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- Instead, Zeus’s ill feelings toward his son were because Ares did not use his violence in service of any sense of law, morality, or righteous cause. Ares relished violence in any circumstances, which made him hateful to the king of law and justice.
mythologysource.com/zeus-and-ares/Zeus and Ares: The Definitive Guide (2023) - Mythology Source
Ares is generally hated by the other Gods even the supreme rapist himself (Zeus) said the world would be a better place if he wasn’t born and called him an embarrassment. Ares also finds himself being outsmarted regularly.
Ares is a son of Zeus and an Olympian. There is a prophecy that a son of Zeus will eventually kill Zeus (in game and mythology). Zeus probably assumes that all of his direct sons have the capability to achieve power greater than his own. Ares is no exception.
In Nonnus's Dionysiaca, in the war between Cronus and Zeus, Ares killed an unnamed giant son of Echidna who was allied with Cronus, and described as spitting "horrible poison" and having "snaky" feet.
Ares was the ancient Greek god of war or, more properly, the spirit of battle. He represented the distasteful aspects of brutal warfare and slaughter. Ares was never very popular, and his worship was not extensive in Greece.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Apr 2, 2002 · Ares was the god that the Greeks loved to hate. As much as they prized democracy and civilized society, war was a grim reality in their lives. Though they were never fond of Ares, they accepted him as a necessary part of their pantheon.
In the Iliad, Zeus calls Ares alloposallos, "most hated". Ares' value as a war god is questionable—in the Trojan War, he was on the losing side, while Athena, depicted as holding Nike (victory) in her hand, was on the side of the victorious Greeks.