Count: 0 — There are no Norse gods that start with W. Consult the primary Old Norse sources (Poetic Edda, Prose Edda, the sagas and skaldic poetry) and standard reference works (for example Rudolf Simek’s Dictionary of Northern Mythology and Andy Orchard’s Dictionary of Norse Myth and Legend) and you will find no deity name beginning with the letter W. Note the interesting detail that Old Norse orthography and phonology do not include a native W letter; sounds that appear as W in other Germanic languages are written and pronounced as V or U in the Norse corpus.

Explain the absence by remembering the historical sound changes and orthographic conventions. Proto‑Germanic *w regularly becomes Old Norse v (compare Old English Wōden / German Wotan to Old Norse Óðinn), so names that begin with a W in English or continental Germanic sources appear under V or other letters in Norse texts. Consider related searches instead: look at Norse gods beginning with V (Váli, Víðarr, the Vanir) or at Anglo‑Saxon and continental Germanic cognates (Woden, Wotan) and at modern fictional or anglicized names that invent W‑initial forms for flavor.