Here’s the featuring from the finale. Dive deeper into what happened at the end with the following breakdown and analysis.
Throughout episode 6, we see Loki trying to save the temporal loom from exploding. But learning the mechanics of the TVA for centuries while attempting to prevent the Temporal loom’s meltdown, Loki ends up going back to the moment Sylvie killed He Who Remains.
Speaking to him, he figures out that He Who Remains was responsible for his time slipping. Furthermore, the only way to save the Multiverse is to kill Sylvie, who is hell-bent on killing He Who Remains at all costs. But he couldn’t do that because of his love for her.
So, trying to save her and the TVA, Loki figures out that the only way to do that is to take the place of He Who Remains and replace him with someone better. He does exactly and takes it upon himself to blow up the temporal loom, which was just a failsafe to keep the Sacred Timeline intact.
He physically grabs all the branches, takes his throne at the end of time, and fulfills his “Glorious Purpose” by becoming the God of Stories, keeping the entire multiverse alive with his magic. Instead of one Sacred Timeline, Loki allows the entire multiverse and its branches to exist with his magic, turning it into Yggdrasil, the tree of life from Norse Mythology.
From someone who was arguably the MCU’s greatest villain, he becomes the greatest hero by watching over the multiverse and keeping it intact.
Loki takes up a very lonely job of watching over the Multiverse to ensure the safety of his friends and allow everyone else to have a choice. In the position that he now holds, it’s likely that Season 3 will not happen. So we shouldn’t expect Loki to return until Avengers 5 or 6.
Meanwhile,
Read more on comingsoon.net