When he thought he won after so many tries, I felt some of that relaxation you get when you FINALLY beat the boss fight after practising over and over and over and over again
Amazing finale. Upped the stakes on what made Kang Kang, as well. He's not just some guy who beat a couple of dudes off-screen as powerful as him, he has carefully cultivated a world where, functionally immortal, it took a god as powerful as him if not more powerful given the magic, willing to do what he would not, to "beat" him. And even then, he's not really been beaten, simply replaced by someone doing what he could do, but would not for the risk it brought.
It does retoroactively also make Quantumania even weaker though. And I'm saying that as someone who found that movie alright — though certainly not nearly a "great" MCU movie. Technology aside, you're telling me 616 Kang got outsmarted by Ant-Man? Like, Ant-Man is smart, but in the MCU he has certainly not been portrayed as nearly this smart. Or maybe they will pull him out of the probabilistic drive thing to start the Kang Dynasty and this was all planned and just poorly explained.
Jonathan Majors was great here. I really hope things work out with his case and it's proven he is innocent. He's such a good actor and commands the room when he speaks. His presence will be missed if he ends up having to exit the MCU.
Most people believe that line was indeed referring to Quantamania. And here’s hoping we see a better version of Kang the Conquerer later. They’ve found ways to write around things before like, The Mandarin.
Same. I'm absolutely blown away...except for Agents of Shield, i never much cared for the TV Series. Loki for me personally has just climbed the throne of "Best TV Series ever".
This was tragically uplifting, satisfyingly tragic, and really felt as much like a Benson and Moorhead movie as it did a Marvel series. Loved that little taste of dread that came with the noble sacrifice to an eternity of glorious purpose!
I understand that the TVA is out there hunting Kang variants now to stop them fucking up the multiverse, while Loki stops the branches from dying by keeping other things in check with his magic.
I'm guessing Loki is able to beat the scaling issue of infinite number of universes through infinite magic the multiverse contains. Just a bunch of speculation here.
No, this is how it played out in the comics, too. This is Prime Loki from Avengers #65 "AVENGERS ASSEMBLE, PART SIX: THE SECRET HISTORY OF AVENGER PRIME".
So towards the end the time travel aspects of all this made less and less sense, but hey, its a show, I honestly do not mind that. Time travel is always a bit like that. And maybe my brain is a bit slow today since I am home with Covid.
Overall I think really nice season. From what I remember I was more impressed with the first one, but Season 2 was good. I guess no Season 03 then, unless its about how Loki gets out of this again, ever? Hows that working in the comics?
It was entertaining and I enjoyed watching the characters. But all time related stuff seemed to not follow any logic and just do whatever was needed. I would have liked if it was more coherent.
The way I look at it, Time works in the TVA the same way as it does in Back to the Future, which Ant-Man was surprised to find out was bull shit in Endgame. It can do this because it exists outside of time.
They say there’s no time in the TVA and people don’t age there, but events still need to have a sequence and there are no alternate TVAs out there.
Now Loki is sitting in the position of He Who Remains and is acting as the temporal loom himself.
This is interesting because if Marvel ends up dropping Jonathan Majors, The Kang Dynasty could become The Loki Dynasty and I don’t think anyone would have a problem with that.