![]() It’s a bit like Marvel giving fans extra homework after the episode is over if they want to truly understand what happened.Īccording to Marvel, this is a statue of Kang. ![]() Considering the timing of their publication, it’s almost like the studio is using its own blog to fill in some important blind spots the show couldn’t cover. ![]() There’s nothing wrong with this inherently, but when you take a closer look at the content of these blog posts, a pattern starts to emerge.Įach of Marvel’s Loki articles reveals details that were completely absent from the episodes themselves. Immediately following the release of Loki Episode 6, multiple articles were published on, delving into the season finale using interviews with the cast and crew. I’m talking about something even worse: homework. No, I’m not talking about Palpatine clones and Kang variants. Loki Episode 6 walked a fine line between fun television and a lot of exposition, but Marvel risks ruining the entire thing by trying to cram in even more information with a questionable storytelling trick last seen in Star Wars: Episode IX. ![]() How do you ruin good science fiction? Easy, by overexplaining it.
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