| Category | Heroes |
| Region | Hells Womb, Lands of Purity |
| Race | firbolg |
| Gender | male |
| Title | King |
| Alignment | chaotic evil |
| Deity | Ares |
| Birthplace | Hengorek |
| Born | 2 Artifice 1035 |
| Died | 6 Warper 1126 |
In the year 1035, a firbolg son was born in a cave facing east, overlooking Sorrow Pass. He was bestowed the name "Naggor" by an Ares battle priest, who served as voices of their god and chronicled the history of names. Naggor was an unused name, untainted by failure. The firbolgs of the Hells Womb region believed that names are intrinsically linked to spirits, with successful ones highly valued and unused names worth more than those associated with failures. Naggor's parents paid a considerable sum of fifty gold pieces for his name, in the hope that their son's days of glory would not be hindered by the legacy of a war maiden who once bore the same name.
In 1052, at the age of 17, he participated in the Great Raid of Gwaeldior. He commenced as the leader of a Triangle; a three-person fighting team comprising two attackers and one dedicated to protecting the others. With commanders perishing for the glory of Ares, Naggor had ascended to a brigade commander by the time he personally spearheaded the charge into Celebriän. Although it was a joint attack by six such commanders, Naggor garnered the credit for his audacity in breaching the elven defenses and reaching the area where civilians were concealed. This provoked considerable confusion amongst the defenders in his wake. They feared the firbolg war frenzy, a state that could only be satiated through combat. The prospect of hundreds of frenzied barbarians running amok near their loved ones shattered the elven defensive line, which could have easily thwarted most of the attackers. When Celebriän fell, Naggor became a national hero. His inaugural act as chieftain was to depopulate the city. Thousands of captives were sold to the Toomrur tribes of the Ogre Steps, while others were used to fulfill pacts made with the Toomrur, or to procure future favors.
The following nine years witnessed Naggor's relentless raids upon the mining communities and frontier settlements of Gimhak. His brazen attacks were ultimately thwarted when his band was encircled by a formidable Celebriän army. Despite having depopulated their city and enslaved many, Naggor was presented with the choice of execution or banishment from the region. Opting for the latter, Naggor led his firbolg army westward into the hallowed Lands of Purity.
Naggor's subsequent exploit was the capture of Iglutt. He traversed the treacherous and alien glacial flows of Chemosh and then constructed boats to cross the Galathien sea. In the 1064 siege of Iglutt, Naggor vanquished the red dragon Apocalypse. Naggor settled in Iglutt, pursuing the path of nation-builder. His empire became the Kingdom of Naggor. His lifespan extended by the Ankh of Phalgas, he reigned for six decades.
In 1126, a slave revolt coupled with a barbarian invasion led to the demise of Naggor Stormhand and the collapse of his domain. Legends suggest that Naggor perished while battling the storm titan Dranfulmus. At the site of Naggor's death, the Red Sword monument was constructed, commemorating the late king's bravery and gallantry, rather than the man himself.