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It’s there that Loki fulfills his glorious purpose: protecting time, For All Time. Always.
“One of the early days discussions about how we were going to be treating the entire final episode, especially the last half of the final episode, was we were actually looking at the Wikipedia for Loki — not the comic book character, but the actual [Norse] god, and he was the God of Stories,” Aaron Moorhead, who directed the episode with Justin Benson, told ComicBook. Moorhead and Benson kept track of the timelines with a white board on which executive producer Kevin Wright wrote “God of Stories,” a name the former God of Mischief and God of Lies later adopted in the comic books.
“It was just a little note somewhere, and we really, really latched onto that,” Moorhead continued. “So we feel like somebody who is the God of Mischief, [who] is the God of Chaos and Trickery and all of that, has transformed into — I wouldn’t even say the God of Time. I would say he’s the God of Everyone’s Story, and he’s a librarian that protects it and allows it to flourish.”
After succeeding He Who Remains (Majors) at the End of Time, Loki restores free will. He may be the God of Everyone’s Story, but Loki’s story in the Marvel Cinematic Universe has ended — at least for now.
“It’s the conclusion of season two. It’s also the conclusion to seasonsone and two,” Hiddleston said of the Loki finale on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. “It’s also the conclusion to six films and 12 episodes and14 years of my life. I was 29 when I was cast, I’m 42 now. it’s been ajourney.”
All episodes of Marvel’s Loki are now streaming on Disney+.








