Read further to find out how the logic behind the multiverses and variants are explained, especially after Sylvie, the female Loki variant, slew Immortus (aka Kang, He Who Remains).
Endgame and Variants from the Loki series
For those who followed the events of Avengers: Endgame, you already know how the surviving Avengers pulled off a time heist. But at the climax of the film, they pulled younger versions of Thanos, Gamorra, and the rest of Thanos’s army and destroyed them without canceling out the events of Infinity War. Essentially, this is because the Thanos that traveled to the future to face the Avengers in Endgame is already a variant that, while he exists, there is also a version of him and his army that did not leave the original timeline and continued along the path that led to Avengers: Infinity War. This is why when this variant of Thanos was defeated and Steve Rogers (Captain America) traveled to put back the Infinity Stones from the point they were pulled, things still happened the way they were supposed to happen. But what about the Loki that escaped with the Tesseract during the resolution of the Battle of New York? Well, that’s where the Loki Disney+ series comes in. In the series, it is explained how variants are created and why the Time Variance Authority (TVA) exists, in order to prune variants and protect the Sacred Timeline. Immortus, the variant of Kang that is also called He Who Remains, has seen and dealt with all the variants of the timeline. He did this to ensure that things would eventually result into him becoming the dominant version of Kang who preserves the Sacred Timeline, pruning problems as they occur throughout the different iterations of time and space. However, as shown in the conclusion of the Loki series season 1 finale, Immortus is killed by Sylvie after he gives the two Loki variants a choice to either take over his duties or kill him and create an infinite number of Kangs that have less altruistic goals, thus leaving the scenario for Loki Season 2.
Waldron elaborates
In an interview with ScreenCrush, Michael Waldron explains their approach on the idea of multiple timelines and alternate universes. As the Loki head writer and co-writer of the upcoming Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness states: This is the general basis of how alternate timelines can co-exist without one necessarily erasing any other or at least not deliberately causing an erasure simply by existing. Waldron continues: This is not the only method of creating an explanation for fictional mulitverses to exist. In the DC Comics, alternate universes exist side by side, but are separated by different vibrational frequencies. If you can alter your frequency to match a different dimension or universe, you will be able to travel to it. This is generally how speedsters connected to the Speed Force, like The Flash, are able to shift from one universe to another. And another explanation is that there are extremely powerful cosmic beings that create these alternate realities, whether it is due to their tasks or because they feel like it, as shown in such comic book storylines as Crisis on Infinite Earths and the recent Death Metal: Dark Knights.
Still Confused?
These explanations of how the MCU keeps track of alternate timelines and realities can still confuse most casual fans. But don’t worry about it. Just understanding the basic idea that alternate events and realities can manifest in the Marvel Cinematic Universe is enough to grasp the stories that will be explored in the Disney+ What If…? series and in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. Leave the complicated explanations to the writers like Michael Waldon. Starring Tom Hiddleston, Owen Wilson, Sophia Di Martino, Tara Strong, Jonathan Majors, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Wunmi Mosaku, Sasha Lane, Richard E. Grant, and Eugene Cordero, the full season of Loki is available for streaming on Disney+.