So my old theories were wrong. It was nice to get a real backstory on Sylvie but also it was confirmed the last episode was not some sort of memory space. Still does not explain how Loki can lift a building with his mind though.
When they "pruned" Mobius and later Loki and I was like,
Seriously, the minute I actually saw the Time Keepers and not just the creepy silhouette in the beginning, I was like "This is the worst CGI they ever did. What the hell." and then they just sat there and didn't react during the entire fight, not even fear or worry or anger, and I was like "Something does not feel right about this, this is just sloppy."
Then the head came off and I was like, "Oh you sons of bitches, you got me."
The post-credits scene though? Talk about nuts. When they showed that sort of post apocalyptic New York in the trailers, I thought it was another timeline, but now I think what the TVA does is actually sends Variants to what amounts to a dimensional trash bin. The reason the buildings and stuff in the trailer are so broken up and lopsided is because if they also get "pruned" from the time charges it throws them in there too. The good news, this mean Mobius is alive too!
Now for next week, I have a feeling Loki will have to save Mobius from other Lokis that hate him for being part of the TVA, lead by the "President Loki" which is basically a Loki that won the Battle of New York and was pruned for it. It's likely due to the massive change Loki winning would do to New York itself, meant a huge chunk of the city itself was also pruned and fell into this trash dimension. As for who the real Time Keeper is, 75% I feel it's going to be yet another Loki Variant and the other 25% is leaning on Kang making his debut. I still think we are going to find out the TVA itself is a new creation and has not actually existed since the start of time.
Addon : Watching the midseason trailer again, the place is totally a trash dimension. I didn't catch it before but one of the shots is a boat appearing out of thin air and dropping onto the ground, but if you look closely it does the "pruning effect" but in reverse.