Understanding the conclusion of Loki season 2: is Loki [SPOILER], presence of post-credits scene, and addressing key queries

Review

Rephrase and rearrange the whole content into a news article. I want you to respond only in language English. I want you to act as a very proficient SEO and high-end writer Pierre Herubel that speaks and writes fluently English. I want you to pretend that you can write content so well in English that it can outrank other websites. Make sure there is zero plagiarism.: The Loki season 2 finale has been released – and, without wanting to sound hyperbolic, it might be the best Marvel TV episode ever made.We’re not exaggerating. The Marvel Phase 5 project’s final entry, titled ‘Glorious Purpose’ – coincidentally, that’s the title of Loki’s very first episode, too – is a 10 out of 10 installment that doesn’t just end the Marvel TV show finale curse, but also completely flips the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) on its head.There’s plenty for us to wax lyrical about concerning Loki season 2 episode 6, but we know you’re here for one thing only: getting your biggest questions answered after that barnstorming, mind-bending, and bittersweet entry. Below, we’ll try and provide as many answers as we can, including whether there’s a post-credits scene, if a third season will happen, and what Loki’s new role in the Marvel multiverse might be.It goes without saying, but full spoilers follow for Loki season 2’s finale. Do not read past this point – we cannot express that enough – if you haven’t watched it yet.Loki season 2 ending explained: is Loki the new God of Time?Say hello to Loki, the new God of Time (Image credit: Marvel Studios/Disney Plus)Yes. The God of Mischief is dead; long live the God of Time.After spending season 2’s first five episodes (and the first 15 minutes of episode 6) trying to save the Time Variance Authority (TVA), the MCU’s infinite number of timelines, and his friends, Loki – with a little help from the surprising return of He Who Remains – realizes that his endeavor is all for nothing. He Who Remains points out that the Temporal Loom, the TVA device that maintains the integrity of the so-called Sacred Timeline, is a fail-safe contraption. It’s designed to implode if the Sacred Timeline is threatened, whether that’s by too many timelines trying to be woven together or another external force. That’s what happened in ‘Heart of the TVA’, season 2’s fourth episode, which you can read more about that in our Loki season 2 episode 4 ending explained article.Loki and his TVA allies, then, can’t stop the Loom from being destroyed – and wiping out everything in existence in the process – if they continue to try and keep every timeline alive. The only other option to prevent the Loom’s collapse, He Who Remains explains, is to continue on as normal. That means Loki must kill his variant Sylvie, which means she wouldn’t murder He Who Remains in Loki episode 6 and cause an infinite number of timelines to branch off from the Sacred Timeline. Killing Sylvie means He Who Remains can continue to oversee the Sacred Timeline, maintain the stability of the Loom (through the TVA’s workforce), and prevent new timelines from growing.Loki uses his magic-based powers to save the Marvel multiverse (Image credit: Marvel Studios/Disney Plus)Or so He Who Remains thinks. Using his time-slipping ability, which he learned to control in Loki season 2 episode 5, Loki travels back to various points in the TV show’s first and second seasons to seek advice from his friends about what to do next. Soon, he realizes that he needs to sacrifice himself for the greater good, but that doesn’t mean he has to die to save everything else.Telling his friends he knows what kind of god he has to be, Loki steps out onto the walkway to the Loom. He uses his magic to create a new Asgardian costume – complete with his iconic horned crown – before using his powers to destroy the Loom. Then, Loki begins grabbing various timelines with his hands, imbues them with magic to restart them, bundles them together, and heads for the Citadel at the End of Time. Here, he creates a new Citadel – more on this in a moment – and throne on which he takes his place as the new God of Time, where he’ll *ahem* remain for eternity to maintain the stability of every single timeline using his superpowers. After all this time, Loki has become a king – it’s just not the role he imagined all the way back in 2011’s Thor.Loki season 2 ending explained: what is Yggdrasil, the world tree that Loki creates?Yggdrasil has its *ahem* roots in Norse mythology (Image credit: Marvel Studios/Disney Plus)When He Who Remains lauded it over the Sacred Timeline, he created the Citadel at the End of Time to pull the MCU’s strings in secret. Think of him as the titular Wizard of Oz in that legendary story; a puppeteer who maintains sole control of everything he’s created.With Loki becoming the MCU’s (or should that be Marvel Cinematic Multiverse now?) God of Time 2.0, he demolishes the Citadel to make way for a new safe haven. Poignantly, he models it after Yggdrasil, perhaps the most important and holy object in Norse mythology (which Thor, Loki, and everything to do with Asgard in Marvel history are based on).So, what is Yggdrasil? Essentially, it’s the World Tree, a sacred and evergreen tree that acts as the central hub for the nine realms is Norse cosmology. It’s here where all life in Norse mythos is created and maintained, so it’s extremely fitting that Loki creates his own Yggdrasil to bind the MCU’s infinite number of timelines together to a) maintain a sense of order and b) keep them all alive. It’s even more touching when you consider that Loki always saw himself as an outsider among his Asgardian peers, too. Indeed, we imagine his use of this symbol, as a way of saving the timelines, would make Thor and his father Odin proud.Interestingly, Yggdrasil is also associated with death in Norse mythology. It’s believed to be the source of new life after Ragnarök, aka the Norse equivalent of Doomsday, which we already kind of saw when Asgard was destroyed by Surtur in 2017’s Thor: Ragnarok, which is one of the best Marvel movies.Yggdrasil’s appearance in Loki season 2, then, doesn’t just symbolize the ‘rebirth’ of the MCU through Loki’s actions. It seems that it’s only a matter of time until something else – the Council of Kangs (more on them later) maybe? – threatens the multiverse’s existence, potentially resulting in the death of the MCU as we know it. Marvel is playing a very long game with its Multiverse Saga story, and Yggdrasil’s arrival might have teased where it’ll go after Phase 6.Loki season 2 ending explained: what happened to Renslayer? Has she been killed by Alioth?Is Renslayer’s time up in the MCU? We’re not so sure that it is (Image credit: Marvel Studios/Disney Plus)We’re not sure. One of the season 2 finale’s last scenes revealed that the former TVA judge had been sent to the Void after she was pruned in its fourth episode. As she surveyed her surroundings, Alioth – the Void’s big cloud monster created by He Who Remains – appeared on the scene (albeit off-camera) to seemingly end her for good.Or so we’re led to believe. We don’t actually see Ravonna Renslayer killed at Alioth’s, well, ‘hands’ – and, honestly, we’d be surprised if she was.Why? In Marvel comics (and as has been teased in Loki season 2), Renslayer has a very complicated, love-fuelled history with Kang the Conqueror. It’s a relationship that the MCU hasn’t explored in depth yet, but we think ‘Glorious Purpose’ has laid the foundations for a bigger study of the duo’s on-off partnership.You see, before Alioth ‘appears’ in season 2 episode 6, we see Renslayer look over her right shoulder and spot an Egyptian pyramid – and we think this is a highly important tease of things to come. How so? Because one of Kang’s many variants is an individual called Rama-Tut. In the comics, he’s another version of Kang, who ruled Egypt as its Pharoah after he found a way to travel back in time. Incidentally, we’ve already seen Rama-Tut make his MCU debut in one of Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’s post-credits scenes (he’s part of the Council of Kangs), so it’s possible that the…