Tolkien might suggest we have no mythology, but, and all respect to the man, video games and television are our generations' mythology. We can recount the events in the Halo universe from the fall of Reach through Master Chief and the journey of Samus Aran as well as Hesiod could recount the lives and genealogy of the Greek Gods in his Works and Days, one of the fundamental texts of mythology. We know the exploits of "The Ghost of Sparta" as well as the recounted stories of Hercules. The stories that comprise the Final Fantasy and Fire Emblem series tell us the stories of men and women banding together to save their kingdoms, their countrymen, their lives by thwarting some oppressive, near-omnipotent evil. What figure in literature or media is as god-defying and capable as The Doctor, in any of his iterations? In one sense, the most literal Deus Ex Machina that could ever happen is watching him step from the TARDIS and save the day. John McClane and his villain-shattering catchphrase stand along side the Lion's roar, as the most famous of Italian Plumbers becomes comparable to Odin in his perpetual fight against Loki, and the forestalling of Ragnarok. In that regard, we have our mythology, our gods, our deities to whom our suppliant prayer of pressing buttons before a shimmering box grant them unimaginable power beyond anything ever before seen in mythology--the power to die, be reborn, and start again moments apart from where they were, keeping the knowledge they just had. Video games, in their childhoods or developing years, are the onset of some of the greatest mythology that has yet been known.