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The Queen offers Loki a position among her advisors and Loki accepts, turning himself into a woman known as Mistress of Strategies. As Angela defeats a tired Thor, the Queen of Angels brought him before her, and the now-female Loki tells Thor that being on the winning sides seems just perfect.
Loki, Mobius, and Sylvie travel to Dox's location and launch an attack to stop her ongoing operation, but most of the branched timelines were destroyed by then, via reset charges and modified TemPads. Sylvie follows Loki through a Timedoor into TVA headquarters and declares that the TVA is rotten for failing to defend the branched timelines.
Loki joins a Time Variance Authority (TVA) mission to the site of an attack by the fugitive variant of him in 1985 Oshkosh, Wisconsin.They find that TVA Hunter C-20 has been kidnapped, but Loki derails the mission by stalling and attempting to bargain his way into immediately meeting the Time-Keepers, who supposedly created the TVA and the Sacred Timeline.
The Time Variance Authority was a primary setting for Seasons 1 and 2 of Disney+’s Loki seres starring MCU vet Tom Hiddleston. Based out of a retro HQ that exists out of time, the TVA was ...
For a show built around a master of magic, Loki sure leans on some retro-looking tech. With the God of Mischief charged as a time criminal following the events of Avengers: Endgame, Marvel's ...
The Time Variance Authority (TVA) first appeared in Thor #372 (October 1986). [1] Created by Walt Simonson and Sal Buscema, the TVA originally paid homage to long-time Marvel writer/editor and continuity expert Mark Gruenwald: the TVA staff were all visually designed as clones of Gruenwald (the classification system for alternate realities—the Marvel multiverse—was devised, in part, by ...
Loki Season 2's Alcatraz escape is inspired by a real-life prison break. Here's the true story behind Casey's escape from Alcatraz in Episode 5.
Sepinwall believed if the finale was examined "as setup for more Loki, in addition to letting MCU viewers get accustomed to a version of Kang", "For All Time. Always." was "a flawed but often fascinating conclusion to just one chapter of the Loki story, rather than the full graphic novel" and "easily the best of this year's three MCU finales". [7]