Often The Dupe Hammer, aka The Mighty Mjolnir is talked about.
Obviously this is named after Thor's hammer in Norse mythology.
But when did the name start being used in StackMythology and why?
Often The Dupe Hammer, aka The Mighty Mjolnir is talked about.
Obviously this is named after Thor's hammer in Norse mythology.
But when did the name start being used in StackMythology and why?
First wide public use at Meta Stack Exchange was in May 8, 2014 announcement in Increase close vote weight for gold tag badge holders:
we're going to be rolling out a change that gives you more power when it comes to handling duplicates, a chronic source of pain...
...if a question goes through two iterations of being opened and closed where this new 'Thor's Hammer' was used, moderators will get a flag alerting them to a contested duplicate...
For the sake of completeness, this announcement also refers "PHP 'hammer":
To show my commitment to this, here's my version of the now famous PHP 'hammer':
I would venture to guess that it comes from internet moderator lingo such as "the Ban Hammer", which usually refers to when a moderator uses his mod powers to ban a misbehaving user from a site:
From Want To Play Halo 4 Early? Prepare To Meet Microsoft’s Banhammer.
In the context of Stack Exchange, moderators do much more than just ban users, they also heavily moderate content quality, such as closing duplicate questions, with only 1 binding close vote (vs the usual 5 close votes required from non-mod users).
Because moderators wield such unilateral powers, it's fitting to refer to the act of closing a duplicate "with one mighty blow" as an instance of using "the Dupe Hammer", Mjolnir, etc.