This battle proved to be an interesting one since I had to figure out how someone like Freddy could hurt someone like Thor.
For full effect this battle takes place in a dreamrealm of my arena. Freddy has the ability to change the dream reality, I just maintain
the use of my arena so that I know what would be there. He will probably change it to attack Thor. If somehow Thor figures out that it
is a dream and pulls Freddy into the real world, the battle will still be in my arena. Thor is immortal so Freddy can't kill him
in a dream like he did all those kids. Freddy would keep Thor too busy for him to realize it is all a dream. However he wouldn't be able
to hurt him, yet. Freddy seems to have some kind of telepathy in that he can sense when his victims are afraid and that feeds him.
He can also pull images from hi victim's mind as seen in Freddy vs. Jason when he appeared to Jason as his mother or trapped him in an
illusion of crystal lake. He can do the same with Thor by making him believe he is stuck back as his old secret identity of Donald Blake,
the crippled surgeon. Freddy himself could appear as Loki and he could turn the illusion of my arena into an illusion of Asgard. My belief is that
the proud Thor's fear would be his failure to protect his land and family from his greatest enemy. The vision of the ruins of Asgard at the hands of Loki would
be one that would demoralize Thor. Believing himself to be a cripple, Thor would not be able to fight back and therefore
would be trapped in the illusion, just as Jason was in the movie. I am making comparisons to the movie since both Jason and Thor
are invulnerable. Believing himself to be a cripple might also mean that he thinks he can be killed easily, ergo Freddy could win not be trapping but
by killing. I haven't said anything about Thor because his abilities are useless against Freddy. He would fight really hard but I believe
Freddy's tactics would demoralize him just enough to stop him cold. Pulling him out of the dreamrealm is not an option when Thor is stuck
believing in the illusion.