Greek heroes have found their place in literature and art for thousands of years, each coming with their own complicated and thrilling series of stories that capture the imagination. For the average contemporary person, they are children’s stories and fiction, but for the Greeks, heroes represented so much more. They were religious figures, who received cults all over the Greek world, they were sources of entertainment and education, and they were a reflection of Greek ideas on humanity and the place of mortals in the world. It is important to look at heroes not only as individuals but also in comparison to others found elsewhere in myth, and my project is focused on particular heroes who form father-son pairs. Working with ancient texts, as well as secondary authors such as Nagy, Burkert, and Rohde, I will further examine the role of heroes in Greek myth through the relationship between fathers and sons, such as Tydeus and Diomedes or Agamemnon and Orestes. By exploring how these different pairs interact with each other in terms of their characteristics, deeds, and their fate after death, we can see an interesting interplay of different heroic attributes being carefully woven into both father and son so that one complements the other. This complementarity shows another more subtle facet of the already complex Greek hero, one that helps us better understand the full importance of heroic characters and their links to one another in myth, cult, and in Greek thought.