Begtse in God of War: Laufey — the Mongolian-Buddhist war god

Updated Info updated 2026-06-03 · 3 min read

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Quick Answer

Begtse is a fiery war god from Tibetan Buddhism (with Mongolian roots) and one of the two hostile gods Faye meets in the Everywhen. He acts as a kind of “afterlife bouncer” for Sekhmet — guarding her and standing between Faye and her path out of the realm.

Begtse's role in God of War: Laufey

Begtse and Sekhmet were the two gods shown at the reveal, “both decidedly less than friendly.” Per detail shared around the State of Play, Begtse “acts as sort of an afterlife bouncer for Sekhmet” — the two appear aligned toward some shared, unforeseen goal, making Begtse an obstacle on Faye's way out of the Everywhen rather than a one-off boss.

Begtse in Buddhist mythology

Begtse is a dharmapala — a wrathful protector of Buddhist teaching — and the lord of war in Tibetan Buddhism, originally a pre-Buddhist war god of the Mongols. He is counted among the Eight Dharmapalas, and his name is a loanword from the Mongolian begder, meaning “coat of mail.” His inclusion is part of how God of War: Laufey mixes pantheons — Norse, Egyptian and Tibetan-Buddhist figures sharing the same realm.

Quick facts

Mythology
Tibetan-Buddhist
Mongolian roots
Domain
War
dharmapala
Name means
“Coat of mail”
from Mongolian
Role
Hostile
Sekhmet’s guard

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Sources

Begtse — the Mongolian-Buddhist War God - God of War: Laufey