In order to get it, you have to beat the first Xemnas fight (skyscraper).
have to be at a level 53
You must finish the Goddess of Fate cup in the undergrounds of the Olympic Coliseum.
The cups you can play by asking Panic are: Pain and Panic Cup, Cerberus Cup, Titan Cup, and Goddess of Fate Cup. Once you have cleared all of these cups, you unlock the Paradox Cups. Go to Hades in his special little chamber and talk to him and you can play the Paradox Pain and Panic Cup, Cerberus Cup, Titan Cup, and Hades Cup. Note: Even though some of the cups have the same names, they are NOT the same cups. Paradox cups are much more difficult.
Only 7 in the whole game: get all types of materials, clear Alantica, clear 100 Acre Woods, treasure in Twilight Town, treasure in The World that Never Was, Treasure in Space Paranoids, clear the Goddess of Fate cup. And no, you can't synthesise and make an orichalcum+, you can only find them and use them to make Ultima Weapon.
Virgin huntress, goddess of the light of the moon, goddess of the wilderness, goddess of animals.
Okonkwo committed an act against the earth goddess by inadvertently killing a clansman during a funeral ceremony, which was considered a female crime or a crime of inadvertence. This act was seen as a violation of the sacredness of the earth and the community's moral and spiritual laws. As a result, he was exiled for seven years, highlighting the seriousness of his offense against both the goddess and his tribe's customs. This incident reflects the broader themes of fate and the consequences of one's actions in Chinua Achebe's "Things Fall Apart."
It is hades that is in the goddess of fate cup
beat all the other cups and the first fight with xemnas.
Aisa (Αίσα), personification of lot and fate
Ananke is the goddess of destiny, necessity, and fate.
Tykhê, Greek goddess of fortune, chance, providence and fate.
Freyja
Fate, destiny, chance.
fenrir valor form :hero's crest {the one you get for beating goddess of fate cup} master form:oathkeeper final form:ultima
To be a minor goddess: there are many nymphs in Greek myths.
A cup or chalice
fatalus (not to be confused with fatalis, which means "Deadly.")
In Roman mythology, the goddess Fortuna is often associated as a daughter of the primordial deity Oceanus and the Titaness Tethys, though some sources suggest she may be a daughter of Zeus (Jupiter in Roman mythology) and the goddess of chance and fate. She is frequently depicted as a personification of luck, fortune, and fate, and is sometimes linked to various other deities associated with chance and prosperity. Fortuna is often portrayed alongside her companion, the god of fate, who represents the inevitable nature of destiny.