The arrival of Marvel’s Loki on Disney+ is maybe the biggest expansion of the MCU since Guardians of the Galaxy brought viewers out into the cosmos. However, the added dimension in Loki is an order of cosmological magnitude greater than just going into space.  The main setting of Loki is the Time Variance Authority, created by the Time-Keepers to guard the one true sacred timeline. But who are these mysterious space lizards, and where do they get off deciding what the true timeline is? Let’s look to the comics to find out.

The Time-Keepers

Loki’s Time-Keepers are introduced in Miss Minutes’ orientation video as survivors of a massive, multiversal war with enormous powers, who decided that in order to prevent that kind of war from ever happening again, they would cultivate the timestream and make sure no alternate realities ever emerged. Setting aside all of the obvious questions (like “But…the Spider-Verse???” or “Is What If cancelled?” or “Wait isn’t this just Crisis on Infinite Earths and Hypertime?”), this isn’t quite who they are in the comics.

Kang the Conqueror

Through the years they were in charge of the TVA, the organization they created to help police the timeline, and most of their work that we know about was spent messing with Thor and the Fantastic Four. They also eventually subcontracted to Immortus, picking Kang the Conqueror’s future self to help execute their timestream gardening and putting them in regular conflict with the Avengers. They would eventually come to blows with Avengers from various points in their subjective timelines who, allied with Kang, fought to save Rick Jones and the Destiny Force from Immortus and Time Keeper deletion. In that battle, Kang would kill the three space lizards. 

Loki and Secret Wars

The thing is, in the comics we’re on our 8th Marvel multiverse. There is a lot of metaphysical mumbo jumbo involved, but Secret Wars marked the end of the 7th multiverse and the beginning of the 8th. The colliding realities eventually collapsed into Battleworld, the lone planetoid existing in a void of nothingness, comprised of bits and pieces from 50ish universes saved by Dr. Doom and Doctor Strange (and the Molecule Man), and mushed together to keep humanity alive. Molecule Man eventually gave the power he was letting Doom use to Reed Richards, and Mr. Fantastic recreated the multiverse with the help of his family.  The collapse of the multiverse created conditions by which the First Firmament, the personified essence of the first multiverse, could break the chains it had been shackled in by the Celestials, and led to it trying to consume the new multiverse. They were eventually stopped by Galactus Life Bringer and his Ultimates, led by Monica Rambeau and Black Panther. Al Ewing’s Ultimates is a trip, y’all. You’ll note that the Time Variance Authority has nothing to do with any of that above nonsense. The point here is that the comics TVA is focused entirely on maintaining the timeline in their corner of the multiverse, and not heading off potential problems that would come from a branching timeline. Will it come to pass? Only the Time-Keepers (and probably Kevin Feige) know.