Loki Season 2 Episode 6 Easter Eggs
Credit: Disney/Marvel

Loki Season 2 Episode 6 Easter Eggs: Alioth & Other MCU References

Loki Season 2 Episode 6 featured multiple Easter eggs and references for fans to pick up. Here’s a list of the best easter eggs in the finale.

All Loki Season 2 Episode 6 Easter Eggs

Alioth in Loki Season 2

Alioth first showed up in Loki Season 1 and it was created by He Who Remains to win the first multiversal war. The cloud-like entity was weaponized to consume and end the variants in the void before the end of time. It acted as the gatekeeper of the Citadel at the End of Time. While it wasn’t physically seen in Season 2, its purple light reflected upon Ravonna Renslayer when it appeared to consume her.

The World Tree of Life – Yggdrasil

Yggdrasil is the world tree in Norse Mythology that connects the nine realms. After it appeared in Thor (2011), Captain America: The First Avenger, and Thor: The Dark World, Loki Season 2 recontextualized into a multiversal tree of life. Loki used his own magic to revive and hold the branched timelines, and turned the multiverse into Yggdrasil.

Quantumania’s Kang reference

The tweet below features a few dialogues from the Loki Season 2 finale, which tease how the TVA will now be going after the Kang variants that showed up at the end of Quantumania. Mobius even talked about the Exiled One on the Earth-616 adjacent realm (Quantum Realm), who was taken down by Team Ant-Man.

Loki’s birthright

In the past, Loki stated that it was his birthright to take the throne. He was burdened with a “glorious purpose” to rule. He finally found his throne and his glorious purpose to save the multiverse.

Loki flips the script

Towards the end of Thor (2011), Loki told Odin “I could have done it, father! For you! For all of us!” right before falling off the Bifrost bridge and becoming a villain. In Loki Season 2 episode 6, he told Sylvie, “I know what kind of God I need to be, for you, and for all of us!” before sacrificing his life to become the multiversal protector.

From God of Mischief to God of Stories

Going from one of Marvel’s greatest villains, Loki became MCU’s greatest hero. He took the mantle of the “God of Stories,” who is one of the strongest versions of Loki in the comics.

Movie News

Marvel and DC

X