Varys: In the Summer Isles, they worship a fertility goddess with sixteen teats.
Tyrion: We should sail there immediately.
A Fertility God is a Stock God role whose job is to create, cultivate or nurture new life, or to help create conditions in which life can thrive.
They often overlap with a Love God and Food God, though not always. "Fertility" means a lot of things to different people and cultures, and thus it's not that uncommon for a god with a wider role to have "fertility" as one of its spheres, or for a fertility god to have various specialized roles as a patron of food (through agriculture) or of sex and love (through birth and pregnancy). A God of Thunder may also have ties to this concept, as the bringer of rains that nourish crops. Male fertility gods are usually associated with this aspect, with virility and fatherhood, or both. A god wholly devoted to it is usually some type of Odd Job God except for a Proud Merchant Race, a society of Explosive Breeders, or an agrarian society, where they are often a Patron God or sometimes even promoted to Top God. Even a Proud Warrior Race understands that it's important not to piss off the god responsible for feeding its armies and producing the children that will grow into future warriors. When displeased, these deities may strike their followers with droughts, bad harvests, and barrenness or impotence — all things that any society will wish very much to avoid if possible.
By default, almost every Earth Mother or Mother Nature spirit doubles as a fertility goddess, but Nature Is Not Nice. A Nature Spirit may spend millions of years cultivating an entire species, only to wipe them all out with a single natural disaster. A pure Fertility God will usually only advocate for the creation and reproduction of life; they may even be opposed to a God/Entity of Death or Destroyer Deity, and works will often contrast the two. If they succeed in upsetting the balance, the world may eventually face an Overpopulation Crisis or some other Green Aesop in which life itself overtakes the Earth like a cancer.
They may also double as a Hot God and Sex God, if hanky-panky is within their definition of "fertility". They may also be responsible for a Mystical Pregnancy or two, often helping a mother (or "father") become pregnant after a single intimate act, or sometimes even no intimacy at all, often with tons and tons of offspring. They may also be the person having a bunch of kids themselves, sometimes by many different partners.
Usually possesses Flowers of Nature, Fertile Feet or Fertile Blood, with more powerful versions capable of Green Thumb, Genesis Effect or World-Healing Wave powers as a function of their station.
Their worshippers are usually Nature Lovers or exhibit Purity Personified, and the gods themselves usually lean toward Light in a work that utilizes Light/Darkness Juxtaposition, with an alignment that can range anywhere from Lawful Good to True Neutral. Evil versions, however, do exist, and may be a Monster Progenitor or Mother of a Thousand Young.
Examples:
- Batman: Poison Ivy has commonly been worshipped as a nature and fertility goddess, due to her sexually-appealing appearance and ability to grow entire forests even in urbanized areas and other places where plant life should not be sustainable. As a scientist (and misanthrope), Ivy is usually quick to to dismiss these claims, but will also take advantage of believers to fulfill whatever goal she strives toward.
- Marvel Universe:
- The Norse goddess Freya, kin to Thor, was originally portrayed as a goddess of fertility. Not much else was known about her. Later stories, however, claimed that "Freya" (or "Freyja") was simply another name used by the Queen of Asgard (and Thor's step-mother) Frigga. It's also claimed that it's an alias which was also used by the Asgardian goddess of sex, beauty and seduction, Amora the Enchantress.
- The Incredible Hercules is considered a god of male fertility; this basically shows itself in his voracious sexual appetite and sex appeal. While the Marvel continuity is rather vague on the number of children he's had over the millennia, he's considered the possible ancestor of numerous superheroes and supervillains.
- Gaea the Earth Mother is revealed to be the same Earth Goddess from every pantheon, such as "Jord" from Norse myth and "Haumea" from Hawaiian myth. Naturally, as a "Mother" goddess, she is also depicted as solving a large number of problems by giving birth to the solution, such as giving birth to Typhon in an attempt to kill the Olympian Gods, giving birth to the Demogorge to kill the Elder Gods, and giving birth to Thor (before retcons) to kill Giants and other monsters. While acting as one of the co-rulers of Asgard, she was even depicted holding an unidentified newborn in her arms.
- In the Miraculous Ladybug fanfic The Biological Imperative, it turns out that Tikki, as the kwami of Creation, is extremely fond of children, and everything that results in them. It takes Marinette a minute to digest the implications of that after she discovers she's pregnant.
Marinette: You mean I've been bonded with a fertility goddess?
Tikki: That's a term they used in some of the old mythologies, sure. - Codex Equus:
- Princess Carnation is a goddess of Fertility, giving her the power to increase the likelihood of having children, makie sterile creatures fertile again, and heal and protect people from things that would prevent them from either siring or giving birth to children safely. Like her father, Amareros, her powers extend to species that are incapable of having children due to biological differences.
- As Kehidupan Cahaya, Moon Ray embodies Life and Creation. The former lets him encourage growth and fertility, control plants and animals, and planimals, and be empowered by life. The latter lets him create things, and he can channel his powers through Magic Music. His domains have gotten him pressured into sleeping around by people who expect Life/Creation deities to do so, much to his annoyance.
- The Stork specifically embodies the genesis of new life, birth, and conception.
- Earth-27:
- Even before he had received this purview, Freyr had the natural power to enrich organic matter and thereby restore its vigor. With this ability, he can also instantly heal minor ailments, cure impotence or infertility over time, and get an overall sense of the general health of all beings in his locality. Witht he addition of this purview, his power was amplified, allowing him to heal major ailments and moderate injuries. With a ritual requiring multiple participants, he can revitalize an entire region all its residents in a single night.
- Elvira, Mistress of the Dark, was a goddess of fertility and sex in the Etruscan pantheon between 1950 BCE to 200 BCE, when she went by the name of Alpanu, and then in the Iberian pantheon for another 200 years as Ataecina.
- The Myth of Link & Zelda: Survivors of the Calamity: Farore is heavily associated with the natural world, especially with the fact that her chosen hero in canon usually finds his Master Sword in a lush green forest. Her region to the south, the Faron Region named for her, is described as being very lush, and one of the few areas entirely untouched by the Great Calamity. The Divine Beast Vah Eponia is the one closest to her region, and is said to be a nature-oriented Divine Beast.
- With This Ring: Once Adrianna Tomaz accepts the Amulet of Isisnote , she and Adom know that their marriage will produce children soon — which they're pleased about, both because they want children, and because it's beneficial to the country to have more potential heirs. Adrianna is less thrilled about how the transformation into Isis' avatar initially results in her being very generously proportioned and very underdressed, but Paul is able to provide her with a change of clothes from some of Wonder Woman's spares.
- Doraemon: Nobita and the Spiral City: The Sower is a creator god who sowed all worlds with life at the beginning of time, can control and increase plant life, and in his true form resembles an immense golden snake.
- Dounia and the Princess of Aleppo: The refugees pass a temple to the ancient fertility goddess, Ishtar. She is portrayed as a dancing, scantily-clad woman who grows a big forest so that Dounia and her family can escape the border patrol into Turkey.
- Moana: Te Fiti, the Mother Island, is an island-sized goddess who gave life to countless islands in the world. She is covered with moss and plants, and can make plant life grow from anything, even ash and soot. She is a kind and benevolent goddess, until her Heart is stolen and she transforms into the destructive Te Ka.
- MonsterVerse: Most of the Kaiju, who were worshipped by ancient civilizations as gods, as revealed in Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019), although it depends on whether they're under Godzilla or King Ghidorah's control at the time. When Godzilla is acting as the Kaiju's alpha, he regenerates oceanic reefs; Behemoth regenerates rainforests, and even Scylla (who's classified as a Destroyer instead of a Protector) reverses polar melting. When Ghidorah is in charge, though, he makes the Kaiju help him to wipe out all life on the planet instead.
- Ascendance of a Bookworm: Leidenschaft, the god of fire, used his warmth to encourage the growth of the plants created by Geduldh and Ewigeliebe after Flutrane freed them from ice. Anwachs, the God of Nurture (German for "to grow"), is one of Leidenschaft's subordinates.
- Cthulhu Mythos: Shub-Niggurath, the Black Goat of the Woods with a Thousand Young, a decidedly dark take on this. Procreation, sex, and nature fall under her purview, but she's still as much of a God of Evil as any other Mythos deity, requiring Human Sacrifice deep in the forest on the night of the full moon, as well as foul and depraved orgies, usually with her or one of her Dark Young taking part in the form of a satyr. That is, if she hasn't shown up as a cloud of monster-haunted black fog, or a full-blown Eldritch Abomination.
- Discworld: Gods tend to merge with each other across different cultures due to the way belief works on the Disc, so it's explained there's only one fertility goddess with a very large collection of wigs and padded bras.
- The Faraway Paladin: Mary's patron deity Mater has this role in the series' Fantasy Pantheon: she's a patron of agriculture and child-rearing, said to be the wife of Top God Volt, god of lightning and rulership, and mother of Gracefeel, goddess of the cycle of reincarnation. Mary's daily prayers to her yielded a highly nutritious bread that was the basis of main character William's diet growing up, while Mary herself, an undead priestess of Mater, acted as his strict but loving adoptive mother.
- Inheritance Trilogy, by N. K. Jemisin: Enefa was the Goddess of Life and Death, and, as a co-creator of the universe, the inventor of those concepts. She was described as a maternal figure to the lifeforms she created, but nonetheless destroyed them without hesitation when she felt they'd served their purpose.
- Kushiel's Legacy: The d'Angeline goddess Eisheth (who, like all of Terre d'Ange's gods, is a former archangel of the Abrahamic God who left heaven to follow Elua) provides Fantasy Contraception to the women of Terre d'Ange, which is quite important in their culture. Women who wish to conceive pray to her to open their wombs.
- The Redemption of Althalus: Dweia is the goddess of love and fertility in all their forms, from agriculture to childbirth, and mediator between her Creator and Destroyer Deity brothers. Nonetheless, she's a bit put off by one culture's depiction of her with extreme Multiboobage.
- Rivers of London: "Kelly", the goddess of the River Kyll, used to be propitiated by the Strackers' vineyard to ensure a good harvest. When Jacqueline Stracker met her in 1984, she said that the pact had ended.
- A Song of Ice and Fire:
- The Summer Isles worship a goddess of love, beauty and fertility as their most important deity. Sex, lovemaking and procreation are all considered holy within the Isles' culture, with prostitution even looked upon as a treasured profession that even some high-born natives aspire to.
- Garth Greenhand, a legendary figure called a god in some stories and a mortal man in others, is said to have restored fertility in barren women with a touch, made girls flower with a smile, and mothers give birth to twins or triplets with his blessing. Every maiden given to him to deflower always became pregnant from it and gave birth to "strong sons or fair daughters". Almost every noble house in the Reach claims descent from one of his many children, and the area's legendary agricultural wealth is said to be the (often literal) fruit of his soujourns there.
- Downplayed with the Mother. In the Faith of the Seven, she is the aspect of God who is prayed to for fertility issues, although she also represents compassion and mercy.
- Tasakeru: The Goddess of Life. Usually appearing as a beautiful (in a couple of myths, the most beautiful) female of a given race (of which there are a whopping nine; eleven if you count near-or recently-extinct races), her purview is life, crops, fertility of all sorts, and the wellspring of Magic. Her husband is the Time god, and their mutual rival (both in love and war) is the Death god. Specific myths point her out as singularly beautiful and capable, and as a mother figure to all life on the World.
- Supernatural: The brothers end up facing a Vanir, a Norse Fertility God, in "Scarecrow". Brought over to America by Scandinavian colonists, the town of Burkitsville entered an agreement where each year they would provide it with two blood sacrifices, and in return it would ensure its blessing fell upon the town, granting them constant bountiful harvests and sparing their town from financial struggles. The Vanir itself manifests in the form of a Scarecrow. It's killed at the climax when they torch its sacred tree, brought over from the old country as a sapling, that was the source of its power and tether to the world.
- Aboriginal Australian Myths: Several deities are associated with fertility, particularly in relation to water. These include Wagyl from the Noongar, the Wandjina from the various cultures in the western Australian "Wandjina-Wungurr" complex and Birrangulu from the Gamilaraay.
- Catholic Christianity: The patron saint Andrew the Apostle is usually acknowledged for being the patron saint of fertility and pregnancy.
- Classical Mythology:
- Demeter (aka Ceres) is the most archetypical fertility goddess, being the deity of agriculture and harvest. Her most famous myth involves her daughter Persephone being married and/or kidnapped by Hades, thus making Demeter miserable and causing a winter where plant life begins to wither and die off. In some tellings, this is merely a result of her mood, but in other versions, Demeter intentionally does it to essentially hold life on earth hostage. Either way, Zeus eventually intervenes and allows Persephone to return to her mother for half of the year (Spring and Summer) before returning to the Underworld for the other half (Fall and Winter).
- Persephone herself is both goddess of spring and vegetation, and a goddess of death and The Underworld. She started as merely a part of her mother's retinue, but gained her status as Queen of The Underworld when she was wed to Hades. Which gave her a connection to the concept of rebirth and renewal.
- Surprisingly enough, Hades was also a fertility god in addition to his role as god of The Underworld. Though in a unique take on the concept, he's specifically connected to the fertility of the soil, rather than the plants. This aspect of him comes from his command over the riches of the earth, which not only includes precious gems and metals, but also the richness of the soil. It was this aspect of Hades that was most widely and openly worshipped (though usually under one of his aliases). It is one of the reasons one of Hades' symbols is a cornucopia, from which he pours fertility. (A vase painting even shows him pouring this fertility onto the soil while Persephone plows.)
- Heracles was often worshipped as a symbol of male fertility and virility, usually within the context of men siring strong heirs or sons. Heracles himself was accredited with having hundreds of children from dozens of different women, who were referred to as "Heraclids". For example, most Spartans claimed ancestry from Heracles. In some versions, he would have sexual affairs with various men as well.
- In addition to love, sex and beauty, fertility was sometimes considered part of Aphrodite's purview, although that was mostly due to her association with the Roman fertility goddess, Venus, and the Mesopotamian goddess Astarte. Nonetheless, her myths were also full of children that were born in very short order after Aphrodite used her powers on one (or both) of the parents, and Aphrodite herself also had a large number of children as well.
- Egyptian Mythology:
- Hathor was the Ancient Egyptian goddess of music, beauty, love, sexuality and fertility. Her "positive" spheres emphasized feminine and procreative energy; some myths state that she helped create the world, often by giving birth to it herself. She was also the most beautiful and usually considered the most sexually-enticing of the gods, commonly using her sexuality to solve (or create) problems.
- The god Hapi represented the fertility of the Nile. To these ends most depictions have both masculine (erections) and feminine (large breasts) traits to emphasise this.
- Sobek was another god associated with water's fertility, and to these sexual voracity was quintessential to the deity (epithets include "he who steals wives from their husbands" and "Lord of semen").
- Igbo Mythology: Ala is the goddess of fertility and considered the Top God of the pantheon. Not only does she hold dominion over the earth and mortality in general (her name literally translates to "the ground"), but she is married to the sky god Amadioha, and her womb is where the underworld and the afterlife dwells.
- Japanese Mythology: Inari is the god of agriculture, fertility, rice, tea and sake. They (Inari is alternately presented as male, female, and ambiguous) are one of the most important and celebrated of the Shinto mythos, often considered a guardian and protector for mortals. They are also highly associated with foxes, with all foxes considered Inari's messengers.
- Mesopotamian Mythology: Ishtar (also known as Inanna and Astarte, and also considered the antecedent to Aphrodite) is known as one of the Mesopotamian deities associated with fertility, along with war, love and sex.
- Norse Mythology:
- The Vanir gods, one of the two rival factions which later integrated, are usually stated to be associated with wisdom, health, foresight and fertility. These included Njordr, the god of seafaring, wealth and crop fertility, and Njordr's children: Freyr, who was the god of virility, peace and prosperity, and Freyja, who is one of the most important gods of the Norse pantheon, being the goddess of war, sex, love, beauty, gold and fertility. She is associated with rye fields (which Scandinavians heavily relied upon).
- Thor is believed to have had a role as an agricultural deity among Norse commoners, as an extension of his role as the primary bringer of thunder, storms, and rain — he was the one who brought the water that crops could not grow without.
- Proto-Indo-European mythology: While no direct sources of this belief system have survived into historical times, some figures have been reconstructed from comparisons among its later, descendant mythologies:
- Dheghom Mehter (a theoretical deity whose name is a reconstructed ancestor of the term "Earth Mother") is a reconstruction of the root source the myths of nearly all others in Eurasia, including Demeter, Ceres, Persephone, Gaea, Jord, Prithvi Mata, and others. She would have been the embodiment of the earth, who created life after mating with Sky Father "Dyeus" or "Perkwunos" (sky/weather gods analogous to Zeus and Thor) or an unnamed possible Water God (a predecessor to Poseidon and Uranus)... or all three, making them all "fertility gods" in their own right.
- Hewsos, Heusos or Hausos, a dawn goddess, was an early archetype for a Love Goddess and Hot God. As goddess of the dawn, she would have been rooted in beauty, dancing, festivity and merriment, and most likely depicted as enticing the (female) sun to follow her across the sky with her suggestive dances. Her Dawn Goddess role was carried on by Eos/Aurora and Apollo/Helios of the Greco-Roman pantheon and Freya of the Norse Pantheon (who, by the way, were all also known for having voracious sexual appetites), and even spread as far as the Far East in the form of Ushas in the Hindu pantheon, and possibly even Ame-no-Uzume in the Japanese pantheon.
- Zoroastrianism: Anahita is associated with fertility due to being the yazata of rivers. She is believed to be derived from the same proto-Indo-Iranian goddess who gave rise to Saraswati, and during the first Persian Empire she was syncretized with Ishtar.
- Dungeons & Dragons:
- Annam is, among other things, the giants' god of fertility. He is the fertile progenitor of worlds and possesses a lustful, instinctive, and unpredictable nature, which causes him to make a considerable number of mistakes when governed by his instincts. Following his departure from the Prime Material Plane, his daughters Diancastra and Iallanis took over some of his role as a fertility god.
- Forgotten Realms: Chauntea is the goddess of agriculture, and one of the most popular deities among Faerunian commoners. Her followers often claim that she is the progenitor of all the mortal races, and her major holiday Greengrass is essentially the Celtic holiday Beltane with the serial numbers filed off. Other fertility deities include Shiallia, Eldath (arguably, as one of her epithets is "Mother Guardian of Groves"), Sharindlar from the dwarf pantheon, Aerdrie Faenya and Angharradh from the elven pantheon, Sheela Peryroyl and Yondalla from the halfling pantheon, Hathor, Isis, and Osiris from the Mulhorandi pantheon, and Luthic from the orc pantheon.
- Eberron: In the faith of the Sovereign Host, Arawai is "Sovereign of Life and Love", and is patron of agriculture, life, and fertility. Curiously, she is also said to be the sister of the Dark Six god of destruction the Devourer, whom civilized folk often also pray to for protection from flooding and drought.
- GURPS Dungeon Fantasy features classic dungeon fantasy-style clerics and holy warriors, and allows for the possibility of them worshiping a range of deities. Specifically, GURPS Dungeon Fantasy 7: Clerics offers different spell lists and special powers for different types of deity served; it covers "Gods of Love and Fertility" in a single section, assuming that the two domains are likely to be linked.
- Pathfinder:
- Erastil is the patron god of rural communities, family, agriculture, and hunting. He is also husband to Jaidi, an ancient Azlanti agriculture goddess; together they are parents to Halcamora, a demigoddess who specializes in parks, gardening, and wineries.
- On a darker note, Lamashtu is revered in some cults as the "Mother of Monsters": an Evilutionary Biologist who likes nothing better than to bring new and vile monsters into existence to set them loose on Golarion. She's seen as a patron goddess by many goblinoids.
- RuneQuest:
- This role is generally associated with the Earth deities:
- Ernalda the Earth Mother, the chief Earth goddess and the patron of agriculture in the Storm pantheon, is the embodiment of the earth as a source of fruitfulness and prosperity and the primary deity of fertility in plants, livestock, and births among the Orlanthi peoples. She is usually depicted as a beautiful, green-skinned, and minimally-dressed woman with snakes winding about her arms.
- Flamal is the ancestor of all vegetation, and the ultimate source of growth and health in all plants, algae, and fungi. When he was murdered by Zorak Zoran all green life began to die; the world's fertility was not restored until Flamal returned to life in the first Dawn. In the present, he dies each winter and is reborn each spring, and the cycle of growth and death in nature is tied to him in this manner. He is worshiped, or at least respected and acknowledged, by both human agriculturalists and the elves of the deep forests, as he makes no distinction between his wild and domesticated descendants.
- Genert and Pamalt were twin snake-bodied gods who presided over the growth and fertility of the north and south of the world. Genert perished, body and soul, during the Great Darkness, while Pamalt survived. As a result, the southern continent of Pamaltela recovered from the Great Darkness far better than northern Generterla did, and a vast area in its center where Genert had his garden, which was tied to his life force, is now a barren desert where little grows.
- The Grain Goddesses are the numerous daughters of Genert, each of whom was given a region of land to rule over. They were among Flamal's many lovers, and from him each begat a particular grain. In the present, they are the primary agricultural deities of their various homelands, and the patrons of each particular strain of cultivated grain. Thus, Frona is both the agricultural goddess of Fronela and the patron of rye, Kralora of Kralorela and of rice, and so on.
- Caladra and Aurelion, the twin volcano gods, restore the earth's fertility and life-giving potential, especially where it is blighted by Chaos.
- To a lesser degree, some Air gods also take on this role:
- Orlanth, the chief of the Air gods, is primarily a god of storms and war. However, Orlanth Thunderous, the aspect of Orlanth that is most concerned with storm and weather, is more fertility-oriented and is worshiped by those dependent on the life-giving and life-taking powers of weather, like farmers or herders. This is particularly notable in light of Orlanth's marriage to Ernalda, as their dual roles as the gods of weather and plants make them a very important pair for agriculture.
- Heler, a water god who joined to Air pantheon, is the hermaphroditic deity of rainfall and thus of immense importance to farmers, particularly in their role as the foe of Daga, the malignant god of drought.
- Lodril, one of the Fire gods, is associated with virility and male fertility in particular. He is famous for his fiery lusts, both in the most direct sense and in a general lust for life, novelty, and experiences, and for the numerous children he fathered with various goddesses, and is usually depicted with exaggerated genitals.
- Hon-eel is a Lunar demigoddess revered as a deity of conception, life, death, and rebirth. She is worshiped both by women hoping for beauty and sexuality and by farmers hoping for good harvests; in particular, due to having been the discoverer and spreader of maize, her cult is nearly universal in areas where corn is grown. In the latter case, her worship often centers around ritualized combat where the losers are offered as sacrifices to the fields.
- This role is generally associated with the Earth deities:
- Warhammer:
- Nurgle, one of the Chaos Gods, is essentially a twisted version of this trope. His domain is fertility and life, but, the setting being what it is, he is most closely associated with decay, parasitism, and disease. After all, bacteria and fungi are living things too!
- Isha, one of the primary Elven/Eldar deities, is the goddess of motherhood and plants. In Fantasy, she is worshiped by elven mothers hoping for safe births and by farmers hoping for good yields, and is one of the chief gods of the Wood Elves due to providing for the yearly growth of the forest. In Warhammer 40,000, she takes an additional role as a goddess of medicine by sending mortals messages of cures for the pestilences of Nurgle, who holds her captive.
- Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay: Rhya the Earth Mother is worshipped as a goddess of life, birth, growing things, and the gentler aspects of nature, and as a counterpart to the her husband Taal, who is the god of forests, hunters, and wild nature. Her cultists often serve as midwives in remote areas, and one minor sect worships her as Dyrath, a goddess of fertility and womanhood. She is considered, by both Elves and some human cults, to be the same figure as Isha.
- Bug Fables: Venus is the goddess of harvest worshipped in the Golden Settlement, and is constantly prayed to in order to ensure the bountiful harvest, with festivals being held in her name to please her. She is also the one who keeps the Golden Region in perpetual autumn with her powers.
- City-Building Series:
- Pharaoh: As god of the Nile, Osiris is responsible for the fertility of floodplain farms, making them barren, withholding the Inundation or even destroying the farms if displeased, or making them double their production if prayed to. Constructing his Temple Complex also allows wood and papyrus to grow back faster.
- Zeus: Master of Olympus:
- Demeter's Sanctuary turns all the land around it to meadow, on which livestock, crops or farms can be placed. She'll also bless farms and can fill granaries with food if prayed to. She's also the fourth most-powerful goddess after the Big Three, so having her around can thwart quite a few invasions by other gods. Naturally, having her as an enemy will cause a lot of problems for agriculture-based cities.
- Gods associated with a particular foodstuff (Poseidon for seafood, Artemis for wild game, Hera for oranges) or trade crop (Dionysus for grapes, Athena for olives) will bless their particular industry, making it more productive, and can provide large amounts of it when prayed to. Hera, Dionysus and Athena also provide groves for their crops, allowing your city to harvest a small amount every year.
- Aphrodite isn't a fertility goddess in the usual sense (population only increases through immigration if you have the housing for it), but if you've suffered a massive population loss due to disease she can instantly replenish your population... for less than heroic reasons.
Heavens! There aren't nearly enough people in the city to worship me! - Emperor: Rise of the Middle Kingdom: Shen Nong the Divine Farmer is one of the three Ancestor Gods, who can bless farms if kept sufficiently happy.
- Dark Souls I: The Divine Blessing item (used for healing) notes that Gwynevere, Princess of Sunlight, is worshipped as a goddess of fertility and bounty.
- Destroy All Humans!: Arkvoodle of the Sacred Crotch has the basic trappings of a god whose domain falls under "sex", "sex" and "more sex", as is noted as having been "prodigious in size and stamina" — something particularly notable among the presently-sterile Furons. Being a Furon god, though, a lot of the tasks he demands of Crypto still require the use of his weaponry.
- Dragon Age: Inquisition: She only gets a brief mention in the DLC Jaws of Hakkon, but Rilla of the Fireside is the Avvar goddess of "making babies." They appeal to her specifically when they're trying to have children.
- Dwarf Fortress: Some deities can be generated with Fertility among their spheres.
- Final Fantasy XIV: Nophica the Matron is one of the Twelve worshiped in Eorzea. Nophica is the goddess of the earth and the harvest. The city-state of Gridania, nestled in the Black Shroud, worship her as their patron.
- Fire Emblem Gaiden: Mila is the Patron God of Zofia, keeping its lands constantly fertile and overflowing with life as a source of comfort to the humans living there. Because of this, she has a devoted following of worshippers who praise her as the Earth Mother. But her gifts have also made many Zofians slothful and hedonistic, as shown by the debauchery of the king before his assassination.
- Genshin Impact:
- In an unconventional manner. Due to Fontainians' original nature as Oceanid pseudo-humans that needed the Hydro Archon's permission to reproduce, Focalors single-handedly blessed Fontaine's women with Mystical Pregnancy for the 500 years she was in power. Furthermore, her "justice" was to ensure the continuation of Fontaine's existence via her Batman Gambit, and with Neuvillette's help, her people's reproductive freedom become no longer under any god's control.
- Due to their mastery over the Primordial Sea that was the source of life before the appearance of outside life forms, the Hydro Dragon could be regarded as Teyvat’s original "God of Life". As such, when Neuvillette regains his Hydro Sovereign authority, he can ascend the incomplete human race that Egeria created from the Oceanids into true humans, and the Traveler comments that the Fontainians were finally truly "born" in that moment.
- Hades: Persephone is the Goddess of Verdure, and her cottage is warm, lush and green in contrast to the Eternal Winter that Demeter has locked the rest of the world in, implying that Persephone's powers are what make the land fertile.
- Honkai: Star Rail: Yaoshi the Abundance is an unusual negative example of this trope. Yaoshi cannot bear to see mortals suffer and believes that death is the cause of all suffering, so they spread immortality and endlessly propagating life across the universe. Problem is, that immortality comes with a side effect of causing people to lose their minds and turning them into monsters that indiscriminately attack other people, and their blessings also result in overpopulation, resource shortages, and ecological disasters. The Xianzhou Alliance, a federation of six Planet Spaceships, was once a group of Immortality Seekers who sought Yaoshi's blessing, only for the resulting immortality to nearly destroy their civilization, causing them to swear revenge. The loyal followers of Yaoshi, the Denizens of Abundance, are generally malicious, with the borisin and wingweavers being warmongerers who biologically modify other races into attack dogs and enslave people into maintaining the endless living things that Yaoshi provides.
- Horizon Zero Dawn: While GAIA as a whole was created for this basically an A.I. tasked with recreating an entire biosphere after a global extinction event, the specific functions that helped nurture life in the new world were DEMETER, which recreated plant life; ARTEMIS, which recreated certain animal life; and ELEUTHIA, which created human beings and gave them a very limited early education.
- Iconoclasts: The prevailing faith of the Isi people does not have a named god or goddess, but has shaped their culture such that procreation and the nuclear family are seen by them as the ultimate good. The Icons of Prayer that dot their home of Isilugar depict a man and woman cradling a newborn child. It's heavily implied that, stemming from this, same-sex relationships are shunned in Isi society, which causes problems for Mina and Samba. Meanwhile, Dr. Gustavo suffers from an unnamed genetic disease that has a high if not guaranteed chance of being passed down to his children, therefore he simply refuses to have any, which has made him something of an outcast.
- The Legend of Zelda: Of the three omnipotent Golden Goddesses that created Hyrule, Farore was the one who created all of the life. Though she is mostly known as the Goddess of Courage, and is specifically the one who blesses and empowers the chosen hero, her other blessings and sacred relics may also help various forms of life flourish.
- Pokémon: As a general trend, the Forces of Nature fill different aspects of the trope as an extension of their weather- and storm-based powers.
- Thundurus' lightning bolts and forest fires enrich the soil that they strike.
- Landorus serves as a mesuring force between Thundurus' lightning and Tornadus' winds, harnessing and using both to make the land more fertile. It is known as the Guardian of the Fields as a result.
- Enamorus from Pokémon Legends: Arceus brings love that sparks new waves of births.
- RuneScape: Elidinis is the Menaphite goddess of fertility and growth, in addition to being the God of the Moon. Since the Menaphites are a Desert People and a Fantasy Counterpart Culture to Ancient Egypt, she falls under the "agriculture" category, being most strongly associated with water.
- Touhou Project: Minoriko Aki is a goddess of the autumn harvest, able to curse or bless harvests made at that time. The Human Village calls her up for the harvest festival to remain in her good graces.
- Fate/hollow ataraxia's viewpoint character notes that Medusa/Rider used to be a fertility goddess before a curse and several decades of moral corruption warped her into a snake-headed monster. The sane version of her residing in the Emiya household has few traces of her old purview left, those being her inhumanly attractive body and her fixation on shipping people she likes...a fixation that manifests by giving them erotic dreams and encouraging them to ogle each other's assets. It seems that "superficiality" was not a big concern in Ancient Greece.
- RWBY: The God of Light is, as his name suggests, the deity in control of light and life. He creates plants, water, and wildlife, and often opposed his brother, the God of Darkness, who brings destruction. He and his brother later came to a compromise, and together created humanity.
- Girl Genius: Ashtara, the patron goddess of the lost city of Skifander, is a fertility goddess. According to Zeetha, Skifander's holy days are a lot of fun.
- Lore Olympus: Fertility goddesses are born roughly once every generation, and are notable for their ability to bear children who are considerably stronger than their fathers and tend to overthrow them. The protagonist of the comic, Persephone, is this generation's fertility goddess, even though she has no idea, as her mother made sure she had no contact with men and joined a chastity cult. She was not unjustifiably overprotective, though, since as soon as Persephone enters the outside world, she immediately becomes a target, leading to Apollo raping her in order to pressure her into marrying him. The fertility goddesses before Persephone included Metis, Rhea, and Gaia.
- Nixvir has the Lady Metre, the goddess of agriculture, wine, food and parties, who is a sort of mash-up between Demeter and Dionysus. She receives the responsibility every year on the Festival of Agriculture and the Grape of kissing farmers' produce as a sign of good luck and prosperity, presumably to make them grow bigger and faster. However, she's a friendly goddess who's not above holding a Drinking Contest with a snowman, and she grants him complete and utter respect after he wins.
- The Order of the Stick: In a Flashback, we see Thor being chewed out by Loki for having impregnated another goddess (presumably in a one night stand), without noticing that the woman with flowers growing around her feet and bluebirds flapping around her hair was a fertility goddess.
- Ow, my sanity: Shub-Niggurath manifests in A Form You Are Comfortable With as a plump, motherly lady with demon horns. She is still, of course, the Black Goat of the Woods; Mother of a Thousand Young.
- Unsounded: Yerta is the Gefendur fertility goddess, always depicted as pregnant and associated with childbirth and plant life.
- SCP Foundation: The Sarkic deity Lovataar, known as the Mother, is the patroness klavigar of motherhood and unrestrained reproduction. This does not just entail breeding and growth, but also cancer.