Galga believed in the gods, even to the point where he believed he is descended from them, but he doesn’t blame the gods for his misfortune or even thank them for his victories. It’s almost as if his belief of the gods were limited to the idea that they exist and that they’re watching over him,
but that’s it. He was also a good father and brother.
Galga is a man who is acutely aware of his own free will. He understood human behavior, read people, and he thought about how he might be perceived in the face of others. He thought before speaking and before doing. When he does speak, he speaks his truth, and his words carry more meaning than they appear to at first.
Of course there’s a dark side to him. Killing his newborn child just because he had deformed legs was powerful because of its brutality. Galga was sure it was the right punishment, and he was sure it was he who must do it. He also killed his brother Neush who betrayed him and became an alley with his enemy. Galga performed a torturous slaying ceremony, he sat his brother on his knees, tired his hands apart, and with an axe chopped his ribs apart from the spines. The, opened his back and took his lungs out. He just had to do what was right and fair in his mind. He believed that if his brother suffered in silence, he may entered the Falah, which is the heaven where all the mighty warriors and kings go after death.