword Infinity -1 class]] weapons and armors; to get the true [[InfinityPlusOneSword best equipment]], the party must take these weapons and [[ItemCrafting forge them one step further]] using an extremely rare Heaven's Secret.
* The Worker of Secrets in the ''VideoGame/InfinityBlade'' series is the one who forged the eponymous sword. In the third game [[spoiler:after his role as the true BigBad of the series is revealed]] he forges a bunch of Infinity Weapons that are weaker than the original Blade but still just as capable [[spoiler:of permanently killing Deathless via disrupting their Quantum Identity Patterns (i.e. souls).]] The opening of the third game has a ForgingScene of the Worker forging the Infinity Blade.
* ''VideoGame/OdinSphere'' has Brom. Even Queen Odette and King Valentine themselves praised his skills, and he's one of the few people able to create a Psypher. Documents in the UpdatedReRelease reveal whole ''teams'' of Ragnanival dwarves armed with superior technology are needed just to match his prowess... and that's ''after'' the fairies had him swear off his forge for years. Still, even he admitted he couldn't create a Psypher as powerful as Odin's [[EpicFlail Balor]]...but one able to destroy it, on the other hand...Brom was also the one who forged the Belderiver which Odette infused with her power. Brom's guilt over what the cursed Belderiver did to its wielders is why he swore off the forge.
* ''VideoGame/TalesOfSymphonia'' featured Altessa. He is notable for ''not'' forging
about any impossible weapons during the span kind of game's events, but was the last blacksmith possessing special dwarven smithing arts (Lloyd's stepfather aside, he wasn't noted for such a level of mastery). Said Altessa did something great and horrible in the past though and still retains the knowledge of forging key-crests for exspheres.
* ''VideoGame/RuneScape'' allows you to become this with a high enough smithing level, allowing the player to forge anything from weapons made of the chitin of gigantic scarabs, through armor made of an ancient metal invented by BloodKnight {{Precursors}}, and even reforging a sword made to kill gods.
* In ''VideoGame/ArxFatalis'', the book theorizing on creating an Ultimate Weapon deems dwarves as these, as they possess the best
equipment and skills. However, upon arriving to dwarven settlement, Am Shaegar finds them [[spoiler: all mauled and eaten by the Black Beast they [[DugTooDeep accidentally unearthed]]]]. Luckily, what he also finds is [[spoiler: a fully automated smelter and forge, so he can just mine a chunk of mithril in the Beast's lair and make the sword himself]].
* Oddly enough, the [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} Temmie shopkeeper]] in the hidden Temmie village is ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'''s ultimate blacksmith, able to create and sell the strongest armor in the game if the player pays for her to go to college.
* ''VideoGame/KidIcarusUprising'' has Dyntos, the god of the forge. He has created nearly every weapon that Pit uses in-game, including the Three Sacred Treasures and the new Great Sacred Treasure. He can create armies and even entire landscapes indistinguishable
imaginable, from the originals in the blink of an eye. With his powers, he is said joke items like a [[CherryTapping cotton sword]] to be able to conquer anyone he wishes. Fortunately for everyone, he's not interested in war.
* Along with being an accomplished swordsman, Rath from ''VideoGame/{{Battleborn}}'' is an accomplished bladesmith.
** According to various lore challenges of his, he crafted the phasic blades he and his order Keepers of the Blade use, including Rath's Axiom and Praxis. After his confrontation with Rendain, Rath sought out and killed the other twenty Keepers as they decided to remain in Rendain's service rather than honor their vow to the Empress. Having defeated the Keepers, Rath used their blades and Rendain's own dagger which Rath tried to kill Rendain with to forge his massive {{BFS}} which Rath named "Precept".
** In addition to his own blades and the blades he once forged for his former fellow Keepers, Rath also forged Caldarius' phasic blade according to another one of Rath's lore challenges.
** It's also speculated in one of Galilea's lore that Rath may have had a hand in crafting Galilea's {{BFS}} Shadowcry as her sword uses the hilt of a standard-issue Arbiter energy weapon, but its blade appears to have been modified after its initial fabrication with informed speculation suggesting Jennerit influence in the blade's design.
* High levels of the Forge aspect in ''VideoGame/CultistSimulator'' come with this benefit. Repairing broken magical artifacts is just the beginning, for the masters of Forge work with materials [[InsubstantialIngredients far more subtle than mere steel]]. The true Forge aspirant can reforge their very ''selves'' into something [[HumanoidAbomination altogether greater and more terrible]].
* ''VideoGame/TheOuterWorlds'' has Celeste Jolicoeur, a fashion designer whom after completing a [[TwentyBearAsses tedious questline]] for will end up making a fancy new suit for you that happens to be one of the best pieces of unique armor in-game, complete with a substantial bonus to dialog skills. [[spoiler:Sadly, this gets her killed by the Board for thoughtcrimes but at least she finishes the suit before that]].
* In ''VideoGame/GodOfWarPS4'', Sindri and Brok show up in this game and are just as skilled as their mythological counterparts. They were the ones who forged the Leviathan Axe as a gift for Faye [[spoiler:to make up for their creation Mjolnir being used to slaughter her people the Giants]]. Throughout the game they can further upgrade the Leviathan Axe, making into a truly formidable weapon. Their skill is such that they can even [[spoiler:improve upon the Blades of Chaos despite them being
[[GameBreaker weapons imbued with [[WrongContextMagic magic that is foreign powerful enough to Midgard]].one-shot pretty much everything.]]
* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'':
** In In the "vanilla" era of the game, it was so that one of the best Blacksmithing sets was made entirely of Dark Iron. Thing is, you had to get the recipes by sucking up to the Thorium Brotherhood Dwarves by collecting iron scraps and iron dust for them. And it took eight pieces of Dark Iron Ore to make one bar of Dark Iron. And you had to go into a ''fucking dungeon'' so that you could smelt the stuff in a furnace hooked up to the freaking ''lava flow''.
** Similarly, when there was only one expansion out, the point of becoming a specialised weaponsmith was that you could forge a special weapon of your chosen type at maximum level. It would start out as a maximum-level practically maximum-quality (ie. "epic") weapon, and then could be upgraded twice after that to make it an even better maximum-level epic, requiring very expensive components but making it pretty [[PenultimateWeapon penultimate]] as far as weapons went. That they didn't automatically add level 80 counterparts in the second expansion must have represented a huge nerfing of the whole specialisation thing.
** There's also a [[http://www.wowpedia.org/David_Wayne lonely blacksmith]] at the literal edge of the world in Terokkar forest, who will forge you a nifty demon-slaying sword after you've jumped through enough hoops and supplied copious amounts of [[AppliedPhlebotinum Phlebotinum]]. While the sword itself isn't all that powerful, he definitely fits the trope.
** The sequel, ''VideoGame/GodOfWarRagnarok'', last content patch of Wrath of the Lich King introduces the Lady Ashen Verdict, which, according to Blizzard, is an ''entire faction'' of Ultimate Blacksmiths. In addition to some of the Forge; she's such best armor and ammo, you can complete a masterful blacksmith long-winded quest chain to obtain Shadowmourne, the best two-handed axe so far. It actually starts as a slightly weaker axe, which itself requires more time and money than the entire leveling experience it took to get that even Brok is humbled by her presence. He pays her a visit along with Kratos so that she can forge him a weapon capable of killing Heimdall, who is otherwise able to use CombatClairvoyance to dodge all attacks. Following the revelation that she is a mermaid, Mimir comments that he once met [[Myth/ArthurianLegend a lake nymph named Nimue who was also a talented swordsmith]].
* Ulgrim in ''VideoGame/{{Brawlhalla}}'' is a blacksmith from Asgard, so he has designed many weapons and armors (including [[MysteriousPast Orion's armor]] and many of the gadgets used in-game. As a playable character, he participates in the Valhalla tournament to both test and show off his creations.
* Black Gnarl from ''VideoGame/AnvilOfDawn'' is basically
far.
** The true
Ultimate Blacksmith The Videogame. Most in the Warcraft story is Khaz'goroth, a member of the game consist Pantheon, the ruling body of gathering items for forging the Titans; while he hasn't been involved in the creations of final Macguffin. Forging scene even have some catchy singing [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGwnmlglEi0 as seen here]]
* ''VideoGame/PathfinderKingmaker'': {{Inverted}} with your dwarf companion Harrim, who ran away from
any ultimate weapons(though his clan because everything he tried to forge crumbled. During his companion questline it turns out smithing hammer is more powerful than any known weapon on the planet), what he has [[BlessedWithSuck a rare gift]] from crafted are the dwarf god Torag earthen(protodwarves), the mountain giants, and, oh yea, the ''mountains themselves''.
** Another important figure who fits into this trope would be none other than King Magni Bronzebeard, who lead the dwarves of Ironforge until ''World of Warcraft: Cataclysm''. It was by his hand that the Ashbringer- a holy blade which shattered [[EvilWeapon Frostmourne]] in the final confrontation with the Lich King- had been created. He also created a weapon for Prince Anduin Wrynn
called the Touch of Unmaking, able to dismantle dwarven constructions that have outlived their usefulness.
* ''VideoGame/{{Littlewood}}'': Corvus, the sole resident of the Master Forge, turns out to be the one who made the Magic Sword the PlayerCharacter used to defeat the BigBad prior to the beginning of the game. In the game proper, his location is
Fearbreaker. It was the only place where some rare resources can be made into crafting materials.object that remained within the blast radius of the mana bomb dropped on Theramore.



* ''Webcomic/TheOswaldChronicles'' features the god Kalvaitis, who forges the sun every night.



* ''Webcomic/TheOswaldChronicles'' features the god Kalvaitis, who forges the sun every night.



* Hephaestus in ''Literature/ThaliasMusings''. His son Eros inherited some of his skill, but since Eros' biological father is probably either Ares or Hermes, it's likely more nurture than nature.



* Hephaestus in ''Literature/ThaliasMusings''. His son Eros inherited some of his skill, but since Eros' biological father is probably either Ares or Hermes, it's likely more nurture than nature.



* ''WesternAnimation/FinalSpace'': The Titans forged ''the entire universe''. In season 3, the Titan Bolo demonstrates this by forging a massive Titan-sized sword by ''crushing a red dwarf star in his bare hands'' and having Mooncake blast it.
* In ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'', Jack's sword, the only weapon capable of harming Aku, is created by such smiths.
* Bismuth of ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'' is a blacksmith who produced equipment for all of the Crystal Gems (a group ranging in the hundreds if not a few thousand), including [[SwordSetToStun Rose's sword]], made in her forge located within ''an active volcano''. Being able to swim through molten metal and shapeshift your limbs into hammers certainly doesn't hurt in that line of work.



* In ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'', Jack's sword, the only weapon capable of harming Aku, is created by such smiths.



* Bismuth of ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'' is a blacksmith who produced equipment for all of the Crystal Gems (a group ranging in the hundreds if not a few thousand), including [[SwordSetToStun Rose's sword]], made in her forge located within ''an active volcano''. Being able to swim through molten metal and shapeshift your limbs into hammers certainly doesn't hurt in that line of work.
* ''WesternAnimation/FinalSpace'': The Titans forged ''the entire universe''. In season 3, the Titan Bolo demonstrates this by forging a massive Titan-sized sword by ''crushing a red dwarf star in his bare hands'' and having Mooncake blast it.
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* In ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', Nimaiya Ouetsu is the blacksmith who created the Asauchi, the nameless swords issued to each Shinigami so that they can shape their own "Zanpakuto" through training. He also calls himself [[GratuitousEnglish "the number one Zanpakuto creator"]]. After [[spoiler:Tensa Zangetsu]] is destroyed during the Wandenreich's first invasion of Soul Society, Nimaiya has it reforged from scratch by using an Asauchi imbued with [[spoiler:Ichigo]]'s Reiatsu after the latter has learned the truth of his heritage.

to:

* In ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', Nimaiya Ouetsu is the blacksmith who created the Asauchi, the nameless swords issued to each Shinigami so that they can shape their own "Zanpakuto" [[EmpathicWeapon Zanpakuto]] through training. He also calls himself [[GratuitousEnglish "the number one Zanpakuto creator"]]. After [[spoiler:Tensa Zangetsu]] is destroyed during the Wandenreich's first invasion of Soul Society, Nimaiya has it reforged from scratch by using an Asauchi imbued with [[spoiler:Ichigo]]'s Reiatsu after the latter has learned the truth of his heritage.

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alphabetized anime


* In ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', Nimaiya Ouetsu is the blacksmith who created the Asauchi, the nameless swords issued to each Shinigami so that they can shape their own "Zanpakuto" through training. He also calls himself [[GratuitousEnglish "the number one Zanpakuto creator"]]. After [[spoiler:Tensa Zangetsu]] is destroyed during the Wandenreich's first invasion of Soul Society, Nimaiya has it reforged from scratch by using an Asauchi imbued with [[spoiler:Ichigo]]'s Reiatsu after the latter has learned the truth of his heritage.
* ''Anime/DanganRonpa3TheEndOfHopesPeakHighSchool'' has Sounosuke Izayoi, whose literal title is Ultimate Blacksmith, though, he is never seen making weapons as using them.
* Old Man Kaseki in ''Manga/DrStone'' begins the series as a Stone Age village craftsman, already accomplished in woodworking and masonry. Then [[TeenGenius Senku]] shows a few failed attempts at glassblowing, and Kaseki's creative spirit is so fired up that [[InstantExpert he]] ''[[InstantExpert instantly]]'' [[InstantExpert gets it right the first time]]. Senku keeps introducing Kaseki to new fields like metalworking, and in the span of only a couple of years, he goes from rope bridges and wooden shields to [[spoiler:katanas, vacuum tubes, and '''automobiles''']], often working entirely by himself.



* ''Manga/FlameOfRecca'': The Hokage clan had two ultimate blacksmiths,[[spoiler: Kokuu]], who believed that weapons should only be used defensively, and [[spoiler: Kaima]], who believed that weapons were made to kill. Their creations reflect their opposing philosophies.



* Master Michael Kohara from ''Manga/GaRei'', having forged pneumatic blades for both Kagura and Kensuke since Anime/GaReiZero. Said blades range from having shotguns built into the hilts to being able to [[spoiler:''[[RealityWarper cross dimensions]]'' through the PowerOfLove.]]



* ''Manga/RurouniKenshin'': After Kenshin breaks his sword, he tries to seek out the original swordsmith for a repair job. Unfortunately, the guy has been dead for years and his son is a regular blacksmith who's more interested in making cookware, but the daughter-in-law lets slip that the swordsmith's last work, considered to be his masterpiece, has been dedicated to the local shrine. [[spoiler: Luckily, it turns out to be a reverse blade sword.]] The son is no slouch when it comes to knives, either. When Kenshin uses the man's kitchen knife to cut a turnip and then presses the bits together, they fuse again, because the cut is so perfect.
* Presea in ''Manga/MagicKnightRayearth''. True, she seems to be using magic, rather than the hammer and anvil, but she is labelled as a blacksmith and she is the one who gives the knights their weapons, after their retrieval of the {{Phlebotinum}}.

to:

* ''Manga/RurouniKenshin'': After Kenshin breaks his sword, he tries to seek out the original swordsmith for a repair job. Unfortunately, the guy has been dead for years and his son is a regular blacksmith who's In ''Literature/IsItWrongToTryToPickUpGirlsInADungeon'', there are ''two'' examples of this. The more interested in making cookware, but the daughter-in-law lets slip that the swordsmith's last work, considered to be his masterpiece, has been dedicated to the local shrine. [[spoiler: Luckily, it turns out to be a reverse blade sword.]] The son is no slouch when it comes to knives, either. When Kenshin uses the man's kitchen knife to cut a turnip and then presses the bits together, they fuse again, because the cut is so perfect.
* Presea in ''Manga/MagicKnightRayearth''. True, she seems to be using magic, rather than the hammer and anvil, but she is labelled as a blacksmith and she is the one who gives the knights their weapons, after their retrieval
famous of the {{Phlebotinum}}.two is Hephaestus (who is a [[GenderFlip gender flipped]] [[HotGod hot goddess]] in this incarnation) who forged what would become the main character's signature weapon as a favor to her friend Hestia. The other one is Goibniu, a god on par with her whose Familia often provides the weapons for Loki's First-class adventurers. Examples of his creations include Aiz's [[MadeOfIndestructium indestructible Desperate]] and [[{{BFS}} Tiona's extremely heavy Urga.]]



* In ''Manga/KenichiTheMightiestDisciple'', Shigure Kosaka's late father was such an awesome weaponsmith that with a traditional forge and materials, he made weapons far superior to those the organization YAMI could make with state-of-the-art techniques and materials. YAMI eventually kidnaps Shigure, hoping she inherited her father's weapon-forging skills. She did, but since they're bad guys and she really doesn't want to work for them, she deliberately messes up each attempt. She forges weapons that ''seem'' perfect, but shatter like glass when hit in a certain spot, forges weapons that become soft like clay, and even trolls them by making a perfect katana that's so small you'd have to be six inches tall to wield it. When she does make real weapons, they record the process with high-tech equipment but still fail to duplicate it. She winds up inflicting LimaSyndrome on the YAMI researchers observing her technique, who are all so inspired by watching her work that they become her apprentices.
* Presea in ''Manga/MagicKnightRayearth''. True, she seems to be using magic, rather than the hammer and anvil, but she is labelled as a blacksmith and she is the one who gives the knights their weapons, after their retrieval of the {{Phlebotinum}}.



* Master Michael Kohara from ''Manga/GaRei'', having forged pneumatic blades for both Kagura and Kensuke since Anime/GaReiZero. Said blades range from having shotguns built into the hilts to being able to [[spoiler:''[[RealityWarper cross dimensions]]'' through the PowerOfLove.]]
* In ''{{Manga/Bleach}}'', Nimaiya Ouetsu is the blacksmith who created the Asauchi, the nameless swords issued to each Shinigami so that they can shape their own "Zanpakuto" through training. He also calls himself [[GratuitousEnglish "the number one Zanpakuto creator"]].



* In ''Manga/KenichiTheMightiestDisciple'', Shigure Kosaka's late father was such an awesome weaponsmith that with a traditional forge and materials, he made weapons far superior to those the organization YAMI could make with state-of-the-art techniques and materials. YAMI eventually kidnaps Shigure, hoping she inherited her father's weapon-forging skills. She did, but since they're bad guys and she really doesn't want to work for them, she deliberately messes up each attempt. She forges weapons that ''seem'' perfect, but shatter like glass when hit in a certain spot, forges weapons that become soft like clay, and even trolls them by making a perfect katana that's so small you'd have to be six inches tall to wield it. When she does make real weapons, they record the process with high-tech equipment but still fail to duplicate it. She winds up inflicting LimaSyndrome on the YAMI researchers observing her technique, who are all so inspired by watching her work that they become her apprentices.
* ''Anime/DanganRonpa3TheEndOfHopesPeakHighSchool'' has Sounosuke Izayoi, whose literal title is Ultimate Blacksmith, though, he is never seen making weapons as using them.
* ''Manga/FlameOfRecca'': The Hokage clan had two ultimate blacksmiths,[[spoiler: Kokuu]], who believed that weapons should only be used defensively, and [[spoiler: Kaima]], who believed that weapons were made to kill. Their creations reflect their opposing philosophies.
* In ''Literature/IsItWrongToTryToPickUpGirlsInADungeon'', there are ''two'' examples of this. The more famous of the two is Hephaestus (who is a [[GenderFlip gender flipped]] [[HotGod hot goddess]] in this incarnation) who forged what would become the main character's signature weapon as a favor to her friend Hestia. The other one is Goibniu, a god on par with her whose Familia often provides the weapons for Loki's First-class adventurers. Examples of his creations include Aiz's [[MadeOfIndestructium indestructible Desperate]] and [[{{BFS}} Tiona's extremely heavy Urga.]]
* Old Man Kaseki in ''Manga/DrStone'' begins the series as a Stone Age village craftsman, already accomplished in woodworking and masonry. Then [[TeenGenius Senku]] shows a few failed attempts at glassblowing, and Kaseki's creative spirit is so fired up that he ''instantly'' gets it right the first time. Senku keeps introducing Kaseki to new fields like metalworking, and in the span of only a couple of years, he goes from rope bridges and wooden shields to [[spoiler:katanas, vacuum tubes, and '''automobiles''']], often working entirely by himself.

to:

* In ''Manga/KenichiTheMightiestDisciple'', Shigure Kosaka's late father was such an awesome weaponsmith that with ''Manga/RurouniKenshin'': After Kenshin breaks his sword, he tries to seek out the original swordsmith for a traditional forge repair job. Unfortunately, the guy has been dead for years and materials, he made weapons far superior to those the organization YAMI could make with state-of-the-art techniques and materials. YAMI eventually kidnaps Shigure, hoping she inherited her father's weapon-forging skills. She did, but since they're bad guys and she really doesn't want to work for them, she deliberately messes up each attempt. She forges weapons that ''seem'' perfect, but shatter like glass when hit his son is a regular blacksmith who's more interested in a certain spot, forges weapons that become soft like clay, and even trolls them by making a perfect katana that's so small you'd have cookware, but the daughter-in-law lets slip that the swordsmith's last work, considered to be six inches tall his masterpiece, has been dedicated to wield it. When she does make real weapons, they record the process with high-tech equipment but still fail to duplicate it. She winds up inflicting LimaSyndrome on the YAMI researchers observing her technique, who are all so inspired by watching her work that they become her apprentices.
* ''Anime/DanganRonpa3TheEndOfHopesPeakHighSchool'' has Sounosuke Izayoi, whose literal title is Ultimate Blacksmith, though, he is never seen making weapons as using them.
* ''Manga/FlameOfRecca'': The Hokage clan had two ultimate blacksmiths,[[spoiler: Kokuu]], who believed that weapons should only be used defensively, and
local shrine. [[spoiler: Kaima]], who believed that weapons were made Luckily, it turns out to kill. Their creations reflect their opposing philosophies.
* In ''Literature/IsItWrongToTryToPickUpGirlsInADungeon'', there are ''two'' examples of this.
be a reverse blade sword.]] The more famous of son is no slouch when it comes to knives, either. When Kenshin uses the two is Hephaestus (who is man's kitchen knife to cut a [[GenderFlip gender flipped]] [[HotGod hot goddess]] in this incarnation) who forged what would become turnip and then presses the main character's signature weapon as a favor to her friend Hestia. The other one is Goibniu, a god on par with her whose Familia often provides bits together, they fuse again, because the weapons for Loki's First-class adventurers. Examples of his creations include Aiz's [[MadeOfIndestructium indestructible Desperate]] and [[{{BFS}} Tiona's extremely heavy Urga.]]
* Old Man Kaseki in ''Manga/DrStone'' begins the series as a Stone Age village craftsman, already accomplished in woodworking and masonry. Then [[TeenGenius Senku]] shows a few failed attempts at glassblowing, and Kaseki's creative spirit
cut is so fired up that he ''instantly'' gets it right the first time. Senku keeps introducing Kaseki to new fields like metalworking, and in the span of only a couple of years, he goes from rope bridges and wooden shields to [[spoiler:katanas, vacuum tubes, and '''automobiles''']], often working entirely by himself.perfect.
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[[caption-width-right:350:These guys make weapons of absolutely ''[[{{pun}} stellar]]'' quality.]]

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* Literature/{{Discworld}} has Jason Ogg, the only man with enough skill to shoe Death's horse, Binky. He can and will shoe anything in the world-he once put horseshoes on an ant just because someone dared him to. Ant-sized horseshoes.

to:

* Literature/{{Discworld}} has Jason Ogg, the only man with enough skill to shoe Death's horse, Binky. He can and will shoe anything in the world-he world- he once put horseshoes on an ant just because someone dared him to. Ant-sized horseshoes.



** Dennis, Handyman of the Gods, fulfils the same function in ''Literature/TheLastHero''. He is seen at his forge repairing the spaceship that brought the adventurers to Dunmanifestin. It is explicitly said that every habitat of Gods gets its resident god of Making and Maintaining Things, as every house needs someone who can do basic repairs, hang doors, fix the roof, plaster a wall, shoe the horses of the Chariot of the Sun, etc, as without them it would all slump into wreckage and disrepair.

to:

** Dennis, Handyman of the Gods, fulfils the same function in ''Literature/TheLastHero''. He is seen at his forge repairing the spaceship that brought the adventurers to Dunmanifestin. It is explicitly said that every habitat of Gods gets its resident god of Making and Maintaining Things, as every house needs someone who can do basic repairs, hang doors, fix the roof, plaster a wall, shoe the horses of the Chariot of the Sun, etc, as etc.; without them it would all slump into wreckage and disrepair.



* ''Literature/TheUnexploredSummonBloodSign'' character Kyousuke, at the age of ten, created a device enabling the permanent summoning of gods into the human world. He didn't think to include an off switch, which caused [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt a lot of problems for everyone]], but in purely scientific terms it was an unsurpassed accomplishment. He would go on to [[spoiler:overwrite the existing magic system ''twice'', and create a new god, which is like hacking the universe's laws of physics and putting your own code in.]]



** For a man from a backwater country, Halbrand is an amazing blacksmith, forging weapons better than most Numenorians, and knows of this craft even more than Celebrimbor, a thousands of years Elf. It makes sense when [[spoiler:he is Sauron in disguise]].

to:

** For a man from a backwater country, Halbrand is an amazing blacksmith, forging weapons better than most Numenorians, and knows of this craft even more than Celebrimbor, a thousands of years thousands-of-years-old Elf. It makes sense when [[spoiler:he is Sauron in disguise]].



* ''Series/ParksAndRecreation'' has an odd and more humorous example. While Ron Swanson is something of a handyman as a whole, he's treated as the Ultimate Woodworker, as his creations are generally of award-winning quality and of astounding, sometimes incredible sturdiness.

to:

* ''Series/ParksAndRecreation'' has an odd and more humorous example. While Ron Swanson is something of a handyman as a whole, he's treated as the Ultimate Woodworker, as Woodworker- his creations are generally of award-winning quality and of astounding, sometimes incredible sturdiness.
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* In ''{{Manga/Bleach}}'', Nimaiya Ouetsu is the blacksmith who created the Asauchi, the nameless swords issued to each Shinigami so that they can shape their own "Zanpakuto" through training.

to:

* In ''{{Manga/Bleach}}'', Nimaiya Ouetsu is the blacksmith who created the Asauchi, the nameless swords issued to each Shinigami so that they can shape their own "Zanpakuto" through training. He also calls himself [[GratuitousEnglish "the number one Zanpakuto creator"]].
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*** Yagrum Bagarn, [[spoiler:[[TheLastOfHisKind the last living]] [[OurDwarvesAreDifferent Dwemer]]]]. He was formerly a Master Crafter (combining this trope with the {{Magitek}} of the Dwemer) in service to Lord Kagrenac (the legendary Dwemer MadScientist). He was an in an undescribed "outer realm" when whatever calamity occurred that wiped out his people. He caught [[BodyHorror the Corprus Disease]] not long after and now lives in the Corprusarium. If completing the main quest via the "[[TakeAThirdOption Backpath]]" method, he is [[spoiler:the only person capable of "jury-rigging" the [[ArtifactOfDoom Wraithguard]]]] for you to use.

to:

*** Yagrum Bagarn, [[spoiler:[[TheLastOfHisKind the last living]] [[OurDwarvesAreDifferent Dwemer]]]]. He was formerly a Master Crafter (combining this trope with the {{Magitek}} of the Dwemer) in service to Lord Kagrenac (the legendary Dwemer MadScientist). He was an in an undescribed "outer realm" when whatever calamity occurred that wiped out his people. He caught [[BodyHorror the Corprus Disease]] not at some point after[[note]]it isn't clear ''how'' long after after, as he mentions having caught Corprus "a long, long time ago" but also that he spent years searching for other Dwemer survivors before that[[/note]] and now lives in the Corprusarium. If completing the main quest via the "[[TakeAThirdOption Backpath]]" method, he is [[spoiler:the only person capable of "jury-rigging" the [[ArtifactOfDoom Wraithguard]]]] for you to use.
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* ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'': Godo, the expert blacksmith who makes Guts' weapons, lives in the middle of nowhere, although this is {{justified}}: his hut is conveniently close to an old mine that was once the home of elves. He still appears to be highly sought-after, as a merchant comes racing to him with the news that the campaign to eradicate [[spoiler: the Hawks]] requires fresh supplies of arms and armor. Godo's greatest accomplishment may be the Dragonslayer sword, which he forged in response to an unidentified king's challenge to craft a sword that could [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin slay a dragon]]; since dragons weren't real, he decided to make an impossible weapon for an impossible threat as protest, yet still refused to neglect his work even for a JokeItem. It [[NonIndicativeName hasn't killed any dragons yet]], but given how many huge, overpowered demons and other creatures it ''has'' killed, there's not much question that it ''could'', but it's so large and heavy that no one has been shown to successfully wield it but Guts.

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* ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'': Godo, the expert blacksmith who makes Guts' weapons, lives in the middle of nowhere, although this is {{justified}}: {{justified|trope}}: his hut is conveniently close to an old mine that was once the home of elves. He still appears to be highly sought-after, as a merchant comes racing to him with the news that the campaign to eradicate [[spoiler: the Hawks]] requires fresh supplies of arms and armor. Godo's greatest accomplishment may be the Dragonslayer sword, which he forged in response to an unidentified king's challenge to craft a sword that could [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin slay a dragon]]; since dragons weren't real, he decided to make an impossible weapon for an impossible threat as protest, yet still refused to neglect his work even for a JokeItem. It [[NonIndicativeName hasn't killed any dragons yet]], but given how many huge, overpowered demons and other creatures it ''has'' killed, there's not much question that it ''could'', but it's so large and heavy that no one has been shown to successfully wield it but Guts.



* ''Anime/DanganRonpa3'' has Sounosuke Izayoi, whose literal title is Ultimate Blacksmith, though, he is never seen making weapons as using them.

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* ''Anime/DanganRonpa3'' ''Anime/DanganRonpa3TheEndOfHopesPeakHighSchool'' has Sounosuke Izayoi, whose literal title is Ultimate Blacksmith, though, he is never seen making weapons as using them.



* In the Ashbringer series, based on the lore of Warcraft, Magni Bronzebeard is this. He forges the Ashbringer, the ultimate holy sword that literally turns undead to ashes by just touching them.

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* In the Ashbringer ''ComicBook/{{Ashbringer}}'' series, based on the lore of Warcraft, ''Warcraft'', Magni Bronzebeard is this. He forges the Ashbringer, the ultimate holy sword that literally turns undead to ashes by just touching them.



* Pictured above: the dwarves of Nidavellir are some of the most accomplished smiths in the Realms, having forged weapons like the iconic Mjolnir wielded by Comicbook/TheMightyThor (the page image is the ForgingScene depicting Mjolnir's creation). In the ''Comicbook/DoctorStrange'' comics, the dwarf Eoffren is introduced as a master of granting magic physical form who was abducted to create a weapon that could destroy entire worlds. He later teaches Stephen how to forge magical tools, leading Stephen Strange to create the very first magical artifact to bear his own name, a dimension cutting blade he named the Scalpel of Strange.

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* Pictured above: the dwarves of Nidavellir are some of the most accomplished smiths in the Realms, having forged weapons like the iconic Mjolnir wielded by Comicbook/TheMightyThor ComicBook/TheMightyThor (the page image is the ForgingScene depicting Mjolnir's creation). In the ''Comicbook/DoctorStrange'' ''ComicBook/DoctorStrange'' comics, the dwarf Eoffren is introduced as a master of granting magic physical form who was abducted to create a weapon that could destroy entire worlds. He later teaches Stephen how to forge magical tools, leading Stephen Strange to create the very first magical artifact to bear his own name, a dimension cutting blade he named the Scalpel of Strange.



* Naruto in "FanFic/AGrowingAffection" just might be this. He forges his staff-blade Kitsune [[MemeticMutation On the side of the road!]] [[Film/IronMan With a bunch of disposable kunai!]] It stands up to Orochimaru's legendary artifact Kusanagi. He creates even more impressive weapons for Hinata and Sakura.

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* Naruto in "FanFic/AGrowingAffection" "Fanfic/AGrowingAffection" just might be this. He forges his staff-blade Kitsune [[MemeticMutation On the side of the road!]] [[Film/IronMan With a bunch of disposable kunai!]] It stands up to Orochimaru's legendary artifact Kusanagi. He creates even more impressive weapons for Hinata and Sakura.



* ''FanFic/{{Scootamom}}'' makes ''Princess Luna'' of all ponies one of these, although she has yet to be shown making anything more impressive than a bike helmet to go with Scootaloo's IconicItem. Still, it's a helmet that's survived everything the Cutie Mark Crusaders can throw at it, so that's pretty badass.

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* ''FanFic/{{Scootamom}}'' ''Fanfic/{{Scootamom}}'' makes ''Princess Luna'' of all ponies one of these, although she has yet to be shown making anything more impressive than a bike helmet to go with Scootaloo's IconicItem. Still, it's a helmet that's survived everything the Cutie Mark Crusaders can throw at it, so that's pretty badass.



* [[WesternAnimation/HowToTrainYourDragon Hiccup]] demonstrates this a few times in ''FanFic/AThingOfVikings'', notably when he forges a flaming sword.

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* [[WesternAnimation/HowToTrainYourDragon Hiccup]] demonstrates this a few times in ''FanFic/AThingOfVikings'', ''Fanfic/AThingOfVikings'', notably when he forges a flaming sword.



** The fetich soul of [[GodEmperor Malfeas the Demon City]], [[NobleDemon Ligier the Green Sun]], also has this as a fundamental expression of his overall goal to basically out-awesome everyone else in existence with how awesome he is and creating beautiful things in his likeness. Among other accomplishments that have made him the most well-known example of this trope in Creation (as Autochthon has exiled himself for such a long time that most people have totally forgotten about him) is a brass daiklaive that fights in his name when he feels his opponents aren't good enough for him to face directly but they insist on challenging him sufficiently for him to consider them [[WorthyOpponent Worthy Opponents.]]

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** The fetich soul of [[GodEmperor Malfeas the Demon City]], [[NobleDemon Ligier the Green Sun]], also has this as a fundamental expression of his overall goal to basically out-awesome everyone else in existence with how awesome he is and creating beautiful things in his likeness. Among other accomplishments that have made him the most well-known example of this trope in Creation (as Autochthon has exiled himself for such a long time that most people have totally forgotten about him) is a brass daiklaive that fights in his name when he feels his opponents aren't good enough for him to face directly but they insist on challenging him sufficiently for him to consider them [[WorthyOpponent Worthy Opponents.]]{{Worthy Opponent}}s.



** [[IdiotSavant Algernon]] from ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 2}}'' blows every other tinkerer in the game out of the water. He'll perform just about any upgrade in the game--Mega Power Fists, Turbo Plasma Rifles, improved flamer fuel, and more--for ''zero'' cost, and he's available in one of the biggest towns in the game, guarded by two dogs who won't attack. Even better, [[GoodBadBug a bug in his scripting]] automatically fills the magazine of any gun you give him to upgrade.
** Downplayed in ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 3}}''; there are no blacksmiths, but some merchants will offer to repair your weapons and armor in exchange for [[WeirdCurrency bottle caps]]. But no merchant has a perfect 100 Repair skill. Only ''you'', the player, can have that through leveling, making you the best repairman in the state.

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** [[IdiotSavant Algernon]] from ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 2}}'' ''VideoGame/Fallout2'' blows every other tinkerer in the game out of the water. He'll perform just about any upgrade in the game--Mega Power Fists, Turbo Plasma Rifles, improved flamer fuel, and more--for ''zero'' cost, and he's available in one of the biggest towns in the game, guarded by two dogs who won't attack. Even better, [[GoodBadBug a bug in his scripting]] automatically fills the magazine of any gun you give him to upgrade.
** Downplayed in ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 3}}''; ''VideoGame/Fallout3''; there are no blacksmiths, but some merchants will offer to repair your weapons and armor in exchange for [[WeirdCurrency bottle caps]]. But no merchant has a perfect 100 Repair skill. Only ''you'', the player, can have that through leveling, making you the best repairman in the state.



* Dagna in ''Videogame/DragonAgeInquisition'' may have chosen to study magic as an artificer and rune crafter, but she's still a former member of the Dwarven Smith Caste. Smithing is in her blood and it shows; she is able to forge Masterwork equipment ''and'' craft runes for you. Much to the chagrin of Haven's former blacksmith Herritt, who finds himself OvershadowedByAwesome. And while she isn't able to [[ReforgedBlade reforge]] a LegendaryWeapon like a typical Ultimate Blacksmith when given the pieces, she is able to use them as inspiration to forge a new sword. Played with in that she isn't the best master smith or best master enchanter, but she is the world's only expert on the interactions between the two fields and the scientific examination of magic in general.

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* Dagna in ''Videogame/DragonAgeInquisition'' ''VideoGame/DragonAgeInquisition'' may have chosen to study magic as an artificer and rune crafter, but she's still a former member of the Dwarven Smith Caste. Smithing is in her blood and it shows; she is able to forge Masterwork equipment ''and'' craft runes for you. Much to the chagrin of Haven's former blacksmith Herritt, who finds himself OvershadowedByAwesome. And while she isn't able to [[ReforgedBlade reforge]] a LegendaryWeapon like a typical Ultimate Blacksmith when given the pieces, she is able to use them as inspiration to forge a new sword. Played with in that she isn't the best master smith or best master enchanter, but she is the world's only expert on the interactions between the two fields and the scientific examination of magic in general.



* Your blacksmith character in ''VideoGame/TheSims Medieval'' can undertake a quest to become one.
* ''VideoGame/{{Touhou}}'': Strongly implied with Suwako: she is a goddess of the earth and can/[[{{Gotterdammerung}} could]] create new soil as she please. She used to own an impressive arsenal of metal weaponry, which she used to pacify the curse-gods of [[GodEmperor her kingdom]]. Unfortunately, it meant little when she fought Kanako, who, being the goddess of rain, rusted all of Suwako's weapons.

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* Your blacksmith character in ''VideoGame/TheSims Medieval'' ''VideoGame/TheSimsMedieval'' can undertake a quest to become one.
* ''VideoGame/{{Touhou}}'': ''Franchise/TouhouProject'': Strongly implied with Suwako: she is a goddess of the earth and can/[[{{Gotterdammerung}} could]] create new soil as she please. She used to own an impressive arsenal of metal weaponry, which she used to pacify the curse-gods of [[GodEmperor her kingdom]]. Unfortunately, it meant little when she fought Kanako, who, being the goddess of rain, rusted all of Suwako's weapons.



* ''VideoGame/DarkSouls2'' splits it up. Lenigrast will say, if asked, that no modern blacksmith knows how to use an Ember to ascend weapons anymore, but some searching will reveal [=McDuff=], who does remember that ancient art and can infuse weapons with any element provided he has the proper materials. Unfortunately, he's also completely insane. Ornifex, meanwhile, is the only blacksmith that knows how to forge unique weapons out of boss souls (Straid can also trade unique weapons for boss souls, but he's a sorcerer, not a blacksmith).
* In ''VideoGame/DarkSouls3'', Andre [[TheBusCameBack returns]] and becomes this trope by virtue of being the ''only'' blacksmith in the game, giving him not only his old ascension paths but those once used by his peers from the first game as well, including the Giant Blacksmith.

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* ''VideoGame/DarkSouls2'' ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsII'' splits it up. Lenigrast will say, if asked, that no modern blacksmith knows how to use an Ember to ascend weapons anymore, but some searching will reveal [=McDuff=], who does remember that ancient art and can infuse weapons with any element provided he has the proper materials. Unfortunately, he's also completely insane. Ornifex, meanwhile, is the only blacksmith that knows how to forge unique weapons out of boss souls (Straid can also trade unique weapons for boss souls, but he's a sorcerer, not a blacksmith).
* In ''VideoGame/DarkSouls3'', ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsIII'', Andre [[TheBusCameBack returns]] and becomes this trope by virtue of being the ''only'' blacksmith in the game, giving him not only his old ascension paths but those once used by his peers from the first game as well, including the Giant Blacksmith.



* Videogame/RuneScape allows you to become this with a high enough smithing level, allowing the player to forge anything from weapons made of the chitin of gigantic scarabs, through armor made of an ancient metal invented by BloodKnight {{Precursors}}, and even reforging a sword made to kill gods.

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* Videogame/RuneScape ''VideoGame/RuneScape'' allows you to become this with a high enough smithing level, allowing the player to forge anything from weapons made of the chitin of gigantic scarabs, through armor made of an ancient metal invented by BloodKnight {{Precursors}}, and even reforging a sword made to kill gods.



* ''Videogame/TheOuterWorlds'' has Celeste Jolicoeur, a fashion designer whom after completing a [[TwentyBearAsses tedious questline]] for will end up making a fancy new suit for you that happens to be one of the best pieces of unique armor in-game, complete with a substantial bonus to dialog skills. [[spoiler:Sadly, this gets her killed by the Board for thoughtcrimes but at least she finishes the suit before that]].

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* ''Videogame/TheOuterWorlds'' ''VideoGame/TheOuterWorlds'' has Celeste Jolicoeur, a fashion designer whom after completing a [[TwentyBearAsses tedious questline]] for will end up making a fancy new suit for you that happens to be one of the best pieces of unique armor in-game, complete with a substantial bonus to dialog skills. [[spoiler:Sadly, this gets her killed by the Board for thoughtcrimes but at least she finishes the suit before that]].



* ''Videogame/{{Littlewood}}'': Corvus, the sole resident of the Master Forge, turns out to be the one who made the Magic Sword the PlayerCharacter used to defeat the BigBad prior to the beginning of the game. In the game proper, his location is the only place where some rare resources can be made into crafting materials.

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* ''Videogame/{{Littlewood}}'': ''VideoGame/{{Littlewood}}'': Corvus, the sole resident of the Master Forge, turns out to be the one who made the Magic Sword the PlayerCharacter used to defeat the BigBad prior to the beginning of the game. In the game proper, his location is the only place where some rare resources can be made into crafting materials.
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was I drunk when I wrote this?


* ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'': Godd, the expert blacksmith who makes Guts' weapons, lives in the middle of nowhere, although this is {{justified}}: his hut is conveniently clsoe to an old mine that was once the home of elves. He still appears to be highly sought-after, as a merchant comes racing to him with the news that the campaign to eradicate [[spoiler: the Hawks]] requires fresh supplies of arms and armor. Godo's greatest accomplishment may be the Dragonslayer sword, which he forged in response to an unidentified king's challenge to craft a sword that could [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin slay a dragon]]; since dragons weren't real, he decided to make an impossible weapon for an impossible threat as protest, yet still refused to neglect his work even for a JokeItem. It [[NonIndicativeName hasn't killed any dragons yet]], but given how many huge, overpowered demons and other creatures it ''has'' killed, there's not much question that it ''could'', but it's so large and heavy that no one has been shown to successfully wield it but Guts.

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* ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'': Godd, Godo, the expert blacksmith who makes Guts' weapons, lives in the middle of nowhere, although this is {{justified}}: his hut is conveniently clsoe close to an old mine that was once the home of elves. He still appears to be highly sought-after, as a merchant comes racing to him with the news that the campaign to eradicate [[spoiler: the Hawks]] requires fresh supplies of arms and armor. Godo's greatest accomplishment may be the Dragonslayer sword, which he forged in response to an unidentified king's challenge to craft a sword that could [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin slay a dragon]]; since dragons weren't real, he decided to make an impossible weapon for an impossible threat as protest, yet still refused to neglect his work even for a JokeItem. It [[NonIndicativeName hasn't killed any dragons yet]], but given how many huge, overpowered demons and other creatures it ''has'' killed, there's not much question that it ''could'', but it's so large and heavy that no one has been shown to successfully wield it but Guts.
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%%** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast'': The dwarves that have to be reunited, although they improve an existing weapon rather than making a new one.%%How are they examples?
%%** ''Oracle of Ages'' and ''Oracle of Seasons'': The [[spoiler:Subrosan Smithies]].

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%%** ** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast'': The dwarves that have to be reunited, although they improve an existing weapon rather than making a new one.%%How Dwarves Swordsmiths are they examples?
%%** ''Oracle
uniquely able to temper Link's Master Sword into a more powerful blade. Making the sword even better requires no less [[spoiler:than the magic of Ages'' the Pyramid's Great Fairy]].
** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOracleGames'': The Subrosan Smithies are the only ones who can prepare certain items for Link, including the Pirate's Bell
and ''Oracle of Seasons'': The [[spoiler:Subrosan Smithies]].higher-level shields.
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* ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'': Good, the expert blacksmith who makes Guts' weapons, lives in the middle of nowhere, although this is {{justified}}: his hut is convenient to old mine that was once the home of elves. He still appears to be highly sought-after, as a merchant comes racing to him with the news that the campaign to eradicate [[spoiler: the Hawks]] requires fresh supplies of arms and armor. Godo's greatest accomplishment may be the Dragonslayer sword, which he forged in response to an unidentified king's challenge to craft a sword that could [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin slay a dragon]]; since dragons weren't real, he decided to make an impossible weapon for an impossible threat as protest, yet still refused to neglect his work even for a JokeItem. It [[NonIndicativeName hasn't killed any dragons yet]], but given how many huge, overpowered demons and other creatures it ''has'' killed, there's not much question that it ''could'', but it's so large and heavy that no one has been shown to successfully wield it but Guts.

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* ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'': Good, Godd, the expert blacksmith who makes Guts' weapons, lives in the middle of nowhere, although this is {{justified}}: his hut is convenient conveniently clsoe to an old mine that was once the home of elves. He still appears to be highly sought-after, as a merchant comes racing to him with the news that the campaign to eradicate [[spoiler: the Hawks]] requires fresh supplies of arms and armor. Godo's greatest accomplishment may be the Dragonslayer sword, which he forged in response to an unidentified king's challenge to craft a sword that could [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin slay a dragon]]; since dragons weren't real, he decided to make an impossible weapon for an impossible threat as protest, yet still refused to neglect his work even for a JokeItem. It [[NonIndicativeName hasn't killed any dragons yet]], but given how many huge, overpowered demons and other creatures it ''has'' killed, there's not much question that it ''could'', but it's so large and heavy that no one has been shown to successfully wield it but Guts.
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* ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'': Good, the expert blacksmith who makes Guts' weapons, lives in the middle of nowhere, although this is {{justified}}: his hut is convenient to old mine that was once the home of elves. He still appears to be highly sought-after, as a merchant comes racing to him with the news that the campaign to eradicate [[spoiler: the Hawks]] requires fresh supplies of arms and armor. Godo's greatest accomplishment may be the Dragonslayer sword, which he forged in response to an unidentified king's challenge to craft a sword that could [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin slay a dragon]]. It [[NonIndicativeName hasn't killed any dragons yet]], but given how many huge, overpowered demons and other creatures it ''has'' killed, there's not much question that it ''could'', but it's so large and heavy that no one has been shown to successfully wield it but Guts.

to:

* ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'': Good, the expert blacksmith who makes Guts' weapons, lives in the middle of nowhere, although this is {{justified}}: his hut is convenient to old mine that was once the home of elves. He still appears to be highly sought-after, as a merchant comes racing to him with the news that the campaign to eradicate [[spoiler: the Hawks]] requires fresh supplies of arms and armor. Godo's greatest accomplishment may be the Dragonslayer sword, which he forged in response to an unidentified king's challenge to craft a sword that could [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin slay a dragon]].dragon]]; since dragons weren't real, he decided to make an impossible weapon for an impossible threat as protest, yet still refused to neglect his work even for a JokeItem. It [[NonIndicativeName hasn't killed any dragons yet]], but given how many huge, overpowered demons and other creatures it ''has'' killed, there's not much question that it ''could'', but it's so large and heavy that no one has been shown to successfully wield it but Guts.

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* In ''VideoGame/GodOfWarPS4'', Sindri and Brokkr show up in this game and are just as skilled as their mythological counterparts. They were the ones who forged the Leviathan Axe as a gift for Faye [[spoiler:to make up for their creation Mjolnir being used to slaughter her people the Giants]]. Throughout the game they can further upgrade the Leviathan Axe, making into a truly formidable weapon. Their skill is such that they can even [[spoiler:improve upon the Blades of Chaos despite them being weapons imbued with [[WrongContextMagic magic that is foreign to Midgard]].]]

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* In ''VideoGame/GodOfWarPS4'', Sindri and Brokkr Brok show up in this game and are just as skilled as their mythological counterparts. They were the ones who forged the Leviathan Axe as a gift for Faye [[spoiler:to make up for their creation Mjolnir being used to slaughter her people the Giants]]. Throughout the game they can further upgrade the Leviathan Axe, making into a truly formidable weapon. Their skill is such that they can even [[spoiler:improve upon the Blades of Chaos despite them being weapons imbued with [[WrongContextMagic magic that is foreign to Midgard]].]]]]
** The sequel, ''VideoGame/GodOfWarRagnarok'', introduces the Lady of the Forge; she's such a masterful blacksmith that even Brok is humbled by her presence. He pays her a visit along with Kratos so that she can forge him a weapon capable of killing Heimdall, who is otherwise able to use CombatClairvoyance to dodge all attacks. Following the revelation that she is a mermaid, Mimir comments that he once met [[Myth/ArthurianLegend a lake nymph named Nimue who was also a talented swordsmith]].
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The Ultimate Blacksmith is the only person in the world that can [[ElementalCrafting turn that ingot]] of [[AppliedPhlebotinum Phlebotinum]] into the InfinityPlusOneSword. They often live in isolation, usually some place where they have access to the planet's natural ores like a deep cave or near a volcano. They might even be a god; one of the StockGods is a 'god of the forge', which makes their handiwork also count as ForgedByTheGods.

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The Ultimate Blacksmith is the only person in the world that can [[ElementalCrafting turn that ingot]] of [[AppliedPhlebotinum Phlebotinum]] into the InfinityPlusOneSword. They often live in isolation, usually some place where they have access to the planet's natural ores like a deep cave or near a volcano. They might even be a god; one of the StockGods is a 'god "god of the forge', forge", which makes their handiwork also count as ForgedByTheGods.
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* In ''VideoGame/GodOfWarPS4'', Sindri and Brokkr show up in this game and are just as skilled as their mythological counterparts. They were the ones who forged the Leviathan Axe as a gift for Faye [[spoiler:to make up for their creation Mjolnir being used to slaughter her people the Giants]]. Throughout the game they can further upgrade the Leviathan Axe, making into a truly formidable weapon. Their skill is such that they can even [[spoiler:improve upon the Blades of Chaos despite them being weapons imbued with magic that is foreign to Midgard.]]

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* In ''VideoGame/GodOfWarPS4'', Sindri and Brokkr show up in this game and are just as skilled as their mythological counterparts. They were the ones who forged the Leviathan Axe as a gift for Faye [[spoiler:to make up for their creation Mjolnir being used to slaughter her people the Giants]]. Throughout the game they can further upgrade the Leviathan Axe, making into a truly formidable weapon. Their skill is such that they can even [[spoiler:improve upon the Blades of Chaos despite them being weapons imbued with [[WrongContextMagic magic that is foreign to Midgard.Midgard]].]]
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* Kiki Shikizaki of ''LightNovel/{{Katanagatari}}'', whose twelve Deviant Blades are all unique in some way (unique like one's actually a robot, one's actually armor and [[spoiler:one's actually a set of handguns and a revolver]]). Even his non-legendary swords are capable of deciding the scale of battle just by how many one possesses. The former are also the {{MacGuffin}}s of the series for the main characters. It's later revealed that the secret to his success is the fact that [[spoiler:as a soothsayer, he could see past his own timeline. Therefore, the Deviant Blades are [[VoodooShark actually futuristic technology.]]]] His strongest, [[spoiler:Thirteenth]] Deviant Blade [[spoiler:is actually a ''bloodline'' dedicated to breeding and raising the ultimate warrior.]]

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* Kiki Shikizaki of ''LightNovel/{{Katanagatari}}'', ''Literature/{{Katanagatari}}'', whose twelve Deviant Blades are all unique in some way (unique like one's actually a robot, one's actually armor and [[spoiler:one's actually a set of handguns and a revolver]]). Even his non-legendary swords are capable of deciding the scale of battle just by how many one possesses. The former are also the {{MacGuffin}}s of the series for the main characters. It's later revealed that the secret to his success is the fact that [[spoiler:as a soothsayer, he could see past his own timeline. Therefore, the Deviant Blades are [[VoodooShark actually futuristic technology.]]]] His strongest, [[spoiler:Thirteenth]] Deviant Blade [[spoiler:is actually a ''bloodline'' dedicated to breeding and raising the ultimate warrior.]]



* In ''LightNovel/IsItWrongToTryToPickUpGirlsInADungeon'', there are ''two'' examples of this. The more famous of the two is Hephaestus (who is a [[GenderFlip gender flipped]] [[HotGod hot goddess]] in this incarnation) who forged what would become the main character's signature weapon as a favor to her friend Hestia. The other one is Goibniu, a god on par with her whose Familia often provides the weapons for Loki's First-class adventurers. Examples of his creations include Aiz's [[MadeOfIndestructium indestructible Desperate]] and [[{{BFS}} Tiona's extremely heavy Urga.]]

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* In ''LightNovel/IsItWrongToTryToPickUpGirlsInADungeon'', ''Literature/IsItWrongToTryToPickUpGirlsInADungeon'', there are ''two'' examples of this. The more famous of the two is Hephaestus (who is a [[GenderFlip gender flipped]] [[HotGod hot goddess]] in this incarnation) who forged what would become the main character's signature weapon as a favor to her friend Hestia. The other one is Goibniu, a god on par with her whose Familia often provides the weapons for Loki's First-class adventurers. Examples of his creations include Aiz's [[MadeOfIndestructium indestructible Desperate]] and [[{{BFS}} Tiona's extremely heavy Urga.]]



* ''LightNovel/TheReunionWithTwelveFascinatingGoddesses'' has Zesca, the goddess of weapons and warfare. She can make weapons that allow even the unskilled to use the power of Spirits and is also the one who forged Tooi's sword [[CoolSword Zodiac]].

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* ''LightNovel/TheReunionWithTwelveFascinatingGoddesses'' ''Literature/TheReunionWithTwelveFascinatingGoddesses'' has Zesca, the goddess of weapons and warfare. She can make weapons that allow even the unskilled to use the power of Spirits and is also the one who forged Tooi's sword [[CoolSword Zodiac]].



* In ''LightNovel/TheIrregularAtMagicHighSchool'', spells are what is smithed. They're a bit like suits: anyone with magical talent and enough power can cast one, but spells tailored to someone's specific eidos signature will always be faster and less exhausting than the generic version. A really good spell engineer can amplify a magician's power several levels beyond what s/he could achieve on their own, which is why engineers are often kept on retainer by wealthy magicians and the ones who have built superweapons have to have their names registered with the government.

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* In ''LightNovel/TheIrregularAtMagicHighSchool'', ''Literature/TheIrregularAtMagicHighSchool'', spells are what is smithed. They're a bit like suits: anyone with magical talent and enough power can cast one, but spells tailored to someone's specific eidos signature will always be faster and less exhausting than the generic version. A really good spell engineer can amplify a magician's power several levels beyond what s/he could achieve on their own, which is why engineers are often kept on retainer by wealthy magicians and the ones who have built superweapons have to have their names registered with the government.
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[[folder:Arts]]
* ''Art/TheApotheosisOfWashington'': Keeping in tradition with Vulcan's role as the Blacksmith God, ''The Apotheosis'' paints him leaning his hammer on an anvil while standing on top of a cannon serves to represent the pride of American mechanics.
[[/folder]]

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Uncrushable shields, Power-belts and magic Rings,\\
Swords that never miss, Scepters and Crowns and other things."''
-->-- '''Falconer''', "Lord Of The Blacksmiths"

to:

Uncrushable shields, Power-belts power-belts and magic Rings,\\
rings,\\
Swords that never miss, Scepters scepters and Crowns crowns and other things."''
-->-- '''Falconer''', "Lord Of The of the Blacksmiths"






* Godo in ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'', the expert blacksmith who makes Guts' weapons, lives in the middle of nowhere, although this is {{justified}}: his hut is convenient to old mine that was once the home of elves. He still appears to be highly sought-after, as a merchant comes racing to him with the news that the campaign to eradicate [[spoiler: the Hawks]] requires fresh supplies of arms and armor. Godo's greatest accomplishment may be the Dragonslayer sword, which he forged in response to an unidentified king's challenge to craft a sword that could [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin slay a dragon]]. It [[NonIndicativeName hasn't killed any dragons yet]], but given how many huge, overpowered demons and other creatures it ''has'' killed, there's not much question that it ''could'', but it's so large and heavy that no one has been shown to successfully wield it but Guts.
* Lon Beruk in ''Manga/DragonQuestTheAdventureOfDai'' is a famous sorcerer-blacksmith from the Demon World, whose powerful weapons are used by heroes and villains alike. He is first referenced as the creator of Hyunkel's Demon Armor Sword and its sister weapons (which can transform part of their mass into [[ArmorOfInvincibility a suit of incredibly sturdy armour]]), and Demon Lord Vearn's MagicStaff is another of his creations. When [[TheHero Dai]] finds that [[FullPotentialUpgrade he has grown too powerful for any normal weapon to withstand his strength]], Lon Beruk appears in person and (once the heroes find him some {{Orichalcum}}) crafts a [[BoringButPractical simple but ultra-durable]] blade for the hero which he christens "The Sword of Dai". It's eventually revealed that Lon Beruk sympathised with Dai because ''he himself'' suffers the same problem - he's also the best ''[[WorldsBestWarrior swordsman]]'' in the Demon World, and originally became a blacksmith as part of his quest for a weapon that could handle his full strength.
* The Rockbells of ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist'' are said to be the best auto-mail engineers around, but they live in rural isolation and only seem to make automail for the protagonist.
** Though Winry eventually leaves to study in Rush Valley, a booming haven for automail engineers.

to:

* Godo in ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'', ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'': Good, the expert blacksmith who makes Guts' weapons, lives in the middle of nowhere, although this is {{justified}}: his hut is convenient to old mine that was once the home of elves. He still appears to be highly sought-after, as a merchant comes racing to him with the news that the campaign to eradicate [[spoiler: the Hawks]] requires fresh supplies of arms and armor. Godo's greatest accomplishment may be the Dragonslayer sword, which he forged in response to an unidentified king's challenge to craft a sword that could [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin slay a dragon]]. It [[NonIndicativeName hasn't killed any dragons yet]], but given how many huge, overpowered demons and other creatures it ''has'' killed, there's not much question that it ''could'', but it's so large and heavy that no one has been shown to successfully wield it but Guts.
* ''Manga/DragonQuestTheAdventureOfDai'': Lon Beruk in ''Manga/DragonQuestTheAdventureOfDai'' is a famous sorcerer-blacksmith from the Demon World, whose powerful weapons are used by heroes and villains alike. He is first referenced as the creator of Hyunkel's Demon Armor Sword and its sister weapons (which can transform part of their mass into [[ArmorOfInvincibility a suit of incredibly sturdy armour]]), and Demon Lord Vearn's MagicStaff is another of his creations. When [[TheHero Dai]] finds that [[FullPotentialUpgrade he has grown too powerful for any normal weapon to withstand his strength]], Lon Beruk appears in person and (once the heroes find him some {{Orichalcum}}) crafts a [[BoringButPractical simple but ultra-durable]] blade for the hero which he christens "The Sword of Dai". It's eventually revealed that Lon Beruk sympathised with Dai because ''he himself'' suffers the same problem - -- he's also the best ''[[WorldsBestWarrior swordsman]]'' in the Demon World, and originally became a blacksmith as part of his quest for a weapon that could handle his full strength.
* ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist'': The Rockbells of ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist'' are said to be the best auto-mail engineers around, but they live in rural isolation and only seem to make automail for the protagonist.
** Though Winry
protagonist. Winry, however, eventually leaves to study in Rush Valley, a booming haven for automail engineers.
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** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkBetweenWorlds'': The Blacksmith in Kakariko Village claims to be the greatest smith in the world, and is the only one who can temper the Master Sword into the stronger Red Sword. Having done that, he remarks that he will likely never make another weapon so fine in his life, and that it could only be improved by someone even better at smithing than he -- but, again, he's the smith in the world. He's in fact correct, since Link needs to go to another world to find someone who can further temper his blade into the Golden Sword -- the Smith's own Lorulean counterpart, who won't spare more than a contemptuous glance at the Master Sword until it's improved by his alternate self, whose work is the only one fine enough to get him excited at the prospect of smithing again.

to:

** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkBetweenWorlds'': The Blacksmith in Kakariko Village claims to be the greatest smith in the world, and is the only one who can temper the Master Sword into the stronger Red Sword. Having done that, he remarks that he will likely never make another weapon so fine in his life, and that it could only be improved by someone even better at smithing than he -- but, again, he's the best smith in the world. He's in fact correct, since Link needs to go to another world to find someone who can further temper his blade into the Golden Sword -- the Smith's own Lorulean counterpart, who won't spare more than a contemptuous glance at the Master Sword until it's improved by his alternate self, whose work is the only one fine enough to get him excited at the prospect of smithing again.

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