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* "Fear No Mort" has the family see a vision of a scenario where Rick manages to save Diane, dying in the process. We find out later that this is all conjured from Morty's memories, and it is easy to imagine that Morty has seen a drunken Rick mourn that he wishes he had died in his wife's place.



* "Fear No Mort" has the family see a vision of a scenario where Rick manages to save Diane, dying in the process. We find out later that this is all conjured from Morty's memories, and it is easy to imagine that Morty has seen a drunken Rick mourn that he wishes he had died in his wife's place.
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* "Fear No Mort" has the family see a vision of a scenario where Rick manages to save Diane, dying in the process. We find out later that this is all conjured from Morty's memories, and it is easy to imagine that Morty has seen a drunken Rick mourn that he wishes he had died in his wife's place.
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!!FridgeLogic
[[folder:Fridge Logic]]
* "Big Trouble in Little Sanchez" features a machine that creates physical representations of the way Beth and Jerry see each other, which is activated a great many times in that episode. That is, there exists a machine capable of mass-creating actual living beings, many of which are extremely powerful, based on nothing more than an idea in someone's mind. It's not even necessary for the person to know how to make the organism's characteristics (like Goddess Beth's telekinesis, for instance) biologically possible; the machine just figures it out. The episode does ''not'' do this technology justice by any means.
** Yes, you read that right. The machine created a literal ''goddess'', or at least a close approximation of one.
** The machine was also proved able to create a functional superhuman army.
* In the same episode's ending, Beth and Jerry decide to stick together until Morty finishes high school. Considering [[NotAllowedToGrowUp the rules of the series...]] [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments they basically decided to stick together forever.]]
* In "The Rickshank Redemption", it's made really clear that the federation considers Rick the cleverest mammal in the universe, and they aren't surprised that he finds a way to manipulate thoughts in a unique way (creating butts, specifically), so ''why'' would they use a obsolete model to deal with him?
** Either they think that Rick wouldn't care or even know how to get passed an obsolete model (hoping on the off chance that he hasn't studied it yet since it's so old), or they really ''aren't'' the brightest tools in the shed...
** This is also a commentary on bureaucracy: Technology exists that would have prevented this exact scenario, they were just too cheap/apathetic to use it.
* The immortality field. Apparently, it exists, but it's only used for that autogrill planet. Why only there? At the very least, Rick (and, by extension, the Council of Ricks) should be able to have that technology, and it could have been very useful to them.
** Just because someone invented a new technology doesn't mean that they're willing to share it. Not only that, but perhaps the resources needed to build it/keep it running are ridiculously high, hence why we only see it in a club for wealthy people. As for why the Ricks didn't have one, knowing their personalities, they probably conclude that if a Rick is not smart enough to keep himself alive, then they shouldn't get to live.
** In addition to what has already been stated the immortality field has two major drawbacks for Rick. The first and most obvious being that Rick lives to risk everything on a regular basis and come out on top not spend life as a coddled mass of directionless molecules like Jerry. The second more insidious risk is that technology like the immortality field can be turned against its user, its made abundantly clear that everyone does feel pain but because it ends moments later they don't mind it much, anyone who got the jump on a Rick could devise all manner of constant agonizing torture abusing the immortality field to keep that Rick alive until they simply broke.
** Imagine if the Citadel were under attack and the attackers could not be killed. Ain't nobody wants that. The field works great as a resort gimmick but has few practical applications.
* In "Rest and Ricklaxation", after Rick and Morty have purged what they thought their toxic parts of their personalities were, Rick states that he is proud to be Morty's gandpa. One of the toxic parts that Rick got rid of was his "illogical" love for Morty. So he said that objectively, without any emotional attachment to Morty making him say it.
** Non-Toxic Rick also lost Rick's cynicism and misanthrophobia, leaving him with an appreciation and love for all forms of life. He no doubt still does love Morty, just as he loves everything. But unlike regular Rick he doesn't love him so much he isn't willing to sacrifice him to save everything else.
** He also doesn't say that he ''loves'' Morty, he says he's ''proud to be his grandfather''. Morty's not great with book-smarts but he's got excellent people skills, and with Healthy!Morty's lack of insecurity and self-loathing, that part of him absolutely shines. Healthy!Rick doesn't have his arrogance or narcissism, so he's able to value that aspect of Morty's personality without devaluing him for not being the same kind of genius Rick is. That's the difference: Healthy!Rick appreciates Morty for the qualities he has but feels nothing for him personally, Toxic!Rick thinks Morty's a piece of shit but loves him to (his own literal, actual) death.
* Wouldn't Tommy be too young to produce sperm when he first started to mate with the indigenous creatures?
** Maybe Beth kept going to Froopyland during her early-to-mid adolescence. Maybe Tommy was a few years older than Beth, such that he was physically capable of mating when he got trapped in Froopyland. It's even possible that Tommy had an underlying condition that caused a [[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precocious_puberty precocious puberty]].
** Also, to echo Beth, "Who gets stuck in Honey?"
*** It's a honey swamp, although the honey itself was probably as breathable and harmless as the rainbow-water, it wouldn't be honey if it wasn't sticky as hell. He probably wasn't strictly ''stuck'', but depending on how far down he fell and how deep the honey was, it probably took him long enough to squirm out that Beth had long since gotten bored and wandered off (if she didn't just shove him in there and abandon him in Froopyland altogether).
* In ''Vindicators 3'', Rick's little Saw stunt ends with drunk!Rick being emotional and crying over [[spoiler: Noob Noob]] after all the snipping back and forth between him and Morty over Morty's admiration of the Vindicators. [[spoiler: But everything ''except'' the drunken rant on the video indicates that it really was intended for Morty, at least when Rick started building it. The rocket ride is too big for Noob Noob but fits Morty perfectly, the platform responded to Morty standing on it when anything except what Rick wanted would have caused the planet to explode, and Rick mentions hoping Noob Noob becomes a real Vindicator someday, even though if Noob Noob had been there to get the message, he would already have been one. You can also see the cardboard materials for the rainbow hands he made in the background, indicating that recording the videos was the last part of the prep.]] He really ''did'' intend it for Morty, his train of thought just derailed.
* In ''The [=ABC=]s Of Beth'', Tommy had to resort to impregnating the wildlife of Froopyland and [[EatsBabies cannibalizing the offspring]] to stay alive. However, Rick created Froopyland for Beth as her own personal play area, and went to insane levels to childproof it, from bouncy ground to oxygenated water. And yet, despite that, he apparently didn't put any sources of food in Froopyland, which is why Tommy nearly starved to death. One would wonder why that would be the case, unless Rick did it to keep out any potential choking hazards.
** Froopyland is a high-tech playpen, not a jail. Rick gave it to Beth as just another toy to play with, assuming she would come out of Froopyland to eat, sleep, go to school, play with other toys (she mentioned thinking a Nintendo was cooler), etc. There was never any need to provide food inside Froopyland because the assumption was if Beth got hungry she'd come out and ask for food.
** It was principally designed for Beth, who Rick actually cares about. If Beth had disappeared for an extended time into Froopyland, Rick would feel enough motivation to go back and get her. Now some random neighborhood kid that Rick seemed barely aware of? Rick wouldn't think to go check to see if anyone other than Beth was stuck in Froopyland.
* Many people see what Morty does to Ethan in "The Whirley-Durley Conspiracy" as the start of Morty transforming into an evil Morty. However, those who have siblings who have had their heart broken would see it as an action performed by a loving brother to even the score for their sister's pain (Ethan shamed Summer's body, making her image conscious as a result and leading her to try to alter herself and leading her to become a giant inside out monster. Morty made sure Ethan understood what he did by turning him into a deformed monster himself). Also, it shows that it runs in the family (as Rick did the same thing by killing King Jelly Bean after he attempted to rape Morty).
* The plot of ''Morty's Mind Blowers'' starts when Morty learns literally ''everything'' by looking at the Truth Turtle. Why, then, was he surprised to learn the existence of Rick's memory-erasing machine, or the content of his expunged memories? He should already know.
** The average human mind can't really contain knowledge of everything, much less store it in a cohesive manner. He was likely being bombarded by a near infinite amount of random information popping into his thoughts, hence his stress and discomfort even some time later. Also, the entirety of everything that Morty has been through would be a drop in the bucket when compared to infinite knowledge. Especially if he didn't know what to think about. Ultimately, Morty probably would have needed to have his memories reset regardless, just to avoid going insane in the long run.
* In ''The Vat Of Acid Episode'' Morty's "ResetButton" was on top of his open bag and next to Jerry for some reason. You'd think Morty would put it somewhere close to himself or have his bag closed which could have prevented Jerry or anyone else for that matter from pressing the button.
** Morty's got a fair amount of his father in him. Overlooking small issues that would prevent much bigger problems for himself is in his wheelhouse. Particularly when he's enjoying himself and relaxed.
* One that spans the whole series: Rick bases his cynicism and misanthropy on the fact that in an infinite multiverse, everything happens every possible way and everyone exists in infinite copies, and therefore nothing and no one really matters. Except... we have also seen time and again that Rick C-137 is orders of magnitude smarter and more capable than even other Ricks (each of which is, in turn, the smartest and most capable person in their own universe). As in, he can go through other Ricks like tissue paper with them being every bit as helpless to stop him as regular people are to stop them. He's also apparently the only Rick to have declined to join the Citadel, making him "the Rickest Rick," with every other Rick being a pale imitation of him. Thus, Rick C-137 proves by his very existence that his and every other Rick's philosophy is wrong - it ''is'' possible for a person to be unique and exceptional even in an infinite universe and therefore for their death to be an objective loss. (which in turn makes no sense, but still, that is the reality that the show presents to us by treating every Rick that isn't Rick C-137 as an easily dispatched mook).
* "Bethic Twinstinct"'s ending makes it abundantly clear that if Beth, Jerry or anyone else has sex from their bedroom, anyone from the Dining Room can clearly hear it. So this shouldn't even be the first time Morty or Summer hear their parents have sex.
** Hell, this isn't the first time this happens in the Series. Remember when Morty has Sex with Gwendolyn?
* In "Final [=Desmithation=]", we learn that fortune cookies are actually reality-binding tools created by a Lockerean creature. Knowing this, shouldn't it be possible for Rick or anyone else capable enough for the job for that matter to just create or grab another one and bend reality to his will?
* In "A Rick in King Mortur's Court", the previously-established Plutonians are completely absent from the episode. Why? Because they're no longer a planet.
* In "Get Shwifty" Birdperson feeds Morty a bowl of random debris from his carpet, explaining that he doesn't know what humans eat... despite the fact that he's dating Tammy, a human. The very next line even establishes that they've been dating for long enough to be sleeping together. Apparently, they never went out for a meal together, or even talked about food during all that time.
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!!FridgeHorror
[[folder: Fridge Horror]]
* There are many dangerous and deadly dimensions out there that can be easily accessible with the Portal Gun. One such place is called the "Blender Dimension", which you pretty much get eviscerated the moment you set foot there. It makes you wonder who would be crazy enough to want to go there in the first place. Not that it matters. It turns out the gun can be hacked to take any Rick who falls out of line there as some sort of death sentence.
* Why didn't Rick use Human DNA in Rick Potion Number 9? And why did he rescue Morty, but not his daughter or granddaughter? Same reason: To make Morty more dependent on him. As far as Morty knows, Rick is the only family he has left.
* At the end of 'Anatomy Park', Rick enlarges the hobo's dead body to help Morty and at the end, destroys the corpse with the dynamite he stuffed into the hobo's corpse. The hobo's blood rains upon the whole United States. Blood that came from a hobo that had many dangerous diseases kept inside him. And it gets ''worse''. Given that the cadaver was giant when it was blown up, you can take your panic: giant monster-sized virus, or said virus, normal sized, getting spread out everywhere. Either way, we're still going with the first pick. '''''[[ParanoiaFuel SWEET DREAMS]]'''''
** But it gains some NightmareRetardant when you find out that since the body exploded, all the viruses in there were clearly and obviously killed in the explosion.
*** Plus it exploded InSpace.
*** Given that Morty was full size, the diseases would be giant, and thus vulnerable to fall damage. They all would've died on impact when they hit the ground. Assuming they didn't burn up in the atmosphere or die in the vacuum of space.
* At the end of "Rick Potion #9" Rick seems completely uninterested at the fact that he jumped timelines while Morty is freaked out. Has Rick done this before? That would mean the last time he did it, he didn't even bring ''Morty'' from his original timeline, but simply changed places with the Rick Morty grew up with and Morty never realized it.
** Better yet, finding a timeline where one of his counterparts was able to solve the problem is plausible; just look for the most similar one where everyone's ''not'' dead. The headscratcher is; How did his [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jil8i5iS6eo "scouting"]] locate one where ''both'' he and Morty died exactly '''five seconds''' '''''before''''' they entered it? The only way to interpret that is that Rick has some way of telling when people are about to die. And only uses it to run from his biggest screw-ups.
** Or simply, due to infinite universes existing, Rick deduced a universe specifically where alternate Rick and Morty have to die for the replacement.
** We later find out that Rick mind-wipes Morty whenever Morty experiences something traumatic [[spoiler: or witnesses Rick do something mildy embarrassing]]. So why doesn't Rick wipe out ''this'' memory too? Because Rick ''wants'' Morty to experience this sort of trauma.
** [[spoiler: Confirmed as of season 6. The Rick we've been following all along is not from the dimension Morty is from. Though it turns out the original Rick from that reality is still alive and our Rick was trying to find him.]]
* [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick]] and [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Morty]] aren't going to fit in at ''all'' on "our" earth! They think and act like humans, while "our" [[spoiler:Cronenbergs]] are basically an unstable slurry of random genes and animal instincts. [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick's]] put himself and his grandson in incredible danger! How would he be so irresponsib--[[FridgeBrilliance Oh, wait. Yup, that's Rick, alright.]]
** [[spoiler: Cronenberg-Rick and Cronenberg-Morty]] came from a universe where everyone was turned back to normal except for them. If Rick and Morty had waited a little while longer, they wouldn't have had to travel to a universe where [[spoiler: they were both killed.]] Poor Morty...
*** It wouldn't matter because [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick and Cronenberg-Morty]] came from a universe where [[spoiler:everyone was originally a cronenberg]]. Rick and Morty would not have been able to [[spoiler:take their place there and return to their "normal" lives]] because [[spoiler:they lack the memories of being a cronenberg from birth]]. Plus, if that universe is anything like theirs than [[spoiler:Morty's family are still cronenbergs]].
** And unlike our Rick [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick]] brought them to a universe where [[spoiler:they presumably wouldn't be able to resume their previous lives]]. That might imply that [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick ran out of universes to do that with, making Rick's statement that him and Morty only get 3 or 4 these all the more true]].
** This also explains the presence of Cronenberg-Rick & Morty on the Citadel of Ricks. More than a simple running gag, this hints that the original C-137 world they traveled to still did not fit their needs. This would have been a combination of the above points (the other Cronenbergs had no intelligence, etc.) as well as what the C-137 Smith family was doing to survive, ''killing and eating Cronenbergs''. If Croneneberg-Rick or Morty tried to reconnect with their family, they would be killed outright. There is very little infrastructure left, so the Cronenberged duo can't even live somewhere else, as there is no food or energy producing facilities still running (the Smiths are watching Summer perform for entertainment and cook their food over a fire), meaning they will eventually starve to death. Going to the Citadel was the only way the two could survive.
* Another one at the end of "Rick Potion #9", you remember Leonard and Joyce? Jerry's parents? And their [[spoiler:sexual]] partner Jacob? And how Rick said that the [[spoiler: love potion doesn't affect anyone with their family's strain of DNA, then you don't need to be a genius to realize what could- nay, probably happened between the three of them.]]
* In 'Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind' Evil!Rick and our Rick are only divided by another Rick and there are Ricks far worse than him, judging by the scale which puts them in the middle.
** Maybe this is a reference to [[spoiler:the shadow council that Evil Morty killed as his last act before taking full power.]]
* [[spoiler: Maybe the reason Evil! Morty killed his Rick was that he was the Rick-est Morty on the Rick & Morty spectrum.]]
* It was said by the Council that 27 Ricks were murdered [[spoiler:but Evil Rick has hundreds of Mortys]] how many Ricks were murdered without the Council knowing?
* At the end of "Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind", Rick tries to comfort Morty saying that, since he's the Rick-est Rick, he must be the Morty-est Morty. But the "Rick-est Rick" is a positive statement only to him, he's actually extremely manipulative, self-centred and genocidal, and Morty is shown to have a ''lot'' of undealth-with rage. So what does exactly Rick considers to be "Morty-est"?
* Jerry's description of what he thinks a rapist looks like is pretty specific. Was [[spoiler: the Titanic recreation with Lucy not the first time he was in a rape scenario?]]
-->'''Jerry ("Pilot"):''' Well, now you can build baskets and watch Paul Newman movies on VHS and mentally scar the Boy Scouts every Christmas. [...]It's personal.
* Mr. Meeseeks is pretty much an Implacable Man. Nothing can kill it, except for fulfilling its task. They are able to survive being brutally mutilated, having massive chunks of its body, even entire limbs, torn off. And they will do absolutely ANYTHING to complete their goals, consequences be damned, and they have zero qualms with killing innocent bystanders. So...hopefully nobody ever gets the idea to use a Meeseeks to commit murder. It would be like the equivalent of a Terminator. Nothing would be able to stop it. Weapons won't work because it'll just shrug them right off to get to its target. And what if it starts taking too long, and the Meeseeks calls in more Meeseeks to help him out? Many police and loved ones, innocent bystanders, would die in the crossfire. There would be blood spilled all over, and Mr. Meeseeks is guaranteed to come out on top in the end because we CAN'T. KILL THEM. The only hope you'll EVER have of being safe from a Meeseeks is POSSIBLY destroying its entire body...But even then, it's likely you'll have an army of other Meeseeks to destroy...
** What happens if you steal the Meeseeks-Box, and task a Meeseeks to prevent being assassinated by a Meeseeks?
*** Assuming all Meeseeks are equally competent at carrying out their tasks, they go crazy after about a week of foiling each other's plans and decide to cut the problem off at the source (where the problem is you and the "source" probably represents your head). Unless one of them manages to succeed just by being luckier.
** Hilariously the game ''VideoGame/PocketMortys'' confirms this fear, as the Meeseeks Box is used to instantly defeat one opponent, regardless of their stats or hit points.
** And one of the recent shorts promoting season three shows that when a Meeseeks' body is destroyed, it'll just poof back into existence perfectly intact. There is truly no way to kill these things aside from completing their assigned tasks...
* The [[BlackComedy infamous]] Lucky Charms parody commercial played on inter-dimensional cable in "Rixty Minutes" opens up a really disturbing implication about where it came from: ''All children'' in that universe may just be exactly like the ones in the advert - KidsAreCruel taken up a notch. The advert's extreme sadism is just the marketers playing to their target demographic.
** The completely dead eyes of the children as they scoop out 'Lucky's' cereal from his intestines confirms this theory. In the RL commercials, the children are happy to be eating this treat. In this universe, the children go about this grim business, as they need to survive, doing so with a minimum of joy and effort.
* All it takes is one snarky comment from Morty about [[spoiler: Rick's alcoholism]] to knock away Rick's certainty in himself. What makes this especially horrifying? That small amount of uncertainty [[spoiler: is all Rick needs to make him essentially suicidal.]]
* Evil Rick says in "Close Rick-Counters" that his plan is to download the contents of other Ricks' brains, then kill them. [[spoiler: But Evil Morty was the one really controlling him. This means that Evil Morty has the knowledge of possibly ''hundreds'' of Ricks spanning multiple dimensions]].
** It's a little eerie that Rick [[spoiler: did a variation of that]] in The Rickshank Redemption. He [[spoiler: uploaded himself into the brains of other Ricks & then killed them.]] He's even [[spoiler: been in one of their bodies ever since]] & he's been a lot more callous lately. Their evil behavior could be influencing him.
* In "Close Rick-Counters," we see glimpses of prime Rick's memories when Evil Rick holds him captive. One of these memories is Rick holding Morty when he was only an infant. While it's really heartwarming to see him cry from such a memory, Rick has been gone from Beth's life for quite a long time. FridgeHorror kicks in when you think about how Rick could have hopped onto another reality, considering his general lack of emotion over crossing into a new one in ''Rick Potion #9''. If this is true, then ''what happened to Rick's original timeline''?
** On the other hand, it could simply be prime Rick's memory of holding an infant Morty from some other reality.
*** Or maybe Rick did visit when Morty was a baby but was never around after that. Beth did mention he tended to be gone and then come back when she was younger.
* Another one for "Close Rick-Counters": Was the Morty controlling evil!Rick evil all along? Or did he perhaps only become evil after years of abuse from evil!Rick, killing him rather than becoming a compliant tool like so many other Morties?
** Considering what [[spoiler: Morty did]] in The Rickshank Redemption, that's a strong possibility.
* The Jerry daycare in "Mortynight Run", where Rick and Morty pairs drop off their Jerrys when they go on adventures. However, sometimes, a Jerry's Rick and Morty never comes back, leaving them stranded in an alien dimension with no way home, and their only alternatives are either to live in the daycare for the rest of their lives, or brave the dangerous alien city outside. Also, the reasons for why a Rick and Morty never come to pick up their Jerry. Which is worse, them being killed during one of their adventures, or just abandoning Jerry to his fate? Also, how are those universe's versions of Beth and Summer reacting?
** Probably with [[ComedicSociopathy indifference]], because nobody really seems to care about [[ButtMonkey Jerry]].
** If you look closely, one of the checkboxes on the clipboard Rick signs is whether Jerry's stay is temporary or "forever." For all we know, the Ricks and Morties belonging to the left-behind Jerries could all be alive and well, having simply booted their Jerry from their lives.
*** This grants another interesting perspective: considering Beth is depicted in many episodes as "looking for the door" in her marriage, what if ''she'd'' put them up to the task?
*** there was one person in the daycare that wasn't a Jerry who explained that his earth's Beth remarried, could one Beth have done it twice.
* Fart's Music/DavidBowie-esque "Goodbye Moonmen" song is a nice little tune that could easily have been an extra track on ''Music/SpaceOddity'' or ''Music/TheRiseAndFallOfZiggyStardustAndTheSpidersFromMars'', but then you realize that is actually about his wish to genocide the disease he views carbon-based life as.
** Soooo, it still sounds like an extra track on a Bowie album? Some of that Ziggy Stardust/Diamond Dogs, apocalypse fun?
** It also makes his murder of the authorities chasing him far more disturbing. He made them slowly kill each other like dominos just by mentally destroying one's will to live. Imagine several millions of his species invading and destroying mankind simply by breaking them via MindRape.
* So, Blim Blam the Korblok was chained up by Rick so that the latter could cure his [[ThePlague "Space-AIDs"]], but ended up breaking free and leaving the planet due to Beth and Jerry. His [=Space-AIDs=] was never cured, and who knows what all species it could infect?
* Rick's [[spoiler:suicide attempt]] at the end of "Auto Erotic Assimilation" becomes even sadder when you consider that, given Rick's usual mental state, [[spoiler:he's probably tried to kill himself a lot. Indeed, the only reason he seems to be alive is that when he wants to kill himself, he's in such a bad state that he's physically unable to actually pull it off; at no point does he decide to keep living. And, because the method he uses is indistinguishable from the rest of his sci-fi stuff, his family presumably doesn't realize what he keeps doing and how close to death he's come. Jerry even sees the machine in a drawer and briefly holds the inanimate "test" specimen without comment.]]
** This is seen in the very first scene of the pilot episode when Rick abducts Morty from his bed and flies off with him, telling him he's going to start over. [[spoiler: Rick got drunk and that's all that was needed for Rick to want to start life on Earth over. The only person he wanted to save was Morty and his (Morty's) crush, Jessica. He also tells Morty that he isn't interested in Jessica and Morty doesn't have to worry about that. Could that be because Rick isn't planning on staying alive with them?]]
** What Rick says to his family before he attempts suicide is ominous {{Foreshadowing}}, "I'll be in the garage." [[TearJerker He was literally telling them where to find his body]].
* Summer has a flashback during "Total Rick-all" to walking in on Beth drunk alone. Beth smacks her with the wine on accident. It's picture day, meaning Summer will have a bruise in her class photo. Based on the casual way Beth grabs make-up to cover up the bruise, has she done this to Summer or Morty before? Or, since we know Rick is an [[TheAlcoholic alcoholic]], did he do something similar to Beth when she was a child? It's also possible that Beth was being so casual because she was so drunk and when you're drunk, apathy tends to set in.
* Rick is frequently drunk and Beth is seen drinking wine whenever [[DrowningMySorrows she's in a bad emotional situation]]. It's safe to say that alcoholism runs in the family, meaning Summer and Morty are susceptible to it.
* Compare the youthful, smiling Rick as seen in the pictures at Birdman's house to the Rick we see in the series [[CynicismCatalyst just to fully realise how much life has beaten out of him.]]
* It’s easy to miss, but in “Get Schwifty” one of the Cromulons mentions their ''Planet Talent'' show is in its ''900th season''. Which means they’ve been at it for (depending on their units of time measurement) the better part of a ''millennium''. And if the format has remained consistent, they’ve annihilated '''''3,600''''' inhabited planets. Holy shit.
* Rick destroyed Zeep's miniverse the moment he arrived back in the microverse. He just destroyed two whole universes and committed genocide on at least two sentient species.
** That is not correct. Rick mentions when they get back to the "real" world that Zeep has a choice: either the battery will work, or Rick will get a new battery. He turns the key and the car starts, meaning Zeep made his choice to not tell everyone the truth. TheStinger even shows Zeep looking up at the sky and muttering "peace among worlds, Rick!" However, Rick basically stated that he ''would'' destroy an entire world of sentient beings if they didn't get back on the "floobleboxes," and Zeep knew it. Imagine meeting your creator and realizing that a. He has zero empathy for you and your kind, and b. he '''will''' destroy you if you don't get back to work. Brrrr!
*** You misread. Rick did not destroy the ''microverse'', but he ''did'' destroy the ''miniverse'' and the ''teenyverse'' when he and Zeep got back to the ''microverse'' that Rick originally created. So the OP's point still stands: He destroyed two entire universes and any life within them. And it's not the only time he's done this, if we take Toxic Rick's batteries into consideration- that's at least four, and no way to know how many times he's done it.
** That's not the worst of it. The floobleboxes are completely unnecessary. Any planet's total energy output cannot be greater than the amount of energy it receives. So basically, the output Zeep's people is a fraction of what the planet's total energy output could be. And that is a fraction of what comes from its star. Basically, Rick could have had a much more powerful battery if he siphoned energy from the micro sun. That would require no enslavement and be more efficient. Considering Rick is a super genius, he knows this. But he created that universe and those people, installing himself as a god to them. It actually tells a lot about Rick's psychology in that he created/became the only god he could believe in: a selfish, uncaring monster whose reasons for creating the universe are not only unfathomable to his creations, but ultimately makes them all cogs in an uncaring machine.
** Tells you a lot about the scientists who made further universes down the road even though ''[[{{Hypocrite}} they]]'' are aware of the little tidbit regarding the sun, [[ItsAllAboutMe didn't they]]?
* Several of the married couples on Nuptia 4 in "Big Trouble in Little Sanchez" get killed. What if they had children who are now orphaned?
* Was [[spoiler:Jerry's traumatic experience with rape when he was younger]] what made him the low self-esteemed man he is today?
* Morty and the family's more Jerkass tendencies in the second season could be very well what Unity said; Rick just sucks everyone down with him. And with Morty, he's starting get more and more like Rick.
* Nothing is likely to come of it since both shows belong to two different networks, but [[WesternAnimation/GravityFalls Bill Cipher]] is [[http://i.imgur.com/7b9G1kQ.png on a computer monitor]] at the couple's therapy center. It seems like an innocuous EasterEgg at first, but bear in mind that the alien doctor speaking with Beth and Jerry has the same eye designs as ''someone [[DemonicPossession possessed]] by Bill.''
** In addition, a picture of Bill and a picture of the logo for Journal 3 are shown in a [[http://somekindofgravityfallsblog.tumblr.com/post/130568788961/as-part-of-the-rick-and-morty-rickstaverse-with Rickstaverse photo inside a Galactic Federation Prison]], alongside Grunkle Stan's notebook, pen, and mug that got sucked through a portal in Society of the Blind Eye[=/=]Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind. If anything, this means that not only are the ''Gravity Falls'' and ''Rick and Morty'' universes are connected to each other but that [[EldritchAbomination Bill]] [[OmnicidalManiac Cipher]] could enter Rick and Morty dimension to do whatever ungodly horrors he wants.
** And if he met Rick? I don’t know what’s worse, if they fight and end up possibly destroying the universe, or if they get along.
* [[spoiler: Rick is in prison:]] he probably won't be given alcohol and uncontrolled detoxification affects alcoholic people in a bad way.
* When you realize that one of the reasons Rick so gleefully destroys his clones in "Big Trouble in Little Sanchez" is because he is suicidal, and murdering his clones literally allows him to destroy himself.
** One has to wonder if Ricks killing Ricks are a common thing.
*** Seeing as the Council of Ricks decided to intervene only after what they called an "untypical high death rate" for Ricks across dimensions, the occasional Rickteside seems to be the norm.
* TheStinger at the end of "Meseeks And Destroy" shows one of the villagers discovering [[spoiler: King Jellybean's perverted history, and deciding to cover it up so as not to disillusion the community. King Jellybean was at least killed beforehand, but what if he was still alive, and said villager was willing to cover for him and let him keep getting away with his crimes for the sake of publicity? It's even more disturbing because this has happened in REAL LIFE, with celebrities having their crimes ignored and hidden for decades or even until their death and so go unpunished and even celebrated. This creepy cartoon is actually the LighterAndSofter variation.]]
* [[spoiler: After being put in prison, Rick is asked "What are you in for?"]] His response: "Everything." This could be interpreted as being hyperbole, but it could otherwise mean that Rick has committed '''every crime in the universe.''' One wonders what fucked-up things he might have done outside of the episodes released so far. It also can be interpreted as his general remorse with everything he has done in life, not just illegal actions.
* At the end of ‘Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind’ Rick gets a ‘Free Replacement Morty’ voucher. Considering all the hundreds of now freed, Rickless Mortys, this is at best a cheap gift and at worst means the council burns through Mortys at an alarming rate.
** For there to be any free Mortys to give away, they presumably need to be Poor Rickless Bastards, which means they burn through ''Ricks'' at an alarming rate too. Or they're just trying to offload all of the Mortys that they suddenly found themselves burdened with.
*** Or clones. Remember that Ricks can buy Morties in blister packs with different accessories.
** Given Rick's self-destructive tendencies, it's entirely possible that a substantial number of these Morties are "available" due to Ricks dying from suicide or accidental deaths. Which raises another question: Are these Morties ones recovered off of their home Earths, like the ones in 'Close Rick-counters', or does the council abduct them from their families?
*** Its explained in later episodes that if there is a family to go back to, they go back. Mortys are only "assigned" to new ricks when they a. have no family, and b. have no Rick. The ones with no family and no earth to go back to and no Rick end up at the Citadel.
* Mr. Meeseeks as beings are in constant pain while still alive, and the only reason they wish to complete their task is to end the pain. Meeseeks are suicidal.
** Meeseeks and destroy is really an episode about how living with a purpose is far worse than living without one.
** What slightly lessens the horrifying nature of this (or makes it worse depending on your viewpoint) is that it doesn't specify what sort of pain the Meeseeks are in - It could just be the mental torment from the frustration of being unable to finish what they were instructed to do. If one imagines that they knew, with total certainty, the meaning of life, but were unable to achieve it, one can probably imagine the intense mental strain this would put on someone. Insanity would be near certain.
*** Until you decide you're perfectly happy living your own life and getting your own meaning from it, to hell with fulfilling any meaning determined by someone else.
** Here's a thought: What happens to a Meeseeks who fails to complete his task, and ends up trapped or imprisoned somehow? Like in that Federation prison where everyone is kept immobilized all the time?
* In "Pilot" what exactly drove Rick to the point that he was willing to wipe out humanity with a bomb?!!!!
** Rick is basically one bad day away from wiping humanity then going to another universe to start over. That fact alone is scarier than just about anything the show has produced. Wouldn't blame any viewer if they consider Rick a VillainProtagonist
** Not only this. The first scene of the pilot is one big fridge horror in itself. While Rick later changed his mind, he passed out right before the call of the detonation. Viewing the show for the first time, you might assume that it's just a joke, fitting for the black comedy of an adult show. But later in the show, it's revealed that there are indeed multiple universes with an infinite number of Ricks and Mortys. So how big is the chance, that this Rick and Morty were alternative versions of the "real" Rick and Morty who were blown up offscreen for real, along with the whole world?
** Morty's also had to disarm so many neutron bombs that he knows the percentage that will turn out to be duds, too. '40%' would require at least five with two duds.
** This whole opening becomes both more interesting and more disturbing with the revelation that this dimension was [[spoiler: Rick Prime's dimension. You know, the guy who destroyed everything Rick loved with a ''bomb''? Rick later says that he realized that Prime didn't care at all about his dimension or his family, but maybe his drunken mind told him to make Prime pay by taking his world away in the same manner he took his so long ago.]]
* Rick [[spoiler:gives a tip to the Galactic Federation under Jerry's name]]. Who's to say this won't end up reaching the rest of the family's ears? It's unlikely that Beth will believe Jerry [[spoiler:when he says it wasn't him]]. If that's true, Beth will likely never forgive Jerry for taking Rick away from her.
** Supported by TheReveal in "The Rickshank Redemption" that [[spoiler: the entire reason Rick turned himself in and overthrew the Galactic Federation was to sabotage Jerry and Beth's marriage. This was probably his backup plan in case they did not go through with the divorce.]]
* The interdimensional goggles seem cool at first. Imagine seeing the lives of your alternate selves from other dimensions. But imagine if your alternative selves also had them. They could see through your eyes while you work, interact with your loved ones, and have sex.
* In the promotion for the Rick and Morty Season 1 DVD, Rick summons a Meeseeks and tells it to 'go out into the world and tell everyone about the DVD'. Rick told the Meseeks to tell EVERYONE about the DVD, as in every single person on the planet. Then the Meeseeks is shown wandering a city in our world, spreading the news...
* The idea of Unity is already pretty horrifying without needing a trip to the fridge, but it's downplayed a bit in the episode in question when it's revealed that the people she has taken over would include sex offenders and engage in race wars without her taking over. However, she's trying to gain membership to the Galactic Federation so she can take over those planets. Given one of the first things she does is declare world peace and given the apparent parallels to Star Trek's Federation, it's likely that achieving a certain level of cultural advancement and eliminating various social problems is required before a planet can enter the Federation. In other words, if she got into this Federation she'd be taking over peaceful planets.
** To add another layer of horror, all of the 'fun' they're having is through the use of sentient beings, none of whom were likely consulted before being used by an alien hive mind and a sociopathic scientist as a relationship aid. How many of the redheads in that stadium would have said "no" [[AndIMustScream if they could?]]
* The destruction of the Council of Ricks in "The Rickshank Redemption" does not immediately garner sympathy, considering the behavior of the majority of its membership, until one remembers that Rick J 19 Z 7 (aka "Doofus Rick") from "Close Encounters of the Rick Kind" was probably among the Ricks caught in the crossfire from the Citadel's TeleFrag with the Galactic Federation's prison. It's highly likely that he was killed like the other Ricks and Mortys from "Close Encounters of the Rick Kind", supporting Morty's claims about Rick's collateral damage being too destructive to ignore.
** This may have been averted, as the "Tall Morty" in "The Ricklantis Mixup" seemed to be Doofus Rick, having the same speech patterns and look. Made a sad moment indeed when he asks if he has "graduated to being a Rick."
*** That wasn't Doofus rick, that was "Slow Rick", and he wasn't asking if he was graduating to being a Rick, he was asking if he passed Morty school to become a Morty. Unlike Doofus rick, he is legitimately unintelligent, and kept as a "Tall Morty" more or less for his own safety. They look completely different (Slow Rick is a generic Rick, Doofus Rick has a unique character design).
* Bird Person's UndyingLoyalty, and in fact all of Rick's relationships, comes into question given how dependent Beth and Summer are. Who's to say Rick hasn't conditioned any of his other friends to be so loyal? Unity, a literal assimilating hive mind, states he ''outperforms'' her in assimilating people and she can only get out by cutting off contact with him. The only ones that can escape the spell of Rick's (pathologically sociopathic) [[MagnificentBastard charisma]] are inhuman beings that can avoid him and people TooDumbToFool who are powerless to go against him, like Jerry.
** What's worse, "Morty's Mind-Blowers" reveals that Rick can remove memories from his loved ones if he wants to. Who's to say that he hasn't done the same to people outside of his family?
* In "Pickle Rick," Dr. Wong is not even slightly fazed, annoyed, or otherwise adversely affected by the turmoil of Rick's family. Even when Rick waltzes in, soaked with blood, feces, and you know, ''being a pickle'', she doesn't so much as raise her voice or lift an eyebrow. Just what kind of horrific patients does she have to deal with, to be completely unfazed by this supernatural mess of a family?
** In a more hopeful interpretation, since alien lifeforms have made their presence known twice over in season two, she's just more openminded to once-thought impossible things.
** Also on a hopeful note, her behavior is consistent with how [[RealityIsUnrealistic a professional psychologist]] [[RealityIsUnrealistic ''should'']] [[RealityIsUnrealistic behave when dealing with difficult patients]]. While some less professional psychologists might reciprocate their patients' more toxic behavior, Dr. Wong's [[TheComicallySerious utter nonchalance]] in the face of the Smith family's absurd home life is perfectly in line with what's expected of her.
** There is every real possibility that Dr. Wong isn't even human. Most aliens left Earth when the Federation collapsed, many (rightly) fearing reprisals from the local populace. If one was sufficiently human looking, they may have stayed, especially as Earth recovered economically rather quickly.
*** This theory gives new meaning's to Rick's line in the S4 finale:
--->'''Rick:''' Smart guns: whitelist human life... and the therapist.
* In "Vindicators 3: Return of the Worldender", it's shown the Vindicators will absolutely turn on each other the moment things get rough and they exterminated an entire planet on their previous adventure. Who's to say they didn't kill the other three Vindicators themselves during the adventure?
* In TheStinger of "Anatomy Park", we learn that Ethan [[spoiler: has the new Anatomy Park (Anatomy World if you will) being built inside of him.]] Now, what happens to it in "The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy" when Morty [[spoiler: monstrously mutates Ethan with the Morphizer-XE?]]
** Considering the events of Rick Potion #9, [[spoiler: those are two different Ethans]] so it depends on whether or not [[spoiler: the new Ethan has an Anatomy Park in him.]]
*** Rick says the current universe is exactly the same as the previous one except they're both dead. New Ethan probably has an anatomy park.
*** [[InSpiteOfANail And besides the original Ethan is a Chronenberg now.]]
** Speaking of "The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy", Ethan got left in the woods by himself with [[spoiler: a barely movable body]] and no concerned witnesses, so it's quite likely [[DyingAlone he didn't make it out of there alive.]]  [[TheWoobie As if being raped, cheated on, and disfigured weren't enough for that boy...]]
*** This is Jossed, as you see Ethan crossing a busy bridge with cars passing him, which is commented on by the freed customer service reps.
** The answer is quite obvious. Because they didn't build Rick's version of Pirates of the Pancreas, the second Anatomy Park was a financial and commercial failure. Given that Rick was involved in the project, everyone building it probably just downed tools one night and went home.
* In "Rest and Ricklaxation", [[spoiler: the Healthy Morty is TheSociopath because he believes having a moral compass is toxic, and leaps in intelligence to a well-accomplished stock broker.]] In "The Ricklantis Mixup", [[spoiler: Evil Morty is also TheSociopath who has killed countless Ricks and tortured or killed their Mortys in the past, on top of disposing of anyone in his path to power with no one the wiser.]] Not only does this seem to imply that [[spoiler: any Morty who abandons all senses of morality is potentially EvilerThanThou to ''[[VillainProtagonist Rick Sanchez]]'', but that being TheFettered and oppressed by Rick is the only thing keeping a Morty from Rick levels of intelligence - [[ProtagonistJourneyToVillain something our Morty is getting closer towards casting off]] as seen in "The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy".]]
* Throughout the show, there are multiple major signs that [[spoiler: Rick has repeatedly switched dimensions after making big mistakes so he can start over by pretending to be part of whatever version of the Sanchez family he finds there. There's no way to be sure the Rick we're watching now is the same one the show started with. He may have even killed other Ricks just so he could take their place &, if he hasn't some other Rick could do it to him at any time.]]
** For what it's worth, the Citadel of Ricks still identify our Rick as Rick C-137. Granted, they're hardly infallible, our Rick never contradicts them in any way.
*** FridgeHorror again-Morty claims he's from C-137, but is never identified as such by any Rick other than Rick C-137. It's possible Rick could be lying to him.
*** It's fairly well conclusive that our Morty is not C-137. Rick C-137 has memories of baby Morty, when our Beth said that Rick had been gone for 20 years. Best bets are that "Evil Morty" is the real Morty C-137, out to get revenge on Rick C-137.
*** In "Rickmurai Jack", Rick reveals the truth with his memories: [[spoiler: There was never a Morty C-137 because ''he never existed in that universe''. Beth was killed alongside Diane, so she never met Jerry, and Morty and Summer were never born.]]
* Let's consider a specific sentence from the episode "Pickle Rick", one that Dr. Wong told Rick near the end of the episode. "You seem to alternate between viewing your own mind as an unstoppable force, and as an inescapable curse." Now, consider the fact that the characters in ''Rick and Morty'' have stated multiple times that there is an infinite amount of universes, with an infinite amount of Ricks. Which means that, while most of the Ricks that we see have embraced science and portal gun technology, there exists Ricks in many universes that have never taken that plunge, instead focusing on their wife and child, Beth. The Ricks that have gone the science route usually end up in turmoil and existential crisis, while the ones who have gone with the family route seem to be living much happier lives in ignorant bliss. However, we've only seen two Ricks in the entire series that chose family over science: the first, in "Rickshank Redemption", in a memory that may or may not be true, and the second, in "The Ricklantis Mixup". In the first instance, after a Rick rejects the invitation to own a portal gun, he witnesses his wife and child get murdered by a bomb before his very eyes. While that story seems to have been fake to trick the agent, there's no actual proof that our Rick didn't just change the last part of the memory while the rest was the truth, or that he didn't just think of the time this happened to another Rick from another dimension. In the second instance, a Rick that preferred to work with wood rather than technology and was proud to raise his daughter got kidnapped, dragged to the Citadel, and forced into a LotusEaterMachine...to make cookies. It seems, then, that the Ricks who have accepted science - the "unstoppable force" - can't stand the simple fact that, for all of their intelligence, some Ricks are happier than they'll ever be because they willingly refused to heighten their intelligence to "inescapable curse" levels. And so, in a fit of self hatred that no show has ever rivaled before, these Science Ricks will go out and ruin the lives of these Family Ricks, out of pure jealousy and spite.
** This makes Dr. Wong's analysis of Rick even more poignant and horrifying. "Pickle Rick" demonstrates one of Rick's ultimate weaknesses and his biggest flaw throughout the series; he uses his vast intelligence as a defense mechanism to avoid caring for himself and his relationships with others. Dr. Wong explicitly tells Rick that he uses being smarter as an excuse to devalue his relationships and the wellbeing of others, and that, in spite of being a genius, refuses to put any work into the mundanity of common relationships and even his own wellbeing, and that it's the root of why he's so miserable. What's the family's reaction to this? To get into the car and get a different therapist. In other words, ''they didn't internalize anything Dr. Wong said, and will continue to repeat their mistakes.'' Even worse, the Citadel is full of Ricks that go out of their way to sabotage other Ricks that actually live by her advice and put in that effort for others. SelfInflictedHell doesn't even cover it.
** Even worse, it's quite likely that there is an alternate universe where the therapy actually acts as a breakthrough and Rick strives to be better, but some Ricks from the Citadel catch on and drag him back into the fray.
** This would explain the number of jobber Ricks on the Citadel. The Ricks could easily automate most of the blue collar jobs, or bring in any kind of easily controlled worker population, but they don't. It wouldn't surprise me if, being the sociopaths they are, the Council of Ricks "recruited" Ricks from beyond the Central Finite Curve for no better reason than to keeping thematic.
* Simple Rick is the only Rick we see who gave up on super-science and adventure so he could stay with his Beth... and was then kidnapped by other Ricks who use his happy memories to make cookies. The question is, when did this happen? Simple Rick's happiest memory is Beth's third birthday. Was Simple Rick kidnapped shortly after? Is this Beth yet another Beth who grew up thinking her father abandoned her?
** Simple Rick's central thought is the simple love he felt for and from his daughter. There's an entire slave factory not only dedicated to making it, but so important that it has implied sister factories, a small army dedicated to its recovery, and a need for Simple Rick so great that his death requires an immediate replacement. Not only is Simple Rick's based on a LotusEaterMachine, it mass-produces lotus-flavored candy for the uncountable number of Ricks who want but cannot get the love of their Beths.
** [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in that Old Rick (a.k.a. Assembly Line/Worker Rick) was [[InTheBack harvested for his memories]] [[ForgotToMindTheirHead mere moments]] [[GutPunch after they happened,]] [[SurpriseParty which could mean...]]
** You have to remember that all the Ricks are the same age, so Simple Rick would have been kidnapped, at earliest, sometime after the Citadel was founded, which was probably at least a few years after Ricks started dimension travelling. Also, the Citadel probably didn't have any Mortys until just a few years ago.
*** On the flip side, given the multiverse, there's no guarantee there aren't Ricks out there who married a different wife or had a child earlier or later. The little girl is implied to be Beth, but it isn't outright stated to be her. Simple Rick might have found a wife and had a different daughter later in life, after the other Ricks had already created the citadel and could capture him. The other Ricks have Mortys only because all other Ricks get detected and killed, whereas Simple Rick never went out on adventures.
* Simple Rick was blatantly kidnapped to be milked for cookie flavoring, but a number of other Ricks and Morties in the episode appear to be on the citadel against their own wishes. Notably Cop Morty who broke down in tears over wanting to be a normal boy before performing a SuicideByCop, and the Rick attempting to concoct portal fluid in a meth lab for the Morty gang. At the end of "Close Rickcounters of the Rick Kind", Evil Morty was shuttled back to his home dimension along with all the Morties he held prisoner, yet he's back on the citadel still Rickless. Could the shadow council have rounded all those Morties back up to repopulate the citadel, along with any aberrant Ricks who never mastered interdimensional travel?
** Cop Morty was just trying to put Cop Rick off his guard, in the exact same way that Crib Room Morty had earlier in the episode.
* Worker Rick is forced to act as a replacement for Simple Rick after he gets him killed, which is bad enough on it’s own, but then at the end of the episode [[spoiler: Evil/President Morty has Wonka Rick (who owned the factory) killed]]. Seeing as President Morty has already enacted major changes in the citadel such as changing the Morty school curriculum and getting the teacher fired, it’s not hard to believe the Simple Rick factory might end up shut down. If this is true, ‘’what will happen to worker Rick?’’
* The PeopleZoo in "Morty's Mind Blowers" has Meeseeks in it, as a FreezeFrameBonus. Meeseeks go crazy after living for only a couple of days, and God knows how long they've been stuck in there.
* In "Morty's Mindblowers", it's revealed [[spoiler:Rick and Morty may have had to abandon another universe because of evil squirrels. This seems disturbing enough, except it's not stated when this took place. It's possible this memory is from ''before'' Rick Potion Number 9, meaning they may have had to ditch at least ''three'' universes.]]
** [[spoiler: Not really. Rick reminds Morty what he said about switching universes, implying that this is after Rick Potion Number 9.]]
* Summer has to be on [[spoiler:watch for Morty's Mindblowers scenarios, which include her younger brother and grandfather attempting suicide. It's also implied that she remembers her mother choosing her life over Morty's, which horrified her at the time. But Rick doesn't wipe her mind, precisely because she has to be on call. "I don't get paid enough for this shit" suddenly takes on a darker tone.]]
* In ''[[Recap/RickAndMortyS3E9TheABCsOfBeth The ABC's of Beth]]'' Rick doesn't just tell Beth about the things she asked him to make for her during her childhood, [[spoiler:he pulls a box out from beneath his workbench and ''shows'' her the items, meaning he actually made at least some of her macabre gadgets and gave them to her to use on other people. Also he makes it clear that he wasn't going to reign her in, even if she needed to be reigned in.]] What happened to the less-than-polite little boys who crossed her socio-path?
** Some of the toys that young Beth "requested" including such things as a teddy bear with realistic organs and a knife that loves stabbing. This, along with Beth's sociopathic tendencies, makes one consider why Beth wanted to become a surgeon. Not because of her smarts but because ''she likes looking at organs''.
** The reveal in Season 5, that [[spoiler:Rick's Beth was murdered when she was a child]], recontextualizes this interaction as [[spoiler:Rick lieing and taking the blame for another Rick's inventions and bad parenting]].
* ''[[Recap/RickAndMortyS3E9TheABCsOfBeth The ABC's of Beth]]'' reveals why Rick has the cloning technology he had to remake Tommy and make Tiny Rick: He was prepared for when Young Beth would murder someone and he'd need to clone them so no one found out.
* In "The ABC's of Beth", there was no happy ending to the situation with Tommy, no matter what Beth or Rick would try. That's why Rick decided to go home after seeing [[spoiler:Tommy's graphic demonstration of him sleeping with and impregnating a Froopy Land resident, then eating the resulting offspring. If Beth had managed to convince Tommy to come home, she would have had to tell his father and the authorities why she had abandoned him in her childhood chicken coop for ''thirty years''. Tommy would have stuck to his story that Beth deliberately drowned and abandoned him because she was jealous of his relationship with his dad. Even if Beth had lawyered up or the statute of limitations had expired, Tommy has lost his sanity living alone, being forced into bestiality, incest and cannibalism to stay alive, and believing his best friend betrayed him. He is also extremely violent, and he would need a lot of rehabilitation. All in all, Beth and Rick cloning Tommy was the least harmful decision because it means Tommy's father never found out the truth.]]
* Beth also reveals that she knew all along, thanks to her father telling her, that [[spoiler:the Rick and Morty in this universe aren't ''her'' Rick and Morty. They're fugitives from another dimension while the father she knew is dead. Rick had absolutely no reason to reveal this to her, except to explain why he's being obtuse about his parenting skills and admitting that Beth is expendable to him. All Beths are the same, in his words, and there are more Mortys that she could have with her original son having disappeared]].
* Had Rick just gone to family therapy with his daughter and grandchildren like he was supposed to, instead of ending up having a solo adventure and allying with Jaguar, Jaguar wouldn't have rescued him and Morty in TheStinger of "Pickle Rick" and they both would've [[YourHeadAsplode suffered]] a CruelAndUnusualDeath. Remember that Rick was genuinely out of ideas and believed they were going to die.
** Though to be fair, Rick's extreme adverse to boredom, as pointed out by Dr. Wong, is a dangerous problem to the family. For all we know, it was completely his fault that they were in that problem in the first place.
* [[spoiler:Evil Morty]]'s Main/{{Leitmotif}}, For the Damaged Coda, has the best possible name. It has only ever been played at the ends of episodes, making it a literal coda, and it's the leitmotif of [[spoiler:the most damaged Morty of them all]].
* Beth in episode Morty's Mind Blowers show that an alien villain forcing Beth into a Sadistic Choice to choose which one of her children he'll spare and Beth immediately chooses Summer, not even hesitating for a second to resign Morty to death. What does that say about Beth character. This is not the first time Beth show no regard for Morty's life, in the stinger of Rick Potion #9, Beth tells Jerry she doesn't care about what might have happened to Rick and Morty and now that they have gone, she feels finally happy. Why do you think she feel like that about Morty, originally The show for the most part has shown Beth to be loving to Morty, or at the very least not abusive, while she and Summer have had a much more fraught relationship because Summer learning that Beth wanted to abort her and still has resentment about Jerry knocking her up and having a shotgun wedding, I was thinking that maybe it the divorce and how relationship with Rick and Jerry that cause her resentment to Morty, when she said that Beth tells Jerry she doesn't care about what might have happened to Rick and Morty and now that they have gone, she feels finally happy, what if when her relationship with Jerry was fix, maybe she thought she did not need Rick anymore now she had Jerry and maybe she saw Morty as Jerry former weakness and insecurities, and now that are Beth the chose Rick over Jerry is regretting how decision and is blaming Morty because she see him as a mix of the worst traits of Rick and Jerry, she did say in episode Raising Gazorpazorp that she believes that Morty was filled with Jerry's insecurities as a result of Jerry's overly-nurturing method of raising him.
* Rick doesn't take his entire lab with him when he and Morty bail on the pilot universe. That means all of the memories in Morty's Mind Blowers were extracted from a different Morty altogether. We know from ''Mortynight Run'' that any given pair of Ricks and Mortys can have entirely different experiences even if they start out on their adventures in the exact same way. Those memories couldn't ''all'' have been extracted from the Morty we know, and since Rick gives the memory tubes nonsense filenames, he can't be certain whether any given memory is actually one that ''his'' Morty has had removed. Morty may have remembered a bunch of horrible things that didn't happen to him.
** Likewise... does Morty remember Mr. Jellybean? Or did he have Rick remove that memory for him?
*** Most likely, he did not have that memory removed. Why? Because he never found out that Rick knew about Mr. Jellybean and killed him. Morty believes that Rick doesn't know what happened and if he DID know, he would just use that knowledge to mock him and "I told you so" him. For the same reason, he probably didn't have him remove the memory of what happened with Fart.
* There is a feature at Rickworld that allows him to massacre a room full of Morty’s.
** Rick does it every three months so that he can stand being around his Morty.
* As 'Edge of Tomorty' shows, due to the infinite versions of TheMultiverse, there exists a version where when in the 'prime' universe they win, in some other universe, Rick as well as Morty die ''numerous'' times during their adventures.
* How many Ricks were killed and found themselves being reborn in a different and most likely fascist universe and were unable to get out of the cycle of being killed over and over again?
** Related. After ending up in a fascist Shrimp reality asks while being chased ''When did this shit become the default?" Well what's changed recently? [[TyrantTakesTheHelm Evil Morty became President of the Citadel]] giving him access to a city worth of Ricks, their technology and science, and a whole lot of Mortys who were sick of the treated like crap.
** Adding onto that, Rick is very insistent on keeping Morty dependent to him. Who's to say seeing realities where Morty becomes a backstabbing fascist didn't reinforce that, and give him an excuse to double down on Morty...?
* The fact that Rick has so many ways to bring himself back to life after his death. Despite being extremely suicidal, he still has a strong will to live. And even if he did turn off all his precautions, he might still be reborn in a different universe. Can Rick ever be KilledOffForReal?
* In ''"Claw and Hoarder"'', Rick had to save the dragon he soul-bonded with because if he dies, Rick dies too. The same dragon soul-bonded with Morty earlier, and Rick threatened to blow up that dragon with C-4.
* ''The Vat of Acid Episode":
** Rick reveals that the "reset button" was actually Morty killing alternate versions of himself. So when Jerry presses the button after Morty comes home from a terrifying trip, he just killed his own son!
** Some of the alternate Morties turned into a pile of BodyHorror in school, during class. One can only imagine how his classmates and teachers would react to this.
*** Eventually undone by the end of the episode, but the thought is still horrifying.
* When Hoovy returns to his farm, it's run-down and dead. The windows are boarded up, his wife is dead in her chair, and his son--in addition to being batshit crazy--is in terrible shape and living in said rundown house. When Morty returns years later, the house and farm are in much better condition, Bova's been lovingly buried, and Japheth is thriving with a family of his own. The horror kicks in when you realize the terrifying future Hoovy returned to ''didn't have to be like that''--Japheth could have fixed the farm earlier and buried his mother as soon as she died, but either chose not to out of a thirst for revenge or was unable to due to decades of grief.
* The season 5 premiere has unsettling implications given it seemed to push the ResetButton. We know that Rick doesn't believe in literal reset buttons because he believes that time travel is bullshit. So either Rick pulled another stunt to get rid of Space Beth as well as win Morty back, or he has gotten himself mired into weird trouble which will play out over the season. 
* If Hoovy's final descendant hadn't woken up Morty to study him, he could have been trapped for centuries like Jessica. 
* Wooden Jerry somehow obtained immortality and doesn't die even after being torn apart by beavers, drowned and then buried for hundreds of years, converted into a mirror, or burned at the stake. Does that apply to the other Wooden Smiths? Are they still alive, buried under rubble?
** Wooden Jerry never died because his head was never destroyed (in typical [[ButtMonkey Jerry]] luck). The family could've been killed permanently by all those rocks. And if they weren't, their Rick is with them, and if he can do science as a pickle then he can do science as a head, and either repair them or kill them depending on what they want.
* Planetina's been around since the 90's and looks no different today than she did back then, despite her "kids" being middle-aged. If she's functionally immortal and Morty ages normally, their relationship was doomed from the start to end in heartache.
** Now that Planetina is freed, how many more will die because they're trying to earn an honest living? Lumberjacks, construction workers, even people working factory jobs for a company that happens to pollute--how many more people will die just trying to keep food on the table?
** Just before going off the deep end, Planetina mentions she can hear the Earth screaming. Assuming she was telling the truth and not just being dramatic to make a point, ''every environmentally unfriendly action'' humans take hurts Planetina. Even "environmentally friendly" power sources such as hydro and solar are merely "much less environmentally damaging" than "harm-free", so if she becomes unhinged enough, Planetina might murder roofers installing solar panels because lithium mining isn't exactly clean, though she does seem pro-Wind power. Now that she's out in the real world and can't hide in the power rings (or wherever she goes when unmanifested), how miserable will Planetina be having to hear that screaming all the time?
* How big is [[spoiler: Naruto]] from ''Rickdependence Spray'' going to get? He's already larger than a satellite and is capable of holding a human in his hands. Let's hope he never comes to Earth.
** At least,[[spoiler:he's friendly to Summer.]] [[spoiler:And he grows even bigger and tears Gotron apart single-handedly.]]
* Rick is the smartest man in any universe he travels to because the Citadel makes sure anything else is literally impossible. Which means that Slow Rick--who is too mentally challenged to even realize he ''is'' a Rick, and not just a big Morty--had to have been more intelligent than he is now. ''Something happened'' to take this Rick from smartest brain in the known universe to barely able to pronounce words correctly.
** Alternatively, it could mean everyone in his universe is somehow ''[[TooDumbToLive dumber then he is.]]''
* With how many Ricks are killed in C-137's RoaringRampageOfRevenge, Rick can easily be responsible for depriving countless Beths, Summers, and Mortys of their own Ricks.
* Evil Morty's sabotage of the portal network could mean that any Ricks and Mortys that used their portal guns before the Citadel was destroyed were killed too.
** The portal network seems to be connected to the fluid the citadel produces rather then all portals, so only Citadel Ricks would be effected and they're dead anyway.
* The fact we see our Rick only became a cynical asshole because his family was murdered has a lot of implications for the other Ricks, even if we assume our Rick is the exception and most didn't need a tragedy to make them assholes, the existence of at least a handful of universes that are exactly like ours implies it at least happened multiple times, possibly with the same Weird Rick
* In "The Wedding Squanchers", after escaping from the Galactic Federation, the family travels on the planet where everything is on a corn cob, even cells. For a fact, your body cells die and get replaced with new ones every second, and if they get replaced with aforementioned cob cells, you will gradually transform into a living cob.
** What's worse is that Morty and Summer ate some of the cob cell fruits present on the planet.
* When Jerry gets transported to his original dimension, we see him dealing with a very aggressive and volatile family. To sell the point, Rick's toxic influence on Morty has gotten so bad that he gets expelled from his school, which barely garners a reaction from him or Rick. It is very likely that they are going to break up in a big way right after Jerry leaves. Things can only get worse now that our Jerry has left them and that Season 2 Jerry got assimilated by Mr. Frundles. In either case, they have a very dark future, and our Jerry and Beth divorcing for a short while really did improve the family bigtime since it curbed Rick's toxic influence to the point that he himself is improving, as much as he hates to admit it.
* In a similar vein, in "Solaricks", we have [[FluffyTheTerrible Mr. Frundles]] [[GreyGoo asssimilating]] [[ApocalypseWow all of Earth]] within minutes or less. The Fridge Horror lies in the fact that this dimension's earth housed many popular characters from older seasons, who are now either dead or assimilated.
** On the topic of that, it is entirely possible for Mr. Frundles to literally assimilate the entire dimension given how he assimilated the earth in only a few minutes.
*** Mr. Frundles needs to bite something to assimilate it, so as long as people don't go near the Frundled Earth the damage is limited to one planet. That said, if Mr. Frundles [[ItCanThink becomes smart enough to use assimilated spaceships...]]
* When the whole family escapes to Par-me-sian dimension at the end of "Solaricks", Beth asks Rick whether the selves they are replacing died of natural causes. Rick's grumpy "mhmm" is suspicious and, [[FreezeFrameBonus if you pause on the scene of carnage]], the scorch mark in the living room looks a lot like the one in Rick's original garage. Was it a sci-fi gadget accident or did Rick portal in a bomb!?
** The damage doesn't really look like a bomb though; the scorch mark is right in front of the couch but the couch is only ripped up a bit, the crater is really small, the bodies are relatively intact, etc. Given how we were just reminded how easy it is for Rick-level sci-fi to go haywire, Rick's wouldn't have needed to do anything to kill them.
** Probably an accident, since Rick was unable to use portals at the time. Remember that to switch universes, they had to physically fly the ship through an existing wormhole.
* When Rick sent all dimensional travelers back to their original universes, [[YankTheDogsChain does that include Evil Morty]]?
** This could be mitigated by how he is currently outside the central finite curve, meaning he could simply be out of range for Rick's portal reset to work.
* Jerry is understandably extremely disturbed about the idea of having sex with his mother. But this becomes infinitely worse if you factor in the theory of Jerry being a survivor of sexual assault. He obviously doesn't consent to having sex in this scenario, effectively making him a rape victim a second time. It's little wonder he tries his damn hardest to avert it.
* The soldier who got immortality only to be immediately [[ImmortalityHurts pumped full of bullets]] had it rough, but he reasonably could have been able to get medical treatment that would fix the damage or at least ease his pain. Except that he almost definitely got sucked into that black hole at the end. The [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaghettification theoretical effects of entering a black hole]] are nightmarish, but you'd die eventually. He's going to be feeling it ''[[AndIMustScream forever]]''.
* In "Analyse Piss" Jerry blows up a planet of Hitlers and worries there could have been other, non Hitler inhabitants before getting reassured there weren't, considering this is Hitler we're talking about its best not to think about why.
* Weird Rick is native to Morty's original world. Now remember there's at least 3 other worlds nearly identical to Morty's, whose (dead) Ricks aren't native to those worlds either. There's a good chance Weird Rick's [[AllianceOfAlternates not alone]].
* Jerry [[DespairEventHorizon tries to ask Summer]] [[{{Subverted}} for drugs]] after the Rick him and his family has been celebrating with Christmas [[RoboticReveal was revealed to be a robot]]. But if you consider neither Jerry, both Beths nor Summer know for how long Rick has been replaced with a robot, it becomes even more tragic. It's possible Jerry thinks Rick was a robot for the entire Season 6, meaning that every time Rick did something kind for Jerry was actually done by some robot.
* "The Ricklantis Mixup" shows a Rick who lived "60 iterations off the Central Finite Curve" until he was kidnapped, and his memories of his Beth were harvested into wafers for the inhabitants of the Citadel of Ricks to eat. That Rick was later freed and sent to the blender dimension to die. "Unmortricken" later revealed that Weird Rick killed every iteration of Diane with the Weapon Too Cool For a Name. This means that the Beth who belonged to the late Simple Rick is now an orphan, since both of her parents are gone for good.
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!!FridgeBrilliance
[[folder:Season 1]]
* In the very first episode, Beth tells Rick that Morty needs to go to school because "He's not a hot girl. He can't just bail on his life and set up shop in someone else's." Cut to 5 episodes later...
* Why wasn't Morty interested in seeing the alternate timeline version of himself in "Rixty Minutes"? Because the last one he saw was [[spoiler:a bloody corpse]].
* It really should have been obvious that Rick, Morty, and Jerry [[spoiler: weren't out of a simulation yet]] when Rick and Morty find Jerry on the ship; he's still wearing the tuxedo [[spoiler: that he only could have gotten in the simulation]].
** Rick pauses for a second of his frantic escape attempt to question why Jerry is "dressed like a waiter", so it's not surprising that [[spoiler:he was completely aware that they hadn't left the simulation yet.]]
** Also, Rick briefly gets very playful and giggly with Morty. This is actually because he's starting to suspect this is a simulation of Morty and he's testing to see if Morty will say something about him acting out of character.
*** At the very start of the episode, Rick nonchalantly makes remarks that would be addressed to the Zigerions and their predictable work, until 'Morty' bumps into the side of the garage, then he plays along with the [[spoiler: layered-simulation scam. He realized that if they were putting in the effort to add natural imperfections, then they were done playing around. That's why he finished them off rather than rob them like normal; they wanna get serious? He can get serious.]]
* Rick's recipe for concentrated dark matter consisting of photonic quarks, cesium and a bottle of water, [[spoiler:is pretty obviously a bomb]].[[note]]Cesium is the most reactive of all metals, it is pyrophoric and reacts with water even at −177 °F.[[/note]] [[spoiler:Rick's trap was actually a test to see if the low achieving aliens would be aware of basic chemistry. To the extent that they mixed it up without any prior evaluation or safety precautions [[EvenEvilHasStandards justified]], in Rick's mind, their fate. Of course one can assume that Rick would also be [[BatmanGambit fairly confident]] as to the result of his "test".]]
* In the fourth episode of season 1, there's a good bit of TropeTelegraphing when [[spoiler: the Zigerions are about to blow themselves up.]] Two episodes later, about the same level of telegraphing is applied when [[spoiler: alternate universe Rick and Morty blow themselves up, but it's far less likely to be picked up on because the scene is set up as if they're ''our'' Rick and Morty, who have too much PlotArmor to be considered for such a gag.]]
* In "M. Night Shaym-Aliens!", if the scammer aliens were really that stupid, chances are they didn't build the simulation machine themselves and didn't know how to use it right. This would make it trivially easy for Rick to notice something was off or what layer of the simulation he was in.
* In "Meeseeks and Destroy" Rick bets Morty the chance to lead 1 in 10 adventures if Morty's adventure is a success. 10 episodes are about the length of a Rick and Morty season, implying there will be one Morty adventure per season.
** If this theory is true, the Morty adventure in Season 2 is probably "Mortynight Run", where Morty convinces Rick to kill Krombopulos Michael and rescue Fart, and in Season 3 it's "Vindicators 3: The Return of World Ender", where Morty is the one who JumpedAtTheCall and he drags Rick along.
*** "Vindicators 3" showed Morty turning in a punch card, so this appears to be in force.
*** In that episode, they mention the first Vindicator adventure, which involved Rick and Morty, and the second, which did not. It was likely "Vindicators 1" that was Morty's adventure.
* How did the Meeseeks get their hands on all those weapons (and a ''horse!'') in "Meeseeks and Destroy"? And how did they know where to find Jerry? They were designed for the sole purpose of solving problems of all sorts, so it was probably child's play for them to figure out how to get the tools and info needed to solve their ''own''. According to the commentary, the idea was that they had robbed a mounted cop for his horse and his gun.
* Rick warns the family to keep the Meeseeks requests simple, so one might think that Beth and Summer's requests, to be popular at school and be a more complete woman, respectively, would be more than they can handle and Jerry asking his Meeseeks to take two strokes off his golf game is the more rational request, right? Wrong! Beth and Summer's requests are broad enough that their Meeseeks simply giving them advice would mean success, whereas Jerry's golfing request is so specific that, unless he figures out ''exactly'' what he needs to do, the task is left incomplete.
** Furthermore, Beth and Summer asked their Meeseeks to simply accomplish tasks, their requests boiled down to the skill of the Meeseeks: Summer's Meeseeks talked her up in front of others while Beth's told her what she wanted to hear. Jerry asked his Meeseeks to teach him a new skill/improve himself, which made success heavily dependent on Jerry regardless of the Meeseeks' skill. Jerry's task was the hardest as it was the only one that the Meeseeks could not do for him.
* The Meeseeks have some truly annoying voices. This is most likely an intentional design flaw since their ability to produce an infinite number of servants with no personal needs would cause a person to become lazy and dependent over time.
** Not to mention the fact that Meeseeks all ''want'' to die, and having a more pleasant voice would make people reluctant to allow their Meeseeks to die.
** On the topic of the Meeseeks' voices, one of their {{Verbal Tic}}s is to announce themselves, followed by a "Look at me!" They want to receive their assigned task so they can finish it as soon as possible, and this is one way of ensuring their creator doesn't fail to task them as soon as possible.
** The Meseeks mention that “existence is pain to a Meseeks! And we will do anything to alleviate that pain!” Their annoying voice is most likely caused by the infinite endless pain they feel from the minute they are spawned.
* The first appearance of Rick's "wubba lubba dub-dub!" catchphrase (you know, the one that means [[spoiler:"help me, I am in great pain"]]) comes shortly after his grandson [[spoiler:nearly gets raped]]. There's no way the two weren't related.
** This is also the first time Rick ever directly addresses the audience through the fourth wall. He knows the audience saw what happened to Morty while Rick was unable to affect the situation because he was off-screen.
* ''"The Ricks Must Be Crazy"'' gives us a very odd inversion of CloneDegradation, Rick made the Microverse, and he's...well, [[AGodAmI Rick]], then the Microverse has Zeep, a [[{{Jerkass}} cynical asshole]], but one [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold willing to make a new power-source for his people]], and [[WhatYouAreInTheDark swallows his pride when he's faced with possible oblivion]], then the universe ''he'' made has a similar scientist, but one that seems a [[NiceGuy lot more friendly than either of them]], despite the questionable work he's doing. [[DrivenToSuicide He also takes the origin of his universe a lot worse than Zeep did.]]
** It's possible the batteries go both ways; Rick could be trapped in a universe created by an even ''more'' vicious "God" than himself. Knowing that your entire universe only exists to power somebody's lawnmower would be enough to turn anyone into a nihilistic anti-theist.
* The deer that Beth and Jerry ran into with their car? That was actually WesternAnimation/{{Bambi}}! That's why Bambi ''survived'' getting shot by the ''hunter'' because before he made it back to Faline, while she was waiting, he ran into the middle of the road and got saved by a vet.
* A brief glimpse reveals that the TV show the hivemind creates for Rick is identical to ''Series/{{Community}}''. What's her name? Unity. Comm-unity.
* Why did Mr. Needful [[spoiler:turn against Summer]]? Well, she made a wish to help him, and twisting wishes to make people suffer is what he ''does''. [[TheFarmerAndTheViper It's in his nature.]]
** Mr. Needful says "I'm the devil... but Rick IS the devil!" After Rick gets bored and closes shop, he leaves people stuck with cursed items after promising them happiness -- Just like the Devil was attempting to do!
** Why is Rick an atheist even though he met Satan? Rick demonstrated that he was able to both detect "evil" and remove "curses" using science. Therefore even if supernatural beings and effects exist, Rick can always discover the science behind them.
*** Later episodes show Rick interacting with various apparently supernatural beings, some of whom are god-like in one way or another, and is never impressed, he even ends up killing some of them. To Rick, these are all just various lifeforms with varying abilities, and he's smart enough to figure them all out.
** It’s also worth pointing out that Summer saves the Devil from hanging himself using a monkey’s paw. Given that that artifact is known for introducing an ironic twist after fulfilling the wish, it’s likely to blame for Summer getting Zuckerberged.
** When Mr. Needful says the microscope he gives Rick "reveals things beyond comprehension" he wasn't lying. It's just that the microscope would have rendered the viewer unable to comprehend the mundane things it was revealing.
* Why do the students think that a Latino student froze Frank? Because Rick is possibly Latino. His last name is Sanchez. It is even confirmed in the commentary for "Auto Erotic Assimilation" that Rick is Hispanic.
* In "Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind," the dome [[spoiler:of tortured Mortys]] isn't to hide a Rick from the Council. It's for when the Council turns up, it reinforces their belief that an Evil Rick is behind this. [[spoiler: it doesn't matter it is an inefficient way to generate Morty-waves because no Morty-waves are needed. Only the horrifying visual is.]]
** Why are all the other Mortys, [[spoiler:save one notable exception]], so much wimpier than ours? Look at their Ricks. Their very decision to join the Council reflects a fundamental restraint and willingness to cooperate that our Rick lacks. C-137's "mave-Rick" ways likely lead him into adventures they would never consider. Consequently, our Morty has been through mind-bending, life-altering experiences and come out of them a stronger person. Look, too, at the way the enforcer-Ricks' Mortys behave--quiet and obedient, where our Morty's seen Rick's feet of clay and is much more willing to question him and call him out on his behavior. It's even possible ("Ricks don't care about Mortys") that at least some of the council-Ricks barely interact with their Mortys unless they have to, so they haven't received the encouragement and mentoring that our Rick gives Morty (on his better days).
*** It's also possible that the other Ricks are much kinder to the other Morty. After all, they are willing and capable of cooperating with each other to achieve a functioning society, that C-137 has absolutely no respect of, it makes perfect sense that they are also more willing to cooperate with their Morty, so finding one who'll treat them horribly leaves them in horror, while for C-137 it's the norm.
*** [[spoiler:Evil Morty was giving a form of mentorship to the Morty's of his Morty-dome; don't trust Rick because he doesn't care about you and wants to hurt you. When Evil Rick claims no Rick cares for their Morty, it comes from Evil Morty's perspective. He wanted the Morty-est Morty to come and prove to the Morty's that they can beat Rick. And now there are a hundred versions of Morty who remember the way they were treated, to be later created into an army by Evil Morty (the Rickiest Morty) ]]
** The fact that it turns out to be [[spoiler:Evil Morty]] who speaks through [[spoiler:Evil Rick]], lends new meaning to him wistfully calling the agonized screams of the multiple Mortys "my symphony". It is made from sounds of [[spoiler:other hims]].
*** Not only that, but Rick's last words screaming at the Morty to kill him? It looks like he's being DefiantToTheEnd, but [[spoiler: that' actually Evil Morty instructing the other Morty to kill Ricks]].
** [[spoiler:Evil Rick]] says he kidnapped Rick because they are so much alike, only separated by one other [[spoiler:Rick]]. But Rick refuses to join him. Why? Because [[spoiler:Evil Rick]]'s data for the Rick that died and was replaced in Rick Potion #9. The Rick the show follows is probably farther on the good side of the [[spoiler:Rick Spectrum]] as shown by his memories and actual care for Morty.
*** Or Rick is actually that one other Rick, [[spoiler: having hopped to the most similar universe, and thus the Rick most like him]]. In other words, [[spoiler: he's the super-weird one because he's evil but actually cares about his Morty.]]
*** Maybe it's not about how evil a Rick is, but how willing to defy the social order. Most Ricks don't care about conventional society's rules, but they'll restrain themselves for the Citadel society. Both Evil Rick and his counterpart are perfectly fine with treating the Citadel the same way they treat everyone else: poorly. And as we've seen, the Citadel Ricks treat Mortys like shit, but they expect better for Ricks. So their definition of good and evil is not to be trusted.
** Rick comments on the Dome's [[DoWrongRight poor craftsmanship]], a pet peeve of his, and just like in another episode where he complains about such things, it's a clue that something is off. [[spoiler: The Dome isn't built the way Rick would have done it because it wasn't designed or built by a Rick.]]
* Why does Rick say in "Rick Potion Number 9" that they can only change universes three times, four tops? Because as we see in "Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind", there's a council of Ricks (and possibly others) keeping track of exactly this sort of thing.
** This would also explain why he went for the extremely specific "Universe where the problem was resolved, and then Rick and Morty died shortly afterwards" instead of the easier alternative of going to a universe where the problem is resolved and then just killing that Rick and Morty himself.
* When Evil Rick tries to show how he and the main Rick are not so different using his scale of Rick evilness, it's somewhat underwhelming. Although the two are in fact very close to each other on the scale, it doesn't look like they're especially close to being the ''most'' evil of all the Ricks. But that makes sense- [[spoiler:the Rick we know is a JerkWithAHeartOfGold that genuinely loves his Morty, and this so-called "Evil Rick" is just a puppet for a much eviler Morty]]. You would probably expect both of those profiles to only be middle of the road in terms of evilness, and that's exactly how they show up on the chart.
* Rick hesitates when calling them "Morty waves". The gag is that he's trying not to call them "moron" or "idiot" waves to avoid offending Morty, but Rick's never had a problem calling Morty stupid and he ends up just landing on Morty's name to define them. Why? Because he literally doesn't know what else to call them, being incomprehensible to him is exactly the point of Morty Waves in the first place. He knows what they do, he knows they come from Morty, but if he could understand exactly what about Morty's brain actually creates those waves the way the brain of a Rick produces "genius" waves, they wouldn't cancel ''his'' brain waves out.
* In "Something Ricked This Way Comes" Rick and Summer beat up a variety of prejudiced and abusive individuals. One of them was a Westboro baptist member protesting their famous slogan "God hates Fags" Rick is later implied to be pansexual so no doubt this gives him an extra amount of hatred for them.
* The Plutonians have a lot of {{stealth pun}}s going on in their world. They're lead by the ultra-rich, who control everything. Plutocrats, in other words. And there's vast mineral wealth that they lay claim to. The reason Plutocrats are called that is that Pluto was a god of vast mineral wealth, buried underground. It's layers within layers.
** It should be noted that this is a case of mixing up two different mythological gods with similar names -- Pluto is named after the Roman ruler of the underworld, while "plutocracy" is derived from the Greek god of wealth, Plutus. They are frequently conflated, though.
*** Technically speaking, Plutus was a name for Hades in his role as the god of Wealth, while Hades was his role as Ruler of the Dead and Lord of the Underworld or the Land of Erebus. Wealth came from underground, be it metals and minerals or seeds. At the time calling the guy in charge of the dead by name was a fearful prospect and often avoided. So Hades has many names, Plutus is one of then.
*** Pluto, Plutus and Hades are all the same God, Pluto is just his Roman name.

to:

!!FridgeBrilliance
[[folder:Season 1]]
!!FridgeHorror
[[folder: Fridge Horror]]
* In There are many dangerous and deadly dimensions out there that can be easily accessible with the very Portal Gun. One such place is called the "Blender Dimension", which you pretty much get eviscerated the moment you set foot there. It makes you wonder who would be crazy enough to want to go there in the first episode, Beth tells place. Not that it matters. It turns out the gun can be hacked to take any Rick who falls out of line there as some sort of death sentence.
* Why didn't Rick use Human DNA in Rick Potion Number 9? And why did he rescue Morty, but not his daughter or granddaughter? Same reason: To make Morty more dependent on him. As far as Morty knows, Rick is the only family he has left.
* At the end of 'Anatomy Park', Rick enlarges the hobo's dead body to help Morty and at the end, destroys the corpse with the dynamite he stuffed into the hobo's corpse. The hobo's blood rains upon the whole United States. Blood that came from a hobo that had many dangerous diseases kept inside him. And it gets ''worse''. Given that the cadaver was giant when it was blown up, you can take your panic: giant monster-sized virus, or said virus, normal sized, getting spread out everywhere. Either way, we're still going with the first pick. '''''[[ParanoiaFuel SWEET DREAMS]]'''''
** But it gains some NightmareRetardant when you find out that since the body exploded, all the viruses in there were clearly and obviously killed in the explosion.
*** Plus it exploded InSpace.
*** Given
that Morty needs to go to school because "He's not a hot girl. He can't just bail on his life was full size, the diseases would be giant, and set thus vulnerable to fall damage. They all would've died on impact when they hit the ground. Assuming they didn't burn up shop in someone else's." Cut to 5 episodes later...
the atmosphere or die in the vacuum of space.
* Why wasn't At the end of "Rick Potion #9" Rick seems completely uninterested at the fact that he jumped timelines while Morty interested in seeing is freaked out. Has Rick done this before? That would mean the last time he did it, he didn't even bring ''Morty'' from his original timeline, but simply changed places with the Rick Morty grew up with and Morty never realized it.
** Better yet, finding a timeline where one of his counterparts was able to solve the problem is plausible; just look for the most similar one where everyone's ''not'' dead. The headscratcher is; How did his [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jil8i5iS6eo "scouting"]] locate one where ''both'' he and Morty died exactly '''five seconds''' '''''before''''' they entered it? The only way to interpret that is that Rick has some way of telling when people are about to die. And only uses it to run from his biggest screw-ups.
** Or simply, due to infinite universes existing, Rick deduced a universe specifically where
alternate timeline version of himself in "Rixty Minutes"? Because the last one he saw was [[spoiler:a bloody corpse]].
* It really should have been obvious that Rick, Morty, and Jerry [[spoiler: weren't out of a simulation yet]] when
Rick and Morty have to die for the replacement.
** We later
find Jerry on the ship; he's still wearing the tuxedo out that Rick mind-wipes Morty whenever Morty experiences something traumatic [[spoiler: or witnesses Rick do something mildy embarrassing]]. So why doesn't Rick wipe out ''this'' memory too? Because Rick ''wants'' Morty to experience this sort of trauma.
** [[spoiler: Confirmed as of season 6. The Rick we've been following all along is not from the dimension Morty is from. Though it turns out the original Rick from
that he only could have gotten in the simulation]].
**
reality is still alive and our Rick pauses for a second of his frantic escape attempt to question why Jerry is "dressed like a waiter", so it's not surprising that [[spoiler:he was completely aware that they hadn't left the simulation yet.trying to find him.]]
** Also, Rick briefly gets very playful * [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick]] and giggly with Morty. This is actually because he's starting [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Morty]] aren't going to suspect this is a simulation of Morty fit in at ''all'' on "our" earth! They think and he's testing to see if Morty will say something about him acting out act like humans, while "our" [[spoiler:Cronenbergs]] are basically an unstable slurry of character.
*** At the very start of the episode, Rick nonchalantly makes remarks that
random genes and animal instincts. [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick's]] put himself and his grandson in incredible danger! How would he be addressed to the Zigerions and their predictable work, until 'Morty' bumps into the side of the garage, then he plays along with the [[spoiler: layered-simulation scam. He realized that if they were putting in the effort to add natural imperfections, then they were done playing around. That's why he finished them off rather than rob them like normal; they wanna get serious? He can get serious.so irresponsib--[[FridgeBrilliance Oh, wait. Yup, that's Rick, alright.]]
* ** [[spoiler: Cronenberg-Rick and Cronenberg-Morty]] came from a universe where everyone was turned back to normal except for them. If Rick and Morty had waited a little while longer, they wouldn't have had to travel to a universe where [[spoiler: they were both killed.]] Poor Morty...
*** It wouldn't matter because [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick and Cronenberg-Morty]] came from a universe where [[spoiler:everyone was originally a cronenberg]]. Rick and Morty would not have been able to [[spoiler:take their place there and return to their "normal" lives]] because [[spoiler:they lack the memories of being a cronenberg from birth]]. Plus, if that universe is anything like theirs than [[spoiler:Morty's family are still cronenbergs]].
** And unlike our Rick [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick]] brought them to a universe where [[spoiler:they presumably wouldn't be able to resume their previous lives]]. That might imply that [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick ran out of universes to do that with, making
Rick's recipe for concentrated dark matter consisting of photonic quarks, cesium statement that him and a bottle of water, [[spoiler:is pretty obviously a bomb]].[[note]]Cesium is Morty only get 3 or 4 these all the most reactive more true]].
** This also explains the presence
of all metals, it is pyrophoric Cronenberg-Rick & Morty on the Citadel of Ricks. More than a simple running gag, this hints that the original C-137 world they traveled to still did not fit their needs. This would have been a combination of the above points (the other Cronenbergs had no intelligence, etc.) as well as what the C-137 Smith family was doing to survive, ''killing and reacts eating Cronenbergs''. If Croneneberg-Rick or Morty tried to reconnect with water even at −177 °F.[[/note]] [[spoiler:Rick's trap was actually a test to see if the low achieving aliens their family, they would be aware of basic chemistry. To killed outright. There is very little infrastructure left, so the extent that they mixed it up without any prior evaluation Cronenberged duo can't even live somewhere else, as there is no food or safety precautions [[EvenEvilHasStandards justified]], in Rick's mind, energy producing facilities still running (the Smiths are watching Summer perform for entertainment and cook their fate. Of course one can assume that Rick would also be [[BatmanGambit fairly confident]] as food over a fire), meaning they will eventually starve to death. Going to the result Citadel was the only way the two could survive.
* Another one at the end
of his "test"."Rick Potion #9", you remember Leonard and Joyce? Jerry's parents? And their [[spoiler:sexual]] partner Jacob? And how Rick said that the [[spoiler: love potion doesn't affect anyone with their family's strain of DNA, then you don't need to be a genius to realize what could- nay, probably happened between the three of them.]]
* In 'Close Rick-Counters of the fourth episode of season 1, there's a good bit of TropeTelegraphing when [[spoiler: the Zigerions Rick Kind' Evil!Rick and our Rick are about to blow themselves up.]] Two episodes later, about the same level of telegraphing is applied when [[spoiler: alternate universe only divided by another Rick and there are Ricks far worse than him, judging by the scale which puts them in the middle.
** Maybe this is a reference to [[spoiler:the shadow council that Evil
Morty blow themselves up, but it's far less likely to be picked up on because the scene is set up killed as if they're ''our'' Rick and Morty, who have too much PlotArmor to be considered for such a gag.his last act before taking full power.]]
* In "M. Night Shaym-Aliens!", if [[spoiler: Maybe the scammer aliens were really that stupid, chances are they didn't build the simulation machine themselves and didn't know how to use it right. This would make it trivially easy for Rick to notice something was off or what layer of the simulation he was in.
* In "Meeseeks and Destroy" Rick bets
reason Evil! Morty the chance to lead 1 in 10 adventures if Morty's adventure is a success. 10 episodes are about the length of a killed his Rick and Morty season, implying there will be one Morty adventure per season.
** If this theory is true, the Morty adventure in Season 2 is probably "Mortynight Run", where Morty convinces Rick to kill Krombopulos Michael and rescue Fart, and in Season 3 it's "Vindicators 3: The Return of World Ender", where Morty is the one who JumpedAtTheCall and he drags Rick along.
*** "Vindicators 3" showed Morty turning in a punch card, so this appears to be in force.
*** In that episode, they mention the first Vindicator adventure, which involved Rick and Morty, and the second, which did not. It was likely "Vindicators 1" that was Morty's adventure.
* How did the Meeseeks get their hands on all those weapons (and a ''horse!'') in "Meeseeks and Destroy"? And how did they know where to find Jerry? They were designed for the sole purpose of solving problems of all sorts, so it was probably child's play for them to figure out how to get the tools and info needed to solve their ''own''. According to the commentary, the idea
was that they had robbed a mounted cop for his horse and his gun.
* Rick warns the family to keep the Meeseeks requests simple, so one might think that Beth and Summer's requests, to be popular at school and be a more complete woman, respectively, would be more than they can handle and Jerry asking his Meeseeks to take two strokes off his golf game is the more rational request, right? Wrong! Beth and Summer's requests are broad enough that their Meeseeks simply giving them advice would mean success, whereas Jerry's golfing request is so specific that, unless
he figures out ''exactly'' what he needs to do, the task is left incomplete.
** Furthermore, Beth and Summer asked their Meeseeks to simply accomplish tasks, their requests boiled down to the skill of the Meeseeks: Summer's Meeseeks talked her up in front of others while Beth's told her what she wanted to hear. Jerry asked his Meeseeks to teach him a new skill/improve himself, which made success heavily dependent on Jerry regardless of the Meeseeks' skill. Jerry's task
was the hardest as it was the only one that the Meeseeks could not do for him.
* The Meeseeks have some truly annoying voices. This is most likely an intentional design flaw since their ability to produce an infinite number of servants with no personal needs would cause a person to become lazy and dependent over time.
** Not to mention the fact that Meeseeks all ''want'' to die, and having a more pleasant voice would make people reluctant to allow their Meeseeks to die.
** On the topic of the Meeseeks' voices, one of their {{Verbal Tic}}s is to announce themselves, followed by a "Look at me!" They want to receive their assigned task so they can finish it as soon as possible, and this is one way of ensuring their creator doesn't fail to task them as soon as possible.
** The Meseeks mention that “existence is pain to a Meseeks! And we will do anything to alleviate that pain!” Their annoying voice is most likely caused by the infinite endless pain they feel from the minute they are spawned.
* The first appearance of Rick's "wubba lubba dub-dub!" catchphrase (you know, the one that means [[spoiler:"help me, I am in great pain"]]) comes shortly after his grandson [[spoiler:nearly gets raped]]. There's no way the two weren't related.
** This is also the first time Rick ever directly addresses the audience through the fourth wall. He knows the audience saw what happened to
Rick-est Morty while on the Rick was unable to affect the situation because he was off-screen.
* ''"The Ricks Must Be Crazy"'' gives us a very odd inversion of CloneDegradation, Rick made the Microverse, and he's...well, [[AGodAmI Rick]], then the Microverse has Zeep, a [[{{Jerkass}} cynical asshole]], but one [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold willing to make a new power-source for his people]], and [[WhatYouAreInTheDark swallows his pride when he's faced with possible oblivion]], then the universe ''he'' made has a similar scientist, but one that seems a [[NiceGuy lot more friendly than either of them]], despite the questionable work he's doing. [[DrivenToSuicide He also takes the origin of his universe a lot worse than Zeep did.
& Morty spectrum.]]
** It's possible * It was said by the batteries go both ways; Council that 27 Ricks were murdered [[spoiler:but Evil Rick could has hundreds of Mortys]] how many Ricks were murdered without the Council knowing?
* At the end of "Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind", Rick tries to comfort Morty saying that, since he's the Rick-est Rick, he must
be trapped the Morty-est Morty. But the "Rick-est Rick" is a positive statement only to him, he's actually extremely manipulative, self-centred and genocidal, and Morty is shown to have a ''lot'' of undealth-with rage. So what does exactly Rick considers to be "Morty-est"?
* Jerry's description of what he thinks a rapist looks like is pretty specific. Was [[spoiler: the Titanic recreation with Lucy not the first time he was
in a universe created by rape scenario?]]
-->'''Jerry ("Pilot"):''' Well, now you can build baskets and watch Paul Newman movies on VHS and mentally scar the Boy Scouts every Christmas. [...]It's personal.
* Mr. Meeseeks is pretty much
an Implacable Man. Nothing can kill it, except for fulfilling its task. They are able to survive being brutally mutilated, having massive chunks of its body, even ''more'' vicious "God" than himself. Knowing that your entire universe only exists limbs, torn off. And they will do absolutely ANYTHING to power somebody's lawnmower complete their goals, consequences be damned, and they have zero qualms with killing innocent bystanders. So...hopefully nobody ever gets the idea to use a Meeseeks to commit murder. It would be enough to turn anyone into a nihilistic anti-theist.
* The deer that Beth and Jerry ran into with their car? That was actually WesternAnimation/{{Bambi}}! That's why Bambi ''survived'' getting shot by
like the ''hunter'' equivalent of a Terminator. Nothing would be able to stop it. Weapons won't work because before he made it'll just shrug them right off to get to its target. And what if it back to Faline, while she was waiting, he ran into starts taking too long, and the middle of Meeseeks calls in more Meeseeks to help him out? Many police and loved ones, innocent bystanders, would die in the road crossfire. There would be blood spilled all over, and got saved Mr. Meeseeks is guaranteed to come out on top in the end because we CAN'T. KILL THEM. The only hope you'll EVER have of being safe from a Meeseeks is POSSIBLY destroying its entire body...But even then, it's likely you'll have an army of other Meeseeks to destroy...
** What happens if you steal the Meeseeks-Box, and task a Meeseeks to prevent being assassinated
by a vet.Meeseeks?
*** Assuming all Meeseeks are equally competent at carrying out their tasks, they go crazy after about a week of foiling each other's plans and decide to cut the problem off at the source (where the problem is you and the "source" probably represents your head). Unless one of them manages to succeed just by being luckier.

* A brief glimpse reveals ** Hilariously the game ''VideoGame/PocketMortys'' confirms this fear, as the Meeseeks Box is used to instantly defeat one opponent, regardless of their stats or hit points.
** And one of the recent shorts promoting season three shows
that when a Meeseeks' body is destroyed, it'll just poof back into existence perfectly intact. There is truly no way to kill these things aside from completing their assigned tasks...
* The [[BlackComedy infamous]] Lucky Charms parody commercial played on inter-dimensional cable in "Rixty Minutes" opens up a really disturbing implication about where it came from: ''All children'' in that universe may just be exactly like
the TV show ones in the hivemind creates for advert - KidsAreCruel taken up a notch. The advert's extreme sadism is just the marketers playing to their target demographic.
** The completely dead eyes of the children as they scoop out 'Lucky's' cereal from his intestines confirms this theory. In the RL commercials, the children are happy to be eating this treat. In this universe, the children go about this grim business, as they need to survive, doing so with a minimum of joy and effort.
* All it takes is one snarky comment from Morty about [[spoiler: Rick's alcoholism]] to knock away Rick's certainty in himself. What makes this especially horrifying? That small amount of uncertainty [[spoiler: is all
Rick is identical to ''Series/{{Community}}''. What's her name? Unity. Comm-unity.
* Why did Mr. Needful [[spoiler:turn against Summer]]? Well, she made a wish to help him, and twisting wishes
needs to make people suffer is what he ''does''. [[TheFarmerAndTheViper It's in his nature.him essentially suicidal.]]
** Mr. Needful * Evil Rick says "I'm in "Close Rick-Counters" that his plan is to download the devil... but contents of other Ricks' brains, then kill them. [[spoiler: But Evil Morty was the one really controlling him. This means that Evil Morty has the knowledge of possibly ''hundreds'' of Ricks spanning multiple dimensions]].
** It's a little eerie that
Rick IS [[spoiler: did a variation of that]] in The Rickshank Redemption. He [[spoiler: uploaded himself into the devil!" After brains of other Ricks & then killed them.]] He's even [[spoiler: been in one of their bodies ever since]] & he's been a lot more callous lately. Their evil behavior could be influencing him.
* In "Close Rick-Counters," we see glimpses of prime Rick's memories when Evil
Rick gets bored and closes shop, he leaves people stuck with cursed items after promising them happiness -- Just like the Devil was attempting to do!
** Why
holds him captive. One of these memories is Rick an atheist even though he met Satan? Rick demonstrated that holding Morty when he was able only an infant. While it's really heartwarming to both detect "evil" and remove "curses" using science. Therefore even if supernatural beings and effects exist, see him cry from such a memory, Rick can always discover has been gone from Beth's life for quite a long time. FridgeHorror kicks in when you think about how Rick could have hopped onto another reality, considering his general lack of emotion over crossing into a new one in ''Rick Potion #9''. If this is true, then ''what happened to Rick's original timeline''?
** On
the science behind them.other hand, it could simply be prime Rick's memory of holding an infant Morty from some other reality.
*** Or maybe Rick did visit when Morty was a baby but was never around after that. Beth did mention he tended to be gone and then come back when she was younger.

*** Later episodes show Rick interacting with various apparently supernatural beings, some of whom are god-like in * Another one way or another, and is never impressed, for "Close Rick-Counters": Was the Morty controlling evil!Rick evil all along? Or did he even ends up perhaps only become evil after years of abuse from evil!Rick, killing some of them. To Rick, these are all just various lifeforms with varying abilities, and he's smart enough to figure them all out.him rather than becoming a compliant tool like so many other Morties?
** Considering what [[spoiler: Morty did]] in The Rickshank Redemption, that's a strong possibility.

** It’s also worth pointing out that * The Jerry daycare in "Mortynight Run", where Rick and Morty pairs drop off their Jerrys when they go on adventures. However, sometimes, a Jerry's Rick and Morty never comes back, leaving them stranded in an alien dimension with no way home, and their only alternatives are either to live in the daycare for the rest of their lives, or brave the dangerous alien city outside. Also, the reasons for why a Rick and Morty never come to pick up their Jerry. Which is worse, them being killed during one of their adventures, or just abandoning Jerry to his fate? Also, how are those universe's versions of Beth and Summer saves reacting?
** Probably with [[ComedicSociopathy indifference]], because nobody really seems to care about [[ButtMonkey Jerry]].
** If you look closely, one of
the Devil checkboxes on the clipboard Rick signs is whether Jerry's stay is temporary or "forever." For all we know, the Ricks and Morties belonging to the left-behind Jerries could all be alive and well, having simply booted their Jerry from hanging himself using a monkey’s paw. Given their lives.
*** This grants another interesting perspective: considering Beth is depicted in many episodes as "looking for the door" in her marriage, what if ''she'd'' put them up to the task?
*** there was one person in the daycare
that that artifact is known for introducing an ironic twist after fulfilling the wish, it’s likely to blame for Summer getting Zuckerberged.
** When Mr. Needful says the microscope he gives Rick "reveals things beyond comprehension" he
wasn't lying. It's a Jerry who explained that his earth's Beth remarried, could one Beth have done it twice.
* Fart's Music/DavidBowie-esque "Goodbye Moonmen" song is a nice little tune that could easily have been an extra track on ''Music/SpaceOddity'' or ''Music/TheRiseAndFallOfZiggyStardustAndTheSpidersFromMars'', but then you realize that is actually about his wish to genocide the disease he views carbon-based life as.
** Soooo, it still sounds like an extra track on a Bowie album? Some of that Ziggy Stardust/Diamond Dogs, apocalypse fun?
** It also makes his murder of the authorities chasing him far more disturbing. He made them slowly kill each other like dominos
just by mentally destroying one's will to live. Imagine several millions of his species invading and destroying mankind simply by breaking them via MindRape.
* So, Blim Blam the Korblok was chained up by Rick so
that the microscope would have rendered latter could cure his [[ThePlague "Space-AIDs"]], but ended up breaking free and leaving the viewer unable planet due to comprehend Beth and Jerry. His [=Space-AIDs=] was never cured, and who knows what all species it could infect?
* Rick's [[spoiler:suicide attempt]] at
the mundane things it was revealing.
* Why do the students think that a Latino student froze Frank? Because Rick is possibly Latino. His last name is Sanchez. It is even confirmed in the commentary for
end of "Auto Erotic Assimilation" becomes even sadder when you consider that, given Rick's usual mental state, [[spoiler:he's probably tried to kill himself a lot. Indeed, the only reason he seems to be alive is that Rick is Hispanic.
* In "Close Rick-Counters of
when he wants to kill himself, he's in such a bad state that he's physically unable to actually pull it off; at no point does he decide to keep living. And, because the Rick Kind," the dome [[spoiler:of tortured Mortys]] isn't to hide a Rick method he uses is indistinguishable from the Council. It's for when the Council turns up, it reinforces their belief that an Evil Rick is behind this. [[spoiler: it rest of his sci-fi stuff, his family presumably doesn't matter it is an inefficient way realize what he keeps doing and how close to generate Morty-waves because no Morty-waves are needed. Only death he's come. Jerry even sees the horrifying visual is.machine in a drawer and briefly holds the inanimate "test" specimen without comment.]]
** Why are all This is seen in the other Mortys, [[spoiler:save one notable exception]], so much wimpier than ours? Look at their Ricks. Their very decision to join first scene of the Council reflects a fundamental restraint and willingness to cooperate that our pilot episode when Rick lacks. C-137's "mave-Rick" ways likely lead him into adventures they would never consider. Consequently, our abducts Morty has been through mind-bending, life-altering experiences from his bed and come out of flies off with him, telling him he's going to start over. [[spoiler: Rick got drunk and that's all that was needed for Rick to want to start life on Earth over. The only person he wanted to save was Morty and his (Morty's) crush, Jessica. He also tells Morty that he isn't interested in Jessica and Morty doesn't have to worry about that. Could that be because Rick isn't planning on staying alive with them?]]
** What Rick says to his family before he attempts suicide is ominous {{Foreshadowing}}, "I'll be in the garage." [[TearJerker He was literally telling
them a stronger person. Look, too, at the way the enforcer-Ricks' Mortys behave--quiet and obedient, where our Morty's seen Rick's feet of clay and is much more willing to question him and call him out on find his behavior. body]].
* Summer has a flashback during "Total Rick-all" to walking in on Beth drunk alone. Beth smacks her with the wine on accident.
It's even possible ("Ricks don't care about Mortys") that at least some of the council-Ricks barely interact with their Mortys unless they picture day, meaning Summer will have to, so they haven't received a bruise in her class photo. Based on the encouragement and mentoring that our Rick gives casual way Beth grabs make-up to cover up the bruise, has she done this to Summer or Morty (on his better days).
***
before? Or, since we know Rick is an [[TheAlcoholic alcoholic]], did he do something similar to Beth when she was a child? It's also possible that the other Ricks are much kinder to the other Morty. After all, they are willing and capable of cooperating with each other to achieve a functioning society, that C-137 has absolutely no respect of, it makes perfect sense that they are also more willing to cooperate with their Morty, so finding one who'll treat them horribly leaves them in horror, while for C-137 it's the norm.
*** [[spoiler:Evil Morty
Beth was giving a form of mentorship to the Morty's of his Morty-dome; don't trust Rick being so casual because he doesn't care about you she was so drunk and wants when you're drunk, apathy tends to hurt you. When Evil set in.
*
Rick claims no Rick cares for their Morty, it comes from Evil Morty's perspective. He wanted the Morty-est Morty to come is frequently drunk and prove Beth is seen drinking wine whenever [[DrowningMySorrows she's in a bad emotional situation]]. It's safe to the Morty's say that they can beat Rick. And now there are a hundred versions of Morty who remember alcoholism runs in the way they were treated, to be later created into an army by Evil Morty (the Rickiest Morty) ]]
** The fact that it turns out to be [[spoiler:Evil Morty]] who speaks through [[spoiler:Evil Rick]], lends new
family, meaning to him wistfully calling the agonized screams of the multiple Mortys "my symphony". It is made from sounds of [[spoiler:other hims]].
*** Not only that, but Rick's last words screaming at the
Summer and Morty are susceptible to kill him? It looks like he's being DefiantToTheEnd, but [[spoiler: that' actually Evil Morty instructing it.
* Compare
the other Morty to kill Ricks]].
** [[spoiler:Evil Rick]] says he kidnapped
youthful, smiling Rick because they are so much alike, only separated by one other [[spoiler:Rick]]. But Rick refuses as seen in the pictures at Birdman's house to join him. Why? Because [[spoiler:Evil Rick]]'s data for the Rick that died and was replaced we see in Rick Potion #9. The Rick the show follows is probably farther on the good side series [[CynicismCatalyst just to fully realise how much life has beaten out of the [[spoiler:Rick Spectrum]] as shown by his memories and actual care for Morty.
*** Or Rick is actually that one other Rick, [[spoiler: having hopped to the most similar universe, and thus the Rick most like him]]. In other words, [[spoiler: he's the super-weird one because he's evil but actually cares about his Morty.
him.]]
* It’s easy to miss, but in “Get Schwifty” one of the Cromulons mentions their ''Planet Talent'' show is in its ''900th season''. Which means they’ve been at it for (depending on their units of time measurement) the better part of a ''millennium''. And if the format has remained consistent, they’ve annihilated '''''3,600''''' inhabited planets. Holy shit.
* Rick destroyed Zeep's miniverse the moment he arrived back in the microverse. He just destroyed two whole universes and committed genocide on at least two sentient species.
** That is not correct. Rick mentions when they get back to the "real" world that Zeep has a choice: either the battery will work, or Rick will get a new battery. He turns the key and the car starts, meaning Zeep made his choice to not tell everyone the truth. TheStinger even shows Zeep looking up at the sky and muttering "peace among worlds, Rick!" However, Rick basically stated that he ''would'' destroy an entire world of sentient beings if they didn't get back on the "floobleboxes," and Zeep knew it. Imagine meeting your creator and realizing that a. He has zero empathy for you and your kind, and b. he '''will''' destroy you if you don't get back to work. Brrrr!
*** Maybe You misread. Rick did not destroy the ''microverse'', but he ''did'' destroy the ''miniverse'' and the ''teenyverse'' when he and Zeep got back to the ''microverse'' that Rick originally created. So the OP's point still stands: He destroyed two entire universes and any life within them. And it's not the only time he's done this, if we take Toxic Rick's batteries into consideration- that's at least four, and no way to know how many times he's done it.
** That's not the worst of it. The floobleboxes are completely unnecessary. Any planet's total energy output cannot be greater than the amount of energy it receives. So basically, the output Zeep's people is a fraction of what the planet's total energy output could be. And that is a fraction of what comes from its star. Basically, Rick could have had a much more powerful battery if he siphoned energy from the micro sun. That would require no enslavement and be more efficient. Considering Rick is a super genius, he knows this. But he created that universe and those people, installing himself as a god to them. It actually tells a lot
about how evil Rick's psychology in that he created/became the only god he could believe in: a selfish, uncaring monster whose reasons for creating the universe are not only unfathomable to his creations, but ultimately makes them all cogs in an uncaring machine.
** Tells you a lot about the scientists who made further universes down the road even though ''[[{{Hypocrite}} they]]'' are aware of the little tidbit regarding the sun, [[ItsAllAboutMe didn't they]]?
* Several of the married couples on Nuptia 4 in "Big Trouble in Little Sanchez" get killed. What if they had children who are now orphaned?
* Was [[spoiler:Jerry's traumatic experience with rape when he was younger]] what made him the low self-esteemed man he is today?
* Morty and the family's more Jerkass tendencies in the second season could be very well what Unity said;
Rick is, just sucks everyone down with him. And with Morty, he's starting get more and more like Rick.
* Nothing is likely to come of it since both shows belong to two different networks,
but how [[WesternAnimation/GravityFalls Bill Cipher]] is [[http://i.imgur.com/7b9G1kQ.png on a computer monitor]] at the couple's therapy center. It seems like an innocuous EasterEgg at first, but bear in mind that the alien doctor speaking with Beth and Jerry has the same eye designs as ''someone [[DemonicPossession possessed]] by Bill.''
** In addition, a picture of Bill and a picture of the logo for Journal 3 are shown in a [[http://somekindofgravityfallsblog.tumblr.com/post/130568788961/as-part-of-the-rick-and-morty-rickstaverse-with Rickstaverse photo inside a Galactic Federation Prison]], alongside Grunkle Stan's notebook, pen, and mug that got sucked through a portal in Society of the Blind Eye[=/=]Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind. If anything, this means that not only are the ''Gravity Falls'' and ''Rick and Morty'' universes are connected to each other but that [[EldritchAbomination Bill]] [[OmnicidalManiac Cipher]] could enter Rick and Morty dimension to do whatever ungodly horrors he wants.
** And if he met Rick? I don’t know what’s worse, if they fight and end up possibly destroying the universe, or if they get along.
* [[spoiler: Rick is in prison:]] he probably won't be given alcohol and uncontrolled detoxification affects alcoholic people in a bad way.
* When you realize that one of the reasons Rick so gleefully destroys his clones in "Big Trouble in Little Sanchez" is because he is suicidal, and murdering his clones literally allows him to destroy himself.
** One has to wonder if Ricks killing Ricks are a common thing.
*** Seeing as the Council of Ricks decided to intervene only after what they called an "untypical high death rate" for Ricks across dimensions, the occasional Rickteside seems to be the norm.
* TheStinger at the end of "Meseeks And Destroy" shows one of the villagers discovering [[spoiler: King Jellybean's perverted history, and deciding to cover it up so as not to disillusion the community. King Jellybean was at least killed beforehand, but what if he was still alive, and said villager was
willing to defy the social order. Most Ricks don't care about conventional society's rules, but they'll restrain themselves cover for him and let him keep getting away with his crimes for the Citadel society. Both Evil Rick and his counterpart are perfectly fine with treating the Citadel the same way they treat everyone else: poorly. And as we've seen, the Citadel Ricks treat Mortys like shit, but they expect better for Ricks. So their definition sake of good and evil is not to be trusted.
** Rick comments on the Dome's [[DoWrongRight poor craftsmanship]], a pet peeve of his, and just like in another episode where he complains about such things, it's a clue that something is off. [[spoiler: The Dome isn't built the way Rick would have done it
publicity? It's even more disturbing because it wasn't designed this has happened in REAL LIFE, with celebrities having their crimes ignored and hidden for decades or built by a Rick.even until their death and so go unpunished and even celebrated. This creepy cartoon is actually the LighterAndSofter variation.]]
* Why does [[spoiler: After being put in prison, Rick say is asked "What are you in "Rick Potion Number 9" that they can only change universes three times, four tops? Because as we see in "Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind", there's a council of Ricks (and possibly others) keeping track of exactly this sort of thing.
**
for?"]] His response: "Everything." This would also explain why he went for the extremely specific "Universe where the problem was resolved, and then Rick and Morty died shortly afterwards" instead of the easier alternative of going to a universe where the problem is resolved and then just killing could be interpreted as being hyperbole, but it could otherwise mean that Rick and Morty himself.
* When Evil Rick tries to show how he and
has committed '''every crime in the main Rick are not so different using his scale of Rick evilness, it's somewhat underwhelming. Although the two are in fact very close to each other on the scale, it doesn't look like they're especially close to being the ''most'' evil of all the Ricks. But that makes sense- [[spoiler:the Rick we know is a JerkWithAHeartOfGold that genuinely loves his Morty, and this so-called "Evil Rick" is just a puppet for a much eviler Morty]]. You would probably expect both of those profiles to only be middle universe.''' One wonders what fucked-up things he might have done outside of the road episodes released so far. It also can be interpreted as his general remorse with everything he has done in terms of evilness, and that's exactly how they show up on the chart.
* Rick hesitates when calling them "Morty waves". The gag is that he's trying
life, not to call them "moron" or "idiot" waves to avoid offending Morty, but Rick's never had a problem calling Morty stupid and he ends up just landing on Morty's name to define them. Why? Because he literally doesn't know what else to call them, being incomprehensible to him is exactly the point of Morty Waves in the first place. He knows what they do, he knows they come from Morty, but if he could understand exactly what about Morty's brain actually creates those waves the way the brain of a Rick produces "genius" waves, they wouldn't cancel ''his'' brain waves out.illegal actions.
* At the end of ‘Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind’ Rick gets a ‘Free Replacement Morty’ voucher. Considering all the hundreds of now freed, Rickless Mortys, this is at best a cheap gift and at worst means the council burns through Mortys at an alarming rate.
** For there to be any free Mortys to give away, they presumably need to be Poor Rickless Bastards, which means they burn through ''Ricks'' at an alarming rate too. Or they're just trying to offload all of the Mortys that they suddenly found themselves burdened with.
*** Or clones. Remember that Ricks can buy Morties in blister packs with different accessories.
** Given Rick's self-destructive tendencies, it's entirely possible that a substantial number of these Morties are "available" due to Ricks dying from suicide or accidental deaths. Which raises another question: Are these Morties ones recovered off of their home Earths, like the ones in 'Close Rick-counters', or does the council abduct them from their families?
*** Its explained in later episodes that if there is a family to go back to, they go back. Mortys are only "assigned" to new ricks when they a. have no family, and b. have no Rick. The ones with no family and no earth to go back to and no Rick end up at the Citadel.
* Mr. Meeseeks as beings are in constant pain while still alive, and the only reason they wish to complete their task is to end the pain. Meeseeks are suicidal.
** Meeseeks and destroy is really an episode about how living with a purpose is far worse than living without one.
** What slightly lessens the horrifying nature of this (or makes it worse depending on your viewpoint) is that it doesn't specify what sort of pain the Meeseeks are in - It could just be the mental torment from the frustration of being unable to finish what they were instructed to do. If one imagines that they knew, with total certainty, the meaning of life, but were unable to achieve it, one can probably imagine the intense mental strain this would put on someone. Insanity would be near certain.
*** Until you decide you're perfectly happy living your own life and getting your own meaning from it, to hell with fulfilling any meaning determined by someone else.
** Here's a thought: What happens to a Meeseeks who fails to complete his task, and ends up trapped or imprisoned somehow? Like in that Federation prison where everyone is kept immobilized all the time?
* In "Something Ricked "Pilot" what exactly drove Rick to the point that he was willing to wipe out humanity with a bomb?!!!!
** Rick is basically one bad day away from wiping humanity then going to another universe to start over. That fact alone is scarier than just about anything the show has produced. Wouldn't blame any viewer if they consider Rick a VillainProtagonist
** Not only this. The first scene of the pilot is one big fridge horror in itself. While Rick later changed his mind, he passed out right before the call of the detonation. Viewing the show for the first time, you might assume that it's just a joke, fitting for the black comedy of an adult show. But later in the show, it's revealed that there are indeed multiple universes with an infinite number of Ricks and Mortys. So how big is the chance, that this Rick and Morty were alternative versions of the "real" Rick and Morty who were blown up offscreen for real, along with the whole world?
** Morty's also had to disarm so many neutron bombs that he knows the percentage that will turn out to be duds, too. '40%' would require at least five with two duds.
**
This Way Comes" whole opening becomes both more interesting and more disturbing with the revelation that this dimension was [[spoiler: Rick Prime's dimension. You know, the guy who destroyed everything Rick loved with a ''bomb''? Rick later says that he realized that Prime didn't care at all about his dimension or his family, but maybe his drunken mind told him to make Prime pay by taking his world away in the same manner he took his so long ago.]]
* Rick [[spoiler:gives a tip to the Galactic Federation under Jerry's name]]. Who's to say this won't end up reaching the rest of the family's ears? It's unlikely that Beth will believe Jerry [[spoiler:when he says it wasn't him]]. If that's true, Beth will likely never forgive Jerry for taking Rick away from her.
** Supported by TheReveal in "The Rickshank Redemption" that [[spoiler: the entire reason Rick turned himself in and overthrew the Galactic Federation was to sabotage Jerry and Beth's marriage. This was probably his backup plan in case they did not go through with the divorce.]]
* The interdimensional goggles seem cool at first. Imagine seeing the lives of your alternate selves from other dimensions. But imagine if your alternative selves also had them. They could see through your eyes while you work, interact with your loved ones, and have sex.
* In the promotion for the Rick and Morty Season 1 DVD, Rick summons a Meeseeks and tells it to 'go out into the world and tell everyone about the DVD'. Rick told the Meseeks to tell EVERYONE about the DVD, as in every single person on the planet. Then the Meeseeks is shown wandering a city in our world, spreading the news...
* The idea of Unity is already pretty horrifying without needing a trip to the fridge, but it's downplayed a bit in the episode in question when it's revealed that the people she has taken over would include sex offenders and engage in race wars without her taking over. However, she's trying to gain membership to the Galactic Federation so she can take over those planets. Given one of the first things she does is declare world peace and given the apparent parallels to Star Trek's Federation, it's likely that achieving a certain level of cultural advancement and eliminating various social problems is required before a planet can enter the Federation. In other words, if she got into this Federation she'd be taking over peaceful planets.
** To add another layer of horror, all of the 'fun' they're having is through the use of sentient beings, none of whom were likely consulted before being used by an alien hive mind and a sociopathic scientist as a relationship aid. How many of the redheads in that stadium would have said "no" [[AndIMustScream if they could?]]
* The destruction of the Council of Ricks in "The Rickshank Redemption" does not immediately garner sympathy, considering the behavior of the majority of its membership, until one remembers that Rick J 19 Z 7 (aka "Doofus Rick") from "Close Encounters of the Rick Kind" was probably among the Ricks caught in the crossfire from the Citadel's TeleFrag with the Galactic Federation's prison. It's highly likely that he was killed like the other Ricks and Mortys from "Close Encounters of the Rick Kind", supporting Morty's claims about Rick's collateral damage being too destructive to ignore.
** This may have been averted, as the "Tall Morty" in "The Ricklantis Mixup" seemed to be Doofus Rick, having the same speech patterns and look. Made a sad moment indeed when he asks if he has "graduated to being a Rick."
*** That wasn't Doofus rick, that was "Slow Rick", and he wasn't asking if he was graduating to being a Rick, he was asking if he passed Morty school to become a Morty. Unlike Doofus rick, he is legitimately unintelligent, and kept as a "Tall Morty" more or less for his own safety. They look completely different (Slow Rick is a generic Rick, Doofus Rick has a unique character design).
* Bird Person's UndyingLoyalty, and in fact all of Rick's relationships, comes into question given how dependent Beth
and Summer beat up a variety are. Who's to say Rick hasn't conditioned any of prejudiced his other friends to be so loyal? Unity, a literal assimilating hive mind, states he ''outperforms'' her in assimilating people and abusive individuals. One she can only get out by cutting off contact with him. The only ones that can escape the spell of them Rick's (pathologically sociopathic) [[MagnificentBastard charisma]] are inhuman beings that can avoid him and people TooDumbToFool who are powerless to go against him, like Jerry.
** What's worse, "Morty's Mind-Blowers" reveals that Rick can remove memories from his loved ones if he wants to. Who's to say that he hasn't done the same to people outside of his family?
* In "Pickle Rick," Dr. Wong is not even slightly fazed, annoyed, or otherwise adversely affected by the turmoil of Rick's family. Even when Rick waltzes in, soaked with blood, feces, and you know, ''being a pickle'', she doesn't so much as raise her voice or lift an eyebrow. Just what kind of horrific patients does she have to deal with, to be completely unfazed by this supernatural mess of a family?
** In a more hopeful interpretation, since alien lifeforms have made their presence known twice over in season two, she's just more openminded to once-thought impossible things.
** Also on a hopeful note, her behavior is consistent with how [[RealityIsUnrealistic a professional psychologist]] [[RealityIsUnrealistic ''should'']] [[RealityIsUnrealistic behave when dealing with difficult patients]]. While some less professional psychologists might reciprocate their patients' more toxic behavior, Dr. Wong's [[TheComicallySerious utter nonchalance]] in the face of the Smith family's absurd home life is perfectly in line with what's expected of her.
** There is every real possibility that Dr. Wong isn't even human. Most aliens left Earth when the Federation collapsed, many (rightly) fearing reprisals from the local populace. If one was sufficiently human looking, they may have stayed, especially as Earth recovered economically rather quickly.
*** This theory gives new meaning's to Rick's line in the S4 finale:
--->'''Rick:''' Smart guns: whitelist human life... and the therapist.
* In "Vindicators 3: Return of the Worldender", it's shown the Vindicators will absolutely turn on each other the moment things get rough and they exterminated an entire planet on their previous adventure. Who's to say they didn't kill the other three Vindicators themselves during the adventure?
* In TheStinger of "Anatomy Park", we learn that Ethan [[spoiler: has the new Anatomy Park (Anatomy World if you will) being built inside of him.]] Now, what happens to it in "The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy" when Morty [[spoiler: monstrously mutates Ethan with the Morphizer-XE?]]
** Considering the events of Rick Potion #9, [[spoiler: those are two different Ethans]] so it depends on whether or not [[spoiler: the new Ethan has an Anatomy Park in him.]]
*** Rick says the current universe is exactly the same as the previous one except they're both dead. New Ethan probably has an anatomy park.
*** [[InSpiteOfANail And besides the original Ethan is a Chronenberg now.]]
** Speaking of "The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy", Ethan got left in the woods by himself with [[spoiler: a barely movable body]] and no concerned witnesses, so it's quite likely [[DyingAlone he didn't make it out of there alive.]]  [[TheWoobie As if being raped, cheated on, and disfigured weren't enough for that boy...]]
*** This is Jossed, as you see Ethan crossing a busy bridge with cars passing him, which is commented on by the freed customer service reps.
** The answer is quite obvious. Because they didn't build Rick's version of Pirates of the Pancreas, the second Anatomy Park
was a Westboro baptist member protesting financial and commercial failure. Given that Rick was involved in the project, everyone building it probably just downed tools one night and went home.
* In "Rest and Ricklaxation", [[spoiler: the Healthy Morty is TheSociopath because he believes having a moral compass is toxic, and leaps in intelligence to a well-accomplished stock broker.]] In "The Ricklantis Mixup", [[spoiler: Evil Morty is also TheSociopath who has killed countless Ricks and tortured or killed
their famous slogan "God hates Fags" Mortys in the past, on top of disposing of anyone in his path to power with no one the wiser.]] Not only does this seem to imply that [[spoiler: any Morty who abandons all senses of morality is potentially EvilerThanThou to ''[[VillainProtagonist Rick Sanchez]]'', but that being TheFettered and oppressed by Rick is later the only thing keeping a Morty from Rick levels of intelligence - [[ProtagonistJourneyToVillain something our Morty is getting closer towards casting off]] as seen in "The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy".]]
* Throughout the show, there are multiple major signs that [[spoiler: Rick has repeatedly switched dimensions after making big mistakes so he can start over by pretending to be part of whatever version of the Sanchez family he finds there. There's no way to be sure the Rick we're watching now is the same one the show started with. He may have even killed other Ricks just so he could take their place &, if he hasn't some other Rick could do it to him at any time.]]
** For what it's worth, the Citadel of Ricks still identify our Rick as Rick C-137. Granted, they're hardly infallible, our Rick never contradicts them in any way.
*** FridgeHorror again-Morty claims he's from C-137, but is never identified as such by any Rick other than Rick C-137. It's possible Rick could be lying to him.
*** It's fairly well conclusive that our Morty is not C-137. Rick C-137 has memories of baby Morty, when our Beth said that Rick had been gone for 20 years. Best bets are that "Evil Morty" is the real Morty C-137, out to get revenge on Rick C-137.
*** In "Rickmurai Jack", Rick reveals the truth with his memories: [[spoiler: There was never a Morty C-137 because ''he never existed in that universe''. Beth was killed alongside Diane, so she never met Jerry, and Morty and Summer were never born.]]
* Let's consider a specific sentence from the episode "Pickle Rick", one that Dr. Wong told Rick near the end of the episode. "You seem to alternate between viewing your own mind as an unstoppable force, and as an inescapable curse." Now, consider the fact that the characters in ''Rick and Morty'' have stated multiple times that there is an infinite amount of universes, with an infinite amount of Ricks. Which means that, while most of the Ricks that we see have embraced science and portal gun technology, there exists Ricks in many universes that have never taken that plunge, instead focusing on their wife and child, Beth. The Ricks that have gone the science route usually end up in turmoil and existential crisis, while the ones who have gone with the family route seem to be living much happier lives in ignorant bliss. However, we've only seen two Ricks in the entire series that chose family over science: the first, in "Rickshank Redemption", in a memory that may or may not be true, and the second, in "The Ricklantis Mixup". In the first instance, after a Rick rejects the invitation to own a portal gun, he witnesses his wife and child get murdered by a bomb before his very eyes. While that story seems to have been fake to trick the agent, there's no actual proof that our Rick didn't just change the last part of the memory while the rest was the truth, or that he didn't just think of the time this happened to another Rick from another dimension. In the second instance, a Rick that preferred to work with wood rather than technology and was proud to raise his daughter got kidnapped, dragged to the Citadel, and forced into a LotusEaterMachine...to make cookies. It seems, then, that the Ricks who have accepted science - the "unstoppable force" - can't stand the simple fact that, for all of their intelligence, some Ricks are happier than they'll ever be because they willingly refused to heighten their intelligence to "inescapable curse" levels. And so, in a fit of self hatred that no show has ever rivaled before, these Science Ricks will go out and ruin the lives of these Family Ricks, out of pure jealousy and spite.
** This makes Dr. Wong's analysis of Rick even more poignant and horrifying. "Pickle Rick" demonstrates one of Rick's ultimate weaknesses and his biggest flaw throughout the series; he uses his vast intelligence as a defense mechanism to avoid caring for himself and his relationships with others. Dr. Wong explicitly tells Rick that he uses being smarter as an excuse to devalue his relationships and the wellbeing of others, and that, in spite of being a genius, refuses to put any work into the mundanity of common relationships and even his own wellbeing, and that it's the root of why he's so miserable. What's the family's reaction to this? To get into the car and get a different therapist. In other words, ''they didn't internalize anything Dr. Wong said, and will continue to repeat their mistakes.'' Even worse, the Citadel is full of Ricks that go out of their way to sabotage other Ricks that actually live by her advice and put in that effort for others. SelfInflictedHell doesn't even cover it.
** Even worse, it's quite likely that there is an alternate universe where the therapy actually acts as a breakthrough and Rick strives to be better, but some Ricks from the Citadel catch on and drag him back into the fray.
** This would explain the number of jobber Ricks on the Citadel. The Ricks could easily automate most of the blue collar jobs, or bring in any kind of easily controlled worker population, but they don't. It wouldn't surprise me if, being the sociopaths they are, the Council of Ricks "recruited" Ricks from beyond the Central Finite Curve for no better reason than to keeping thematic.
* Simple Rick is the only Rick we see who gave up on super-science and adventure so he could stay with his Beth... and was then kidnapped by other Ricks who use his happy memories to make cookies. The question is, when did this happen? Simple Rick's happiest memory is Beth's third birthday. Was Simple Rick kidnapped shortly after? Is this Beth yet another Beth who grew up thinking her father abandoned her?
** Simple Rick's central thought is the simple love he felt for and from his daughter. There's an entire slave factory not only dedicated to making it, but so important that it has implied sister factories, a small army dedicated to its recovery, and a need for Simple Rick so great that his death requires an immediate replacement. Not only is Simple Rick's based on a LotusEaterMachine, it mass-produces lotus-flavored candy for the uncountable number of Ricks who want but cannot get the love of their Beths.
** [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in that Old Rick (a.k.a. Assembly Line/Worker Rick) was [[InTheBack harvested for his memories]] [[ForgotToMindTheirHead mere moments]] [[GutPunch after they happened,]] [[SurpriseParty which could mean...]]
** You have to remember that all the Ricks are the same age, so Simple Rick would have been kidnapped, at earliest, sometime after the Citadel was founded, which was probably at least a few years after Ricks started dimension travelling. Also, the Citadel probably didn't have any Mortys until just a few years ago.
*** On the flip side, given the multiverse, there's no guarantee there aren't Ricks out there who married a different wife or had a child earlier or later. The little girl is
implied to be pansexual Beth, but it isn't outright stated to be her. Simple Rick might have found a wife and had a different daughter later in life, after the other Ricks had already created the citadel and could capture him. The other Ricks have Mortys only because all other Ricks get detected and killed, whereas Simple Rick never went out on adventures.
* Simple Rick was blatantly kidnapped to be milked for cookie flavoring, but a number of other Ricks and Morties in the episode appear to be on the citadel against their own wishes. Notably Cop Morty who broke down in tears over wanting to be a normal boy before performing a SuicideByCop, and the Rick attempting to concoct portal fluid in a meth lab for the Morty gang. At the end of "Close Rickcounters of the Rick Kind", Evil Morty was shuttled back to his home dimension along with all the Morties he held prisoner, yet he's back on the citadel still Rickless. Could the shadow council have rounded all those Morties back up to repopulate the citadel, along with any aberrant Ricks who never mastered interdimensional travel?
** Cop Morty was just trying to put Cop Rick off his guard, in the exact same way that Crib Room Morty had earlier in the episode.
* Worker Rick is forced to act as a replacement for Simple Rick after he gets him killed, which is bad enough on it’s own, but then at the end of the episode [[spoiler: Evil/President Morty has Wonka Rick (who owned the factory) killed]]. Seeing as President Morty has already enacted major changes in the citadel such as changing the Morty school curriculum and getting the teacher fired, it’s not hard to believe the Simple Rick factory might end up shut down. If this is true, ‘’what will happen to worker Rick?’’
* The PeopleZoo in "Morty's Mind Blowers" has Meeseeks in it, as a FreezeFrameBonus. Meeseeks go crazy after living for only a couple of days, and God knows how long they've been stuck in there.
* In "Morty's Mindblowers", it's revealed [[spoiler:Rick and Morty may have had to abandon another universe because of evil squirrels. This seems disturbing enough, except it's not stated when this took place. It's possible this memory is from ''before'' Rick Potion Number 9, meaning they may have had to ditch at least ''three'' universes.]]
** [[spoiler: Not really. Rick reminds Morty what he said about switching universes, implying that this is after Rick Potion Number 9.]]
* Summer has to be on [[spoiler:watch for Morty's Mindblowers scenarios, which include her younger brother and grandfather attempting suicide. It's also implied that she remembers her mother choosing her life over Morty's, which horrified her at the time. But Rick doesn't wipe her mind, precisely because she has to be on call. "I don't get paid enough for this shit" suddenly takes on a darker tone.]]
* In ''[[Recap/RickAndMortyS3E9TheABCsOfBeth The ABC's of Beth]]'' Rick doesn't just tell Beth about the things she asked him to make for her during her childhood, [[spoiler:he pulls a box out from beneath his workbench and ''shows'' her the items, meaning he actually made at least some of her macabre gadgets and gave them to her to use on other people. Also he makes it clear that he wasn't going to reign her in, even if she needed to be reigned in.]] What happened to the less-than-polite little boys who crossed her socio-path?
** Some of the toys that young Beth "requested" including such things as a teddy bear with realistic organs and a knife that loves stabbing. This, along with Beth's sociopathic tendencies, makes one consider why Beth wanted to become a surgeon. Not because of her smarts but because ''she likes looking at organs''.
** The reveal in Season 5, that [[spoiler:Rick's Beth was murdered when she was a child]], recontextualizes this interaction as [[spoiler:Rick lieing and taking the blame for another Rick's inventions and bad parenting]].
* ''[[Recap/RickAndMortyS3E9TheABCsOfBeth The ABC's of Beth]]'' reveals why Rick has the cloning technology he had to remake Tommy and make Tiny Rick: He was prepared for when Young Beth would murder someone and he'd need to clone them
so no doubt this gives one found out.
* In "The ABC's of Beth", there was no happy ending to the situation with Tommy, no matter what Beth or Rick would try. That's why Rick decided to go home after seeing [[spoiler:Tommy's graphic demonstration of
him an extra amount of hatred for them.
* The Plutonians
sleeping with and impregnating a Froopy Land resident, then eating the resulting offspring. If Beth had managed to convince Tommy to come home, she would have had to tell his father and the authorities why she had abandoned him in her childhood chicken coop for ''thirty years''. Tommy would have stuck to his story that Beth deliberately drowned and abandoned him because she was jealous of his relationship with his dad. Even if Beth had lawyered up or the statute of limitations had expired, Tommy has lost his sanity living alone, being forced into bestiality, incest and cannibalism to stay alive, and believing his best friend betrayed him. He is also extremely violent, and he would need a lot of {{stealth pun}}s going on rehabilitation. All in their world. all, Beth and Rick cloning Tommy was the least harmful decision because it means Tommy's father never found out the truth.]]
* Beth also reveals that she knew all along, thanks to her father telling her, that [[spoiler:the Rick and Morty in this universe aren't ''her'' Rick and Morty.
They're lead fugitives from another dimension while the father she knew is dead. Rick had absolutely no reason to reveal this to her, except to explain why he's being obtuse about his parenting skills and admitting that Beth is expendable to him. All Beths are the same, in his words, and there are more Mortys that she could have with her original son having disappeared]].
* Had Rick just gone to family therapy with his daughter and grandchildren like he was supposed to, instead of ending up having a solo adventure and allying with Jaguar, Jaguar wouldn't have rescued him and Morty in TheStinger of "Pickle Rick" and they both would've [[YourHeadAsplode suffered]] a CruelAndUnusualDeath. Remember that Rick was genuinely out of ideas and believed they were going to die.
** Though to be fair, Rick's extreme adverse to boredom, as pointed out by Dr. Wong, is a dangerous problem to the family. For all we know, it was completely his fault that they were in that problem in the first place.
* [[spoiler:Evil Morty]]'s Main/{{Leitmotif}}, For the Damaged Coda, has the best possible name. It has only ever been played at the ends of episodes, making it a literal coda, and it's the leitmotif of [[spoiler:the most damaged Morty of them all]].
* Beth in episode Morty's Mind Blowers show that an alien villain forcing Beth into a Sadistic Choice to choose which one of her children he'll spare and Beth immediately chooses Summer, not even hesitating for a second to resign Morty to death. What does that say about Beth character. This is not the first time Beth show no regard for Morty's life, in the stinger of Rick Potion #9, Beth tells Jerry she doesn't care about what might have happened to Rick and Morty and now that they have gone, she feels finally happy. Why do you think she feel like that about Morty, originally The show for the most part has shown Beth to be loving to Morty, or at the very least not abusive, while she and Summer have had a much more fraught relationship because Summer learning that Beth wanted to abort her and still has resentment about Jerry knocking her up and having a shotgun wedding, I was thinking that maybe it the divorce and how relationship with Rick and Jerry that cause her resentment to Morty, when she said that Beth tells Jerry she doesn't care about what might have happened to Rick and Morty and now that they have gone, she feels finally happy, what if when her relationship with Jerry was fix, maybe she thought she did not need Rick anymore now she had Jerry and maybe she saw Morty as Jerry former weakness and insecurities, and now that are Beth the chose Rick over Jerry is regretting how decision and is blaming Morty because she see him as a mix of the worst traits of Rick and Jerry, she did say in episode Raising Gazorpazorp that she believes that Morty was filled with Jerry's insecurities as a result of Jerry's overly-nurturing method of raising him.
* Rick doesn't take his entire lab with him when he and Morty bail on the pilot universe. That means all of the memories in Morty's Mind Blowers were extracted from a different Morty altogether. We know from ''Mortynight Run'' that any given pair of Ricks and Mortys can have entirely different experiences even if they start out on their adventures in the exact same way. Those memories couldn't ''all'' have been extracted from the Morty we know, and since Rick gives the memory tubes nonsense filenames, he can't be certain whether any given memory is actually one that ''his'' Morty has had removed. Morty may have remembered a bunch of horrible things that didn't happen to him.
** Likewise... does Morty remember Mr. Jellybean? Or did he have Rick remove that memory for him?
*** Most likely, he did not have that memory removed. Why? Because he never found out that Rick knew about Mr. Jellybean and killed him. Morty believes that Rick doesn't know what happened and if he DID know, he would just use that knowledge to mock him and "I told you so" him. For the same reason, he probably didn't have him remove the memory of what happened with Fart.
* There is a feature at Rickworld that allows him to massacre a room full of Morty’s.
** Rick does it every three months so that he can stand being around his Morty.
* As 'Edge of Tomorty' shows, due to the infinite versions of TheMultiverse, there exists a version where when in the 'prime' universe they win, in some other universe, Rick as well as Morty die ''numerous'' times during their adventures.
* How many Ricks were killed and found themselves being reborn in a different and most likely fascist universe and were unable to get out of the cycle of being killed over and over again?
** Related. After ending up in a fascist Shrimp reality asks while being chased ''When did this shit become the default?" Well what's changed recently? [[TyrantTakesTheHelm Evil Morty became President of the Citadel]] giving him access to a city worth of Ricks, their technology and science, and a whole lot of Mortys who were sick of the treated like crap.
** Adding onto that, Rick is very insistent on keeping Morty dependent to him. Who's to say seeing realities where Morty becomes a backstabbing fascist didn't reinforce that, and give him an excuse to double down on Morty...?
* The fact that Rick has so many ways to bring himself back to life after his death. Despite being extremely suicidal, he still has a strong will to live. And even if he did turn off all his precautions, he might still be reborn in a different universe. Can Rick ever be KilledOffForReal?
* In ''"Claw and Hoarder"'', Rick had to save the dragon he soul-bonded with because if he dies, Rick dies too. The same dragon soul-bonded with Morty earlier, and Rick threatened to blow up that dragon with C-4.
* ''The Vat of Acid Episode":
** Rick reveals that the "reset button" was actually Morty killing alternate versions of himself. So when Jerry presses the button after Morty comes home from a terrifying trip, he just killed his own son!
** Some of the alternate Morties turned into a pile of BodyHorror in school, during class. One can only imagine how his classmates and teachers would react to this.
*** Eventually undone
by the ultra-rich, who control everything. Plutocrats, end of the episode, but the thought is still horrifying.
* When Hoovy returns to his farm, it's run-down and dead. The windows are boarded up, his wife is dead
in her chair, and his son--in addition to being batshit crazy--is in terrible shape and living in said rundown house. When Morty returns years later, the house and farm are in much better condition, Bova's been lovingly buried, and Japheth is thriving with a family of his own. The horror kicks in when you realize the terrifying future Hoovy returned to ''didn't have to be like that''--Japheth could have fixed the farm earlier and buried his mother as soon as she died, but either chose not to out of a thirst for revenge or was unable to due to decades of grief.
* The season 5 premiere has unsettling implications given it seemed to push the ResetButton. We know that Rick doesn't believe in literal reset buttons because he believes that time travel is bullshit. So either Rick pulled another stunt to get rid of Space Beth as well as win Morty back, or he has gotten himself mired into weird trouble which will play out over the season. 
* If Hoovy's final descendant hadn't woken up Morty to study him, he could have been trapped for centuries like Jessica. 
* Wooden Jerry somehow obtained immortality and doesn't die even after being torn apart by beavers, drowned and then buried for hundreds of years, converted into a mirror, or burned at the stake. Does that apply to the
other words. Wooden Smiths? Are they still alive, buried under rubble?
** Wooden Jerry never died because his head was never destroyed (in typical [[ButtMonkey Jerry]] luck). The family could've been killed permanently by all those rocks.
And if they weren't, their Rick is with them, and if he can do science as a pickle then he can do science as a head, and either repair them or kill them depending on what they want.
* Planetina's been around since the 90's and looks no different today than she did back then, despite her "kids" being middle-aged. If she's functionally immortal and Morty ages normally, their relationship was doomed from the start to end in heartache.
** Now that Planetina is freed, how many more will die because they're trying to earn an honest living? Lumberjacks, construction workers, even people working factory jobs for a company that happens to pollute--how many more people will die just trying to keep food on the table?
** Just before going off the deep end, Planetina mentions she can hear the Earth screaming. Assuming she was telling the truth and not just being dramatic to make a point, ''every environmentally unfriendly action'' humans take hurts Planetina. Even "environmentally friendly" power sources such as hydro and solar are merely "much less environmentally damaging" than "harm-free", so if she becomes unhinged enough, Planetina might murder roofers installing solar panels because lithium mining isn't exactly clean, though she does seem pro-Wind power. Now that she's out in the real world and can't hide in the power rings (or wherever she goes when unmanifested), how miserable will Planetina be having to hear that screaming all the time?
* How big is [[spoiler: Naruto]] from ''Rickdependence Spray'' going to get? He's already larger than a satellite and is capable of holding a human in his hands. Let's hope he never comes to Earth.
** At least,[[spoiler:he's friendly to Summer.]] [[spoiler:And he grows even bigger and tears Gotron apart single-handedly.]]
* Rick is the smartest man in any universe he travels to because the Citadel makes sure anything else is literally impossible. Which means that Slow Rick--who is too mentally challenged to even realize he ''is'' a Rick, and not just a big Morty--had to have been more intelligent than he is now. ''Something happened'' to take this Rick from smartest brain in the known universe to barely able to pronounce words correctly.
** Alternatively, it could mean everyone in his universe is somehow ''[[TooDumbToLive dumber then he is.]]''
* With how many Ricks are killed in C-137's RoaringRampageOfRevenge, Rick can easily be responsible for depriving countless Beths, Summers, and Mortys of their own Ricks.
* Evil Morty's sabotage of the portal network could mean that any Ricks and Mortys that used their portal guns before the Citadel was destroyed were killed too.
** The portal network seems to be connected to the fluid the citadel produces rather then all portals, so only Citadel Ricks would be effected and they're dead anyway.
* The fact we see our Rick only became a cynical asshole because his family was murdered has a lot of implications for the other Ricks, even if we assume our Rick is the exception and most didn't need a tragedy to make them assholes, the existence of at least a handful of universes that are exactly like ours implies it at least happened multiple times, possibly with the same Weird Rick
* In "The Wedding Squanchers", after escaping from the Galactic Federation, the family travels on the planet where everything is on a corn cob, even cells. For a fact, your body cells die and get replaced with new ones every second, and if they get replaced with aforementioned cob cells, you will gradually transform into a living cob.
** What's worse is that Morty and Summer ate some of the cob cell fruits present on the planet.
* When Jerry gets transported to his original dimension, we see him dealing with a very aggressive and volatile family. To sell the point, Rick's toxic influence on Morty has gotten so bad that he gets expelled from his school, which barely garners a reaction from him or Rick. It is very likely that they are going to break up in a big way right after Jerry leaves. Things can only get worse now that our Jerry has left them and that Season 2 Jerry got assimilated by Mr. Frundles. In either case, they have a very dark future, and our Jerry and Beth divorcing for a short while really did improve the family bigtime since it curbed Rick's toxic influence to the point that he himself is improving, as much as he hates to admit it.
* In a similar vein, in "Solaricks", we have [[FluffyTheTerrible Mr. Frundles]] [[GreyGoo asssimilating]] [[ApocalypseWow all of Earth]] within minutes or less. The Fridge Horror lies in the fact that this dimension's earth housed many popular characters from older seasons, who are now either dead or assimilated.
** On the topic of that, it is entirely possible for Mr. Frundles to literally assimilate the entire dimension given how he assimilated the earth in only a few minutes.
*** Mr. Frundles needs to bite something to assimilate it, so as long as people don't go near the Frundled Earth the damage is limited to one planet. That said, if Mr. Frundles [[ItCanThink becomes smart enough to use assimilated spaceships...]]
* When the whole family escapes to Par-me-sian dimension at the end of "Solaricks", Beth asks Rick whether the selves they are replacing died of natural causes. Rick's grumpy "mhmm" is suspicious and, [[FreezeFrameBonus if you pause on the scene of carnage]], the scorch mark in the living room looks a lot like the one in Rick's original garage. Was it a sci-fi gadget accident or did Rick portal in a bomb!?
** The damage doesn't really look like a bomb though; the scorch mark is right in front of the couch but the couch is only ripped up a bit, the crater is really small, the bodies are relatively intact, etc. Given how we were just reminded how easy it is for Rick-level sci-fi to go haywire, Rick's wouldn't have needed to do anything to kill them.
** Probably an accident, since Rick was unable to use portals at the time. Remember that to switch universes, they had to physically fly the ship through an existing wormhole.
* When Rick sent all dimensional travelers back to their original universes, [[YankTheDogsChain does that include Evil Morty]]?
** This could be mitigated by how he is currently outside the central finite curve, meaning he could simply be out of range for Rick's portal reset to work.
* Jerry is understandably extremely disturbed about the idea of having sex with his mother. But this becomes infinitely worse if you factor in the theory of Jerry being a survivor of sexual assault. He obviously doesn't consent to having sex in this scenario, effectively making him a rape victim a second time. It's little wonder he tries his damn hardest to avert it.
* The soldier who got immortality only to be immediately [[ImmortalityHurts pumped full of bullets]] had it rough, but he reasonably could have been able to get medical treatment that would fix the damage or at least ease his pain. Except that he almost definitely got sucked into that black hole at the end. The [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaghettification theoretical effects of entering a black hole]] are nightmarish, but you'd die eventually. He's going to be feeling it ''[[AndIMustScream forever]]''.
* In "Analyse Piss" Jerry blows up a planet of Hitlers and worries there could have been other, non Hitler inhabitants before getting reassured there weren't, considering this is Hitler we're talking about its best not to think about why.
* Weird Rick is native to Morty's original world. Now remember
there's vast mineral wealth that they lay claim to. The reason Plutocrats are called that is that Pluto at least 3 other worlds nearly identical to Morty's, whose (dead) Ricks aren't native to those worlds either. There's a good chance Weird Rick's [[AllianceOfAlternates not alone]].
* Jerry [[DespairEventHorizon tries to ask Summer]] [[{{Subverted}} for drugs]] after the Rick him and his family has been celebrating with Christmas [[RoboticReveal
was revealed to be a god of vast mineral wealth, buried underground. robot]]. But if you consider neither Jerry, both Beths nor Summer know for how long Rick has been replaced with a robot, it becomes even more tragic. It's layers within layers.
** It should be noted
possible Jerry thinks Rick was a robot for the entire Season 6, meaning that this is every time Rick did something kind for Jerry was actually done by some robot.
* "The Ricklantis Mixup" shows
a case of mixing up two different mythological gods with similar names -- Pluto is named after Rick who lived "60 iterations off the Roman ruler Central Finite Curve" until he was kidnapped, and his memories of his Beth were harvested into wafers for the inhabitants of the underworld, while "plutocracy" is derived from Citadel of Ricks to eat. That Rick was later freed and sent to the Greek god blender dimension to die. "Unmortricken" later revealed that Weird Rick killed every iteration of wealth, Plutus. They Diane with the Weapon Too Cool For a Name. This means that the Beth who belonged to the late Simple Rick is now an orphan, since both of her parents are frequently conflated, though.
*** Technically speaking, Plutus was a name
gone for Hades in his role as the god of Wealth, while Hades was his role as Ruler of the Dead and Lord of the Underworld or the Land of Erebus. Wealth came from underground, be it metals and minerals or seeds. At the time calling the guy in charge of the dead by name was a fearful prospect and often avoided. So Hades has many names, Plutus is one of then.
*** Pluto, Plutus and Hades are all the same God, Pluto is just his Roman name.
good.



[[folder:Season 2]]
* Jerry is able to get the Coldstone Creamery involved in an elaborate scheme to save Bambi. Typical cartoon contrivance? Not quite - If you do the math, Jerry spent $480 at the place and was implied to give out enormous tips.
* At the end of "Mortynight Run", [[spoiler:Fart]] says to Morty, "You said yourself that life must be protected, even through sacrifice. You haven't changed your mind about that, [[spoiler:I can sense your thoughts.]]" What happens next? [[spoiler:Morty sacrifices Fart to protect all carbon-based life. Fart did in fact sense Morty's thoughts, but did not realize where his convictions had changed.]]
* In "Total Rickall" we eventually learn the parasites can only create good memories and alter memories to seem good that's perfect foreshadowing that [[spoiler: Mr. Poopybutthole isn't one of them]] considering the first memory he's featured in is the elevator memory which is generally unpleasant between, Beth and Jerry's arguing, Rick's exasperation of not bringing his portal gun, Morty in desperate need of a bathroom and Summer pissing herself the second she learned they were stuck. Notice that while not a bad memory specifically about him it only gets better at the mere presence of [[spoiler:Cousin Nicky]].
** [[spoiler: Mr. Poopybutthole not being a parasite]] is also shown in the opening credits, since he is inserted into all the clips and all but one are "bad memories".
** "Total Rickall" spoiler: [[spoiler:Considering the Smiths had to actually check each other for bad memories to be sure that they're real, it stands to reason that at least one of them actually has bad memories of Mr. Poopy Butthole, considering he survived the shootout at the end. Rick is an obvious candidate, [[JerkAss for obvious reasons]], and Morty and Summer might have some, too, if he's ever joined them on their adventures. The "sorry for not having bad memories of him" was obviously only pointed at Beth, who might've not even known him all that well.]]
*** Also to reinforce this, [[spoiler:neither Mr. Poopybutthole nor Beth had photos of each other in their phones.]]
** Another subtle hint about Mr. Poopybutthole is that Mr. Beauregard slaps his hands away from his tray of hors d'oeuvres.
*** And Cousin Nicky gets his name wrong, but that could just be Nicky's style of talking.
** The first parasite, [[spoiler:Jerry's 'Goofy Brother Steve']], buys the Smith family airline tickets for a holiday to Paris. Why? Well, why else would a parasite want to leave the house and get on a plane to France?
** Sleepy Gary vaguely resembles Jerry, as well as the fact that he took Jerry's place as Beth's husband
*** Why does a parasite replace Jerry as Beth's husband? They create happy memories. And "Interdimensional Cable" revealed that getting married led to the couple's unhappiness.
*** It's also clear that Sleepy Gary is far more intelligent than the other parasites - not only does he take what is, arguably, the least outlandish form and alters the family's memories in the most complex way, the first memory he plants in the family's heads is him interrupting a pillow fight - a happy memory.
** Thinking about it, some of the parasites are true masters of manipulation. While most of them are just going for generic good memories and taking on any shapes or personalities, some are really targeting the psychological weak spots of various members of the Smith family and trying to exploit those weaknesses. Some examples:
*** Jerry, who is constantly unsure of himself and seeks attention, validation, and approval from others, is closest to two parasites: one taking the form of his kindly, encouraging big brother Steve, and one who poses as his longtime best friend and secret lover Gary. Both stick up for Jerry at various times and give him the support he doesn't get otherwise, resulting in him willingly embracing them.
*** Summer craves popularity and to be more than just the mistake child that ruined the lives of her parents. The parasites that target her take on the form of many magical friends, who take Summer away to a world without her real-life troubles and insecurities where she can be a central human character in a strange world.
*** The parasite Rick is most reluctant to shoot is Pencilvester, who is basically acting like a cheerful, voice of reason type KidSidekick. ''He's basically the parasite's version of Morty!'' No wonder Rick ultimately fails to bring himself to shoot Pencilvester and has to leave it to Morty.
*** Lastly, this isn't an example of preying on the Smiths, but is another sign of how good the parasites are at turning a situation in their favor: Reverse Giraffe is first seen in Rick's barbecue flashback, but isn't heard speaking until he tries to convince the Smiths to kill Rick and let the parasites out of the house. What voice does he use when he does this? The ''President's'' voice, a voice that is (usually) guaranteed to get extra respect and deference to authority, even when that authority is suggesting something as horrible as killing somebody for the greater good. (Particularly when that voice is [[Creator/KeithDavid Keith freaking David]] and his famous baritone.)
** Rick spent the whole episode singling out Summer to the point that him trying to kill her became a running gag, which seems odd since Rick's least favorite member of the family has always been [[ButtMonkey Jerry]] who Rick didn't accuse of being a parasite or try to kill once in the episode. But then remember why Rick dislikes Jerry, he got his daughter pregnant in high school and ruined her life, and Sleepy Gary had brainwashed Rick into thinking he was Beth's husband so Rick would have spent the whole episode thinking Jerry was just one of his daughters loser friends.
** [[spoiler:How did Morty find out that the parasites can only create good memories? Rick got accused by the real parasites that he is actually one, but Morty has tons of bad memories with him. Morty was suspicious about a parasite, who can alter memories and wants to take control over you would create bad memories. Also, Rick was the one who constantly told anyone to beware the parasites, if he was an actual parasite he wouldn't have done that. In the garage, when Morty was pointing the gun at Rick, the latter insulted the former and said he has bad memories with him. Morty knew that he himself was real and also someone else had a bad memory with him. Morty knows that if you know someone for a long time you will have a bad memory with them sooner or later, even if it's their fault or not. Rick's statement confirmed to Morty that parasites can only create good memories. He probably had other reasons to come to this conclusion as well.]]
* Why did "Greatest Ice Cream Earth" suffer from eleven 9/11s? It's likely that the telepathic spiders were also using their mind control powers to get pilots to crash their aircraft into buildings. Seeing as they are not depicted with any other weapons or technology, offensive mind control would be their most effective mechanism to counter the human bombing campaign.
* In "The Ricks Must Be Crazy", Rick mentions that his microverse battery should be putting out 20 terawatts of power. Earth's total electricity generation is currently around 2 terawatts, and his battery is powered by aliens manually cranking generators. This may seem like a case of SciFiWritersHaveNoSenseOfScale, but it actually makes sense. Power is a function of energy divided by time since the battery explicitly uses [[YearInsideHourOutside time distortion]], Rick is getting all the power generated throughout the civilization's history, packed into however many years it's been since he made the battery. 20 terawatts aren't implausible.
* Zeep giving Rick the middle finger, which in his world is a gesture of peace and welcome. Seeing as Zeep is just as smart as Rick and that he did the same thing with his microverse, teaching them a gesture and lying about its meaning, Zeep probably realized the middle finger was actually an offensive gesture in the universe Rick came from.
** The gesture Zeep teaches his microverse people seems like Peace Sign to American audiences, but the V-Sign was originally an inverse of how Brits [[FlippingTheBird flip people off]], meaning it's still kinda FlippingTheBird.
** Why did Zeep repeating Rick's comments about slavery cause him to jump to the realization that he was in a microverse? Because he was being completely hypocritical and disingenuous and recognized that Rick must have been trying to manipulate him as well.
*** That Rick underestimated Zeep's ability to figure out what was going on establishes Zeep as a [[WorthyOpponent Formidable Opponent]]. Well, that and the MiniMecha Zeep built that was an even match for Rick's.
** Everything Rick says about the lives of the people living in his microverse being a lie is put in a new light when you consider that Rick himself is a character in a cartoon and [[BreakingTheFourthWall frequently demonstrates that he is aware of that fact.]]
* The device at the heart of "The Ricks Must Be Crazy" is consistently called a Microverse Battery, despite it seemingly being a generator instead because Rick is getting the energy generated by the inhabitants. But Rick had to use a lot of energy to induce the Microverse's Big Bang - per the Law of Conservation of Energy, the only energy that will ever be in the Microverse. It's a battery, that Rick charged when he first created the universe, and he uses the inhabitants to draw the stored energy from it.
* When "keeping Summer safe", the AI in Rick's space car demonstrated a propensity for carrying out its commands in the most direct and efficient way possible. Therefore it should not have been surprising when the auto-navigation [[AIIsACrapshoot landed the car directly on top of Krombopulos Michael]].
* The song that Summer has Tiny Rick listen to in order to get him under control is about using alcohol to cope with depression.
* Bird Person said he doesn't know what humans eat, yet Tammy was somehow alive. [[spoiler: It turns out she might not be human after all.]]
* Despite Tammy's assertion, Rick could use the term Bird ''Person'' instead of Bird ''Man'' because [[AnimalsLackAttributes most birds don't have dicks]][[note]]it saves weight[[/note]].
* In the VR game ''Roy: A Life Well Lived'' Morty finishes with a score of "55 years" but the Roy character appears to be older than that when he dies. Remember that Morty started the game as a young Roy somewhere between the ages of 8 and 12, not a newborn Roy. It would for the score to exclude these unlived years, so Roy's "biologic" age at death was closer to 65, matching his appearance.
** Although clearly a WideOpenSandbox, Roy, the game, clearly has a finite number of paths to take. Morty chooses the "high school football star" path at a [[StoryBranching branch point]] with the teacher telling the class to think about their future with the other kids throwing a football outside the window. When Rick dumps on Morty going back to the carpet store after beating cancer, it's clear that the branches are known and might even push the character into certain outcomes once a branch has been selected. Roy's unexpected and seemingly random death is likely the game playing out the end of one of the branches.
** Morty's decision to pursue sports and get the girl left him with limited job prospects and ultimately a lower score. This might be an example of a LinearWarriorsQuadraticWizards design element in the game, especially since many players would be inclined to [[StandardHeroReward get the girl]].
** Why would aliens be interested in a VR sim of a human life? Simple, in that season Earth was not yet part of the Galactic Federation and therefore would provide an exotic setting and genuine challenge to most alien gamers who would have no idea how to live as a human or thrive in human culture. Remember, arcades make more money when players die quickly and have to keep playing to gain experience.
* Mr. Poopy Butthole's watching of the season 2 finale could just be another bit of [[BreakingTheFourthWall fourth wall breaking]] meta-humor, but as one of Rick's long time friends, it stands to reason that he would have been set up with inter-dimensional cable and can watch a version of his own reality presented as a show on TV. If Mr. Poopy Butthole is actually MediumAware or is simply goofing off due to the show he was watching remains to be seen.
** He might be watching a show from our reality - this very show.
* In "Auto-Erotic Assimilation", Unity has another suitor, a hive mind named Beta 7 whom she blows off in favor of Rick. In [[JerkWithTheHeartOfAJerk Pickup-Artist]] Terminology (which lists men in order of their attractiveness to women,) "Beta Male" refers to a stable, yet boring chump who's more likely to be friend-zoned than the more dynamic and jerkish "Alpha Male." In the love-triangle between Unity, Beta 7, and Rick, Beta 7 is ''literally'' the Beta of that relationship, while Rick is the Alpha.
* The reason why Unity find the will to leave Rick again was because he charmed it claiming that he changed by reconnecting with his family, but when Unity saw how badly Rick treated Morty and Summer, it realized that Rick not only will never change but that he lied to it just to use it for endless orgies. Unity might be attracted to Rick but it also has some self-respect.
* Morty not noticing Rick's predicament in "Big Trouble in Little Sanchez" makes more sense when you remember him sending Morty for some crystals in "Ricksy Business" which Morty thought would help send them home when actually Rick used them to get high and improvise a dance. Morty probably didn't take Rick's cries for help seriously because he thought it was another one of Rick's weird dance improvs.
* In the same episode, it seems weird that Beth and Jerry patch things up and promise to stay together until Morty graduates from high school, only [[spoiler:to divorce in Season 3. But we don't know if they're the same Beth and Jerry who went through that life-changing experience! A later episode reveals that Rick and Morty had to hop dimensions to avoid the squirrels, which means they possibly left ''another'' timeline with a reconciled Smith family]].
* Rick being [[spoiler: arrested and charged for "everything"]] makes a whole lot more sense if the Galactic Federation is aware of Rick's ability to cross alternate universes because if there's an infinite amount of universes then there's an infinite amount of Ricks who perform even worse crimes against the government than our own Rick. If Rick's word on the Federation is true than what is to them charging Rick with every possibility of what an alternate version of him does and there's always a chance a worse Rick can take his place so might as well throw on the possibilities too.
* In "Auto Erotic Assimilation" it's implied Rick had an issue in his relationship with his father. He wanted men who remotely resembled his father cheering him on as he had sex with Unity. So it can be assumed that Rick never got much support from his father.
** The men who remotely resemble his father all have something in common, they are all wearing collared shirts and ties. His father was exactly what Rick hates, a bureaucratic type of person. He probably got his hatred of authority from his relationship with his father.
* Why do Birdperson and Squanchy have such basic, generic names, especially considering their homes are 'Birdworld' and 'Planet Squanch'? Because they're [[spoiler: not their real names. Like Gearhead says, it's akin to calling a human 'Asia Face'. However, they're galactic terrorists, it makes sense they wouldn't share their real names with each other or Rick so that they could continue to live their lives on their respective planets (which are likely in Federation territory) in peace, being impossible to find with such generic names. Rick wouldn't need such a code name because his planet isn't in Galactic Federation territory, and he's covered by Morty wherever he goes.]]
* In "Wedding Squanchers" Beth is told that squanchers can tell the difference between each usage of the word "squanch", because they can read a person's true intentions. When Beth says "I squanch my family", Squanchy reacts with disgust. Given that Beth resents Jerry, was at one point willing to sacrifice Morty without a second thought, has unhealthy feelings of dependency on Rick and only seems to favour Summer through process of elimination, her usage of the word "squanch" likely translated to something horrible.
** This might be the case. Maybe the squanchers are masters at reading peoples' feelings. But also notice that Rick and Squanchy don't use squanch as a verb at the wedding and at one point Squanchy did use the verb to squanch to referr to masturbation while asphyxiating himself. Maybe the verb 'to squanch' is an exception of the language and only means that. Or maybe it has multiple meanings but the way Beth said it made it sound like that particular meaning. Or maybe the way she said it wasn't the problem, but the fact that this verb can have that meaning was enough to make Squanchy and Rick feel disgusted.
* Tammy's "parents". They seem like perfectly normal, functional parents at first glance. But a lot of parents wouldn't be that supportive in their teenage daughter marrying a 40-something-year-old, interdimensional animal hybrid. That should be minor evidence that [[spoiler: they are actually robots and Tammy is not who she seems.]]
* Why is the sapient sun screaming all the time? Maybe because it is on fire and can feel pain.
* When Rick overhears Jerry encouraging his family to abandon him for constantly putting them in risk in "The Wedding Squanchers", he responds in kind by seemingly abandoning the whole family in return. It might seem unfair for Rick to punish the whole family for something only Jerry is responsible for while the rest explicitly rejected his suggestions in his earshot. But this is actually probeably intended as an excellent {{Foreshadowing}} on the show's part. We later learn in "Rickshank Redemption" that Rick's entire plan here was to just punish Jerry and Jerry alone by getting him divorced from Beth and kicked from his house for having dared to oppose him.

to:

[[folder:Season 2]]

!!FridgeSadness
[[folder:Fridge Sadness]]
* Jerry is able to get the Coldstone Creamery involved in an elaborate scheme to save Bambi. Typical cartoon contrivance? Not quite - If you do the math, Jerry spent $480 at the place and was implied to give out enormous tips.
* At the end of "Mortynight Run", [[spoiler:Fart]] says to Morty, "You said yourself that life must be protected, even through sacrifice. You haven't changed your mind about that, [[spoiler:I can sense your thoughts.]]" What happens next? [[spoiler:Morty sacrifices Fart to protect all carbon-based life. Fart did in fact sense Morty's thoughts, but did not realize where his convictions had changed.]]
* In "Total Rickall" we eventually learn the parasites can only create good memories and alter memories to seem good that's perfect foreshadowing that [[spoiler: Mr. Poopybutthole isn't one of them]] considering the first memory he's featured in is the elevator memory which is generally unpleasant between, Beth and Jerry's arguing, Rick's exasperation of not bringing his portal gun, Morty in desperate need of a bathroom and Summer pissing herself the second she learned they were stuck. Notice that while not a bad memory specifically about him it only gets better at the mere presence of [[spoiler:Cousin Nicky]].
** [[spoiler: Mr. Poopybutthole not being a parasite]] is also shown in the opening credits, since he is inserted into all the clips and all but one are "bad memories".
** "Total Rickall" spoiler: [[spoiler:Considering the Smiths had to actually check each other for bad memories to be sure that they're real, it stands to reason that at least one of them actually has bad memories of Mr. Poopy Butthole, considering he survived the shootout at the end. Rick is an obvious candidate, [[JerkAss for obvious reasons]], and Morty and Summer might have some, too, if he's ever joined them on their adventures. The "sorry for not having bad memories of him" was obviously only pointed at Beth, who might've not even known him all that well.]]
*** Also to reinforce this, [[spoiler:neither Mr. Poopybutthole nor Beth had photos of each other in their phones.]]
** Another subtle hint about Mr. Poopybutthole is that Mr. Beauregard slaps his hands away from his tray of hors d'oeuvres.
*** And Cousin Nicky gets his name wrong, but that could just be Nicky's style of talking.
** The first parasite, [[spoiler:Jerry's 'Goofy Brother Steve']], buys the Smith family airline tickets for a holiday to Paris. Why? Well, why else would a parasite want to leave the house and get on a plane to France?
** Sleepy Gary vaguely resembles Jerry, as well as the fact that he took Jerry's place as Beth's husband
*** Why does a parasite replace Jerry as Beth's husband? They create happy memories. And "Interdimensional Cable" revealed that getting married led to the couple's unhappiness.
*** It's also clear that Sleepy Gary is far more intelligent than the other parasites - not only does he take what is, arguably, the least outlandish form and alters the family's memories in the most complex way, the first memory he plants in the family's heads is him interrupting a pillow fight - a happy memory.
** Thinking about it, some of the parasites are true masters of manipulation. While most of them are just going for generic good memories and taking on any shapes or personalities, some are really targeting the psychological weak spots of various members of the Smith family and trying to exploit those weaknesses. Some examples:
*** Jerry, who is constantly unsure of himself and seeks attention, validation, and approval from others, is closest to two parasites: one taking the form of his kindly, encouraging big brother Steve, and one who poses as his longtime best friend and secret lover Gary. Both stick up for Jerry at various times and give him the support he doesn't get otherwise, resulting in him willingly embracing them.
*** Summer craves popularity and to be more than just the mistake child that ruined the lives of her parents. The parasites that target her take on the form of many magical friends, who take Summer away to a world without her real-life troubles and insecurities where she can be a central human character in a strange world.
*** The parasite Rick is most reluctant to shoot is Pencilvester, who is basically acting like a cheerful, voice of reason type KidSidekick. ''He's basically the parasite's version of Morty!'' No wonder Rick ultimately fails to bring himself to shoot Pencilvester and has to leave it to Morty.
*** Lastly, this isn't an example of preying on the Smiths, but is another sign of how good the parasites are at turning a situation in their favor: Reverse Giraffe is first seen in Rick's barbecue flashback, but isn't heard speaking until he tries to convince the Smiths to kill Rick and let the parasites out of the house. What voice does he use when he does this? The ''President's'' voice, a voice that is (usually) guaranteed to get extra respect and deference to authority, even when that authority is suggesting something as horrible as killing somebody for the greater good. (Particularly when that voice is [[Creator/KeithDavid Keith freaking David]] and his famous baritone.)
** Rick spent the whole episode singling out Summer to the point that him trying to kill her became a running gag, which seems odd since Rick's least favorite member of the family has always been [[ButtMonkey Jerry]] who Rick didn't accuse of being a parasite or try to kill once in the episode. But then remember why Rick dislikes Jerry, he got his daughter pregnant in high school and ruined her life, and Sleepy Gary had brainwashed Rick into thinking he was Beth's husband so Rick would have spent the whole episode thinking Jerry was just one of his daughters loser friends.
** [[spoiler:How did Morty find out that the parasites can only create good memories? Rick got accused by the real parasites that he is actually one, but Morty has tons of bad memories with him. Morty was suspicious about a parasite, who can alter memories and wants to take control over you would create bad memories. Also, Rick was the one who constantly told anyone to beware the parasites, if he was an actual parasite he wouldn't have done that. In the garage, when Morty was pointing the gun at Rick, the latter insulted the former and said he has bad memories with him. Morty knew that he himself was real and also someone else had a bad memory with him. Morty knows that if you know someone for a long time you will have a bad memory with them sooner or later, even if it's their fault or not. Rick's statement confirmed to Morty that parasites can only create good memories. He probably had other reasons to come to this conclusion as well.]]
* Why did "Greatest Ice Cream Earth" suffer from eleven 9/11s? It's likely that the telepathic spiders were also using their mind control powers to get pilots to crash their aircraft into buildings. Seeing as they are not depicted with any other weapons or technology, offensive mind control would be their most effective mechanism to counter the human bombing campaign.
* In "The Ricks Must Be Crazy", Rick mentions that his microverse battery should be putting out 20 terawatts of power. Earth's total electricity generation is currently around 2 terawatts, and his battery is powered by aliens manually cranking generators. This may seem like a case of SciFiWritersHaveNoSenseOfScale, but it actually makes sense. Power is a function of energy divided by time since the battery explicitly uses [[YearInsideHourOutside time distortion]], Rick is getting all the power generated throughout the civilization's history, packed into however many years it's been since he made the battery. 20 terawatts aren't implausible.
* Zeep giving Rick the middle finger, which in his world is a gesture of peace and welcome. Seeing as Zeep is just as smart as Rick and that he did the same thing with his microverse, teaching them a gesture and lying about its meaning, Zeep probably realized the middle finger was actually an offensive gesture in the universe Rick came from.
** The gesture Zeep teaches his microverse people seems like Peace Sign to American audiences, but the V-Sign was originally an inverse of how Brits [[FlippingTheBird flip people off]], meaning it's still kinda FlippingTheBird.
** Why did Zeep repeating Rick's comments about slavery cause him to jump to the realization that he was in a microverse? Because he was being completely hypocritical and disingenuous and recognized that Rick must have been trying to manipulate him as well.
*** That Rick underestimated Zeep's ability to figure out what was going on establishes Zeep as a [[WorthyOpponent Formidable Opponent]]. Well, that and the MiniMecha Zeep built that was an even match for Rick's.
** Everything Rick says about the lives of the people living in his microverse being a lie is put in a new light when you consider that Rick himself is a character in a cartoon and [[BreakingTheFourthWall frequently demonstrates that he is aware of that fact.]]
* The device at the heart of "The Ricks Must Be Crazy" is consistently called a Microverse Battery, despite it seemingly being a generator instead because Rick is getting the energy generated by the inhabitants. But Rick had to use a lot of energy to induce the Microverse's Big Bang - per the Law of Conservation of Energy, the only energy that will ever be in the Microverse. It's a battery, that Rick charged when he first created the universe, and he uses the inhabitants to draw the stored energy from it.
* When "keeping Summer safe", the AI in Rick's space car demonstrated a propensity for carrying out its commands in the most direct and efficient way possible. Therefore it should not have been surprising when the auto-navigation [[AIIsACrapshoot landed the car directly on top of Krombopulos Michael]].
* The song that Summer has Tiny Rick listen to in order to get him under control is about using alcohol to cope with depression.
* Bird Person said he doesn't know what humans eat, yet Tammy was somehow alive. [[spoiler: It turns out she might not be human after all.]]
* Despite Tammy's assertion, Rick could use the term Bird ''Person'' instead of Bird ''Man'' because [[AnimalsLackAttributes most birds don't have dicks]][[note]]it saves weight[[/note]].
* In the VR game ''Roy: A Life Well Lived'' Morty finishes with a score of "55 years" but the Roy character appears to be older than that when he dies. Remember that Morty started the game as a young Roy somewhere between the ages of 8 and 12, not a newborn Roy. It would for the score to exclude these unlived years, so Roy's "biologic" age at death was closer to 65, matching his appearance.
** Although clearly a WideOpenSandbox, Roy, the game, clearly has a finite number of paths to take. Morty chooses the "high school football star" path at a [[StoryBranching branch point]] with the teacher telling the class to think about their future with the other kids throwing a football outside the window. When Rick dumps on Morty going back to the carpet store after beating cancer, it's clear that the branches are known and might even push the character into certain outcomes once a branch has been selected. Roy's unexpected and seemingly random death is likely the game playing out the end of one of the branches.
** Morty's decision to pursue sports and get the girl left him with limited job prospects and ultimately a lower score. This might be an example of a LinearWarriorsQuadraticWizards design element in the game, especially since many players would be inclined to [[StandardHeroReward get the girl]].
** Why would aliens be interested in a VR sim of a human life? Simple, in that season Earth was not yet part of the Galactic Federation and therefore would provide an exotic setting and genuine challenge to most alien gamers who would have no idea how to live as a human or thrive in human culture. Remember, arcades make more money when players die quickly and have to keep playing to gain experience.
* Mr. Poopy Butthole's watching of the season 2 finale could just be another bit of [[BreakingTheFourthWall fourth wall breaking]] meta-humor, but as one of Rick's long time friends, it stands to reason that he would have been set up with inter-dimensional cable and can watch a version of his own reality presented as a show on TV. If Mr. Poopy Butthole is actually MediumAware or is simply goofing off due to the show he was watching remains to be seen.
** He might be watching a show from our reality - this very show.
* In "Auto-Erotic Assimilation", Unity has another suitor, a hive mind named Beta 7 whom she blows off in favor of Rick. In [[JerkWithTheHeartOfAJerk Pickup-Artist]] Terminology (which lists men in order of their attractiveness to women,) "Beta Male" refers to a stable, yet boring chump who's more likely to be friend-zoned than the more dynamic and jerkish "Alpha Male." In the love-triangle between Unity, Beta 7, and Rick, Beta 7 is ''literally'' the Beta of that relationship, while Rick is the Alpha.
* The reason why Unity find the will to leave Rick again was because he charmed it claiming that he changed by reconnecting with his family, but when Unity saw how badly Rick treated Morty and Summer, it realized that Rick not only will never change but that he lied to it just to use it for endless orgies. Unity might be attracted to Rick but it also has some self-respect.
* Morty not noticing Rick's predicament in "Big Trouble in Little Sanchez" makes more sense when you remember him sending Morty for some crystals in "Ricksy Business" which Morty thought would help send them home when actually Rick used them to get high and improvise a dance. Morty probably didn't take Rick's cries for help seriously because he thought it was another one of Rick's weird dance improvs.
* In the same episode, it seems weird that Beth and Jerry patch things up and promise to stay together until Morty graduates from high school, only [[spoiler:to divorce in Season 3. But we don't know if they're the same Beth and Jerry who went through that life-changing experience! A later episode reveals that Rick and Morty had to hop dimensions to avoid the squirrels, which means they possibly left ''another'' timeline with a reconciled Smith family]].
* Rick being [[spoiler: arrested and charged for "everything"]] makes a whole lot more sense if the Galactic Federation is aware of Rick's ability to cross alternate universes because if there's an infinite amount of universes then there's an infinite amount of Ricks who perform even worse crimes against the government than our own Rick. If Rick's word on the Federation is true than what is to them charging Rick with every possibility of what an alternate version of him does and there's always a chance a worse Rick can take his place so might as well throw on the possibilities too.
* In "Auto Erotic Assimilation" it's implied Rick had an issue in his relationship with his father. He wanted men who remotely resembled his father cheering him on as he had sex with Unity. So it can be assumed that Rick never got much support from his father.
** The men who remotely resemble his father all have something in common, they are all wearing collared shirts and ties. His father was exactly what Rick hates, a bureaucratic type of person. He probably got his hatred of authority from his relationship with his father.
* Why do Birdperson and Squanchy have such basic, generic names, especially considering their homes are 'Birdworld' and 'Planet Squanch'? Because they're [[spoiler: not their real names. Like Gearhead says, it's akin to calling a human 'Asia Face'. However, they're galactic terrorists, it makes sense they wouldn't share their real names with each other or Rick so that they could continue to live their lives on their respective planets (which are likely in Federation territory) in peace, being impossible to find with such generic names. Rick wouldn't need such a code name because his planet isn't in Galactic Federation territory, and he's covered by Morty wherever he goes.]]
* In "Wedding Squanchers" Beth is told that squanchers can tell the difference between each usage of the word "squanch", because they can read a person's true intentions. When Beth says "I squanch my family", Squanchy reacts with disgust. Given that Beth resents Jerry, was at one point willing to sacrifice Morty without a second thought, has unhealthy feelings of dependency on Rick and only seems to favour Summer through process of elimination, her usage of the word "squanch" likely translated to something horrible.
** This might be the case. Maybe the squanchers are masters at reading peoples' feelings. But also notice that Rick and Squanchy don't use squanch as a verb at the wedding and at one point Squanchy did use the verb to squanch to referr to masturbation while asphyxiating himself. Maybe the verb 'to squanch' is an exception of the language and only means that. Or maybe it has multiple meanings but the way Beth said it made it sound like that particular meaning. Or maybe the way she said it wasn't the problem, but the fact that this verb can have that meaning was enough to make Squanchy and Rick feel disgusted.
* Tammy's "parents". They seem like perfectly normal, functional parents at first glance. But a lot of parents wouldn't be that supportive in their teenage daughter marrying a 40-something-year-old, interdimensional animal hybrid. That should be minor evidence that [[spoiler: they are actually robots and Tammy is not who she seems.]]
* Why is the sapient sun screaming all the time? Maybe because it is on fire and can feel pain.
* When Rick overhears Jerry encouraging his family to abandon him for constantly putting them in risk in "The Wedding Squanchers", he responds in kind by seemingly abandoning the whole family in return. It might seem unfair for Rick to punish the whole family for something only Jerry is responsible for while the rest explicitly rejected his suggestions in his earshot. But this is actually probeably intended as an excellent {{Foreshadowing}} on the show's part. We later learn in "Rickshank Redemption"
"Unmortricken" confirms that Rick's entire plan here was to spaceship has Diane's voice. Now remember way back in the very first episode when Rick told Morty he'd just punish Jerry and Jerry alone by built the ship before getting him divorced from Beth drunk and kicked from trying to blow up the town - but making sure to spare Jessica for Morty's sake. It's like he learned the hard way that he couldn't fill the void and wanted to erase his house past for having dared good, but he also wants Morty to oppose him.have a better shot at happiness.



[[folder:Season 3]]
* Why does Beth allow Morty to accompany Rick on his adventures? Because she would rather Morty be influenced by his brilliant grandfather than his idiot father.
** It might also be partly out of fear. Rick is clearly extremely unstable, and the very first scene of the series showed that one night of drinking too much is all it takes to get him to try and start a nuclear war. Beth probably figures that keeping Rick from the one thing he truly cared about would lead to Rick going even more insane and committing either suicide, mass murder, or both.
** It looks most like another consequence of Beth's extreme fear of losing her father, she is too happy just to have him around to risk losing him by saying no.
** "Morty's Mind-Blowers" implies that [[ParentalNeglect Beth might just not care that much about Morty]], although Summer does start going on adventures with her father too.
** This was covered by the very first episode: Beth thinks that Morty is learning more by traveling with Rick, as Rick claimed Morty was 'special'. He is, by dint of [[spoiler: being a stealth device for Rick's brainwaves]]. The megaseeds in that episode gave Morty a brief boost in brainpower, allowing him to quote the Law of Thermodynamics by rote, which made Beth think Rick was being honest with her.
* The Guard Ricks that capture Summer and Morty say that Rick C-137 will have to assassinated to prevent Citadel secrets from falling into the Federation's hands. Given how he [[spoiler: built the Citadel in the first place, this fear was not unfounded.]]
* In "Rickshank Redemption", Rick does a now-[[MemeticMutation memetic]] bit about Mulan Szechuan Sauce, available from UsefulNotes/McDonalds in 1998. While Rick is recalling the [[spoiler:fake]] traumatic memory of the invention of his portal gun, Cornvelious Daniel comments that the sauce is "fucking amazing". This should be a clear tell that [[spoiler:Rick is fabricating the memory and is assuming control of the program, as Cornvelious wouldn't be able to taste something from someone else's memory.]]
** Either way it was created from Rick's mind/memories. That doesn't really prove this is[[spoiler: a fabricated memory.]]
** There is a theory that the Szechuan sauce was the medium for the transmission of the virus that allowed Rick to gain control of the system. Sense of taste would vary wildly from species to species, and it is hard to imagine something that is palatable to mammals like Rick would have the same appeal to insect-based creatures (such as the interrogator). By making the sauce taste 'good' to the agent, the agent is enticed to consume it, which since this is all in a mental mindscape hides the true purpose of the hacking code. Rick proceeds to then show the alien more scenes, allowing the program to take hold. The final scene in the mindscape has Rick show a formula, which is the activation code for the virus. Note the lack of the sauce in the interrogator's hands at that point. The sauce is gone because it had served its purpose.
* It should have been clear from the get-go that Rick's memory of creating the portal gun in "Rickshank Redemption" was fabricated when he casually mentions that the memory takes place in 1998- the same year when the Mulan szechuan sauce was available. Why? Because assuming the show's present takes place in our current year, there's no way that Beth, whose age is established to be 34 at the beginning of the series, could have been as young as she looks in the "memory". She would have been born around 1983, making her at least 15 in 1998.
** Given the revelation in season 5 that [[spoiler: the memory was in fact real apart from some details, Rick could've lied about the date of the memory not wanting to really think about that day, but knowing that a timestamp would make the interrogator more likely to believe what he was seeing]].
* In "Rickshank Redemption", C-137 Rick hands Morty a pistol before confronting one of the Council Ricks, who has Summer hostage. C-137 Rick tries to bait Council Rick into letting Summer go, but Morty aims his pistol at Rick for brushing off Summer, at which point both Ricks and Summer berate him, causing him to shoot C-137 Rick. This lets Council Rick's guard down enough for C-137 Rick, who gave Morty a fake pistol with a cardboard note on it, to shoot him. However, C-137 Rick knows Morty has a LOT of pent-up aggression from the episode "Look Who's Purging Now", and reassured Morty by saying he ate a chocolate bar with Purgenol. C-137 Rick probably put the note on the fake pistol because either Morty would read it, and use it as part of C-137 Rick's double bluff, or the situation would spiral into Morty getting angry enough to shoot someone, making an opening for C-137 Rick to shoot. Regardless, C-137 Rick kills Council Rick without harming Summer, and Morty gets an excuse for his actions. Because C-137 Rick loves his grandkids.
* In "Rickshank Redemption" we see Rick [[spoiler:testing the bounds of his simulated world by asking Jerry to (literally) "fold himself 12 times". He then casually mentions to the bug agent that since Jerry was only able to manage 6 folds that he must be subject to a low cost "Series 9000" brainalyzer, which the agent implicitly confirms. Since the first step in any computer hack involves the hacker learning about the environment they are dealing with, this actually constitutes very subtle foreshadowing as Rick is learning the necessary details that he is then able to employ in creating exploit code that gives him full control over the Brainalyzer]].
** Doubly brilliant in that the lower cost Series 9000 probably lacked the same security features or quality assurance found in the higher-end models. [[spoiler:The bugs basically put the smartest mammal in the galaxy in a [[LockingMacGyverInTheStoreCupboard mental prison with shoddy locks]]]].
* A meta example In "Rickshank Redemption" is just before Rick [[spoiler:transfers his mind into the body of the alien agent]], he tells the agent that he's leaving him with only a few parts of his brain, including "six years of improv workshops: comedy comes in threes!" For the rest of the episode, whenever Rick needs to leave a secured area, he uses the same poor excuse, rather than any of the witty reasons he used in the past: "I'm gonna go take a dump". And how many times does he use this excuse? Three times.
** Don't forget that in that action Rick also lost his general ability to improvise. It's likely the best/only thing he can think of to do after initiating a new round of mayhem.
** I interpreted Rick saying I'm going to take a shit as him wanting to check out his new "equipment" has he said he wants to give his "new insect dick a test drive" and by saying I'm going to take a shit he has an excuse to drop his pants and see what he's working with.
** Or he used it because "I'm gonna go take a shit" is such a mundane excuse, that nobody with a digestive system would call it into question.
** There is every possibility that the transference machinery causes this effect through an adrenaline rush. The human body undergoes all manner of changes during stress, having to empty one's bladder after a mind-switch may just be a side-effect.
* Why is Rick C-137 so easily able to [[spoiler:own the Citadel/Council of Ricks in "Rickshank Redemption"]] when, in theory, all the other Ricks should be his equal? It was previously stated that Ricks exist along a continuum of personality traits and also that Rick C-137 is the most like himself, aka the "Rickiest". Therefore from the pool of hyper-intelligent, omni-skilled humans known as "Rick", Rick C-137 is still a cut above.
** In "Close Rick Counters Of The Rick Kind " it's mentioned that Rick C-137 refused to join the Council of Ricks, i.e the ruling group of Ricks who stood out from the rest.
** In season 5 we learn that [[spoiler: Rick helped ''build'' the Citadel as part of the peace agreement between him and the other Ricks. Of course he'd know it's every weakness, and even if he hadn't, he had decades of experience killing Ricks. The only reason he didn't wipe them out years ago was because he realized he would gain nothing from it. When they broke the peace, all bets were off]].
* The Citadel of Ricks has a surprising number of "blue collar" Ricks doing basic jobs for the council like guarding things or operating consoles. There are also Ricks who make their living doing mundane stuff like selling "Morty dazzlers" or "Morty Insurance". Why would a significant number of Ricks seem to fail to live up to their potential? In "Rickshank Redemption" we see the possibility that Ricks will give portal gun technology to alternate Ricks who haven't invented it yet. It is a common trope for people who have not had to work hard for success to then underachieve.
** Or, perhaps they're taking a page from [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/VideoGame/BioShock1 Bioshock:]] "Everybody wants to be a captain of industry. No one's thinking they're going to be scrubbing toilets." Every Rick's a genius, but some have visions, and some are just like every other Rick. So, they get by as best they can.
*** There's a lot to imply that the Citadel is essentially a giant scam: Ricks come to the Citadel because it's presented to them as a paradise, a 'nonstop party where all the guests are the only person they like', but it's still a functional city-state that still needs the trappings of a modern society to function. Candidate Morty even asks Plumber Rick if he came to the Citadel to be a plumber, and the answer is, obviously, no, but because the average citizen on the Citadel ''is a Rick'', that means every Rick is ''an average citizen''. It's downright chilling to think about.
*** What separates the "successful" Ricks from the "regular jackoff" Ricks on the Citadel? Social skills and vision. Since all Ricks are equally qualified for every job because they're all geniuses, the ones who can get ahead are the ones who either have unique ideas and passions (like Rick D. Sanchez III, who owns the Simple Rick cookie factory), or the right social skills to endear themselves to their superiors ("Cool Rick", who gets promoted despite being new to the job). This is also why so much of the Citadel's social structure depends on the Citadel removing everything that makes an individual Rick unique: the Citadel ''needs'' those work-a-day Ricks to function as a society and there aren't enough suitably prestigious positions for every Rick to have one. It's the same reason why the "I pulled myself up by my bootstraps and so can you" myth is horseshit: yes, anyone ''could be capable'' of it, but only ''one'' person can actually get it no matter how hard they all work. Without creating a new position so that he can be the Rick to fill it or having the social skills to convince other versions of himself to give a position to him, it's entirely arbitrary.
*** This entire round of logic falls on its face when you realize they are all, or most of them, are capable of creating near-sentient robots, thus capable of automating every single menial job there is. The only reason those sucker jobs exist is so other Ricks have something to lord over someone else. It's entirely pointless when the manual labor parts of the economy should be entirely automated. Things are kept that way not for economic reasons, but for societal control reasons. Its makework to keep as many Ricks and Mortys imprisoned and helpless as possible.
*** So, why don't blue-collar Ricks just move to planets where their genius is exceptional again? There are references to "unlicensed portal guns", and we see one criminal Rick making bootleg portal gun fluid. That implies that ownership and use of portal guns are strictly controlled by the Council, meaning that normal citizens can no longer freely move between realities. There's a real possibility that the Ricks who move to the Citadel are literally trapped there.
** Rick C-137 described Ricks in general as having problems with "the Government", so they formed an equally unpalatable (to him anyway) Government (The Council/Citadel) to protect themselves. Also, while Rick C-137 may be a genius, much of the time we see him stealing critical resources he needs or engaging in other criminal activity for money and the Council repeatedly describes him as a criminal/terrorist. It appears likely that the cost of living under Citadel protection is a reduced ability to engage in profitable criminal activities. Combined with Ricks living in a society of "equals", as mentioned above, Ricks lacking the resources to adventure would be forced into mundane vocations.
* Depending on how much of Rick's "origin story" memory was fabricated, the Citadel of Ricks seems to recruit new Ricks by selling it as "a nonstop party where all the guests are the only person we like." So, why is life in the Citadel so miserable? Because Rick ''doesn't'' like himself! It's consistently made clear that Rick is his own worst enemy, so it makes sense that Ricks would be constantly in conflict with other Ricks. It also makes sense that most Ricks would be too arrogant to realize that a world full of Ricks would be unpleasant. It took "the Rickest Rick" to recognize that being the smartest guy in a mediocre world is the best option for him.
* When Rick collapses the value of the single galactic currency, many of the characters start fighting over pants as a new store of value. In the later days of the Soviet Union, foreign goods in general and blue jeans in particular were used as currency in an informal barter economy due to the Ruble having little practical value.
* Why does Mr. Goldenfold eat shit? Because he's been in a sewer for God knows how long.
** This might explain why Dr. Wong specializes in getting people to stop eating shit.
* Why would Blue Collar Ricks be engaged in menial jobs that could be easily automated, like stamping a design on individual cookies? The industrial Ricks saw wage slavery as a useful tool to keep the other Ricks under control. Blue Collar Ricks would be so busy trying to make ends meet, they wouldn't have time to plot against the upper classes or possibly invent ways to supplant them.
* In a [[SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome Fridge Moment of Awesome]], Pickle Rick can [[spoiler:build a new body, create a machine that can put him into a ''different'' new body, exterminate a nest of sewer rats and take down an international terrorist with 34 armed guards]] in the ''total time it takes his family to drive to the therapist's office and sit through most of a session''. Rick can do more in two hours than most people can accomplish in a lifetime!
** PS: [[spoiler:Rick also managed to make it to the therapy session before it ended.]]
* The answer to the second "Drunk Rick" question [[spoiler:could never have been Dorian V]]. Despite all of Crocubot's "mechanical and reptilian logic", he failed to remember that [[spoiler:Rick and Morty were not summoned for the second Vindicators mission that resulted in Dorian V's destruction, and thus would not have known what happened and why the Vindicators avoid the subject.]]
* It makes sense that Rick doesn’t take responsibility for his actions when black-out drunk and basically considers "Drunk Rick" a different person, considering his greatest antagonists for most of his life were literally other versions of himself with different mentalities. For all intents and purposes, it ''might as well have been'' a straggler from the Council of Rick.
* Speaking "Vindicators 3", the main room of the ride features a city made of cardboard cutouts with heroes and monsters fighting. The three cutouts at the center of the city are a lady holding a katana, a large green horned figure with bloody fists, and a mummy with a blue flame in hand. It seems random at first, but they're supposed to be Lady Katana, Diablo Verde and Calypso!
** Their design in WesternAnimation/Vindicators2 take cues from the cutouts, further reinforcing the connection.
** Notice how none of the other cutouts represent the other vindicators? Considering he reacts genuinely bummed out when Morty tells him they're dead, Rick might have a soft spot for the missing vindicators.
** Alternatively, since "Drunk Rick" often gets emotional according to him, he wanted to make an homage to the dead.
* It seems odd that Rick would ThrowTheDogABone by giving Jerry a pity adventure, considering he's spent most of the series hating Jerry's existence. However, considering the main reason Rick hated Jerry was cause he married his daughter, Rick doesn't have any real reason to outright despise Jerry now that he's a pathetic divorced man. Thus, Rick would be more willing to hang with Jerry since he is already out of his family's life.
* Why would Rick willingly walk through a scanner when he had cybernetic implants that would trigger it, causing him to be hit with a mental dampener that nearly got him killed? It's because Rick didn't realize he had cybernetic implants because the body he's inhabiting is not his original one, but one he stole from an alternate Rick in ''The Rickshank Rickdemption''.
** It wasn't just any alternate Rick. It was a Rick serving as a high-ranking officer in the Council of Ricks' military. This Rick didn't need to hide his implants from the space-TSA, because his rank and status gave him ''carte blanche'' from a higher power that superceded the space-TSA.
* Rick tends to say "Don't think about it!" whenever something incredibly disturbing happens. It's entirely possible he's also telling himself not to think about it. Given that Rick is the smartest man in the universe, thinking about something is much much worse for him than somebody else.
* Rick's WMD of choice appears to be the Neutrino Bomb, which is generally understood to be a device that emits lethal levels of Neutrino radiation. As explained [[https://what-if.xkcd.com/73/ here]], neutrinos are so insubstantial despite billions flowing through a person's body every day, a neutrino will only succeed in hitting one of that person's atoms on average of once a decade. Since even planets are opaque to neutrinos there is pretty much nowhere to hide from such a weapon. As Rick prefers technology to other people, a weapon that is lethal to biologic beings yet leaves technology mostly unharmed is perfectly in line with his character.
** Of course, a level of neutrino radiation that would kill a human would probably NOT leave other things intact.
* Jerry's ButtMonkey status is tuned [[CallBack way up, waaaay up]] in season 3, after his divorce. By episode 5, Rick finally states that his hatred of Jerry comes from his act of making himself as miserable and pitiful as possible in an attempt to get things out of pity. It explains how pitiful Jerry is this season: he is deliberately making himself as pathetic as humanly possible to see if anyone in his family will take pity on him.
* Season 3 has put a lot of emphasis on the psychology of the main characters, especially Rick. What have we learned so far during the season? He admitted that he sees most of his family as expendable since he can just jump into an alternate universe as he pleases to get a new family (said in "Pickle Rick"). He loves his grandkids but hates the fact that Jerry is their father, seeing him as someone who uses the pity of others to get anywhere ("The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy"). He sees his attachment to his family as a weakness that hinders him (in "Rest and Ricklaxation"). All three involve his family in a way or another; is it any wonder he didn't want to go to therapy, where he could have ended up revealing any of this, with Beth, Morty, and Summer also present? Just imagine their reactions. All three revelations open up their own Fridge Brilliance, too:
** He felt more at ease admitting these things to Jaguar precisely because his family wasn't there to hear him. Unknowingly, he did do some therapy. Just not with an actual therapist.
** Jerry is a problem to Rick, as there's no way he can escape him; in just about every single alternate universe where Morty exists, he looks like regular Morty, and likely has the same two parents, indicating that Jerry is the father of most Mortys in most universes. Even jumping between universes won't remove Jerry from the picture, and with Rick's disdain towards the guy, is it any wonder he despises him so much? Most alternate universe Beths fell for the same guy he sees as an utter loser!
*** This might also explain why most Ricks treat most Mortys like complete garbage. Morty is a constant reminder of what Rick sees as Jerry ruining his daughter's life. Rick C-137 ended up bonding with his grandson and genuinely caring for him. Most of the other Ricks didn't. This is also probably why Morty C-137 seems smarter and more assertive than the other Mortys.
** Him seeing his attachment to his family as a weakness: With the reveal in "Pickle Rick" that he sees them as expendable, he doesn't see why he should care about them - yet he does. Even if he can just replace them as he pleases, he cares too much to allow himself to have complete apathy towards them.
* In ''Morty's Mind Blowers'' Rick is actually flattered to be asked to kill the alien and allow him to go to heaven. Rick is usually disparaging to the religious, even in a situation where it glorifies him. So what could get him to act nicely in this situation? When the Flip-Floopian dies dishonorably, he is visibly dragged to hell by demons, it is the one thing that could get Rick to respect a religion: Hard proof of its beliefs.
* It makes perfect sense that [[spoiler:Toxic Rick is the Rick that cares about Morty.]] The first thing he does after thinking the spa machine exploded? ''Call out to Morty'', either in anguish because he thought Morty died, or in a panic because he couldn't see Morty.
** Toxic Rick stops the fight in the house the second Beth shows up, either because she could get hurt in the crossfire or he had already realized that Healthy Rick would be willing to hurt her to beat him if he realized his Toxic self's weakness (as he did moments later), and he decided that wasn't worth the risk.
** There's a very quick moment which also foreshadows this. As he's trying to predict his counterpart's plans, regular Rick pauses for thought and then slaps Morty. [[spoiler:That tells Rick that Toxic Rick cares about Morty because one of them does and it sure as hell isn't him and that he can therefore use Toxic Morty as leverage.]]
* The reason why Rick considers Morty [[spoiler:one of his most irrational attachments and one of his most toxic traits: how else would you describe an attachment to the grandson of your family's murderer?]]
* In "Pickle Rick," we find out that the reason Mr. Goldenfold is seeing a therapist is that he eats poop. Earlier in the season, "The Rickshank Redemption" shows him leading some human rebels out of the sewer. Makes his problem not seem as disturbing if he only ate poop out of necessity.
* Immediately following "Rest and Ricklaxation", which shows how independent and capable our Morty is without a moral compass, we get an episode where [[spoiler: Evil Morty manages to take over the entire Citadel of Ricks as their beloved, tyrannical leader]]
* The new flag for the Citadel of Ricks shows an M stabbing through an R from the top. A little clue about [[spoiler: a returning character who's in charge]]
* "The Ricklantis Mixup" seemingly is a misleading title, given the episode pretty much completely ignores the Atlantis adventure C-137's Rick and Morty go on. But what if the titular mixup was showing us what was happening in the Citadel instead of the main Rick and Morty's adventure?
** There's even a small detail at the beginning that hints at this. Both ''our'' Rick and Morty and the Census Rick and Morty hop through portals. Implying that the show quite literally mixed up the portals and followed the wrong one.
* It might seem stupid of Campaign Manager Morty to try and assassinate Evil Morty instead of just leaking those documents to the press, but remember, Evil Morty doesn't have any features that discern him from any other non-gimmick Morty. Leaking the documents wouldn't prove anything.
* Part of why Campaign Morty's assassination failed? Remember, Fat Morty thought the trait that set him apart from the other Mortys was that he was left-handed ("I thought I was Left-Handed Morty"), meaning most Mortys are right-handed. Campaign Morty shakes Candidate Morty's hand with [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/rickandmorty/images/1/14/S3e7_handshake.png/revision/latest?cb=20170913013120 his right hand]], and thus has only his left hand free to [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/rickandmorty/images/d/d1/S3e7_assassinate.png/revision/latest?cb=20170913013128 shoot the gun]]. He was shooting with his weaker, non-dominant hand; had he held the gun in his right hand, the shot would have been more on-target, and most likely lethal.
* Evil Morty using the Morty Dome was originally thought to be about making every think it was a Rick who was trying to hide, in addition to disturbing the Citadel. But with the revelation that he wanted to control the Citadel, capturing a bunch of Mortys, torturing them in a way that would make them hate Ricks, then letting them be sent to the place he wants to take over is a brilliant move. He has an army he could get together with little persuasion. Or a population crisis he could take advantage of to gain power, which is part of what he did when Rick trashed the Citadel and ended up creating a way to gain absolute control of the city through the election.
* Evil Morty fires Campaign Manager Morty despite him not really doing anything wrong. Which puts him in perfect position to get 'secrets' from a Rick who could've just done the assassination himself rather than try to include more variables. An assassination that, had it come from a Rick, would've been viewed as being about the Rick-Morty divide. but when done by a Morty, reinforces Evil Morty's point about the division being between the Citadel and it's opposers. Evil Morty holds Campaign Morty's hand long after the handshake is done, meaning he has to shoot with his non-dominant hand (see above). And as seen in episode 4x10, it's possible to protect the heart (and presumably all other organs) without anyone seeing that it's protected, so he didn't have to worry about actually dying if things went wrong. At the end of the episode, the Ricks executing Campaign Morty mention that the ultimate vote was almost close enough to trigger a recount, and since Evil Morty was losing at first, that assassination 'against a united Citadel' would be necessary to get him the support he needed to win. Truly a plan worthy of the Rickest Morty.
* The "specialty" Ricks are more than just a joke when you consider Dr. Wong's speech on "doing the work" in "Pickle Rick." Wonka Rick, Fashion Guru Rick, and all the other Ricks are Ricks who did the work. Any Rick ''could'' make an awesome candy factory, but they'd get bored halfway through and burn it down, like Rick C-137 and his successful business he built to screw with the Devil.
* It’s mentioned in the recap for “The Ricklantis Mixup” that WeWillUseManualLaborInTheFuture and states that the Ricks in the Citadel could have easily created an automated workforce instead of using blue-collar Ricks. But it makes sense because this is exactly what the Shadow Council Of Ricks ‘’wants’’. They’re a group of the wealthiest and most influential Ricks in the citadel, and by keeping most of the other Ricks stuck in boring, dead-end jobs, they won’t be able to pursue their own aspirations and will allow the Shadow Council to retain their status. Automated labor would be detrimental to this goal, so the Shadow Council has probably been keeping the Citadel from embracing it.
* All the women that came [[spoiler:flying to the item magnet after Morty programmed it are probably all named Jessica.]]
** Take a closer look: every one of those women was a pretty ''redheaded'' girl. Morty has a type, it seems.
*** Just like grandpa...
* In "The Ricklantis Mixup", the donation-collecting Rick and Morty are surprised to come across C-137 as if they were expecting a different Rick in that reality. "Morty's Mind Blowers" reveals that our Rick and Morty had to move again due to Morty learning a MilkmanConspiracy run by squirrels.
* Rick is initially described as being 60, but is described as 70 in "Rest and Relaxation". Continuity error? Not necessarily; he did freeze time except for him, Morty, and Summer in "A Rickle in Time" for six whole months, and other universes he visits don't necessarily have to follow the same flow of time(like the microverse and its smaller iterations). It's possible stuff like this are to blame for the supposed age inconsistency for him, along with other Ricks and Mortys in the multiverse.
* More of a FridgeHeartwarming but while Rick revealing Beth's "childhood toys" is disturbing, this means that:
** Rick still ''made'' the gifts despite how disturbing they are.
** Rick still ''kept'' the gifts after all these years.
* The reason Jerry was given a PetTheDog in TheStinger of "The [=ABCs=] of Beth" is because for once he owned up to his mistake. It could imply the reason he's a CosmicPlaything is, as pathetic as his life is, he doesn't admit that most of it was his own fault.
* In the 3rd season finale, the US government seems to have access to quite a bit more sophisticated tech than we last saw them, however after the Federation's invasion and subsequent collapse/departure from Earth they probably left a lot of their tech behind for the Pentagon to reverse engineer!
** The President has also been frequently calling on Rick and Morty to solve problems while simultaneously monitoring what they do (even at home). This means they'd have some idea of what kind of weapons Rick had access to, and (being the US government) would insist on developing their own counter-measures. This is heavily hinted at in the episode.
--->'''POTUS:''' We've been preparing for a Rick-level event for some time now.
* The final Season 3 episode artfully leaves Beth's clone status ambiguous as everything Rick does in relation to the Smith family getting back together could be an elaborate ruse to convince a Beth clone she is the real Beth while sparing the kids and Jerry the act of killing and recreating clone-Beth....or it could be taken at face value.
** Especially since Rick's previous attempt to reassure Beth only made her freak out. Clone Beth or not, family re-unification may have been the only method to calm Beth down.
* The fact that Rick is afraid of pirates at least strongly suggests that he was intending the Pirates of the Pancreas ride to be some sort of scary thrill-ride. It would also explain why his business partners in the Anatomy Park project didn't get the concept of the ride.
* One major sign of Beth accepting how much like her father she is? The episode after she comes to terms with it, she mentions that the family reuniting will make the show like season one, only more streamlined. That's right, for the first time Beth reveals that - just like Rick - ''she's aware she's in a TV show.''
** Or, she accepts that she's like her father in many ways, but refuses to cross certain boundaries that he had crossed before. If this is the original Beth and not a clone, it would mean she chose not to ditch her family to go on adventures across space and universes - which is what Rick did when she was young.
* No wonder Rick and Morty only have a limited number of times through which they can jump and settle into a new universe after destroying the last. Not only do they need to find universes where their selves from that universe died right after solving the current crisis (which is already a very rare thing to happen), they also need to find a universe that has seen roughly the same things unravel as they did in the universe they just left, another very rare case. This severely limits their options. You know what else limits their options? The Citadel of Ricks. Having so many Ricks and Mortys in one place means just as many universes in which Rick and Morty haven't been seen in a long while - which would make it suspicious for the C-137 originals to suddenly show up. Due to the sheer amount of Ricks and Mortys living in the Citadel and how Ricks and Mortys die every day there, it gets increasingly difficult to know which universes still have their Rick and/or Morty alive somewhere in the multiverse. It's also not like they can jump into any universe previously inhabited by a Rick and Morty that joined the Citadel and both died there, as that universe's events had to have differed greatly due to the scientist and his grandson missing for so long. The solution to this would be to completely ignore any home universe of Ricks and Mortys that have left to live in the Citadel, which shaves off a large number of possible universes to run away into. Oh, and for added creepy factor, it also means taking out of the equation any universe that was irreparably damaged in the exact same way as the one they've just run away from.
** And that's not all - if the comic books are canon to the show (and if some theories are confirmed in future seasons), then there's an implication that our Rick and Morty aren't the only ones who jump to another universe when the one they lived in gets damaged, further reducing the options when untouched universes are taken by other Ricks and Mortys fleeing their mistakes.
** The Season 5 finale revealing [[spoiler: the Central Finite Curve enclosing all the "Rick's the most intelligent" universes off from all the rest]] adds another layer to this. [[spoiler: Massive as it is in absolute terms, the available pool is, well, a finite one. No matter how long it takes, eventually you'll run out of options.]]
* Every time Rick [[spoiler: swaps bodies with a different Rick]] on the Citadel, there's a running gag about him going to take a shit. It's a dumb excuse for him to just leave the room with nobody asking questions, but ''of course'' he'd need to use the bathroom every time: they're all ''anal retentive''.
* Rick says Jessica's lying because she kept asking whether he got a ''new'' Morty yet, except Jessica is explicitly there to get the old Morty back. She has no way of knowing that getting a completely new Morty from another timeline is an option. [[AwLookTheyReallyDoLoveEachOther Aww.]]
* Why are Mortys so prevalent on the Citadel, and why does almost every Rick have one? Why isn't there a population of Summers, Beths, or even Jerrys? Morty-waves! The vast majority of Ricks in universes without Mortys didn't survive long enough to join the Citadel. They were all tracked down and captured by the Federation. The only Rick we KNOW didn't have a Morty, Doofus Rick, probably survived by never having been a threat to his universe's Federation. Also, most Ricks on the Citadel seem to have been adventuring with their Mortys a bit longer than C-137, since the Citadel is up and running with a thriving Morty exchange when we first see it, only a few months into Rick returning to his family's life.
* Mortys have a knack for manipulating others: our Morty tricks Rick into taking his dad on a pity adventure, Evil Morty literally remote-controls his Rick [[spoiler: and engineers an attempt on his own life to boost his approval rating and win the election]]. The Citadel Mortys are even better at it: Cop Morty feigns sympathy and support to get Cop Rick to leave the building so he can blow the building up, then fake-cries (with real tears!) to get him to drop his guard, and it's apparently a known tendency of Mortys in Mortytown to play up their youth and vulnerability to the point of keeping cribs and mobiles in their home to make Ricks feel bad when they're caught breaking the law. Why? ''Because of Jerry''. Jerry is sort of naturally weak and pitiful, it's not that he consciously ''decides'' to be weak and pitiful, it's that being weak and pitiful works for him, so he only toughens up when he's got nothing to lose, and he has the people skills to know whether or not he's really in danger or not...and he raised Morty, the son of a highly intelligent mother. The end result? A boy who's had a lifetime of training in how to appear vulnerable, with enough brains to consciously weaponize it.
* Continuing from the part about Cop Morty: We find out in the season 5 finale [[spoiler: that Mortys are cloned and often purpose-bred on the Citadel.]] When Cop Morty talks about wanting to go back to life as an ordinary high school student, there's a non-zero chance that he's [[spoiler: one of said clones]] so it's possible he'd never be able to have a normal life. And do Mortys ever realize that they're clones?
** Cop Morty says "Mortys are raised to be sidekicks", so it's possible that ''he'' knows their cloned. It would explain his attitude towards them and himself; every time their brought up in the show, clones are usually regard as less valuable than those naturally born, and Cop Morty has that view of his whole kind.
* "Morty's Mind Blowers" reveals that Rick can remove memories from his family members if he wants to. Recall in "Total Rick-call" that the way to identify the parasites was that you'd have no unpleasant memories of them, and you have a potential explanation why Beth wouldn't have any unpleasant memories of Mr. Poopybutthole: Rick removed them.
* Why was Morty so paranoid about Mr. Lunas? Keep in mind his school had already been infiltrated the vampire [[{{Film/Nosferatu}} Coach Feratu]]. It would be easy for Morty to assume that someone else with a MeaningfulName might also be up to no good.
* Something "Jerry-Built" is something cheaply and shoddily constructed. Rick sees Jerry as a shoddy, sorry excuse of a man who uses what makes him pitiful and badly made to make people pity him.
** Additionally, the phrase "Jerry-Rigged", it can mean it's something put together cheaply and shoddily with what materials one has on hand. Jerry and Rick seem to get along well enough on their adventure, at least at first, despite not getting along well normally. However, like many Jerry-Rigged contraptions, it's not meant to last and falls apart not long after it's formed. "Jerry-Rig", "Jerry-Rick".
* Its shown that the more in pain or afraid a Morty is, the stronger the Morty Waves that protect Rick are. That's why Rick makes his adventures seem so dangerous and precarious and lets Morty get in so much danger. To make his Morty Waves stronger and therefore keep Rick safer.
* It is shown in Issue 46 that the Rick that made Jerry Land also made a theme park for every member of the family including himself.
* In "Mortys Mind Blowers" all the memories shown portray Jerry and Beth as not being together implying they were all recent memories, this seems weird until you remember they changed universes again after the squirrel incident, all the older memories belonged to that universes original Morty.

to:

[[folder:Season 3]]

!!FridgeLogic
[[folder:Fridge Logic]]
* Why does "Big Trouble in Little Sanchez" features a machine that creates physical representations of the way Beth allow Morty to accompany Rick on his adventures? Because she would rather Morty be influenced by his brilliant grandfather than his idiot father.
** It might also be partly out
and Jerry see each other, which is activated a great many times in that episode. That is, there exists a machine capable of fear. Rick is clearly mass-creating actual living beings, many of which are extremely unstable, and the very first scene of the series showed that one night of drinking too much is all it takes to get him to try and start a nuclear war. Beth probably figures that keeping Rick from the one thing he truly cared about would lead to Rick going powerful, based on nothing more than an idea in someone's mind. It's not even more insane and committing either suicide, mass murder, or both.
** It looks most like another consequence of
necessary for the person to know how to make the organism's characteristics (like Goddess Beth's extreme fear of losing her father, she is too happy telekinesis, for instance) biologically possible; the machine just to have him around to risk losing him by saying no.
** "Morty's Mind-Blowers" implies that [[ParentalNeglect Beth might just not care that much about Morty]], although Summer does start going on adventures with her father too.
** This was covered by the very first episode: Beth thinks that Morty is learning more by traveling with Rick, as Rick claimed Morty was 'special'. He is, by dint of [[spoiler: being a stealth device for Rick's brainwaves]].
figures it out. The megaseeds in that episode gave does ''not'' do this technology justice by any means.
** Yes, you read that right. The machine created a literal ''goddess'', or at least a close approximation of one.
** The machine was also proved able to create a functional superhuman army.
* In the same episode's ending, Beth and Jerry decide to stick together until
Morty a brief boost in brainpower, allowing him to quote finishes high school. Considering [[NotAllowedToGrowUp the Law rules of Thermodynamics by rote, which made Beth think Rick was being honest with her.
* The Guard Ricks that capture Summer and Morty say that Rick C-137 will have to assassinated to prevent Citadel secrets from falling into
the Federation's hands. Given how he [[spoiler: built the Citadel in the first place, this fear was not unfounded.series...]] [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments they basically decided to stick together forever.]]
* In "Rickshank "The Rickshank Redemption", Rick does a now-[[MemeticMutation memetic]] bit about Mulan Szechuan Sauce, available from UsefulNotes/McDonalds in 1998. While Rick is recalling the [[spoiler:fake]] traumatic memory of the invention of his portal gun, Cornvelious Daniel comments it's made really clear that the sauce is "fucking amazing". This should be a clear tell federation considers Rick the cleverest mammal in the universe, and they aren't surprised that [[spoiler:Rick is fabricating the memory and is assuming control of the program, as Cornvelious he finds a way to manipulate thoughts in a unique way (creating butts, specifically), so ''why'' would they use a obsolete model to deal with him?
** Either they think that Rick
wouldn't care or even know how to get passed an obsolete model (hoping on the off chance that he hasn't studied it yet since it's so old), or they really ''aren't'' the brightest tools in the shed...
** This is also a commentary on bureaucracy: Technology exists that would have prevented this exact scenario, they were just too cheap/apathetic to use it.
* The immortality field. Apparently, it exists, but it's only used for that autogrill planet. Why only there? At the very least, Rick (and, by extension, the Council of Ricks) should
be able to taste something from someone else's memory.]]
** Either way it was created from Rick's mind/memories. That doesn't really prove this is[[spoiler: a fabricated memory.]]
** There is a theory
have that the Szechuan sauce was the medium for the transmission of the virus that allowed Rick to gain control of the system. Sense of taste would vary wildly from species to species, technology, and it is hard to imagine something that is palatable to mammals like Rick would have the same appeal to insect-based creatures (such as the interrogator). By making the sauce taste 'good' to the agent, the agent is enticed to consume it, which since this is all in a mental mindscape hides the true purpose of the hacking code. Rick proceeds to then show the alien more scenes, allowing the program to take hold. The final scene in the mindscape has Rick show a formula, which is the activation code for the virus. Note the lack of the sauce in the interrogator's hands at that point. The sauce is gone because it had served its purpose.
* It should have been clear from the get-go that Rick's memory of creating the portal gun in "Rickshank Redemption" was fabricated when he casually mentions that the memory takes place in 1998- the same year when the Mulan szechuan sauce was available. Why? Because assuming the show's present takes place in our current year, there's no way that Beth, whose age is established to be 34 at the beginning of the series,
could have been as young as she looks in very useful to them.
** Just because someone invented a new technology doesn't mean that they're willing to share it. Not only that, but perhaps
the "memory". She would resources needed to build it/keep it running are ridiculously high, hence why we only see it in a club for wealthy people. As for why the Ricks didn't have been born around 1983, making her at least 15 in 1998.
** Given the revelation in season 5 that [[spoiler: the memory was in fact real apart from some details, Rick could've lied about the date of the memory not wanting to really think about that day, but
one, knowing that a timestamp would make the interrogator more likely to believe what he was seeing]].
* In "Rickshank Redemption", C-137 Rick hands Morty a pistol before confronting one of the Council Ricks, who has Summer hostage. C-137 Rick tries to bait Council Rick into letting Summer go, but Morty aims his pistol at Rick for brushing off Summer, at which point both Ricks and Summer berate him, causing him to shoot C-137 Rick. This lets Council Rick's guard down enough for C-137 Rick, who gave Morty a fake pistol with a cardboard note on it, to shoot him. However, C-137 Rick knows Morty has a LOT of pent-up aggression from the episode "Look Who's Purging Now", and reassured Morty by saying he ate a chocolate bar with Purgenol. C-137 Rick
their personalities, they probably put the note on the fake pistol because either Morty would read it, and use it as part of C-137 Rick's double bluff, or the situation would spiral into Morty getting angry conclude that if a Rick is not smart enough to shoot someone, making an opening for C-137 Rick to shoot. Regardless, C-137 Rick kills Council Rick without harming Summer, and Morty gets an excuse for his actions. Because C-137 Rick loves his grandkids.
* In "Rickshank Redemption" we see Rick [[spoiler:testing the bounds of his simulated world by asking Jerry to (literally) "fold
keep himself 12 times". He alive, then casually mentions they shouldn't get to live.
** In addition to what has already been stated
the bug agent that since Jerry was only able to manage 6 folds that he must be subject to a low cost "Series 9000" brainalyzer, which the agent implicitly confirms. Since the immortality field has two major drawbacks for Rick. The first step in any computer hack involves and most obvious being that Rick lives to risk everything on a regular basis and come out on top not spend life as a coddled mass of directionless molecules like Jerry. The second more insidious risk is that technology like the hacker learning about the environment immortality field can be turned against its user, its made abundantly clear that everyone does feel pain but because it ends moments later they are dealing with, this actually constitutes very subtle foreshadowing as don't mind it much, anyone who got the jump on a Rick is learning could devise all manner of constant agonizing torture abusing the necessary details immortality field to keep that he is then able to employ in creating exploit code that gives him full control over Rick alive until they simply broke.
** Imagine if
the Brainalyzer]].Citadel were under attack and the attackers could not be killed. Ain't nobody wants that. The field works great as a resort gimmick but has few practical applications.
** Doubly brilliant in * In "Rest and Ricklaxation", after Rick and Morty have purged what they thought their toxic parts of their personalities were, Rick states that he is proud to be Morty's gandpa. One of the lower cost Series 9000 toxic parts that Rick got rid of was his "illogical" love for Morty. So he said that objectively, without any emotional attachment to Morty making him say it.
** Non-Toxic Rick also lost Rick's cynicism and misanthrophobia, leaving him with an appreciation and love for all forms of life. He no doubt still does love Morty, just as he loves everything. But unlike regular Rick he doesn't love him so much he isn't willing to sacrifice him to save everything else.
** He also doesn't say that he ''loves'' Morty, he says he's ''proud to be his grandfather''. Morty's not great with book-smarts but he's got excellent people skills, and with Healthy!Morty's lack of insecurity and self-loathing, that part of him absolutely shines. Healthy!Rick doesn't have his arrogance or narcissism, so he's able to value that aspect of Morty's personality without devaluing him for not being the same kind of genius Rick is. That's the difference: Healthy!Rick appreciates Morty for the qualities he has but feels nothing for him personally, Toxic!Rick thinks Morty's a piece of shit but loves him to (his own literal, actual) death.
* Wouldn't Tommy be too young to produce sperm when he first started to mate with the indigenous creatures?
** Maybe Beth kept going to Froopyland during her early-to-mid adolescence. Maybe Tommy was a few years older than Beth, such that he was physically capable of mating when he got trapped in Froopyland. It's even possible that Tommy had an underlying condition that caused a [[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precocious_puberty precocious puberty]].
** Also, to echo Beth, "Who gets stuck in Honey?"
*** It's a honey swamp, although the honey itself was
probably lacked as breathable and harmless as the same security features or quality assurance found rainbow-water, it wouldn't be honey if it wasn't sticky as hell. He probably wasn't strictly ''stuck'', but depending on how far down he fell and how deep the honey was, it probably took him long enough to squirm out that Beth had long since gotten bored and wandered off (if she didn't just shove him in there and abandon him in Froopyland altogether).
* In ''Vindicators 3'', Rick's little Saw stunt ends with drunk!Rick being emotional and crying over [[spoiler: Noob Noob]] after all the snipping back and forth between him and Morty over Morty's admiration of the Vindicators. [[spoiler: But everything ''except'' the drunken rant on the video indicates that it really was intended for Morty, at least when Rick started building it. The rocket ride is too big for Noob Noob but fits Morty perfectly, the platform responded to Morty standing on it when anything except what Rick wanted would have caused the planet to explode, and Rick mentions hoping Noob Noob becomes a real Vindicator someday, even though if Noob Noob had been there to get the message, he would already have been one. You can also see the cardboard materials for the rainbow hands he made
in the higher-end models. [[spoiler:The bugs basically put background, indicating that recording the smartest mammal in videos was the galaxy in a [[LockingMacGyverInTheStoreCupboard mental prison with shoddy locks]]]].last part of the prep.]] He really ''did'' intend it for Morty, his train of thought just derailed.
* A meta example In "Rickshank Redemption" is just before Rick [[spoiler:transfers his mind into the body of the alien agent]], he tells the agent that he's leaving him with only a few parts of his brain, including "six years of improv workshops: comedy comes in threes!" For the rest of the episode, whenever Rick needs to leave a secured area, he uses the same poor excuse, rather than any of the witty reasons he used in the past: "I'm gonna go take a dump". And how many times does he use this excuse? Three times.
** Don't forget that in that action Rick also lost his general ability to improvise. It's likely the best/only thing he can think of to do after initiating a new round of mayhem.
** I interpreted Rick saying I'm going to take a shit as him wanting to check out his new "equipment" has he said he wants to give his "new insect dick a test drive" and by saying I'm going to take a shit he has an excuse to drop his pants and see what he's working with.
** Or he used it because "I'm gonna go take a shit" is such a mundane excuse, that nobody with a digestive system would call it into question.
** There is every possibility that the transference machinery causes this effect through an adrenaline rush. The human body undergoes all manner of changes during stress, having to empty one's bladder after a mind-switch may just be a side-effect.
* Why is Rick C-137 so easily able to [[spoiler:own the Citadel/Council of Ricks in "Rickshank Redemption"]] when, in theory, all the other Ricks should be his equal? It was previously stated that Ricks exist along a continuum of personality traits and also that Rick C-137 is the most like himself, aka the "Rickiest". Therefore from the pool of hyper-intelligent, omni-skilled humans known as "Rick", Rick C-137 is still a cut above.
** In "Close Rick Counters Of The Rick Kind " it's mentioned that Rick C-137 refused to join the Council of Ricks, i.e the ruling group of Ricks who stood out from the rest.
** In season 5 we learn that [[spoiler: Rick helped ''build'' the Citadel as part of the peace agreement between him and the other Ricks. Of course he'd know it's every weakness, and even if he hadn't, he had decades of experience killing Ricks. The only reason he didn't wipe them out years ago was because he realized he would gain nothing from it. When they broke the peace, all bets were off]].
* The Citadel of Ricks has a surprising number of "blue collar" Ricks doing basic jobs for the council like guarding things or operating consoles. There are also Ricks who make their living doing mundane stuff like selling "Morty dazzlers" or "Morty Insurance". Why would a significant number of Ricks seem to fail to live up to their potential? In "Rickshank Redemption" we see the possibility that Ricks will give portal gun technology to alternate Ricks who haven't invented it yet. It is a common trope for people who have not had to work hard for success to then underachieve.
** Or, perhaps they're taking a page from [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/VideoGame/BioShock1 Bioshock:]] "Everybody wants to be a captain of industry. No one's thinking they're going to be scrubbing toilets." Every Rick's a genius, but some have visions, and some are just like every other Rick. So, they get by as best they can.
*** There's a lot to imply that the Citadel is essentially a giant scam: Ricks come to the Citadel because it's presented to them as a paradise, a 'nonstop party where all the guests are the only person they like', but it's still a functional city-state that still needs the trappings of a modern society to function. Candidate Morty even asks Plumber Rick if he came to the Citadel to be a plumber, and the answer is, obviously, no, but because the average citizen on the Citadel ''is a Rick'', that means every Rick is ''an average citizen''. It's downright chilling to think about.
*** What separates the "successful" Ricks from the "regular jackoff" Ricks on the Citadel? Social skills and vision. Since all Ricks are equally qualified for every job because they're all geniuses, the ones who can get ahead are the ones who either have unique ideas and passions (like Rick D. Sanchez III, who owns the Simple Rick cookie factory), or the right social skills to endear themselves to their superiors ("Cool Rick", who gets promoted despite being new to the job). This is also why so much of the Citadel's social structure depends on the Citadel removing everything that makes an individual Rick unique: the Citadel ''needs'' those work-a-day Ricks to function as a society and there aren't enough suitably prestigious positions for every Rick to have one. It's the same reason why the "I pulled myself up by my bootstraps and so can you" myth is horseshit: yes, anyone ''could be capable'' of it, but only ''one'' person can actually get it no matter how hard they all work. Without creating a new position so that he can be the Rick to fill it or having the social skills to convince other versions of himself to give a position to him, it's entirely arbitrary.
*** This entire round of logic falls on its face when you realize they are all, or most of them, are capable of creating near-sentient robots, thus capable of automating every single menial job there is. The only reason those sucker jobs exist is so other Ricks have something to lord over someone else. It's entirely pointless when the manual labor parts of the economy should be entirely automated. Things are kept that way not for economic reasons, but for societal control reasons. Its makework to keep as many Ricks and Mortys imprisoned and helpless as possible.
*** So, why don't blue-collar Ricks just move to planets where their genius is exceptional again? There are references to "unlicensed portal guns", and we see one criminal Rick making bootleg portal gun fluid. That implies that ownership and use of portal guns are strictly controlled by the Council, meaning that normal citizens can no longer freely move between realities. There's a real possibility that the Ricks who move to the Citadel are literally trapped there.
** Rick C-137 described Ricks in general as having problems with "the Government", so they formed an equally unpalatable (to him anyway) Government (The Council/Citadel) to protect themselves. Also, while Rick C-137 may be a genius, much of the time we see him stealing critical resources he needs or engaging in other criminal activity for money and the Council repeatedly describes him as a criminal/terrorist. It appears likely that the cost of living under Citadel protection is a reduced ability to engage in profitable criminal activities. Combined with Ricks living in a society of "equals", as mentioned above, Ricks lacking the resources to adventure would be forced into mundane vocations.
* Depending on how much of Rick's "origin story" memory was fabricated, the Citadel of Ricks seems to recruit new Ricks by selling it as "a nonstop party where all the guests are the only person we like." So, why is life in the Citadel so miserable? Because Rick ''doesn't'' like himself! It's consistently made clear that Rick is his own worst enemy, so it makes sense that Ricks would be constantly in conflict with other Ricks. It also makes sense that most Ricks would be too arrogant to realize that a world full of Ricks would be unpleasant. It took "the Rickest Rick" to recognize that being the smartest guy in a mediocre world is the best option for him.
* When Rick collapses the value of the single galactic currency, many of the characters start fighting over pants as a new store of value. In the later days of the Soviet Union, foreign goods in general and blue jeans in particular were used as currency in an informal barter economy due to the Ruble having little practical value.
* Why does Mr. Goldenfold eat shit? Because he's been in a sewer for God knows how long.
** This might explain why Dr. Wong specializes in getting people to stop eating shit.
* Why would Blue Collar Ricks be engaged in menial jobs that could be easily automated, like stamping a design on individual cookies? The industrial Ricks saw wage slavery as a useful tool to keep the other Ricks under control. Blue Collar Ricks would be so busy trying to make ends meet, they wouldn't have time to plot against the upper classes or possibly invent ways to supplant them.
* In a [[SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome Fridge Moment of Awesome]], Pickle Rick can [[spoiler:build a new body, create a machine that can put him into a ''different'' new body, exterminate a nest of sewer rats and take down an international terrorist with 34 armed guards]] in the ''total time it takes his family to drive to the therapist's office and sit through most of a session''. Rick can do more in two hours than most people can accomplish in a lifetime!
** PS: [[spoiler:Rick also managed to make it to the therapy session before it ended.]]
* The answer to the second "Drunk Rick" question [[spoiler:could never have been Dorian V]]. Despite all of Crocubot's "mechanical and reptilian logic", he failed to remember that [[spoiler:Rick and Morty were not summoned for the second Vindicators mission that resulted in Dorian V's destruction, and thus would not have known what happened and why the Vindicators avoid the subject.]]
* It makes sense that Rick doesn’t take responsibility for his actions when black-out drunk and basically considers "Drunk Rick" a different person, considering his greatest antagonists for most of his life were literally other versions of himself with different mentalities. For all intents and purposes, it ''might as well have been'' a straggler from the Council of Rick.
* Speaking "Vindicators 3", the main room of the ride features a city made of cardboard cutouts with heroes and monsters fighting. The three cutouts at the center of the city are a lady holding a katana, a large green horned figure with bloody fists, and a mummy with a blue flame in hand. It seems random at first, but they're supposed to be Lady Katana, Diablo Verde and Calypso!
** Their design in WesternAnimation/Vindicators2 take cues from the cutouts, further reinforcing the connection.
** Notice how none of the other cutouts represent the other vindicators? Considering he reacts genuinely bummed out when Morty tells him they're dead, Rick might have a soft spot for the missing vindicators.
** Alternatively, since "Drunk Rick" often gets emotional according to him, he wanted to make an homage to the dead.
* It seems odd that Rick would ThrowTheDogABone by giving Jerry a pity adventure, considering he's spent most of the series hating Jerry's existence. However, considering the main reason Rick hated Jerry was cause he married his daughter, Rick doesn't have any real reason to outright despise Jerry now that he's a pathetic divorced man. Thus, Rick would be more willing to hang with Jerry since he is already out of his family's life.
* Why would Rick willingly walk through a scanner when he had cybernetic implants that would trigger it, causing him to be hit with a mental dampener that nearly got him killed? It's because Rick didn't realize he had cybernetic implants because the body he's inhabiting is not his original one, but one he stole from an alternate Rick in
''The Rickshank Rickdemption''.
** It wasn't just any alternate Rick. It was a
[=ABC=]s Of Beth'', Tommy had to resort to impregnating the wildlife of Froopyland and [[EatsBabies cannibalizing the offspring]] to stay alive. However, Rick serving created Froopyland for Beth as a high-ranking officer in the Council of Ricks' military. This Rick her own personal play area, and went to insane levels to childproof it, from bouncy ground to oxygenated water. And yet, despite that, he apparently didn't need to hide his implants from the space-TSA, because his rank and status gave him ''carte blanche'' from a higher power that superceded the space-TSA.
* Rick tends to say "Don't think about it!" whenever something incredibly disturbing happens. It's entirely possible he's also telling himself not to think about it. Given that Rick is the smartest man
put any sources of food in the universe, thinking about something is much much worse for him than somebody else.
* Rick's WMD of choice appears to be the Neutrino Bomb,
Froopyland, which is generally understood why Tommy nearly starved to be a device that emits lethal levels of Neutrino radiation. As explained [[https://what-if.xkcd.com/73/ here]], neutrinos are so insubstantial despite billions flowing through a person's body every day, a neutrino will only succeed in hitting one of that person's atoms on average of once a decade. Since even planets are opaque to neutrinos there is pretty much nowhere to hide from such a weapon. As Rick prefers technology to other people, a weapon that is lethal to biologic beings yet leaves technology mostly unharmed is perfectly in line with his character.
** Of course, a level of neutrino radiation
death. One would wonder why that would kill be the case, unless Rick did it to keep out any potential choking hazards.
** Froopyland is
a human high-tech playpen, not a jail. Rick gave it to Beth as just another toy to play with, assuming she would probably NOT leave other things intact.
* Jerry's ButtMonkey status is tuned [[CallBack way up, waaaay up]] in season 3, after his divorce. By episode 5, Rick finally states that his hatred of Jerry comes from his act of making himself as miserable and pitiful as possible in an attempt to get things
come out of pity. Froopyland to eat, sleep, go to school, play with other toys (she mentioned thinking a Nintendo was cooler), etc. There was never any need to provide food inside Froopyland because the assumption was if Beth got hungry she'd come out and ask for food.
**
It explains how pitiful Jerry is this season: he is deliberately making himself as pathetic as humanly possible was principally designed for Beth, who Rick actually cares about. If Beth had disappeared for an extended time into Froopyland, Rick would feel enough motivation to go back and get her. Now some random neighborhood kid that Rick seemed barely aware of? Rick wouldn't think to go check to see if anyone other than Beth was stuck in his family will take pity on him.
Froopyland.
* Season 3 has put a lot of emphasis on Many people see what Morty does to Ethan in "The Whirley-Durley Conspiracy" as the psychology start of the main characters, especially Rick. What have we learned so far during the season? He admitted that he sees most of his family as expendable since he can just jump Morty transforming into an alternate universe evil Morty. However, those who have siblings who have had their heart broken would see it as an action performed by a loving brother to even the score for their sister's pain (Ethan shamed Summer's body, making her image conscious as a result and leading her to try to alter herself and leading her to become a giant inside out monster. Morty made sure Ethan understood what he pleases to get did by turning him into a new deformed monster himself). Also, it shows that it runs in the family (said in "Pickle Rick"). He loves his grandkids but hates the fact that Jerry is their father, seeing him as someone who uses the pity of others to get anywhere ("The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy"). He sees his attachment to his family as a weakness that hinders him (in "Rest and Ricklaxation"). All three involve his family in a way or another; is it any wonder he didn't want to go to therapy, where he could have ended up revealing any of this, with Beth, Morty, and Summer also present? Just imagine their reactions. All three revelations open up their own Fridge Brilliance, too:
** He felt more at ease admitting these things to Jaguar precisely because his family wasn't there to hear him. Unknowingly, he
(as Rick did do some therapy. Just not with an actual therapist.
** Jerry is a problem to Rick, as there's no way he can escape him; in just about every single alternate universe where Morty exists, he looks like regular Morty, and likely has
the same two parents, indicating that Jerry is the father thing by killing King Jelly Bean after he attempted to rape Morty).
* The plot
of most Mortys in most universes. Even jumping between universes won't remove Jerry from the picture, and with Rick's disdain towards the guy, is it any wonder he despises him so much? Most alternate universe Beths fell for the same guy he sees as an utter loser!
*** This might also explain why most Ricks treat most Mortys like complete garbage. Morty is a constant reminder of what Rick sees as Jerry ruining his daughter's life. Rick C-137 ended up bonding with his grandson and genuinely caring for him. Most of the other Ricks didn't. This is also probably why Morty C-137 seems smarter and more assertive than the other Mortys.
** Him seeing his attachment to his family as a weakness: With the reveal in "Pickle Rick" that he sees them as expendable, he doesn't see why he should care about them - yet he does. Even if he can just replace them as he pleases, he cares too much to allow himself to have complete apathy towards them.
* In
''Morty's Mind Blowers'' Rick is actually flattered to be asked to kill the alien and allow him to go to heaven. Rick is usually disparaging to the religious, even in a situation where it glorifies him. So what could get him to act nicely in this situation? When the Flip-Floopian dies dishonorably, he is visibly dragged to hell by demons, it is the one thing that could get Rick to respect a religion: Hard proof of its beliefs.
* It makes perfect sense that [[spoiler:Toxic Rick is the Rick that cares about Morty.]] The first thing he does after thinking the spa machine exploded? ''Call out to Morty'', either in anguish because he thought
starts when Morty died, or in a panic because he couldn't see Morty.
** Toxic Rick stops the fight in the house the second Beth shows up, either because she could get hurt in the crossfire or he had already realized that Healthy Rick would be willing to hurt her to beat him if he realized his Toxic self's weakness (as he did moments later), and he decided that wasn't worth the risk.
** There's a very quick moment which also foreshadows this. As he's trying to predict his counterpart's plans, regular Rick pauses for thought and then slaps Morty. [[spoiler:That tells Rick that Toxic Rick cares about Morty because one of them does and it sure as hell isn't him and that he can therefore use Toxic Morty as leverage.]]
* The reason why Rick considers Morty [[spoiler:one of his most irrational attachments and one of his most toxic traits: how else would you describe an attachment to the grandson of your family's murderer?]]
* In "Pickle Rick," we find out that the reason Mr. Goldenfold is seeing a therapist is that he eats poop. Earlier in the season, "The Rickshank Redemption" shows him leading some human rebels out of the sewer. Makes his problem not seem as disturbing if he only ate poop out of necessity.
* Immediately following "Rest and Ricklaxation", which shows how independent and capable our Morty is without a moral compass, we get an episode where [[spoiler: Evil Morty manages to take over the entire Citadel of Ricks as their beloved, tyrannical leader]]
* The new flag for the Citadel of Ricks shows an M stabbing through an R from the top. A little clue about [[spoiler: a returning character who's in charge]]
* "The Ricklantis Mixup" seemingly is a misleading title, given the episode pretty much completely ignores the Atlantis adventure C-137's Rick and Morty go on. But what if the titular mixup was showing us what was happening in the Citadel instead of the main Rick and Morty's adventure?
** There's even a small detail at the beginning that hints at this. Both ''our'' Rick and Morty and the Census Rick and Morty hop through portals. Implying that the show quite
learns literally mixed up ''everything'' by looking at the portals and followed Truth Turtle. Why, then, was he surprised to learn the wrong one.
* It might seem stupid
existence of Campaign Manager Morty to try and assassinate Evil Morty instead of just leaking those documents to Rick's memory-erasing machine, or the press, but remember, Evil Morty doesn't have any features that discern him from any other non-gimmick Morty. Leaking the documents wouldn't prove anything.
* Part
content of why Campaign Morty's assassination failed? Remember, Fat Morty thought the trait that set him apart from the other Mortys was that he was left-handed ("I thought I was Left-Handed Morty"), meaning most Mortys are right-handed. Campaign Morty shakes Candidate Morty's hand with [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/rickandmorty/images/1/14/S3e7_handshake.png/revision/latest?cb=20170913013120 his right hand]], and thus has only his left hand free to [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/rickandmorty/images/d/d1/S3e7_assassinate.png/revision/latest?cb=20170913013128 shoot the gun]]. expunged memories? He should already know.
** The average human mind can't really contain knowledge of everything, much less store it in a cohesive manner.
He was shooting with his weaker, non-dominant hand; had he held the gun in his right hand, the shot would have been more on-target, and most likely lethal.
* Evil
being bombarded by a near infinite amount of random information popping into his thoughts, hence his stress and discomfort even some time later. Also, the entirety of everything that Morty using the Morty Dome was originally thought to be about making every think it was a Rick who was trying to hide, in addition to disturbing the Citadel. But with the revelation that he wanted to control the Citadel, capturing a bunch of Mortys, torturing them in a way that would make them hate Ricks, then letting them be sent to the place he wants to take over is a brilliant move. He has an army he could get together with little persuasion. Or a population crisis he could take advantage of to gain power, which is part of what he did when Rick trashed the Citadel and ended up creating a way to gain absolute control of the city been through would be a drop in the election.
* Evil Morty fires Campaign Manager Morty despite him not really doing anything wrong. Which puts him in perfect position to get 'secrets' from a Rick who could've just done the assassination himself rather than try to include more variables. An assassination that, had it come from a Rick, would've been viewed as being about the Rick-Morty divide. but
bucket when done by a Morty, reinforces Evil Morty's point about the division being between the Citadel and it's opposers. Evil Morty holds Campaign Morty's hand long after the handshake is done, meaning he has compared to shoot with his non-dominant hand (see above). And as seen in episode 4x10, it's possible to protect the heart (and presumably all other organs) without anyone seeing that it's protected, so infinite knowledge. Especially if he didn't have know what to worry about actually dying if things went wrong. At the end of the episode, the Ricks executing Campaign think about. Ultimately, Morty mention that the ultimate vote was almost close enough to trigger a recount, and since Evil Morty was losing at first, that assassination 'against a united Citadel' probably would be necessary to get him the support he have needed to win. Truly a plan worthy of have his memories reset regardless, just to avoid going insane in the Rickest Morty.
long run.
* The "specialty" Ricks are In ''The Vat Of Acid Episode'' Morty's "ResetButton" was on top of his open bag and next to Jerry for some reason. You'd think Morty would put it somewhere close to himself or have his bag closed which could have prevented Jerry or anyone else for that matter from pressing the button.
** Morty's got a fair amount of his father in him. Overlooking small issues that would prevent much bigger problems for himself is in his wheelhouse. Particularly when he's enjoying himself and relaxed.
* One that spans the whole series: Rick bases his cynicism and misanthropy on the fact that in an infinite multiverse, everything happens every possible way and everyone exists in infinite copies, and therefore nothing and no one really matters. Except... we have also seen time and again that Rick C-137 is orders of magnitude smarter and
more capable than just a joke when you consider Dr. Wong's speech on "doing the work" in "Pickle Rick." Wonka Rick, Fashion Guru Rick, and all the even other Ricks are Ricks who did (each of which is, in turn, the work. Any Rick ''could'' make an awesome candy factory, but they'd get bored halfway through and burn it down, like Rick C-137 and his successful business he built to screw with the Devil.
* It’s mentioned in the recap for “The Ricklantis Mixup” that WeWillUseManualLaborInTheFuture and states that the Ricks in the Citadel could have easily created an automated workforce instead of using blue-collar Ricks. But it makes sense because this is exactly what the Shadow Council Of Ricks ‘’wants’’. They’re a group of the wealthiest
smartest and most influential Ricks capable person in the citadel, and by keeping most of the their own universe). As in, he can go through other Ricks stuck like tissue paper with them being every bit as helpless to stop him as regular people are to stop them. He's also apparently the only Rick to have declined to join the Citadel, making him "the Rickest Rick," with every other Rick being a pale imitation of him. Thus, Rick C-137 proves by his very existence that his and every other Rick's philosophy is wrong - it ''is'' possible for a person to be unique and exceptional even in boring, dead-end jobs, they won’t be able to pursue an infinite universe and therefore for their own aspirations and will allow death to be an objective loss. (which in turn makes no sense, but still, that is the Shadow Council reality that the show presents to retain us by treating every Rick that isn't Rick C-137 as an easily dispatched mook).
* "Bethic Twinstinct"'s ending makes it abundantly clear that if Beth, Jerry or anyone else has sex from
their status. Automated labor would be detrimental to bedroom, anyone from the Dining Room can clearly hear it. So this goal, so shouldn't even be the Shadow Council has probably been keeping the Citadel from embracing it.
* All the women that came [[spoiler:flying to the item magnet after
first time Morty programmed it are probably all named Jessica.]]
or Summer hear their parents have sex.
** Take a closer look: every one of those women was a pretty ''redheaded'' girl. Hell, this isn't the first time this happens in the Series. Remember when Morty has a type, it seems.
*** Just like grandpa...
Sex with Gwendolyn?
* In "The Ricklantis Mixup", the donation-collecting Rick and Morty are surprised to come across C-137 as if they were expecting a different Rick in "Final [=Desmithation=]", we learn that reality. "Morty's Mind Blowers" reveals that our Rick and Morty had to move again due to Morty learning a MilkmanConspiracy run fortune cookies are actually reality-binding tools created by squirrels.
* Rick is initially described as being 60, but is described as 70 in "Rest and Relaxation". Continuity error? Not necessarily; he did freeze time except for him, Morty, and Summer in "A Rickle in Time" for six whole months, and other universes he visits don't necessarily have to follow the same flow of time(like the microverse and its smaller iterations). It's
a Lockerean creature. Knowing this, shouldn't it be possible stuff like this are to blame for Rick or anyone else capable enough for the supposed age inconsistency job for him, along with other Ricks that matter to just create or grab another one and Mortys in the multiverse.
* More of a FridgeHeartwarming but while Rick revealing Beth's "childhood toys" is disturbing, this means that:
** Rick still ''made'' the gifts despite how disturbing they are.
** Rick still ''kept'' the gifts after all these years.
* The reason Jerry was given a PetTheDog in TheStinger of "The [=ABCs=] of Beth" is because for once he owned up
bend reality to his mistake. It could imply will?
* In "A Rick in King Mortur's Court",
the reason he's previously-established Plutonians are completely absent from the episode. Why? Because they're no longer a CosmicPlaything is, as pathetic as planet.
* In "Get Shwifty" Birdperson feeds Morty a bowl of random debris from
his life is, carpet, explaining that he doesn't admit that most of it was his own fault.
* In the 3rd season finale, the US government seems to have access to quite a bit more sophisticated tech than we last saw them, however after the Federation's invasion and subsequent collapse/departure from Earth they probably left a lot of their tech behind for the Pentagon to reverse engineer!
** The President has also been frequently calling on Rick and Morty to solve problems while simultaneously monitoring
know what they do (even at home). This means they'd have some idea of what kind of weapons Rick had access to, and (being humans eat... despite the US government) would insist on developing their own counter-measures. This is heavily hinted at in the episode.
--->'''POTUS:''' We've been preparing for a Rick-level event for some time now.
* The final Season 3 episode artfully leaves Beth's clone status ambiguous as everything Rick does in relation to the Smith family getting back together could be an elaborate ruse to convince a Beth clone she is the real Beth while sparing the kids and Jerry the act of killing and recreating clone-Beth....or it could be taken at face value.
** Especially since Rick's previous attempt to reassure Beth only made her freak out. Clone Beth or not, family re-unification may have been the only method to calm Beth down.
* The
fact that Rick is afraid of pirates at least strongly suggests he's dating Tammy, a human. The very next line even establishes that he was intending the Pirates of the Pancreas ride to be some sort of scary thrill-ride. It would also explain why his business partners in the Anatomy Park project didn't get the concept of the ride.
* One major sign of Beth accepting how much like her father she is? The episode after she comes to terms with it, she mentions that the family reuniting will make the show like season one, only more streamlined. That's right, for the first time Beth reveals that - just like Rick - ''she's aware she's in a TV show.''
** Or, she accepts that she's like her father in many ways, but refuses to cross certain boundaries that he had crossed before. If this is the original Beth and not a clone, it would mean she chose not to ditch her family to go on adventures across space and universes - which is what Rick did when she was young.
* No wonder Rick and Morty only have a limited number of times through which they can jump and settle into a new universe after destroying the last. Not only do they need to find universes where their selves from that universe died right after solving the current crisis (which is already a very rare thing to happen), they also need to find a universe that has seen roughly the same things unravel as they did in the universe they just left, another very rare case. This severely limits their options. You know what else limits their options? The Citadel of Ricks. Having so many Ricks and Mortys in one place means just as many universes in which Rick and Morty haven't been seen in a long while - which would make it suspicious for the C-137 originals to suddenly show up. Due to the sheer amount of Ricks and Mortys living in the Citadel and how Ricks and Mortys die every day there, it gets increasingly difficult to know which universes still have their Rick and/or Morty alive somewhere in the multiverse. It's also not like they can jump into any universe previously inhabited by a Rick and Morty that joined the Citadel and both died there, as that universe's events had to have differed greatly due to the scientist and his grandson missing for so long. The solution to this would be to completely ignore any home universe of Ricks and Mortys that have left to live in the Citadel, which shaves off a large number of possible universes to run away into. Oh, and for added creepy factor, it also means taking out of the equation any universe that was irreparably damaged in the exact same way as the one
they've just run away from.
** And that's not all - if the comic books are canon to the show (and if some theories are confirmed in future seasons), then there's an implication that our Rick and Morty aren't the only ones who jump to another universe when the one they lived in gets damaged, further reducing the options when untouched universes are taken by other Ricks and Mortys fleeing their mistakes.
** The Season 5 finale revealing [[spoiler: the Central Finite Curve enclosing all the "Rick's the most intelligent" universes off from all the rest]] adds another layer to this. [[spoiler: Massive as it is in absolute terms, the available pool is, well, a finite one. No matter how long it takes, eventually you'll run out of options.]]
* Every time Rick [[spoiler: swaps bodies with a different Rick]] on the Citadel, there's a running gag about him going to take a shit. It's a dumb excuse
been dating for him to just leave the room with nobody asking questions, but ''of course'' he'd need to use the bathroom every time: they're all ''anal retentive''.
* Rick says Jessica's lying because she kept asking whether he got a ''new'' Morty yet, except Jessica is explicitly there to get the old Morty back. She has no way of knowing that getting a completely new Morty from another timeline is an option. [[AwLookTheyReallyDoLoveEachOther Aww.]]
* Why are Mortys so prevalent on the Citadel, and why does almost every Rick have one? Why isn't there a population of Summers, Beths, or even Jerrys? Morty-waves! The vast majority of Ricks in universes without Mortys didn't survive
long enough to join the Citadel. They were all tracked down and captured by the Federation. The only Rick we KNOW didn't have a Morty, Doofus Rick, probably survived by be sleeping together. Apparently, they never having been a threat to his universe's Federation. Also, most Ricks on the Citadel seem to have been adventuring with their Mortys a bit longer than C-137, since the Citadel is up and running with a thriving Morty exchange when we first see it, only a few months into Rick returning to his family's life.
* Mortys have a knack
went out for manipulating others: our Morty tricks Rick into taking his dad on a pity adventure, Evil Morty literally remote-controls his Rick [[spoiler: and engineers an attempt on his own life to boost his approval rating and win the election]]. The Citadel Mortys are meal together, or even better at it: Cop Morty feigns sympathy and support to get Cop Rick to leave the building so he can blow the building up, then fake-cries (with real tears!) to get him to drop his guard, and it's apparently a known tendency of Mortys in Mortytown to play up their youth and vulnerability to the point of keeping cribs and mobiles in their home to make Ricks feel bad when they're caught breaking the law. Why? ''Because of Jerry''. Jerry is sort of naturally weak and pitiful, it's not that he consciously ''decides'' to be weak and pitiful, it's that being weak and pitiful works for him, so he only toughens up when he's got nothing to lose, and he has the people skills to know whether or not he's really in danger or not...and he raised Morty, the son of a highly intelligent mother. The end result? A boy who's had a lifetime of training in how to appear vulnerable, with enough brains to consciously weaponize it.
* Continuing from the part
talked about Cop Morty: We find out in the season 5 finale [[spoiler: food during all that Mortys are cloned and often purpose-bred on the Citadel.]] When Cop Morty talks about wanting to go back to life as an ordinary high school student, there's a non-zero chance that he's [[spoiler: one of said clones]] so it's possible he'd never be able to have a normal life. And do Mortys ever realize that they're clones?
** Cop Morty says "Mortys are raised to be sidekicks", so it's possible that ''he'' knows their cloned. It would explain his attitude towards them and himself; every time their brought up in the show, clones are usually regard as less valuable than those naturally born, and Cop Morty has that view of his whole kind.
* "Morty's Mind Blowers" reveals that Rick can remove memories from his family members if he wants to. Recall in "Total Rick-call" that the way to identify the parasites was that you'd have no unpleasant memories of them, and you have a potential explanation why Beth wouldn't have any unpleasant memories of Mr. Poopybutthole: Rick removed them.
* Why was Morty so paranoid about Mr. Lunas? Keep in mind his school had already been infiltrated the vampire [[{{Film/Nosferatu}} Coach Feratu]]. It would be easy for Morty to assume that someone else with a MeaningfulName might also be up to no good.
* Something "Jerry-Built" is something cheaply and shoddily constructed. Rick sees Jerry as a shoddy, sorry excuse of a man who uses what makes him pitiful and badly made to make people pity him.
** Additionally, the phrase "Jerry-Rigged", it can mean it's something put together cheaply and shoddily with what materials one has on hand. Jerry and Rick seem to get along well enough on their adventure, at least at first, despite not getting along well normally. However, like many Jerry-Rigged contraptions, it's not meant to last and falls apart not long after it's formed. "Jerry-Rig", "Jerry-Rick".
* Its shown that the more in pain or afraid a Morty is, the stronger the Morty Waves that protect Rick are. That's why Rick makes his adventures seem so dangerous and precarious and lets Morty get in so much danger. To make his Morty Waves stronger and therefore keep Rick safer.
* It is shown in Issue 46 that the Rick that made Jerry Land also made a theme park for every member of the family including himself.
* In "Mortys Mind Blowers" all the memories shown portray Jerry and Beth as not being together implying they were all recent memories, this seems weird until you remember they changed universes again after the squirrel incident, all the older memories belonged to that universes original Morty.
time.



[[folder:Season 4]]
* It seems to be RuleOfFunny that the first couple of dimensions C-137 Rick [[{{BodySurf}} bodysurfs]] into are all fascist. It's possible most of the Ricks went through the same events of "Big Trouble in Little Sanchez" and subsequently destroyed their clone bodies as well. So how come the fascist Ricks kept their clones? Well, a fascist would be all for keeping clones of themselves, either because they don’t know about the side effects or are confident they can stay in control. Also, the reason why Wasp Rick might've kept his clone body, despite not being a fascist, was because he had more empathy being a wasp and possibly didn't go through the events that made Tiny Rick.
* Why can Rick be reborn in a different universe whenever he dies and isn’t brought back to life after a certain amount of time? It was probably a feature he put into Operation Phoenix in the case he died in a different universe but didn’t work on the feature any further so rather than only accepting the original Rick, it accepted any version of Rick who died in a different universe.
* The Wasp!Smith family having a strong, healthy bond makes sense when you think about it: they aren't just a family, they are a ''hive''!
** Also, Wasp Rick asks Wasp Beth if Wasp Morty can go and help C-137 Rick to get home. Beth says that Morty has homework to do first. Wasp Rick accepts this without argument. Who runs a hive? The ''Queen''.
* Why would Wasp!Rick help our Rick (in a wasp body clone), and treat his family so well but still be willing to eat Catepillar!Goldenfold (who is clearly sentient) alive, despite having "empathy"? He wasn't lying, it's just that that empathy only extends to ''other wasps''.
* Funnily enough, Morty learns a real-life lesson at the actual end of “Edge Of Tomorty Rick Die Rickpeat”, the lesson being “Context Matters!” One downside to the death crystals is that they don’t provide any context to one’s death, only how one dies.
* The nearly InstantEmergencyResponse that takes place after Morty starts fighting the bullies could be seen as a writing shortcut, however, it has been established that the US Government is aware of Rick and Morty and has prepared for unspecified "Rick Level Events" with methods that include constant satellite surveillance. Therefore it is reasonable to assume that police and armed forces are stationed nearby in case Rick or Morty goes rogue.
** The lack of Rick likely encouraged the commitment of conventional military forces as Morty alone could be seen[[note]]incorrectly[[/note]] as someone the government could handle.
** The description of Morty's sci-fi fight as an "{{Manga/Akira}} type situation" is both a ShoutOut and makes sense given that knowledge about Rick and Morty is likely classified and [[PoliceAreUseless local law enforcement]] was probably given training that would map strange sci-fi phenomena into simple-to-understand cultural references.
* Morty asks the Meeseeks to "shield him from the law" and they vanish as soon as the Army shows up and displace the fleeing police. This is because the military is distinct from law enforcement.
* Of course the death where Morty dies with Jessica comforting him in a hostel is certain when he follows a certain path. Along the way he mutilates, murders and emotionally destroys many people before becoming a horrific monster. If he hadn't been stopped, [[SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome dying alone in a hostel where Jessica has to comfort him because he has no friends was the only way his life would progress.]]
* Why weren't Rick and Morty attacked by Sanchez's 3329 when Miles Knightly's death was apparently an unforeseen consequence? Simple, Miles Knightly was part of Heistcon (Featured Guest/Keynote/Founder), Rick and Morty were just attending.
* You'd have thought Morty would have remembered the consequences of "Mortynight Run" and not tried to 'help out' the snakes in "Rattlestar Ricklactica" based on emotional impulse. But based on the FreezeFrameBonus of the tickets, that was a different Rick and Morty, therefore our Morty never learned the lesson.
* Dan Harmon has been vocal about his dislike of TimeTravel stories and the entire episode artfully demonstrates his point that, in Rick's words, it is "universe destroying". Because the number of dimension hoppers per reality is set up to be low, the average reality is not swamped by Ricks. With time travel, any one point in time can be the target from an unbounded number of potential futures. The result is [[AuthorTract what we see in the episode]], swarms of time travelers descending on specific points in time. Basically moving between alternate possibilities, like Rick does, is as interesting and useful as changing the one possibility you are in (and eliminates most of the [[PlotHole plot holes]]).
* The "[[WaitHere Stay in the Car]]" lesson of the Snake episode at first seems to be a bit of a HardTruthAesop about not helping others[[note]]The Star Trek franchise is notorious for espousing this same thing.[[/note]] as the unintended consequence, time-traveling snakes appears completely divorced from Morty's action of delivering Slippy as a replacement astronaut[[note]]Typically this sci-fi scenario is set up by an accidental or intentional technology transfer.[[/note]]. Rick, with his space car scanner, could easily tell that any interaction was likely to cause as many problems as it might solve and therefore knew better than to get involved. As was stated with Glootie's App, Rick is generally too lazy to explain the exact reason behind his warnings. In this case, the snakes were in a position to create AI and/or time travel in responce to the mysterious appearance of Slippy.
* While at first the TimePolice could be interpreted to have metaphorically sent the snakes "back to the stone age" by beating up some "original" tool-using snake, we can see in the cave art that the snakes are already hunting prey in groups with spears and the female is wearing clothing, so the "prevent tool use" ship has clearly sailed. The key detail is that the male "tool using" snake was dragging the unconscious female back to his cave, implying a desire to mate with her. When the Time Cops intervene she slithers away, preventing the mating and thus creating [[ButterflyEffect significant changes]] to the timeline that prevents the discovery of Snake Time Travel.
* If "Wubba Lubba Dub-Dub" is supposed to mean "[[spoiler: I am in great pain, please help me]]", it's possible that another reason Rick used it as a catchphrase is that it could also mean something similar like "Man, what a pain!" [[MetaphoricallyTrue That would make it a more fun catchphrase without actually twisting the meaning of the words.]]
* Why does the disabling magic spell actually ''work'' on Rick? If magic is indeed distinguishable from science, then it is 100% in character for Rick to use it. Hell, [[SufficientlyAnalyzedMagic he may not actually know the difference between magic and science]] since it exists. Case in point, this quote from episode 9 of season 1:
-->'''Rick:''' Hey, Morty, let me *''urrrrp''* let me *''urrrrp''* let me ask you a question real quick. Does evil exist, and if so, can one detect and measure it?\\
'''Morty:''' Ummm--\\
'''Rick:''' Rhetorical question, Morty. The answer's yes, you just have to be a genius.
** He knows how to bloody detected '''Evil''', which is a man-made concept. Rick thinks that if something such as magic exists, then you only have to be smart enough to be able to detect and measure it.
** Alternatively, he may not be aware that his new body is a magic-user.
* The dragons being portrayed as sluts makes a lot more sense when you realise they're making fun of Dungeons and Dragons and in that game, dragons can interbreed with anything.
** It's also why Rick's technology fails to activate. In-universe gods and rules of magic enforce D&D's CompetitiveBalance to allow wizards, sorcerers, and other spellcasting classes to exist. Part of that is restricting what technologies and sciences can and can't be used in any given setting. A device that doesn't conform to those restrictions will fail to work, and even self-destruct.
* In the same episode, Summer spends most of her time as the party's ranger nailing shot after improbable shot...until she has to make a precision aimed shot to free Balthromaw. At which point she hits him in the eye instead, causing Rick to yell in pain and alert the wizard. Many a story exists of D&D players being humiliated by rolling a CriticalFailure on an important skill check after a long string of high rolls and {{Critical Success}}es.
* Throughout Season 4 Rick and Morty have had ''a lot'' more animosity between one another, in particular when dealing with adventures led by Morty. It was only by ''The Vat of Acid'' episode that this became apparent why: Rick and Morty have become an AuthorAvatar and AudienceSurrogate respectively in regards to how they want the plot to go. Anytime Morty comes up with an idea, Rick will brush it off as stupid unless it aligns with what ''he'' thinks is a good idea, and Morty either going along with it anyway or browbeating Rick into doing it ends up causing nothing but problems, proving Rick right in the end.
** In ''Edge of Tomorty: Rick Die Repeat'', Morty gets his hands on a death crystal and tries to follow its visions so he can achieve what he thinks its showing him: growing old and dying with Jessica, to the point that when Rick is killed by his reckless driving, he refuses to bring him back and ignores Hologram Rick. This causes no end of bloodshed ranging from a bully being sent into the atmosphere, cops being disfigured, military being liquefied, and even a judge being DrivenToSuicide, with Morty being a walking ShoutOut to Manga/{{Akira}} by the end of it. It takes Rick coming in with Wasp Rick to stop Morty, and then Hologram Rick becomes corporeal and goes mad with power, requiring Wasp Rick kill him. By the end, Morty learns Jessica is planning on working in Hospice, making him realize he misinterpreted the visions and the events of the entire episode AllForNothing.
** In ''One Crew Over the Crewcoo's Morty'', Rick concocts the entirety of the events of the episode after learning Morty is writing a Heist Movie script for Netflix and being forbidden from telling him no by Beth. By the end of it, Morty is disillusioned and left none the wiser to Rick's actions, and is all set to keep adventuring with him.
** In ''Claw and Hoarder: Special Ricktim's Morty'', Morty only agreed to go with Rick if he was given a dragon, even throwing a tantrum when Rick says no and causing their car to crash, and ''still'' wanting one after waking up in the hospital. Rick gives him one, but it backfires when Balthromaw doesn't really want to ''do'' anything with him and binds with Rick instead, leading Morty being disillusioned with dragons, and both Rick and Summer blaming Morty for what they consider the "Worst Adventure Ever".
** In ''Rattlestar Ricklactica'', Morty's refusal to stay in the car causes him to get bit by the snake alien, and even when told not to get involved with its planet, Morty buys Slippy and sends her there to replace it. All this does is start a parody of a Franchise/{{Terminator}} TimeTravel plot requiring they get the TimePolice to fix it, with Rick repeatedly telling him to next time "Stay in the fucking car!", marking this adventure as the last of Morty's freebies, and then landing Morty a black eye to preserve the StableTimeLoop.
** In ''The Vat of Acid Episode'', after Morty acts as an AudienceSurrogate and disparages Rick's titular idea when it doesn't work, he gets into a heated argument over Rick never suggesting his ideas, Rick angrily deciding to actually do Morty's SaveScumming idea, Morty all too excited to use it without asking Rick about the details. He later learns that Rick, being an adamant hater of TimeTravel, didn't actually make him a SaveScumming device, but one he directly compares to Film/ThePrestige, with everything Morty did having consequences. He then goes on to reveal the entire reason he did this was [[EvilIsPetty to prove how wrong Morty was and make him admit the Vat of Acid was a good idea]], and that Morty wasn't even speaking to ''his'' Rick, and that the Vat of Acid idea was a multiversal ''constant'' among Ricks. Rick seemingly going ahead at first can be seen as a blatant case of PanderingToTheBase, only to then show why that plot ''wouldn't'' work and being petty over the fans dismissing the ''original'' plot by making ''it'' the thing that resolves the problem.
** The one episode Morty has an idea that ''isn't'' disparaged by Rick is in ''Never Ricking Morty'', where Rick praises Morty for buying the Story Train. This idea Rick supporting still fits because the Story Train is a blatant reference to Dan Harmon's "Story Circle", and fittingly, when it breaks by going OffTheRails, Rick derides Morty for wanting to return it, instead telling him to just [[StatusQuoIsGod throw it away]] and buy another one. In the train itself, the characters fulfill their ''own'', more blatant, Meta Commentary:
*** Rick represents Harmon, as he repeatedly lambastes the passengers for being so obsessed with him and points out the flaws in their stories. Similarly, the way he defeats Story Lord is a microcosm of his relationship with Morty when acting as an AuthorAvatar to Morty's AudienceSurrogate: by taking the story Story Lord tried to tell and hijacking it so that it ''fails'', allowing Rick and Morty to jump ship while the bad idea is left behind.
*** Morty represents the average fan, confused by the meta nature and questioning how much of whats going on is canon. Similarly, his questioning of whether the things Story Lord is draining out of them were canon is representative of the fans wondering about said characters, with Ricks response of "They could've been" being the ShrugOfGod Harmon has been known to use, and he's been on record as saying he tends to not make a decision about canon until it actually happens, and that he tries to ''avoid'' {{fanon}} so that it doesn't corrupt the ideas he has for the series.
*** The passengers represent the toxic fans. They constantly gush about how they had adventures with Rick and we get little vignettes to represent them, representative of the ideas ''they'' want to see. Similarly, they assume everyone ''else'' on the train has something to do with Rick, representative of how they assume others will agree with their ideas, and when someone challenges their ideas, much like how Rick in disguise did with Goomby's story, they either ignore him or tell him to tell a ''better'' story, representative of LetsSeeYouDoBetter.
*** The "Tickets Please Guy" represents the EnsembleDarkhorse, a character fans end up liking so much and think things would be better if they were more involved in the story even though they're just a OneSceneWonder, with the two aliens watching and talking about "Floaty Blood Man" representing the fans who engage in {{fanon}} to the point they consider it canon, specifically acting as if "Floaty Blood Man" is this all powerful god, when he's really just an old man spewing blood while speaking nonsense, who is himself just the delusion of the "Tickets Please Guy" as he floats in the vacuum of space, or as Rick calls it: non-canon.
*** The Story Lord represents the network executives that work with Harmon. He is the conductor of the Story Train and plans to "propel it to its final stop", representative of the show being owned by the network and its greenlighting of 70 more episodes for the show, and his incapacitation of Rick and Morty to "extract their story potential" could potentially represent what happens when the network gets full creative control over the show. Similarly, the vignettes he shows involving many {{Fandom Specific Plot}}s (such as the return of Lincler, Tammy and Phoenix Person fighting Summer and Rick, and Evil Morty leading an army of Ricks) look like they came out of a bad fanfiction, representing the executives PanderingToTheFanbase as much as possible with no regard for the spirit of ''Rick and Morty''; this in turn showcases both its pursuit of maximum money and viewership and its failure to grasp what the fanbase truly loves about the franchise. Even the way he's beaten by Rick (by having his story hijacked to the point that the train grinds to a halt) is representative of Harmon pulling a TorchTheFranchiseAndRun on the executives by deliberately killing his own franchise so badly that it simply cannot continue, and therefore cannot be used and twisted by the network anymore.
*** However, despite this, the Story Lord also reasonably serves as a ''parody'' of Harmon himself for some of those same reasons, as well as the fact that his "Story Circle" serves as the layout of the train, and his VillainousBreakdown when beaten is reminiscent of Harmon having a CreatorBreakdown if he was forced to make a story he didn't want to write. Furthermore, while stuck there, he proceeds to {{deconstruct|edTrope}} Jesus' religious origin, turning a story he ''didn't'' want to write into one he ''would'' write to show why it doesn't work.
* In ''Rest and Ricklaxation'', it may seem strange at first that Morty, when freed of the aspects he considers toxic, becomes a flat out [[TheSociopath sociopath]]. However, there are many indications, both before and after this episode, that Morty is fairly sociopathic by nature, and it's only his neurotic guilt that usually keeps him in check. By removing the neuroticism, the spa removed the only thing keeping him in check.
** In ''Rick Potion #9'', Morty becomes so desperate to go out with Jessica he sets off the plot by having Rick make him a love potion, with Rick directly comparing it to a "roofie" potion when Morty tries to lay the blame for the world being Cronenberged on him.
** In ''Get Schwifty'', Morty is perfectly willing to abandon the Earth after the Cromulons conscript it into "Planet Music", and when Rick reveals that his Portal Gun ''was'' charged, Morty accuses him of being lazy rather than the more reasonable not wanting to abandon Earth. Bird Person even {{lampshade|Hanging}}s that ''In bird culture, this is considered a dick move.''
** In ''The Ricks Must Be Crazy'', after he, Rick, and Zeep are trapped in the Tinyverse, he abandons Rick to go live in the woods after getting fed up with his feud with Zeep, only to return months later, capture the two of them, and threaten them into working together because he's sick of living there.
** In ''Big Trouble in Little Sanchez'', he's willing to remain blissfully ignorant of Tiny Rick's rather blatant signs of problems just so he can get with Jessica, only stepping in after seeing Summer be humiliated and right before Tiny Rick can kill regular Rick, Rick {{lampshad|eHanging}}ing how eager Morty was to sell Rick out.
** In ''Look Who's Purging Now'', Morty reaches his RageBreakingPoint after being forced to listen to the Old Man who CantTakeCriticism, then not only kills him with no remorse, but then proceeds to slaughter dozens of purgers, as well as people who were just ''hiding'', even threatening to purge Rick just for telling him to calm down. Even ''[[EvenEvilHasStandards Rick]]'' is unnerved by this enough to lie to Morty and claim it was just purgenol making him act like that.
** In ''The Rickshank Redemption'', during the standoff between Rick C-137 and one of the Council of Ricks, Morty ends up shooting Rick C-137 after being berated for screwing up Rick's plan, his only response to doing so being to ask what he ''thinks'' is Rick's corpse "Who's stupid now, [[ThisIsForEmphasisBitch bitch?!]]" While Rick ''had'' given him a fake gun with the instructions ''to'' shoot him, Morty wasn't aware of this, meaning Morty was completely willing to kill Rick just for being insulted one too many times.
** In ''Rickmancing The Stone'', Morty proceeds to vent his issues of the divorce with Armothy by murdering various fighters in the arena. He takes obvious joy in taking his anger out on other people, as long as it's not really him doing it. After Armothy passes on, though, he hesitates to finish killing the slaver because it's now clearly ''his'' decision, which means he's accountable for it.
** In ''The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy'', he tricks Rick into taking Jerry on an adventure so he can have a day off, then proceeds to berate Beth for how similar she is to Rick after her trying to fix Summer ruins it. Later, after Summer goes to where Ethan is and Beth and Morty meet up with her, he uses the Morphizer and casually disfigures Ethan for [[DisproportionateRetribution breaking up with Summer for someone with bigger breasts]], even when he's going only off what ''[[UnreliableNarrator Summer]]'' thought.
** In ''Morty's Mind Blowers'', one of the mind blowers showed Morty was perfectly willing to ''torture'' an alien just because Jessica almost got caught in the crossfire, something even ''[[EvenEvilHasStandards Rick]]'' was against.
** In ''Edge of Tomorty: Rick Die Rickpeat'', the A-Plot only occurs because Morty is shown a vision of dying with Jessica thanks to a death crystal, and he becomes so obsessed with making the vision a reality that he becomes an Manga/{{Akira}}, kills numerous people including cops and soldiers, has a judge DrivenToSuicide, and even got ''Rick'' killed at the beginning and refused to revive him. By the episodes end, he exhibits no remorse for any of his actions and is more just pissed off it was AllForNothing.
** In ''Claw and Hoarder: Special Ricktim's Morty'', Morty basically throws a tantrum when Rick refuses to give him a dragon, and despite their car crashing, the first thing Rick hears from him when they wake up in the hospital is him still demanding a dragon. When he finally gets Balthromaw, he treats him more like a pet and gets pissed off when he finds Rick spending time with and soul-bounding with him.
** In ''The Vat of Acid Episode'', Morty does ''a lot'' of KickTheDog moments while using what he thought was SaveScumming, including pantsing Goldenfold in the middle of class, pushing a wheelchair bound old man down and stealing his wheelchair, and numerous {{noodle incident}}s that land him several angry mobs and the S.W.A.T. force by the end, including doing ''something'' to the whales, NWordPrivileges of some kind, pissing off the NAARP, and something involving Gamergate, demonstrating again a willingness to abandon any semblance of morality if he feels he can't be held accountable.
** In ''Star Mort Rickturn of the Jerri'', Morty stops Rick from using the invisibility belt to get out of therapy only because he hates that Rick never lets him use it, even saying "Why should I let you use it? You never let me use it." When Rick lets Summer use it just to piss Morty off, he repeatedly fights with her while trying to take it, even attempting to trick Summer into giving him back the goggles he was using while giving her a normal belt. And after finally stealing it, he proceeds to use it to try and [[PowerPerversionPotential spy on the cheerleaders while they're showering]] ''and'' while he's masturbating. Yet when Summer steals it back after exposing him he calls ''her'' a [[YouMonster monster]] just for stopping him.
* Gaia's offspring all say "I am" upon being spawned. [[spoiler: Given that "I am" is how God introduces himself in Judeo-Christian mythology, it's a big clue as to who their true father is.]]
** [[spoiler:"God the father" ends up being a "Zeus" but still he was meant to evoke an offbrand Yahweh vibe. Ultimately it's probably meant to combine the imagery of Yahweh and the imagery of Zeus(who also probably inspires the personality) with the role of Ouranous (who sired children with Gaia and was the sky so to speak).]]
* Despite both Beth and Rick laughing off therapy sessions with Dr Wong, the Smith family is still shown attending it by Season 4 finale. It may seem a bit odd, unless one remembers "Morty's Mind Blowers" where Rick and Morty escaped their universe, so it just might be a different version of the Smith Family who thought Dr Wong had a point.
* It may seem odd that the Federation's laser destroys everything except Wrangler jeans, but then you remember the season 3 opener where Rick destroyed the galactic economy and everyone fought over what they believed was the new legal tender: pants.
* Rick's seeming cold and ambiguous reaction to Beth's concerns about being a clone in "The Rickchurian Mortydate" makes more sense when you discover in the Season 4 finale that not ''even Rick'' really knows if Beth is a clone or not.
* Using a fascist version of Morty to personify fans who want Rick and Morty to be like how it used to be may seem like nothing but a [[TakeThat needlessly mean-spirited joke]], but obsessing over tradition and rejecting modernity are major traits of fascism - they're literally number one and two on Umberto Eco's list of signs and potential seeds of fascism.
* Rick being despondent upon the discovery that he really did clone Beth and that he really is as terrible of a father as everyone else says he is might seem out-of-place given that he was pretty blase` about it before- take "The A-B-C's Of Beth", for example. However, this was back when he had ''erased his own memory'' of actually doing so. It doesn't take a dimension-jumping genius to suggest something that you haven't done or seen before and be desensitized to it- it's another to ''have'' actually done or seen something and understand its full ramifications. Not to mention the realization that he might have killed his original daughter if he had guessed wrong.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Season 5]]
* Rick's fear of Mr.Nimbus makes sense when you take into account that Nimbus can control the ocean and the police. That gives him control of 75% of the Earth's surface and then a lot of power to harass Rick in his civilian life. Fighting Nimbus would require Rick to use his science to ruin the biosphere and destroy a large portion of the government. So Rick appeases him to avoid having to move to another dimension.
** Likewise, Nimbus by all accounts shouldn't be Rick's worst enemy given the number of sworn foes that we have seen for four seasons and counting. After all, as Jerry pointed out, Rick got into a tussle with Zeus in the previous season. But what does Rick hate more than violent people? Beings that understand him, and get under his skin. Nimbus hurts Rick more by bringing up Diane, and how she wouldn't like that her husband became a washed-up alcoholic nihilist that takes his family for granted. Heck, Nimbus overheard the fight where Morty refused to be a witness for Rick's treaty and Morty says that he is tired of being his grandfather's errand boy. 
** Mr. Nimbus is probably the origin of Rick's fear of pirates - If he were ever caught by pirates, he'd probably be taken onto an ocean-going ship, thereby breaking the treaty between land and sea.
* In the first episode of the season, the Narnia dimension is attacked by a mysterious being from a portal, who ruins their lives for seemingly no reason. They devote their lives to slaying the invader, develop incredible technology in their quest to do so, and eventually use their own portal to try and hunt him down. In the last episode of the season, we find out that [[spoiler: in Rick's past, a being came from a portal, destroyed everything he loved on a whim, and he devoted himself to finding him and getting vengeance]].
* In "Mortiplicity", all the decoy families have different reactions to their situations. Some choose to kill other decoy families, some commit suicide, and others hide. Why do people who are basically the same five people have such wildly different reactions? CloneDegeneration might be why. The big picture might be the same but the little details in their brains that are affected by being copies of a copy can explain why they pick different choices than another decoy Smith Family.
* The ease at which the Squids [[WorfEffect are able to kill the decoy families]] is a major clue to their true identities, however the audience is itself decoyed by the decoy family's status as decoys until the reveal. In hindsight there is naturally [[TheOnlyOneAllowedToDefeatYou only one real adversary]] that is able to so casually take out a Rick.
** Becomes even more brilliant after Rick's backstory is revealed. Our Rick can so easily kill other Ricks that he's become bored of it and since these decoys are clones of that Rick, it's obvious the real deal should be able to kill an entire army worth of Rick decoys.
* Wooden Jerry is even more of a DirtyCoward than regular Jerry... Because he was programmed by an already-degraded Rick. Rick has a notoriously low opinion of Jerry, and since the decoy Rick that programmed Wooden Jerry already got lazy with the design, he could have let his personal biases get in the way, making this version of Jerry worse than the real one would ever be.
* Mr. Always Wants To Be Hunted was found in a cryo pod and if you don’t hunt him, he hunts you instead. It’s also implied something bad happens if you successfully hunt him as well. It’s possible he was in that cryo-pod because the last person who hunted him shoved him into it to end the hunt.
* In the first episode of Captain Planet and the Planeteers, Gaia mentions that the Heart is the most powerful and most important of the five rings. Planetina and the Tina-Teers are missing their version of Ma-Ti and his Heart Ring. So it shouldn’t be a surprise that the Tina-Teers are horrible people who see Planetina as a product rather than a person and Planetina herself becomes an ecoterrorist willing to murder hundreds of people and more in order to save the planet.
** In WesternAnimation/CaptainPlanetAndThePlaneteers the emphasis in the title is on the Planet. With Planetina and the Tina-Teers the emphasis is on...Tina.
* When the asian Tina-Teer wanted to produce a continuous stream of dirt, she said "dirt" multiple times. When Morty wanted to produce a similar effect with the air ring, he simply said "Airs".
** ...what does that mean?
*** The rings accept either the singular noun multiple times or the plural of the noun to create the same effect of multiple elemental blasts. Meaning the rings are far more versatile than the users give them credit, not surprising with how little Tina-teering they seem to do anymore. Morty, with more experience under his belt with weird quasi magi-tek than them, is able to realize that and much more efficiently use the rings than their original wielders.
* The fifth season premiered on June 20, 2021. A certain other adult-oriented cartoon, WesternAnimation/SouthPark, had its fifth season premiere on June 20, 2001. How coincidental is it that these two shows had their fifth seasons begin on June 20th of the first year of their perspective decades? This had to have been intentional.
* At the end of "Mortiplicity", the (presumably) real Rick in space receives an alert that the decoy family has died. "Decoy family", as in, only one family. Rick only ever made one decoy family before leaving for space and was never aware of the Azimov's Cascade that followed suit. This makes sense, as decoys who made decoys were also unaware that their decoys made more decoys. The fact that he gets this alert at the end of the episode means the original decoys were the last to die. This also makes sense, as the last two decoy families--the Beacon and Muppet families--were smart enough to create a beacon and draw all other decoys in one place and disguised themselves as obviously fake but harmless decoys, which makes it the most likely that they are the most free from CloneDegeneration and closest to the originals.
* Rick and Morty, both turned into turkeys, automatically turn back into humans after a certain amount of time. Looks like Rick learned his lesson when he turned himself into a pickle and was stuck as a pickle since Beth took the syringe that contained the serum that would've turned him back into a human.
* A running gag in the Thanksgiving episode is that characters keep mistaking Thanksgiving for "America's Birthday", ie the 4th of July. However according to the backstory with the aliens, in a way it really is.
* In the Go Tron episode the stinger "revealed" that the "monsters" are just size expanded, cross dimensional insectoids trying to inform others about the cure for AIDS. One might recall that the first monster the Smith family defeated was perceived to be attacking an [[{{Gayborhood}} alien Golden Gate Bridge]][[note]]San Francisco was ground zero for the AIDS crisis in the United States[[/note]].
* 'Rickternal Friendshine of the Rickless Mort' reveals that our Rick's original Beth was killed by Prime Rick when she was a child, which is confirmed two episodes later; and following his failure to find Prime Rick, ours has been transporting himself into universes where Beth is alive. With someone like Prime Rick on the loose, potentially killing Dianes and Beths, the creation of Froopyland, an entirely harmless world for the child Beth to live in, makes a lot more sense. It's unclear how true it is that Beth was a danger to other kids (after all, our Rick never saw a Beth grow up from childhood to adulthood), but every Rick that created a Froopyland likely wanted some way to protect their Beth, were Prime Rick coming to kill theirs as well.
** It would also explain why Rick made all those dangerous inventions for Beth even though it freaked him out. If Prime Rick appeared to kill her, having her always be armed meant she could protect herself, and constantly agreeing to make her weapons instead of saying no would encourage her to be violent, so she wouldn't hold back if he ever attacked her. That fact that Rick was knowingly turning his daughter into a killing machine would definitely freak him out, even if he avoids those thoughts by saying it was just how Beth was.
* In hindsight, Rick choosing [[Series/BreakingBad Walter White’s house for his “fabricated” origin story]] makes total sense. [[https://therickiest-rick.tumblr.com/post/661559169864859648/rick-didnt-even-care-about-killing-other-ricks As one tumblr user put it]]:
--> His entire life has been about family this ''entire'' fucking time. Burning, horrible loss and family. I honestly think Rick is the most misunderstood character on television...he was always talking about how family didn't matter. When this entire time, it was all his life revolved around.
* It’s said it’s impossible to fabricate memories in the Brainalyzer in “The Rickshank Redemption” and with Rick confirming the backstory he showed in that episode actually turned out to be true, it likely is true that one cannot fabricate memories in a Brainalyzer. But they can alter small details as well as not reveal the whole memory.
** Plus it's established that Rick ''hates'' canon, especially in relation to himself. Of course he's not going to admit to showing the worst day of his life to anyone, much less one of the biggest headaches in his life. Knowing Rick he lied through his teeth about the whole memory being fake.
* Rick's backstory as shown in "Rickmurai Jack" explains why he was the Citadel's first suspect in the Rick serial killings in "Close Rick-counter of the Rick Kind": the entire Citadel's existence was predicated on Rick's prior murders of his alternate selves.
** Even when Rick was helping to build the Citadel it was clear he wasn't all that enthusiastic about the whole deal. The Council probably defaulted to always making him the prime suspect whenever trouble happened to other Ricks because they knew how tenuous the peace they had with him really was and anytime trouble cropped up they were likely worried that Rick finally snapped and decided to pick up where he left off.
* It may seem odd that the special anime intro for "Rick and Two Crows" is only 30 seconds long. That's because it's not a parody of traditional anime intros, which tend to be 90 seconds long, it's a parody of the shortened ''Creator/{{Toonami}}'' versions of anime intros!
* The title of the episode "Rickmurai Jack" might at first seem to refer to Rick's anime-esque adventures as a sword-wielding adventurer with his two crows in the first part of the episode, but what is ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'' about? A lone wanderer sent through a portal into a strange alien world, trying to go on after having lost everything, on a futile quest to either defeat the one who destroyed his home, or somehow return there. That describes Rick's revealed backstory, too.
* Fridge Heartwarming. Despite everything and everyone in the universe saying Rick shouldn't care about Morty (that he's replaceable livestock to Ricks and that he isn't even his real grandson) it's amazing our Rick still loves his Morty as much as he does.
* The comics recently revealed the origins of both Rick and Bird-Persons friendship and The Council of Ricks, both of which were completely contradicted in the last three episodes of season 5. Why? In one issue of the comic Rick and Morty travel to a world where Morty is a genius and Rick is his BumblingSidekick, this Morty even metions the existance of a Citadel of Morty's. The "Central Finite Curve" ensures that TV!Rick and Morty could never access a universe where a Morty would be smarter than a Rick, and any Rick and Morty that could would never have access to any world TV!Rick and Morty would ever go to. So to access this world Comics!Rick and Morty and their Bird Person and Citadel of Rick's must exist outside of the "Central Finite Curve".
* Evil Morty's new portal is yellow instead of the standard green of Rick's portals. Rick's dominant colour pallette is blue--his shirt, his hair, even his skin has a cool undertone. Morty's pallette is warmer, with a yellow shirt, brown hair, and even his skin has a warmer tint to it. Green is the colour associated with Rick ''and'' Morty adventures, because it's what you get when you mix blue and yellow--a Morty without a Rick is a yellow without a blue.
* Almost all the Ricks we've seen being treated like crap or in dead-end jobs are the ones that don't have a "C-" designation -- The D-series Ricks, Doofus Rick, the factory worker. With the reveal of the Central Finite Curve, now we know why: these Ricks are the loser Ricks who aren't the smartest beings in their universe, and at best are refugees in a multiverse surrounded by those that are.
** Alternatively, we don't know the algorithm that decides what puts the universe on Central Finite Curve and what makes Rick the smartest being in the universe. It is possible that D-series Ricks all have the potential to become "the smartest being in their universe" but that potential was curbed, cut in the bud and undernurished like a bonsai tree. Maybe by giving them a portal gun instead of letting them develop it themselves?
** Back in season 3, the Rick used to make the Simple Rick's cookies, the one that wasn't an inventor, was described as hailing from "16 iterations off the Central Finite Curve''. It seems the further out of the Curve you go, the less genius Ricks there are.
* Evil Morty calls the Central Finite Curve a crib. That is exactly what it is. A place where Ricks can play with their friends without worrying anything bad is going to happen to them. A C-level Rick is the smartest man in any universe he enters, with enough preparation time he can solve any problem and kill anyone. And if he dies? He will just get resurrected in one of the alternative universes where he is also the smartest man thanks to one alternative Operation Phoenix, as we see in "Edge of Tomorty: Rick Die Rickpeat". And if he dies in that universe, he will resurrect in another. This brings another level to Evil Morty's sabotage of Operation Phoenix: the first universe every Rick will wake up will be above Evil Morty's blender, every next one is unknown. It might take a long time for other "murdered" Ricks to get home and with the destruction of the Central Finite Curve, it is not a certainty they will wake up in Operation Phoenix of a "Rick friendly", if fascistic, world.
** This also explains why no matter which universe we see throughout the show, we never see a Rick that doesn't have the ability to be the smartest being in the universe. The Central Finite Curve ensures that they cannot travel to universes without this deciding trait.
* It makes total sense why Rick is so different from the other Ricks of the Citadel -- he ''didn't'' want to be a super-smart scientist, he was forced down that path by other Ricks, and slaughtered untold legions of them trying to find the Rick that killed his family. The Citadel was created out of this chaos and he wanted no part of it, and thus he galvanized his multiversal selves into uniting against him. And then they began manipulating Beths and Jerrys together to create Mortys. The Citadel is a symbol of everything that Rick hates about existence and a reminder of the loss of his family and his failure to avenge him, and he's so bitter and cynical compared to other Ricks because he's the only Rick among them that was forced down this path in life instead of choosing it.
* The Morty Market also explains why Rick hates Jerry -- he's only with Beth because the Citadel made it happen, and Rick knows that on some level, he's responsible for hooking his daughter up with a man like Jerry just for the sake of giving him a sidekick for his adventures. At the same time, it explains why he never tried to kill or remove Jerry outside of season 3: he knows Jerry is just another victim of the Citadel, manipulated down this path, so he doesn't hate Jerry as a person so much as what he represents. Causing the divorce and his ultimate attempt at killing Jerry in season 3 is because Jerry tried to take away the family Rick wished he had. And that's also the reason why Rick stopped interfering with Beth and Jerry after Season 3, they got above the Citadel's influence and got back together of their own volition.
* Since it’s likely Bird Person knows some or most of Rick’s backstory, Memory Rick hating what his future self becomes is more understandable. In his eyes, Rick not only became a cynical suicidal alcoholic but also gave up on getting revenge for their murdered family and just replaced Beth by going to a universe where Rick abandoned her. Of course he’s going to hate what his future self becomes.
* Rick [[TakeAThirdOption decision to do both]] when Beth gives him an ultimatum, to either be a part of her life or let her go, gets more sad when it’s revealed this Beth isn’t his actual daughter and that it was only thanks to a drunken bender that he came back into her life. Rick making the choice to try to have both, to continue having Beth in his life while also letting her go to realize her potential, was likely made because of his conflicting emotions, knowing he has no right to be a part of this Beth’s life but also not wanting his daughter to leave him again.
* Rick helping out Jaguar back in season 3 makes more sense after the reveal. Rick didn't want Jaguar to lose his daughter like Rick did (not knowing she was already dead). Him also blatently lying about only Rick having infinite daughters is also because Rick didn't want Jaguar to experience the same guilt Rick feels for replacing his deceased daughter.
* "Rickmurai Jack" answers a long-standing question: why did the Ricks in "Rickshank Redemption" seem so confused by the fact that Morty identifies himself as "Morty C-137?" [[spoiler:Because there never *was* a Morty C-137. Beth C-137 died as a child, therefore, he was never born in that universe.]]
** It also explains why the Council are so eager to blame Rick for Evil Morty’s killing spree back in "Close Rick-Counters Of The Rick Kind" — [[spoiler:''Rick has slaughtered other Ricks en masse before, and he was '''scary''' good at it.'']]
** His aversion to taking women on adventures, first mentioned in "Raising Gazorpazorp", may stem from [[spoiler:the trauma of watching his wife and daughter get murdered in front of him]].
** His multiple-season-spanning arc about supposedly not caring about his family? Makes complete sense when you learn [[spoiler:they literally ''aren't'' his family — and not just in the "infinite multiverse" sense, but literally none of them are "his" family because his Beth never even got the chance to grow up, let alone marry and have kids.]]
** This also shines a new light on his contempt for Beth & Jerry's marriage, since it's [[spoiler:(in most universes at least) manufactured entirely by the Citadel to ensure every timeline has a Morty]].
* The Planetina episode opens with an acid rain villain. This helps further the reference to the 80'sness of captain planet as acid rain is one of the few environmental issues humanity has ever really solved.
* Of course fascist Morty likes Mr. Meeseeks - a wilful slave who disappears as soon as he stops being useful.
* In "The Old Man and the Seat", Tony tells Rick about his wife recently dying to garner sympathy before he killed him. Rick became furious and found a version of Tony who's wife didn't die who still used his toilet then gave him a speech about [[FreudianExcuseIsNoExcuse not using his dead wife as an excuse.]] As first it was just presented as using Rick's bathroom being a BerserkButton but given recent revelations this reaction makes sense. [[spoiler:While running the Citadel of Rick's, Rick was forced to spend time with other versions of himself who's relationships with Diane and Beth deteriorated naturally due to their ego and selfishness. As much pain as he was in due to losing his family, he was given no choice but to accept that his most negative traits were deeply ingrained in his personality and didn't develop as a result of their deaths. Him finding another version of Tony who's wife didn't die was the first of many NotSoDifferentRemark's betweeen them.]]
* The Ricks' portal guns were the tool that let them become the smartest and most dominant beings in their universes. How does Evil Morty beat all the Ricks? [[spoiler: He turns the Citadel, the ultimate symbol of the Ricks' authority, into a giant portal gun that uses the Ricks as fuel]].
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Season 6]]
* The revelation of main Morty's timeline being Weird Rick’s timeline casts many events of the first season in a new light, such as why Rick is so cavalier about destroying the entire world with random animal DNA. Why should he give a shit about the home planet of [[spoiler:the guy who killed his family]]? It also creates a case of “Schrödinger's Asshole” vis-à-vis Main Rick’s treatment of Morty; does he subconsciously resent Morty for [[spoiler:being the grandchild of the man Rick hates most]]? Or was this just Rick being Rick?
* Weird Rick shows no animosity towards the Jerry of his universe and is even polite towards him, despite most Ricks hating Jerry so much that our Rick planned around their inability to stop bullying him. Why is this? It’s because according to our Rick, Weird Rick doesn’t give a single damn about his family, including Beth. Most of Rick’s hatred towards Jerry stems from him impregnating his daughter and chaining her down with his sorry ass. Since Weird Rick doesn’t care about Beth, he has no underlying hatred of Jerrys and just like everyone else, he doesn’t give a crap about them.
** Prime Rick does however mention that he has heard of the concept, likely from other Ricks. He's never been invested in his family or any other version of it across the multiverse, so he may have some knowledge of what Jerrys represent to Ricks, but he hasn't experienced it himself. Even if he did know why he should spite Jerry, Prime Rick's thing is that he does not care about anything, so would he even care enough to do so?
* The revelation that "our" Rick isn't the native Rick of Main Morty's timeline but a dimension hopper who took his counterpart's place after Prime Rick killed his own timeline's version of his daughter actually explains a ''lot'' of Rick's JerkAss attributes. For starters, it neatly explains his cynical assertions that no individual is special and can easily by replaced by any of their multiversial counterparts; it's a philosophy he's using to justify using "our" Beth and her offspring as ReplacementGoldfish. It also explains why he'd go to the trouble of setting himself up to take another Rick's place as main Beth's dad, only to then neglect her; not only is Rick just inherently a toxic person, but in ''this'' Rick's case, he's also being a massive hypocrite, and there's only so much of that he can take.
** Building on from that, "our" Rick probably has idealized his own timeline's version of his daughter, since she was killed when she was a little kid. This would contribute to why he's so passive-aggressively abusive to the mainline characters; whilst Rick would hate Jerry as unworthy of his daughter in any case, for reasons he's spelled out, he's also got reasons to see mainline Beth as an InadequateInheritor. Firstly, the fact she was dumb enough to have sex with a loser like Jerry. Secondly, the whole Froopyland debacle; once he realized that this replacement Beth was so crazy, he almost certainly would have started demonizing her, especially since there's no evidence that her counterpart in Dimension C-137 acted in such a way.
* “Solaricks” puts some throwaway gags into a new light. Since it’s finally confirmed that the main Rick wasn’t from C-137, a couple of his jokes (specifically, about there being a movie similar to Film/{{Cocktail}} called “Cuisine”, or a song sounding like “Tutti Frutti” by a guy named Tiny Rogerts) make more sense - he was probably mixing up his original reality with the one he was living in.
* In "Mortyplicity", the future Wooden Jerry wakes up looks like a dry wasteland. When Mr. Frundles spread to the planet itself, it's shown the ocean drains into its giant mouth. Looks like we've just seen why the future becomes the one Wooden Jerry first wakes up in.
* Things like soldiers attacking Rick's meeting with other Morty fragments for not doing religion right can possibly be explained away by Morty himself believing the government itself would attack other religions without good reason, thanks to Rick's own rants about government and religion. Whatever way Morty believes society works is how the population of the Roy game acts like the world works.
** Furthermore: The relatively small number of countries that Rick meets up with can be linked to Morty's probable GlobalIgnorance.
* After Marta convinces some soldiers to embrace Mortyism, the Morty fragments start chanting "Oh Geez", which is their unified self's {{catchphrase}}. But furthermore, "Oh Geez" is a minced oath form of "Oh Jesus", making the chanting all the more appropriate for a "religion" like Mortyism.
* The Roy game world is clearly based on Earth. It's interesting that Rick says there are ''5 billion'' [=NPCs=] in the game, since the current population of Earth is over 7 billion. But 5 billion was the population of Earth ''in 1987'', which not only represents the in-game player starting point, but is quite possibly the year the Roy game was created, and on a meta level is a reference to the 80s being the golden age of video arcades, an atmosphere that Blips and Chitz is clearly trying to emulate.
* At the end of "Bethic Instinct", after all the instances of ScrewYourself that have been going on or discussed in the episode, Jerry goes to the Jerryboree to partake in some of it of his own; however, he ends up keeping it to a simple kiss to another Jerry. A possible reason may be that Jerry is an AmazonChaser (we've only seen him with strong women - Beth and Kiara). As a result, a Jerry might be the last type of person a Jerry would feel sexually attracted to.
** Also, going by the interpretation that Beth fell in love with Space Beth due to them being both incredibly narcissistic, it can also be inferred that Jerry didn't feel a strong sense of attraction to the other Jerry because of his lack of self-esteem.
* In "Solaricks", after Rick reveals that he secretly enhances Morty for defense purporses, the latter wonders why he doesn't do the same for Jerry. Two episodes later in "Bethic Twinstinct", we find out that Rick has given Jerry his most wanted feature, the pillbug protocol, the ultimate emotional defense mechanism.
* When Jerry finally comes out of his pillbug defense shell, he explains to Beth that instead of killing himself, he would "cry while looking for a job in Starbucks Wi-fi". This provides an excellent reason for why Jerry is still jobless 6 seasons in. While he is perfectly capable of getting a new job, he has no need to do so, being financially supported by Beth's job. Here, since he would no longer have that luxury, he would finally attempt to find a job.
* Night Jerry at the end of "Night Family" plugs his ears when Night Rick shoots the machine. He has a good relationship with Day Jerry and is trying to preserve his hearing.
* The Night Family doesn't really go off the deep end until Night Summer's influence kicks in, which can be put down to a few factors:
** They don't really seem to gain much awareness until later in the episode. Given how the Night Family GrewBeyondTheirProgramming it's likely there weren't problems at the start because they hadn't been active long enough to develop their own sense of individuality.
** The family was tasking their Night selves with things that they were genuinely invested in so the Night Family wouldn't mind doing those things too much due to shared interests. And in Beth and Summer's cases they were learning skills such as language and music, which would be less physically tasking for their Night selves. The dishes though were a task the Night Family got saddled with just because their awake selves didn't want to deal with it, which crossed the line for the Night Family.
** Night Summer being the forerunner to turn the family against their awake selves makes sense when you stop and think on their personalities. Morty and Beth are pretty subservient to Rick even if they've become less willing to put up with his crap, Jerry loathes Rick on a good day but is too timid usually to really do anything about it and Rick himself has an ocean of self-loathing issues that go hand in hand with his stubborn pride. Summer on the other hand, while she has sought Rick's approval in the past, doesn't put up with her grandfather's garbage like the rest of the family. If anyone was going to snap over something ultimately minor because of Rick's {{Jerkass}} behavior it would most likely be Summer. And because of the above issues it would actually be pretty easy for Night Summer to win the rest of the Night Family over to her side.
* The Night Family offering a truce to Rick makes more sense when you remember that Rick said he was going to keep going until he won against them. Much like his actions against the President at the end of Season 3 Rick goes stomping around like he has the moral high ground when he really doesn't and winds up needlessly escalating a conflict when he doesn't have to. The Night Family cared far less about just getting the dishes washed and far more about getting Rick to concede he was being a stubborn ass for no reason other than his own pettiness.
** It also once again reflects Dr. Wong's assessment of him. He simply cannot accept anything mundane, like taking a few seconds to rinse his dishes, he ''has'' to escalate everything into a death-defying adventure, and when pushed on it, he pushes back ''[[DisproportionateRetribution hard]]''.
* In "Final [=DeSmithanation=]", Morty and Beth get "empty" fortunes that say "Family time is time well spent." But what do they do in the episode? Spend time with their family at the Zoo (and Morty spends time helping Summer mess with Jerry).
** Summer's says "Hard work often pays off." In this episode, she (along with Morty) works hard at making fun of Jerry's fear of his fortune.
** Why did Rick apologize for hitting Jerry? Because it wasn't Jerry's fault; the fortune forced him to declare Rick his friend, as it's shown the cookies force fate, and Jerry had no control over that.
** The episode's whole premise is basically one massive expansion on the old "Help. I'm being held hostage in a Chinese cookie factory" joke.
* [[StatusQuoIsGod The Smith-Sanchez family bounced back from them being broke in "Night Family" seemingly pretty easily.]] In "Final [=DeSmithation=]", Rick hacks into bank accounts and transfer billions of dollars of assets like it's nothing. No wonder they're completely fine now.
* The episode "Final Desmithation" is even more similar to ''Franchise/FinalDestination'' than you think. Namely, just like how Death's victims can't die until it is their turn in Final Destination, Fortune Cookie Users won't die until their fortunes are resolved. [[labelnote:*]] In ''Film/FinalDestination2'', Eugene tries to kill himself using Officer Burke's gun so he can go out on his own terms and not give Death the satisfaction. Since his turn has not yet arrived, all the bullets turn out to be duds, an extreme coincidence as noted by Officer Burke, who kept his gun fully loaded at all times. [[/labelnote]]
* How is that the guy who sticks to walls gets his insides sucked out, but not Rick, Jerry or Mrs. Smith ? Well, all three of them had unfulfilled fortunes at that point (Rick making a friend, and [[ParentalIncest the last two having sex]]). Meanwhile, the guy who stuck to walls already fulfilled his fortune of well... sticking to walls.
* Jerry fulfills Rick's "you will make a new friend" fortune, that by extension made him unable to die until it was fulfilled. When you stop to think about it, haven't we already met a Rick who has no interest in friends and does whatever the hell he wants? Rick is rightfully peeved that his immortality is gone, but Jerry may have unwittingly saved him from [[HeWhoFightsMonsters becoming just like (or even worse than) Rick Prime]].
** We also know from "Solaricks" that Rick Prime has HealingFactor. Given this and [[YoungerThanTheyLook him looking younger compared to]] Series!Rick, it can be believed he has some sort of ImmortalityImmorality. This makes him an excellent {{foil}} to the mortal and relatively kinder Series!Rick.
* The portal gun the Dinosaurs give Rick is supposed to be superior to Rick’s version but all it can do that Rick’s portal gun can’t is just show the user where the portal goes. The only times Rick didn’t know where the portal went was only when something was wrong with his portal gun or somebody else used the portal gun. Having the ability to see where the portal goes is thus a useless feature to him.
* While the three "dino improved" worlds lean heavily into the FutureImperfect trope with both the "skull foot" and "basket" configurations, we should not forget dinosaurs evolved on Earth. As alien life forms, the native species would have to take a lot of liberties slotting them into the native fossil record. Moreover, as much as this trope was present in Real Life Earth's history concerning paleontology, the show has [[ShownTheirWork incorporated the most recent science related to dinosaurs]] with the sauropods having pseudo-beaks and the Tyrannosaurus having feathers on her head and tail, but otherwise being predominantly scaly.
* Why did it take so long for Rick to fix the portal network? Why was he leaving the rift? He wanted to leave Rick Prime trapped in the Cronenberg-verse so he'd always know where to find him, to a degree.
* In the ''Never Ricking Morty'' stinger we learn that, in typical Rick fashion, the Story Train comes with ''living'' characters, but customers need not worry because those characters "have no souls". How did Story Lord seem to BecomeARealBoy and escape to Meta Reality? Fictional Rick and Morty trapped him in a Bible story with Jesus Christ which probably helped out with his lack of soul, thus making him a threat to the "real life" owners of the Story Train (which is not a surprising outcome for a Rick designed/produced toy).
** Although the premise of the episode is highly self referential to the RealLife show, Jan's job does make sense in universe. Based on what we learn in the ''Never Ricking Morty'' ad, the Story Train characters needed some sort of pre-loaded demonstration story or establishing framework to help the customers create their own Story Train stories. The Ricks would have needed to hire a writer (at low cost) and would have provided them a basic concept of what was technically needed to make the Story Train work, ie a Rickibury Tales or Batman Poker style anthology.
* In ''Analyze Piss'' the Pissmaster's long simmering depression presents a plausible explanation for his desire for a showdown with Rick. He somehow wins and turns his life around, thanks to the notoriety, or is killed in a form of [[SuicideByCop Suicide By Rick]].

[[/folder]]
[[folder:Season 7]]
* Why was Rick with Jerry's body, including brain, so quick to [[DrivenToSuicide kill himself]] in "The Jerrick Trap"? Because even without the intelligence of a "Rick", he still has all the emotional issues like his self-loathing and narcissism, just made worse by the fact that Jerry's brain likely has much more intense emotional centers compared to Rick's brain. Without his own brain's ability to numb the pain or emotionally detach himself, the issues become too much for him and he goes to blow his brains out.
* It seemed out of character for Dr Wong to pin all the blame on Rick, even though as he himself pointed out, he's well within his rights not to want to take the calls of the person who dumped him. But in the scene right before that, Rick tells Dr Wong to lie to Unity if that's what it takes to get her to help. She's taking Unity's side to make Unity more open to listening to her input, she doesn't actually believe that Rick is the one (or at least not the only one) at fault.
* The aliens only stop desiring the spaghetti after seeing Fred’s life onscreen despite knowing before it came from sentient beings. Most of the aliens shown wanting it don’t look human at all, thus it might be easier for them to dehumanize the humans where the spaghetti comes from. And the cans the planet sold the spaghetti in usually showed it came from reprehensible people and/or was willingly given. It’s only when they see Fred’s life that they realize these beings feel the same emotions they do and aren’t animals, thereby making them feel too guilty to eat another bite.
* Just like how "Rattlestar Ricklactica" showed the problem with time travel where time travelers will inevitably all go to one place to change time, creating utter chaos, "Unmortricken" shows it's the same with interdimensional travelers. Because infinite possibilities exist, so do infinite interdimensional travelers. And just like time travelers, they create utter chaos in places of interest.
[[/folder]]

!!FridgeHorror
[[folder: Fridge Horror]]
* There are many dangerous and deadly dimensions out there that can be easily accessible with the Portal Gun. One such place is called the "Blender Dimension", which you pretty much get eviscerated the moment you set foot there. It makes you wonder who would be crazy enough to want to go there in the first place. Not that it matters. It turns out the gun can be hacked to take any Rick who falls out of line there as some sort of death sentence.
* Why didn't Rick use Human DNA in Rick Potion Number 9? And why did he rescue Morty, but not his daughter or granddaughter? Same reason: To make Morty more dependent on him. As far as Morty knows, Rick is the only family he has left.
* At the end of 'Anatomy Park', Rick enlarges the hobo's dead body to help Morty and at the end, destroys the corpse with the dynamite he stuffed into the hobo's corpse. The hobo's blood rains upon the whole United States. Blood that came from a hobo that had many dangerous diseases kept inside him. And it gets ''worse''. Given that the cadaver was giant when it was blown up, you can take your panic: giant monster-sized virus, or said virus, normal sized, getting spread out everywhere. Either way, we're still going with the first pick. '''''[[ParanoiaFuel SWEET DREAMS]]'''''
** But it gains some NightmareRetardant when you find out that since the body exploded, all the viruses in there were clearly and obviously killed in the explosion.
*** Plus it exploded InSpace.
*** Given that Morty was full size, the diseases would be giant, and thus vulnerable to fall damage. They all would've died on impact when they hit the ground. Assuming they didn't burn up in the atmosphere or die in the vacuum of space.
* At the end of "Rick Potion #9" Rick seems completely uninterested at the fact that he jumped timelines while Morty is freaked out. Has Rick done this before? That would mean the last time he did it, he didn't even bring ''Morty'' from his original timeline, but simply changed places with the Rick Morty grew up with and Morty never realized it.
** Better yet, finding a timeline where one of his counterparts was able to solve the problem is plausible; just look for the most similar one where everyone's ''not'' dead. The headscratcher is; How did his [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jil8i5iS6eo "scouting"]] locate one where ''both'' he and Morty died exactly '''five seconds''' '''''before''''' they entered it? The only way to interpret that is that Rick has some way of telling when people are about to die. And only uses it to run from his biggest screw-ups.
** Or simply, due to infinite universes existing, Rick deduced a universe specifically where alternate Rick and Morty have to die for the replacement.
** We later find out that Rick mind-wipes Morty whenever Morty experiences something traumatic [[spoiler: or witnesses Rick do something mildy embarrassing]]. So why doesn't Rick wipe out ''this'' memory too? Because Rick ''wants'' Morty to experience this sort of trauma.
** [[spoiler: Confirmed as of season 6. The Rick we've been following all along is not from the dimension Morty is from. Though it turns out the original Rick from that reality is still alive and our Rick was trying to find him.]]
* [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick]] and [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Morty]] aren't going to fit in at ''all'' on "our" earth! They think and act like humans, while "our" [[spoiler:Cronenbergs]] are basically an unstable slurry of random genes and animal instincts. [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick's]] put himself and his grandson in incredible danger! How would he be so irresponsib--[[FridgeBrilliance Oh, wait. Yup, that's Rick, alright.]]
** [[spoiler: Cronenberg-Rick and Cronenberg-Morty]] came from a universe where everyone was turned back to normal except for them. If Rick and Morty had waited a little while longer, they wouldn't have had to travel to a universe where [[spoiler: they were both killed.]] Poor Morty...
*** It wouldn't matter because [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick and Cronenberg-Morty]] came from a universe where [[spoiler:everyone was originally a cronenberg]]. Rick and Morty would not have been able to [[spoiler:take their place there and return to their "normal" lives]] because [[spoiler:they lack the memories of being a cronenberg from birth]]. Plus, if that universe is anything like theirs than [[spoiler:Morty's family are still cronenbergs]].
** And unlike our Rick [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick]] brought them to a universe where [[spoiler:they presumably wouldn't be able to resume their previous lives]]. That might imply that [[spoiler:Cronenberg-Rick ran out of universes to do that with, making Rick's statement that him and Morty only get 3 or 4 these all the more true]].
** This also explains the presence of Cronenberg-Rick & Morty on the Citadel of Ricks. More than a simple running gag, this hints that the original C-137 world they traveled to still did not fit their needs. This would have been a combination of the above points (the other Cronenbergs had no intelligence, etc.) as well as what the C-137 Smith family was doing to survive, ''killing and eating Cronenbergs''. If Croneneberg-Rick or Morty tried to reconnect with their family, they would be killed outright. There is very little infrastructure left, so the Cronenberged duo can't even live somewhere else, as there is no food or energy producing facilities still running (the Smiths are watching Summer perform for entertainment and cook their food over a fire), meaning they will eventually starve to death. Going to the Citadel was the only way the two could survive.
* Another one at the end of "Rick Potion #9", you remember Leonard and Joyce? Jerry's parents? And their [[spoiler:sexual]] partner Jacob? And how Rick said that the [[spoiler: love potion doesn't affect anyone with their family's strain of DNA, then you don't need to be a genius to realize what could- nay, probably happened between the three of them.]]
* In 'Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind' Evil!Rick and our Rick are only divided by another Rick and there are Ricks far worse than him, judging by the scale which puts them in the middle.
** Maybe this is a reference to [[spoiler:the shadow council that Evil Morty killed as his last act before taking full power.]]
* [[spoiler: Maybe the reason Evil! Morty killed his Rick was that he was the Rick-est Morty on the Rick & Morty spectrum.]]
* It was said by the Council that 27 Ricks were murdered [[spoiler:but Evil Rick has hundreds of Mortys]] how many Ricks were murdered without the Council knowing?
* At the end of "Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind", Rick tries to comfort Morty saying that, since he's the Rick-est Rick, he must be the Morty-est Morty. But the "Rick-est Rick" is a positive statement only to him, he's actually extremely manipulative, self-centred and genocidal, and Morty is shown to have a ''lot'' of undealth-with rage. So what does exactly Rick considers to be "Morty-est"?
* Jerry's description of what he thinks a rapist looks like is pretty specific. Was [[spoiler: the Titanic recreation with Lucy not the first time he was in a rape scenario?]]
-->'''Jerry ("Pilot"):''' Well, now you can build baskets and watch Paul Newman movies on VHS and mentally scar the Boy Scouts every Christmas. [...]It's personal.
* Mr. Meeseeks is pretty much an Implacable Man. Nothing can kill it, except for fulfilling its task. They are able to survive being brutally mutilated, having massive chunks of its body, even entire limbs, torn off. And they will do absolutely ANYTHING to complete their goals, consequences be damned, and they have zero qualms with killing innocent bystanders. So...hopefully nobody ever gets the idea to use a Meeseeks to commit murder. It would be like the equivalent of a Terminator. Nothing would be able to stop it. Weapons won't work because it'll just shrug them right off to get to its target. And what if it starts taking too long, and the Meeseeks calls in more Meeseeks to help him out? Many police and loved ones, innocent bystanders, would die in the crossfire. There would be blood spilled all over, and Mr. Meeseeks is guaranteed to come out on top in the end because we CAN'T. KILL THEM. The only hope you'll EVER have of being safe from a Meeseeks is POSSIBLY destroying its entire body...But even then, it's likely you'll have an army of other Meeseeks to destroy...
** What happens if you steal the Meeseeks-Box, and task a Meeseeks to prevent being assassinated by a Meeseeks?
*** Assuming all Meeseeks are equally competent at carrying out their tasks, they go crazy after about a week of foiling each other's plans and decide to cut the problem off at the source (where the problem is you and the "source" probably represents your head). Unless one of them manages to succeed just by being luckier.
** Hilariously the game ''VideoGame/PocketMortys'' confirms this fear, as the Meeseeks Box is used to instantly defeat one opponent, regardless of their stats or hit points.
** And one of the recent shorts promoting season three shows that when a Meeseeks' body is destroyed, it'll just poof back into existence perfectly intact. There is truly no way to kill these things aside from completing their assigned tasks...
* The [[BlackComedy infamous]] Lucky Charms parody commercial played on inter-dimensional cable in "Rixty Minutes" opens up a really disturbing implication about where it came from: ''All children'' in that universe may just be exactly like the ones in the advert - KidsAreCruel taken up a notch. The advert's extreme sadism is just the marketers playing to their target demographic.
** The completely dead eyes of the children as they scoop out 'Lucky's' cereal from his intestines confirms this theory. In the RL commercials, the children are happy to be eating this treat. In this universe, the children go about this grim business, as they need to survive, doing so with a minimum of joy and effort.
* All it takes is one snarky comment from Morty about [[spoiler: Rick's alcoholism]] to knock away Rick's certainty in himself. What makes this especially horrifying? That small amount of uncertainty [[spoiler: is all Rick needs to make him essentially suicidal.]]
* Evil Rick says in "Close Rick-Counters" that his plan is to download the contents of other Ricks' brains, then kill them. [[spoiler: But Evil Morty was the one really controlling him. This means that Evil Morty has the knowledge of possibly ''hundreds'' of Ricks spanning multiple dimensions]].
** It's a little eerie that Rick [[spoiler: did a variation of that]] in The Rickshank Redemption. He [[spoiler: uploaded himself into the brains of other Ricks & then killed them.]] He's even [[spoiler: been in one of their bodies ever since]] & he's been a lot more callous lately. Their evil behavior could be influencing him.
* In "Close Rick-Counters," we see glimpses of prime Rick's memories when Evil Rick holds him captive. One of these memories is Rick holding Morty when he was only an infant. While it's really heartwarming to see him cry from such a memory, Rick has been gone from Beth's life for quite a long time. FridgeHorror kicks in when you think about how Rick could have hopped onto another reality, considering his general lack of emotion over crossing into a new one in ''Rick Potion #9''. If this is true, then ''what happened to Rick's original timeline''?
** On the other hand, it could simply be prime Rick's memory of holding an infant Morty from some other reality.
*** Or maybe Rick did visit when Morty was a baby but was never around after that. Beth did mention he tended to be gone and then come back when she was younger.
* Another one for "Close Rick-Counters": Was the Morty controlling evil!Rick evil all along? Or did he perhaps only become evil after years of abuse from evil!Rick, killing him rather than becoming a compliant tool like so many other Morties?
** Considering what [[spoiler: Morty did]] in The Rickshank Redemption, that's a strong possibility.
* The Jerry daycare in "Mortynight Run", where Rick and Morty pairs drop off their Jerrys when they go on adventures. However, sometimes, a Jerry's Rick and Morty never comes back, leaving them stranded in an alien dimension with no way home, and their only alternatives are either to live in the daycare for the rest of their lives, or brave the dangerous alien city outside. Also, the reasons for why a Rick and Morty never come to pick up their Jerry. Which is worse, them being killed during one of their adventures, or just abandoning Jerry to his fate? Also, how are those universe's versions of Beth and Summer reacting?
** Probably with [[ComedicSociopathy indifference]], because nobody really seems to care about [[ButtMonkey Jerry]].
** If you look closely, one of the checkboxes on the clipboard Rick signs is whether Jerry's stay is temporary or "forever." For all we know, the Ricks and Morties belonging to the left-behind Jerries could all be alive and well, having simply booted their Jerry from their lives.
*** This grants another interesting perspective: considering Beth is depicted in many episodes as "looking for the door" in her marriage, what if ''she'd'' put them up to the task?
*** there was one person in the daycare that wasn't a Jerry who explained that his earth's Beth remarried, could one Beth have done it twice.
* Fart's Music/DavidBowie-esque "Goodbye Moonmen" song is a nice little tune that could easily have been an extra track on ''Music/SpaceOddity'' or ''Music/TheRiseAndFallOfZiggyStardustAndTheSpidersFromMars'', but then you realize that is actually about his wish to genocide the disease he views carbon-based life as.
** Soooo, it still sounds like an extra track on a Bowie album? Some of that Ziggy Stardust/Diamond Dogs, apocalypse fun?
** It also makes his murder of the authorities chasing him far more disturbing. He made them slowly kill each other like dominos just by mentally destroying one's will to live. Imagine several millions of his species invading and destroying mankind simply by breaking them via MindRape.
* So, Blim Blam the Korblok was chained up by Rick so that the latter could cure his [[ThePlague "Space-AIDs"]], but ended up breaking free and leaving the planet due to Beth and Jerry. His [=Space-AIDs=] was never cured, and who knows what all species it could infect?
* Rick's [[spoiler:suicide attempt]] at the end of "Auto Erotic Assimilation" becomes even sadder when you consider that, given Rick's usual mental state, [[spoiler:he's probably tried to kill himself a lot. Indeed, the only reason he seems to be alive is that when he wants to kill himself, he's in such a bad state that he's physically unable to actually pull it off; at no point does he decide to keep living. And, because the method he uses is indistinguishable from the rest of his sci-fi stuff, his family presumably doesn't realize what he keeps doing and how close to death he's come. Jerry even sees the machine in a drawer and briefly holds the inanimate "test" specimen without comment.]]
** This is seen in the very first scene of the pilot episode when Rick abducts Morty from his bed and flies off with him, telling him he's going to start over. [[spoiler: Rick got drunk and that's all that was needed for Rick to want to start life on Earth over. The only person he wanted to save was Morty and his (Morty's) crush, Jessica. He also tells Morty that he isn't interested in Jessica and Morty doesn't have to worry about that. Could that be because Rick isn't planning on staying alive with them?]]
** What Rick says to his family before he attempts suicide is ominous {{Foreshadowing}}, "I'll be in the garage." [[TearJerker He was literally telling them where to find his body]].
* Summer has a flashback during "Total Rick-all" to walking in on Beth drunk alone. Beth smacks her with the wine on accident. It's picture day, meaning Summer will have a bruise in her class photo. Based on the casual way Beth grabs make-up to cover up the bruise, has she done this to Summer or Morty before? Or, since we know Rick is an [[TheAlcoholic alcoholic]], did he do something similar to Beth when she was a child? It's also possible that Beth was being so casual because she was so drunk and when you're drunk, apathy tends to set in.
* Rick is frequently drunk and Beth is seen drinking wine whenever [[DrowningMySorrows she's in a bad emotional situation]]. It's safe to say that alcoholism runs in the family, meaning Summer and Morty are susceptible to it.
* Compare the youthful, smiling Rick as seen in the pictures at Birdman's house to the Rick we see in the series [[CynicismCatalyst just to fully realise how much life has beaten out of him.]]
* It’s easy to miss, but in “Get Schwifty” one of the Cromulons mentions their ''Planet Talent'' show is in its ''900th season''. Which means they’ve been at it for (depending on their units of time measurement) the better part of a ''millennium''. And if the format has remained consistent, they’ve annihilated '''''3,600''''' inhabited planets. Holy shit.
* Rick destroyed Zeep's miniverse the moment he arrived back in the microverse. He just destroyed two whole universes and committed genocide on at least two sentient species.
** That is not correct. Rick mentions when they get back to the "real" world that Zeep has a choice: either the battery will work, or Rick will get a new battery. He turns the key and the car starts, meaning Zeep made his choice to not tell everyone the truth. TheStinger even shows Zeep looking up at the sky and muttering "peace among worlds, Rick!" However, Rick basically stated that he ''would'' destroy an entire world of sentient beings if they didn't get back on the "floobleboxes," and Zeep knew it. Imagine meeting your creator and realizing that a. He has zero empathy for you and your kind, and b. he '''will''' destroy you if you don't get back to work. Brrrr!
*** You misread. Rick did not destroy the ''microverse'', but he ''did'' destroy the ''miniverse'' and the ''teenyverse'' when he and Zeep got back to the ''microverse'' that Rick originally created. So the OP's point still stands: He destroyed two entire universes and any life within them. And it's not the only time he's done this, if we take Toxic Rick's batteries into consideration- that's at least four, and no way to know how many times he's done it.
** That's not the worst of it. The floobleboxes are completely unnecessary. Any planet's total energy output cannot be greater than the amount of energy it receives. So basically, the output Zeep's people is a fraction of what the planet's total energy output could be. And that is a fraction of what comes from its star. Basically, Rick could have had a much more powerful battery if he siphoned energy from the micro sun. That would require no enslavement and be more efficient. Considering Rick is a super genius, he knows this. But he created that universe and those people, installing himself as a god to them. It actually tells a lot about Rick's psychology in that he created/became the only god he could believe in: a selfish, uncaring monster whose reasons for creating the universe are not only unfathomable to his creations, but ultimately makes them all cogs in an uncaring machine.
** Tells you a lot about the scientists who made further universes down the road even though ''[[{{Hypocrite}} they]]'' are aware of the little tidbit regarding the sun, [[ItsAllAboutMe didn't they]]?
* Several of the married couples on Nuptia 4 in "Big Trouble in Little Sanchez" get killed. What if they had children who are now orphaned?
* Was [[spoiler:Jerry's traumatic experience with rape when he was younger]] what made him the low self-esteemed man he is today?
* Morty and the family's more Jerkass tendencies in the second season could be very well what Unity said; Rick just sucks everyone down with him. And with Morty, he's starting get more and more like Rick.
* Nothing is likely to come of it since both shows belong to two different networks, but [[WesternAnimation/GravityFalls Bill Cipher]] is [[http://i.imgur.com/7b9G1kQ.png on a computer monitor]] at the couple's therapy center. It seems like an innocuous EasterEgg at first, but bear in mind that the alien doctor speaking with Beth and Jerry has the same eye designs as ''someone [[DemonicPossession possessed]] by Bill.''
** In addition, a picture of Bill and a picture of the logo for Journal 3 are shown in a [[http://somekindofgravityfallsblog.tumblr.com/post/130568788961/as-part-of-the-rick-and-morty-rickstaverse-with Rickstaverse photo inside a Galactic Federation Prison]], alongside Grunkle Stan's notebook, pen, and mug that got sucked through a portal in Society of the Blind Eye[=/=]Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind. If anything, this means that not only are the ''Gravity Falls'' and ''Rick and Morty'' universes are connected to each other but that [[EldritchAbomination Bill]] [[OmnicidalManiac Cipher]] could enter Rick and Morty dimension to do whatever ungodly horrors he wants.
** And if he met Rick? I don’t know what’s worse, if they fight and end up possibly destroying the universe, or if they get along.
* [[spoiler: Rick is in prison:]] he probably won't be given alcohol and uncontrolled detoxification affects alcoholic people in a bad way.
* When you realize that one of the reasons Rick so gleefully destroys his clones in "Big Trouble in Little Sanchez" is because he is suicidal, and murdering his clones literally allows him to destroy himself.
** One has to wonder if Ricks killing Ricks are a common thing.
*** Seeing as the Council of Ricks decided to intervene only after what they called an "untypical high death rate" for Ricks across dimensions, the occasional Rickteside seems to be the norm.
* TheStinger at the end of "Meseeks And Destroy" shows one of the villagers discovering [[spoiler: King Jellybean's perverted history, and deciding to cover it up so as not to disillusion the community. King Jellybean was at least killed beforehand, but what if he was still alive, and said villager was willing to cover for him and let him keep getting away with his crimes for the sake of publicity? It's even more disturbing because this has happened in REAL LIFE, with celebrities having their crimes ignored and hidden for decades or even until their death and so go unpunished and even celebrated. This creepy cartoon is actually the LighterAndSofter variation.]]
* [[spoiler: After being put in prison, Rick is asked "What are you in for?"]] His response: "Everything." This could be interpreted as being hyperbole, but it could otherwise mean that Rick has committed '''every crime in the universe.''' One wonders what fucked-up things he might have done outside of the episodes released so far. It also can be interpreted as his general remorse with everything he has done in life, not just illegal actions.
* At the end of ‘Close Rick-Counters of the Rick Kind’ Rick gets a ‘Free Replacement Morty’ voucher. Considering all the hundreds of now freed, Rickless Mortys, this is at best a cheap gift and at worst means the council burns through Mortys at an alarming rate.
** For there to be any free Mortys to give away, they presumably need to be Poor Rickless Bastards, which means they burn through ''Ricks'' at an alarming rate too. Or they're just trying to offload all of the Mortys that they suddenly found themselves burdened with.
*** Or clones. Remember that Ricks can buy Morties in blister packs with different accessories.
** Given Rick's self-destructive tendencies, it's entirely possible that a substantial number of these Morties are "available" due to Ricks dying from suicide or accidental deaths. Which raises another question: Are these Morties ones recovered off of their home Earths, like the ones in 'Close Rick-counters', or does the council abduct them from their families?
*** Its explained in later episodes that if there is a family to go back to, they go back. Mortys are only "assigned" to new ricks when they a. have no family, and b. have no Rick. The ones with no family and no earth to go back to and no Rick end up at the Citadel.
* Mr. Meeseeks as beings are in constant pain while still alive, and the only reason they wish to complete their task is to end the pain. Meeseeks are suicidal.
** Meeseeks and destroy is really an episode about how living with a purpose is far worse than living without one.
** What slightly lessens the horrifying nature of this (or makes it worse depending on your viewpoint) is that it doesn't specify what sort of pain the Meeseeks are in - It could just be the mental torment from the frustration of being unable to finish what they were instructed to do. If one imagines that they knew, with total certainty, the meaning of life, but were unable to achieve it, one can probably imagine the intense mental strain this would put on someone. Insanity would be near certain.
*** Until you decide you're perfectly happy living your own life and getting your own meaning from it, to hell with fulfilling any meaning determined by someone else.
** Here's a thought: What happens to a Meeseeks who fails to complete his task, and ends up trapped or imprisoned somehow? Like in that Federation prison where everyone is kept immobilized all the time?
* In "Pilot" what exactly drove Rick to the point that he was willing to wipe out humanity with a bomb?!!!!
** Rick is basically one bad day away from wiping humanity then going to another universe to start over. That fact alone is scarier than just about anything the show has produced. Wouldn't blame any viewer if they consider Rick a VillainProtagonist
** Not only this. The first scene of the pilot is one big fridge horror in itself. While Rick later changed his mind, he passed out right before the call of the detonation. Viewing the show for the first time, you might assume that it's just a joke, fitting for the black comedy of an adult show. But later in the show, it's revealed that there are indeed multiple universes with an infinite number of Ricks and Mortys. So how big is the chance, that this Rick and Morty were alternative versions of the "real" Rick and Morty who were blown up offscreen for real, along with the whole world?
** Morty's also had to disarm so many neutron bombs that he knows the percentage that will turn out to be duds, too. '40%' would require at least five with two duds.
** This whole opening becomes both more interesting and more disturbing with the revelation that this dimension was [[spoiler: Rick Prime's dimension. You know, the guy who destroyed everything Rick loved with a ''bomb''? Rick later says that he realized that Prime didn't care at all about his dimension or his family, but maybe his drunken mind told him to make Prime pay by taking his world away in the same manner he took his so long ago.]]
* Rick [[spoiler:gives a tip to the Galactic Federation under Jerry's name]]. Who's to say this won't end up reaching the rest of the family's ears? It's unlikely that Beth will believe Jerry [[spoiler:when he says it wasn't him]]. If that's true, Beth will likely never forgive Jerry for taking Rick away from her.
** Supported by TheReveal in "The Rickshank Redemption" that [[spoiler: the entire reason Rick turned himself in and overthrew the Galactic Federation was to sabotage Jerry and Beth's marriage. This was probably his backup plan in case they did not go through with the divorce.]]
* The interdimensional goggles seem cool at first. Imagine seeing the lives of your alternate selves from other dimensions. But imagine if your alternative selves also had them. They could see through your eyes while you work, interact with your loved ones, and have sex.
* In the promotion for the Rick and Morty Season 1 DVD, Rick summons a Meeseeks and tells it to 'go out into the world and tell everyone about the DVD'. Rick told the Meseeks to tell EVERYONE about the DVD, as in every single person on the planet. Then the Meeseeks is shown wandering a city in our world, spreading the news...
* The idea of Unity is already pretty horrifying without needing a trip to the fridge, but it's downplayed a bit in the episode in question when it's revealed that the people she has taken over would include sex offenders and engage in race wars without her taking over. However, she's trying to gain membership to the Galactic Federation so she can take over those planets. Given one of the first things she does is declare world peace and given the apparent parallels to Star Trek's Federation, it's likely that achieving a certain level of cultural advancement and eliminating various social problems is required before a planet can enter the Federation. In other words, if she got into this Federation she'd be taking over peaceful planets.
** To add another layer of horror, all of the 'fun' they're having is through the use of sentient beings, none of whom were likely consulted before being used by an alien hive mind and a sociopathic scientist as a relationship aid. How many of the redheads in that stadium would have said "no" [[AndIMustScream if they could?]]
* The destruction of the Council of Ricks in "The Rickshank Redemption" does not immediately garner sympathy, considering the behavior of the majority of its membership, until one remembers that Rick J 19 Z 7 (aka "Doofus Rick") from "Close Encounters of the Rick Kind" was probably among the Ricks caught in the crossfire from the Citadel's TeleFrag with the Galactic Federation's prison. It's highly likely that he was killed like the other Ricks and Mortys from "Close Encounters of the Rick Kind", supporting Morty's claims about Rick's collateral damage being too destructive to ignore.
** This may have been averted, as the "Tall Morty" in "The Ricklantis Mixup" seemed to be Doofus Rick, having the same speech patterns and look. Made a sad moment indeed when he asks if he has "graduated to being a Rick."
*** That wasn't Doofus rick, that was "Slow Rick", and he wasn't asking if he was graduating to being a Rick, he was asking if he passed Morty school to become a Morty. Unlike Doofus rick, he is legitimately unintelligent, and kept as a "Tall Morty" more or less for his own safety. They look completely different (Slow Rick is a generic Rick, Doofus Rick has a unique character design).
* Bird Person's UndyingLoyalty, and in fact all of Rick's relationships, comes into question given how dependent Beth and Summer are. Who's to say Rick hasn't conditioned any of his other friends to be so loyal? Unity, a literal assimilating hive mind, states he ''outperforms'' her in assimilating people and she can only get out by cutting off contact with him. The only ones that can escape the spell of Rick's (pathologically sociopathic) [[MagnificentBastard charisma]] are inhuman beings that can avoid him and people TooDumbToFool who are powerless to go against him, like Jerry.
** What's worse, "Morty's Mind-Blowers" reveals that Rick can remove memories from his loved ones if he wants to. Who's to say that he hasn't done the same to people outside of his family?
* In "Pickle Rick," Dr. Wong is not even slightly fazed, annoyed, or otherwise adversely affected by the turmoil of Rick's family. Even when Rick waltzes in, soaked with blood, feces, and you know, ''being a pickle'', she doesn't so much as raise her voice or lift an eyebrow. Just what kind of horrific patients does she have to deal with, to be completely unfazed by this supernatural mess of a family?
** In a more hopeful interpretation, since alien lifeforms have made their presence known twice over in season two, she's just more openminded to once-thought impossible things.
** Also on a hopeful note, her behavior is consistent with how [[RealityIsUnrealistic a professional psychologist]] [[RealityIsUnrealistic ''should'']] [[RealityIsUnrealistic behave when dealing with difficult patients]]. While some less professional psychologists might reciprocate their patients' more toxic behavior, Dr. Wong's [[TheComicallySerious utter nonchalance]] in the face of the Smith family's absurd home life is perfectly in line with what's expected of her.
** There is every real possibility that Dr. Wong isn't even human. Most aliens left Earth when the Federation collapsed, many (rightly) fearing reprisals from the local populace. If one was sufficiently human looking, they may have stayed, especially as Earth recovered economically rather quickly.
*** This theory gives new meaning's to Rick's line in the S4 finale:
--->'''Rick:''' Smart guns: whitelist human life... and the therapist.
* In "Vindicators 3: Return of the Worldender", it's shown the Vindicators will absolutely turn on each other the moment things get rough and they exterminated an entire planet on their previous adventure. Who's to say they didn't kill the other three Vindicators themselves during the adventure?
* In TheStinger of "Anatomy Park", we learn that Ethan [[spoiler: has the new Anatomy Park (Anatomy World if you will) being built inside of him.]] Now, what happens to it in "The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy" when Morty [[spoiler: monstrously mutates Ethan with the Morphizer-XE?]]
** Considering the events of Rick Potion #9, [[spoiler: those are two different Ethans]] so it depends on whether or not [[spoiler: the new Ethan has an Anatomy Park in him.]]
*** Rick says the current universe is exactly the same as the previous one except they're both dead. New Ethan probably has an anatomy park.
*** [[InSpiteOfANail And besides the original Ethan is a Chronenberg now.]]
** Speaking of "The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy", Ethan got left in the woods by himself with [[spoiler: a barely movable body]] and no concerned witnesses, so it's quite likely [[DyingAlone he didn't make it out of there alive.]]  [[TheWoobie As if being raped, cheated on, and disfigured weren't enough for that boy...]]
*** This is Jossed, as you see Ethan crossing a busy bridge with cars passing him, which is commented on by the freed customer service reps.
** The answer is quite obvious. Because they didn't build Rick's version of Pirates of the Pancreas, the second Anatomy Park was a financial and commercial failure. Given that Rick was involved in the project, everyone building it probably just downed tools one night and went home.
* In "Rest and Ricklaxation", [[spoiler: the Healthy Morty is TheSociopath because he believes having a moral compass is toxic, and leaps in intelligence to a well-accomplished stock broker.]] In "The Ricklantis Mixup", [[spoiler: Evil Morty is also TheSociopath who has killed countless Ricks and tortured or killed their Mortys in the past, on top of disposing of anyone in his path to power with no one the wiser.]] Not only does this seem to imply that [[spoiler: any Morty who abandons all senses of morality is potentially EvilerThanThou to ''[[VillainProtagonist Rick Sanchez]]'', but that being TheFettered and oppressed by Rick is the only thing keeping a Morty from Rick levels of intelligence - [[ProtagonistJourneyToVillain something our Morty is getting closer towards casting off]] as seen in "The Whirly Dirly Conspiracy".]]
* Throughout the show, there are multiple major signs that [[spoiler: Rick has repeatedly switched dimensions after making big mistakes so he can start over by pretending to be part of whatever version of the Sanchez family he finds there. There's no way to be sure the Rick we're watching now is the same one the show started with. He may have even killed other Ricks just so he could take their place &, if he hasn't some other Rick could do it to him at any time.]]
** For what it's worth, the Citadel of Ricks still identify our Rick as Rick C-137. Granted, they're hardly infallible, our Rick never contradicts them in any way.
*** FridgeHorror again-Morty claims he's from C-137, but is never identified as such by any Rick other than Rick C-137. It's possible Rick could be lying to him.
*** It's fairly well conclusive that our Morty is not C-137. Rick C-137 has memories of baby Morty, when our Beth said that Rick had been gone for 20 years. Best bets are that "Evil Morty" is the real Morty C-137, out to get revenge on Rick C-137.
*** In "Rickmurai Jack", Rick reveals the truth with his memories: [[spoiler: There was never a Morty C-137 because ''he never existed in that universe''. Beth was killed alongside Diane, so she never met Jerry, and Morty and Summer were never born.]]
* Let's consider a specific sentence from the episode "Pickle Rick", one that Dr. Wong told Rick near the end of the episode. "You seem to alternate between viewing your own mind as an unstoppable force, and as an inescapable curse." Now, consider the fact that the characters in ''Rick and Morty'' have stated multiple times that there is an infinite amount of universes, with an infinite amount of Ricks. Which means that, while most of the Ricks that we see have embraced science and portal gun technology, there exists Ricks in many universes that have never taken that plunge, instead focusing on their wife and child, Beth. The Ricks that have gone the science route usually end up in turmoil and existential crisis, while the ones who have gone with the family route seem to be living much happier lives in ignorant bliss. However, we've only seen two Ricks in the entire series that chose family over science: the first, in "Rickshank Redemption", in a memory that may or may not be true, and the second, in "The Ricklantis Mixup". In the first instance, after a Rick rejects the invitation to own a portal gun, he witnesses his wife and child get murdered by a bomb before his very eyes. While that story seems to have been fake to trick the agent, there's no actual proof that our Rick didn't just change the last part of the memory while the rest was the truth, or that he didn't just think of the time this happened to another Rick from another dimension. In the second instance, a Rick that preferred to work with wood rather than technology and was proud to raise his daughter got kidnapped, dragged to the Citadel, and forced into a LotusEaterMachine...to make cookies. It seems, then, that the Ricks who have accepted science - the "unstoppable force" - can't stand the simple fact that, for all of their intelligence, some Ricks are happier than they'll ever be because they willingly refused to heighten their intelligence to "inescapable curse" levels. And so, in a fit of self hatred that no show has ever rivaled before, these Science Ricks will go out and ruin the lives of these Family Ricks, out of pure jealousy and spite.
** This makes Dr. Wong's analysis of Rick even more poignant and horrifying. "Pickle Rick" demonstrates one of Rick's ultimate weaknesses and his biggest flaw throughout the series; he uses his vast intelligence as a defense mechanism to avoid caring for himself and his relationships with others. Dr. Wong explicitly tells Rick that he uses being smarter as an excuse to devalue his relationships and the wellbeing of others, and that, in spite of being a genius, refuses to put any work into the mundanity of common relationships and even his own wellbeing, and that it's the root of why he's so miserable. What's the family's reaction to this? To get into the car and get a different therapist. In other words, ''they didn't internalize anything Dr. Wong said, and will continue to repeat their mistakes.'' Even worse, the Citadel is full of Ricks that go out of their way to sabotage other Ricks that actually live by her advice and put in that effort for others. SelfInflictedHell doesn't even cover it.
** Even worse, it's quite likely that there is an alternate universe where the therapy actually acts as a breakthrough and Rick strives to be better, but some Ricks from the Citadel catch on and drag him back into the fray.
** This would explain the number of jobber Ricks on the Citadel. The Ricks could easily automate most of the blue collar jobs, or bring in any kind of easily controlled worker population, but they don't. It wouldn't surprise me if, being the sociopaths they are, the Council of Ricks "recruited" Ricks from beyond the Central Finite Curve for no better reason than to keeping thematic.
* Simple Rick is the only Rick we see who gave up on super-science and adventure so he could stay with his Beth... and was then kidnapped by other Ricks who use his happy memories to make cookies. The question is, when did this happen? Simple Rick's happiest memory is Beth's third birthday. Was Simple Rick kidnapped shortly after? Is this Beth yet another Beth who grew up thinking her father abandoned her?
** Simple Rick's central thought is the simple love he felt for and from his daughter. There's an entire slave factory not only dedicated to making it, but so important that it has implied sister factories, a small army dedicated to its recovery, and a need for Simple Rick so great that his death requires an immediate replacement. Not only is Simple Rick's based on a LotusEaterMachine, it mass-produces lotus-flavored candy for the uncountable number of Ricks who want but cannot get the love of their Beths.
** [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in that Old Rick (a.k.a. Assembly Line/Worker Rick) was [[InTheBack harvested for his memories]] [[ForgotToMindTheirHead mere moments]] [[GutPunch after they happened,]] [[SurpriseParty which could mean...]]
** You have to remember that all the Ricks are the same age, so Simple Rick would have been kidnapped, at earliest, sometime after the Citadel was founded, which was probably at least a few years after Ricks started dimension travelling. Also, the Citadel probably didn't have any Mortys until just a few years ago.
*** On the flip side, given the multiverse, there's no guarantee there aren't Ricks out there who married a different wife or had a child earlier or later. The little girl is implied to be Beth, but it isn't outright stated to be her. Simple Rick might have found a wife and had a different daughter later in life, after the other Ricks had already created the citadel and could capture him. The other Ricks have Mortys only because all other Ricks get detected and killed, whereas Simple Rick never went out on adventures.
* Simple Rick was blatantly kidnapped to be milked for cookie flavoring, but a number of other Ricks and Morties in the episode appear to be on the citadel against their own wishes. Notably Cop Morty who broke down in tears over wanting to be a normal boy before performing a SuicideByCop, and the Rick attempting to concoct portal fluid in a meth lab for the Morty gang. At the end of "Close Rickcounters of the Rick Kind", Evil Morty was shuttled back to his home dimension along with all the Morties he held prisoner, yet he's back on the citadel still Rickless. Could the shadow council have rounded all those Morties back up to repopulate the citadel, along with any aberrant Ricks who never mastered interdimensional travel?
** Cop Morty was just trying to put Cop Rick off his guard, in the exact same way that Crib Room Morty had earlier in the episode.
* Worker Rick is forced to act as a replacement for Simple Rick after he gets him killed, which is bad enough on it’s own, but then at the end of the episode [[spoiler: Evil/President Morty has Wonka Rick (who owned the factory) killed]]. Seeing as President Morty has already enacted major changes in the citadel such as changing the Morty school curriculum and getting the teacher fired, it’s not hard to believe the Simple Rick factory might end up shut down. If this is true, ‘’what will happen to worker Rick?’’
* The PeopleZoo in "Morty's Mind Blowers" has Meeseeks in it, as a FreezeFrameBonus. Meeseeks go crazy after living for only a couple of days, and God knows how long they've been stuck in there.
* In "Morty's Mindblowers", it's revealed [[spoiler:Rick and Morty may have had to abandon another universe because of evil squirrels. This seems disturbing enough, except it's not stated when this took place. It's possible this memory is from ''before'' Rick Potion Number 9, meaning they may have had to ditch at least ''three'' universes.]]
** [[spoiler: Not really. Rick reminds Morty what he said about switching universes, implying that this is after Rick Potion Number 9.]]
* Summer has to be on [[spoiler:watch for Morty's Mindblowers scenarios, which include her younger brother and grandfather attempting suicide. It's also implied that she remembers her mother choosing her life over Morty's, which horrified her at the time. But Rick doesn't wipe her mind, precisely because she has to be on call. "I don't get paid enough for this shit" suddenly takes on a darker tone.]]
* In ''[[Recap/RickAndMortyS3E9TheABCsOfBeth The ABC's of Beth]]'' Rick doesn't just tell Beth about the things she asked him to make for her during her childhood, [[spoiler:he pulls a box out from beneath his workbench and ''shows'' her the items, meaning he actually made at least some of her macabre gadgets and gave them to her to use on other people. Also he makes it clear that he wasn't going to reign her in, even if she needed to be reigned in.]] What happened to the less-than-polite little boys who crossed her socio-path?
** Some of the toys that young Beth "requested" including such things as a teddy bear with realistic organs and a knife that loves stabbing. This, along with Beth's sociopathic tendencies, makes one consider why Beth wanted to become a surgeon. Not because of her smarts but because ''she likes looking at organs''.
** The reveal in Season 5, that [[spoiler:Rick's Beth was murdered when she was a child]], recontextualizes this interaction as [[spoiler:Rick lieing and taking the blame for another Rick's inventions and bad parenting]].
* ''[[Recap/RickAndMortyS3E9TheABCsOfBeth The ABC's of Beth]]'' reveals why Rick has the cloning technology he had to remake Tommy and make Tiny Rick: He was prepared for when Young Beth would murder someone and he'd need to clone them so no one found out.
* In "The ABC's of Beth", there was no happy ending to the situation with Tommy, no matter what Beth or Rick would try. That's why Rick decided to go home after seeing [[spoiler:Tommy's graphic demonstration of him sleeping with and impregnating a Froopy Land resident, then eating the resulting offspring. If Beth had managed to convince Tommy to come home, she would have had to tell his father and the authorities why she had abandoned him in her childhood chicken coop for ''thirty years''. Tommy would have stuck to his story that Beth deliberately drowned and abandoned him because she was jealous of his relationship with his dad. Even if Beth had lawyered up or the statute of limitations had expired, Tommy has lost his sanity living alone, being forced into bestiality, incest and cannibalism to stay alive, and believing his best friend betrayed him. He is also extremely violent, and he would need a lot of rehabilitation. All in all, Beth and Rick cloning Tommy was the least harmful decision because it means Tommy's father never found out the truth.]]
* Beth also reveals that she knew all along, thanks to her father telling her, that [[spoiler:the Rick and Morty in this universe aren't ''her'' Rick and Morty. They're fugitives from another dimension while the father she knew is dead. Rick had absolutely no reason to reveal this to her, except to explain why he's being obtuse about his parenting skills and admitting that Beth is expendable to him. All Beths are the same, in his words, and there are more Mortys that she could have with her original son having disappeared]].
* Had Rick just gone to family therapy with his daughter and grandchildren like he was supposed to, instead of ending up having a solo adventure and allying with Jaguar, Jaguar wouldn't have rescued him and Morty in TheStinger of "Pickle Rick" and they both would've [[YourHeadAsplode suffered]] a CruelAndUnusualDeath. Remember that Rick was genuinely out of ideas and believed they were going to die.
** Though to be fair, Rick's extreme adverse to boredom, as pointed out by Dr. Wong, is a dangerous problem to the family. For all we know, it was completely his fault that they were in that problem in the first place.
* [[spoiler:Evil Morty]]'s Main/{{Leitmotif}}, For the Damaged Coda, has the best possible name. It has only ever been played at the ends of episodes, making it a literal coda, and it's the leitmotif of [[spoiler:the most damaged Morty of them all]].
* Beth in episode Morty's Mind Blowers show that an alien villain forcing Beth into a Sadistic Choice to choose which one of her children he'll spare and Beth immediately chooses Summer, not even hesitating for a second to resign Morty to death. What does that say about Beth character. This is not the first time Beth show no regard for Morty's life, in the stinger of Rick Potion #9, Beth tells Jerry she doesn't care about what might have happened to Rick and Morty and now that they have gone, she feels finally happy. Why do you think she feel like that about Morty, originally The show for the most part has shown Beth to be loving to Morty, or at the very least not abusive, while she and Summer have had a much more fraught relationship because Summer learning that Beth wanted to abort her and still has resentment about Jerry knocking her up and having a shotgun wedding, I was thinking that maybe it the divorce and how relationship with Rick and Jerry that cause her resentment to Morty, when she said that Beth tells Jerry she doesn't care about what might have happened to Rick and Morty and now that they have gone, she feels finally happy, what if when her relationship with Jerry was fix, maybe she thought she did not need Rick anymore now she had Jerry and maybe she saw Morty as Jerry former weakness and insecurities, and now that are Beth the chose Rick over Jerry is regretting how decision and is blaming Morty because she see him as a mix of the worst traits of Rick and Jerry, she did say in episode Raising Gazorpazorp that she believes that Morty was filled with Jerry's insecurities as a result of Jerry's overly-nurturing method of raising him.
* Rick doesn't take his entire lab with him when he and Morty bail on the pilot universe. That means all of the memories in Morty's Mind Blowers were extracted from a different Morty altogether. We know from ''Mortynight Run'' that any given pair of Ricks and Mortys can have entirely different experiences even if they start out on their adventures in the exact same way. Those memories couldn't ''all'' have been extracted from the Morty we know, and since Rick gives the memory tubes nonsense filenames, he can't be certain whether any given memory is actually one that ''his'' Morty has had removed. Morty may have remembered a bunch of horrible things that didn't happen to him.
** Likewise... does Morty remember Mr. Jellybean? Or did he have Rick remove that memory for him?
*** Most likely, he did not have that memory removed. Why? Because he never found out that Rick knew about Mr. Jellybean and killed him. Morty believes that Rick doesn't know what happened and if he DID know, he would just use that knowledge to mock him and "I told you so" him. For the same reason, he probably didn't have him remove the memory of what happened with Fart.
* There is a feature at Rickworld that allows him to massacre a room full of Morty’s.
** Rick does it every three months so that he can stand being around his Morty.
* As 'Edge of Tomorty' shows, due to the infinite versions of TheMultiverse, there exists a version where when in the 'prime' universe they win, in some other universe, Rick as well as Morty die ''numerous'' times during their adventures.
* How many Ricks were killed and found themselves being reborn in a different and most likely fascist universe and were unable to get out of the cycle of being killed over and over again?
** Related. After ending up in a fascist Shrimp reality asks while being chased ''When did this shit become the default?" Well what's changed recently? [[TyrantTakesTheHelm Evil Morty became President of the Citadel]] giving him access to a city worth of Ricks, their technology and science, and a whole lot of Mortys who were sick of the treated like crap.
** Adding onto that, Rick is very insistent on keeping Morty dependent to him. Who's to say seeing realities where Morty becomes a backstabbing fascist didn't reinforce that, and give him an excuse to double down on Morty...?
* The fact that Rick has so many ways to bring himself back to life after his death. Despite being extremely suicidal, he still has a strong will to live. And even if he did turn off all his precautions, he might still be reborn in a different universe. Can Rick ever be KilledOffForReal?
* In ''"Claw and Hoarder"'', Rick had to save the dragon he soul-bonded with because if he dies, Rick dies too. The same dragon soul-bonded with Morty earlier, and Rick threatened to blow up that dragon with C-4.
* ''The Vat of Acid Episode":
** Rick reveals that the "reset button" was actually Morty killing alternate versions of himself. So when Jerry presses the button after Morty comes home from a terrifying trip, he just killed his own son!
** Some of the alternate Morties turned into a pile of BodyHorror in school, during class. One can only imagine how his classmates and teachers would react to this.
*** Eventually undone by the end of the episode, but the thought is still horrifying.
* When Hoovy returns to his farm, it's run-down and dead. The windows are boarded up, his wife is dead in her chair, and his son--in addition to being batshit crazy--is in terrible shape and living in said rundown house. When Morty returns years later, the house and farm are in much better condition, Bova's been lovingly buried, and Japheth is thriving with a family of his own. The horror kicks in when you realize the terrifying future Hoovy returned to ''didn't have to be like that''--Japheth could have fixed the farm earlier and buried his mother as soon as she died, but either chose not to out of a thirst for revenge or was unable to due to decades of grief.
* The season 5 premiere has unsettling implications given it seemed to push the ResetButton. We know that Rick doesn't believe in literal reset buttons because he believes that time travel is bullshit. So either Rick pulled another stunt to get rid of Space Beth as well as win Morty back, or he has gotten himself mired into weird trouble which will play out over the season. 
* If Hoovy's final descendant hadn't woken up Morty to study him, he could have been trapped for centuries like Jessica. 
* Wooden Jerry somehow obtained immortality and doesn't die even after being torn apart by beavers, drowned and then buried for hundreds of years, converted into a mirror, or burned at the stake. Does that apply to the other Wooden Smiths? Are they still alive, buried under rubble?
** Wooden Jerry never died because his head was never destroyed (in typical [[ButtMonkey Jerry]] luck). The family could've been killed permanently by all those rocks. And if they weren't, their Rick is with them, and if he can do science as a pickle then he can do science as a head, and either repair them or kill them depending on what they want.
* Planetina's been around since the 90's and looks no different today than she did back then, despite her "kids" being middle-aged. If she's functionally immortal and Morty ages normally, their relationship was doomed from the start to end in heartache.
** Now that Planetina is freed, how many more will die because they're trying to earn an honest living? Lumberjacks, construction workers, even people working factory jobs for a company that happens to pollute--how many more people will die just trying to keep food on the table?
** Just before going off the deep end, Planetina mentions she can hear the Earth screaming. Assuming she was telling the truth and not just being dramatic to make a point, ''every environmentally unfriendly action'' humans take hurts Planetina. Even "environmentally friendly" power sources such as hydro and solar are merely "much less environmentally damaging" than "harm-free", so if she becomes unhinged enough, Planetina might murder roofers installing solar panels because lithium mining isn't exactly clean, though she does seem pro-Wind power. Now that she's out in the real world and can't hide in the power rings (or wherever she goes when unmanifested), how miserable will Planetina be having to hear that screaming all the time?
* How big is [[spoiler: Naruto]] from ''Rickdependence Spray'' going to get? He's already larger than a satellite and is capable of holding a human in his hands. Let's hope he never comes to Earth.
** At least,[[spoiler:he's friendly to Summer.]] [[spoiler:And he grows even bigger and tears Gotron apart single-handedly.]]
* Rick is the smartest man in any universe he travels to because the Citadel makes sure anything else is literally impossible. Which means that Slow Rick--who is too mentally challenged to even realize he ''is'' a Rick, and not just a big Morty--had to have been more intelligent than he is now. ''Something happened'' to take this Rick from smartest brain in the known universe to barely able to pronounce words correctly.
** Alternatively, it could mean everyone in his universe is somehow ''[[TooDumbToLive dumber then he is.]]''
* With how many Ricks are killed in C-137's RoaringRampageOfRevenge, Rick can easily be responsible for depriving countless Beths, Summers, and Mortys of their own Ricks.
* Evil Morty's sabotage of the portal network could mean that any Ricks and Mortys that used their portal guns before the Citadel was destroyed were killed too.
** The portal network seems to be connected to the fluid the citadel produces rather then all portals, so only Citadel Ricks would be effected and they're dead anyway.
* The fact we see our Rick only became a cynical asshole because his family was murdered has a lot of implications for the other Ricks, even if we assume our Rick is the exception and most didn't need a tragedy to make them assholes, the existence of at least a handful of universes that are exactly like ours implies it at least happened multiple times, possibly with the same Weird Rick
* In "The Wedding Squanchers", after escaping from the Galactic Federation, the family travels on the planet where everything is on a corn cob, even cells. For a fact, your body cells die and get replaced with new ones every second, and if they get replaced with aforementioned cob cells, you will gradually transform into a living cob.
** What's worse is that Morty and Summer ate some of the cob cell fruits present on the planet.
* When Jerry gets transported to his original dimension, we see him dealing with a very aggressive and volatile family. To sell the point, Rick's toxic influence on Morty has gotten so bad that he gets expelled from his school, which barely garners a reaction from him or Rick. It is very likely that they are going to break up in a big way right after Jerry leaves. Things can only get worse now that our Jerry has left them and that Season 2 Jerry got assimilated by Mr. Frundles. In either case, they have a very dark future, and our Jerry and Beth divorcing for a short while really did improve the family bigtime since it curbed Rick's toxic influence to the point that he himself is improving, as much as he hates to admit it.
* In a similar vein, in "Solaricks", we have [[FluffyTheTerrible Mr. Frundles]] [[GreyGoo asssimilating]] [[ApocalypseWow all of Earth]] within minutes or less. The Fridge Horror lies in the fact that this dimension's earth housed many popular characters from older seasons, who are now either dead or assimilated.
** On the topic of that, it is entirely possible for Mr. Frundles to literally assimilate the entire dimension given how he assimilated the earth in only a few minutes.
*** Mr. Frundles needs to bite something to assimilate it, so as long as people don't go near the Frundled Earth the damage is limited to one planet. That said, if Mr. Frundles [[ItCanThink becomes smart enough to use assimilated spaceships...]]
* When the whole family escapes to Par-me-sian dimension at the end of "Solaricks", Beth asks Rick whether the selves they are replacing died of natural causes. Rick's grumpy "mhmm" is suspicious and, [[FreezeFrameBonus if you pause on the scene of carnage]], the scorch mark in the living room looks a lot like the one in Rick's original garage. Was it a sci-fi gadget accident or did Rick portal in a bomb!?
** The damage doesn't really look like a bomb though; the scorch mark is right in front of the couch but the couch is only ripped up a bit, the crater is really small, the bodies are relatively intact, etc. Given how we were just reminded how easy it is for Rick-level sci-fi to go haywire, Rick's wouldn't have needed to do anything to kill them.
** Probably an accident, since Rick was unable to use portals at the time. Remember that to switch universes, they had to physically fly the ship through an existing wormhole.
* When Rick sent all dimensional travelers back to their original universes, [[YankTheDogsChain does that include Evil Morty]]?
** This could be mitigated by how he is currently outside the central finite curve, meaning he could simply be out of range for Rick's portal reset to work.
* Jerry is understandably extremely disturbed about the idea of having sex with his mother. But this becomes infinitely worse if you factor in the theory of Jerry being a survivor of sexual assault. He obviously doesn't consent to having sex in this scenario, effectively making him a rape victim a second time. It's little wonder he tries his damn hardest to avert it.
* The soldier who got immortality only to be immediately [[ImmortalityHurts pumped full of bullets]] had it rough, but he reasonably could have been able to get medical treatment that would fix the damage or at least ease his pain. Except that he almost definitely got sucked into that black hole at the end. The [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaghettification theoretical effects of entering a black hole]] are nightmarish, but you'd die eventually. He's going to be feeling it ''[[AndIMustScream forever]]''.
* In "Analyse Piss" Jerry blows up a planet of Hitlers and worries there could have been other, non Hitler inhabitants before getting reassured there weren't, considering this is Hitler we're talking about its best not to think about why.
* Weird Rick is native to Morty's original world. Now remember there's at least 3 other worlds nearly identical to Morty's, whose (dead) Ricks aren't native to those worlds either. There's a good chance Weird Rick's [[AllianceOfAlternates not alone]].
* Jerry [[DespairEventHorizon tries to ask Summer]] [[{{Subverted}} for drugs]] after the Rick him and his family has been celebrating with Christmas [[RoboticReveal was revealed to be a robot]]. But if you consider neither Jerry, both Beths nor Summer know for how long Rick has been replaced with a robot, it becomes even more tragic. It's possible Jerry thinks Rick was a robot for the entire Season 6, meaning that every time Rick did something kind for Jerry was actually done by some robot.
* "The Ricklantis Mixup" shows a Rick who lived "60 iterations off the Central Finite Curve" until he was kidnapped, and his memories of his Beth were harvested into wafers for the inhabitants of the Citadel of Ricks to eat. That Rick was later freed and sent to the blender dimension to die. "Unmortricken" later revealed that Weird Rick killed every iteration of Diane with the Weapon Too Cool For a Name. This means that the Beth who belonged to the late Simple Rick is now an orphan, since both of her parents are gone for good.
[[/folder]]

!!FridgeSadness
[[folder:Fridge Sadness]]
* "Unmortricken" confirms that Rick's spaceship has Diane's voice. Now remember way back in the very first episode when Rick told Morty he'd just built the ship before getting drunk and trying to blow up the town - but making sure to spare Jessica for Morty's sake. It's like he learned the hard way that he couldn't fill the void and wanted to erase his past for good, but he also wants Morty to have a better shot at happiness.
[[/folder]]

!!FridgeLogic
[[folder:Fridge Logic]]
* "Big Trouble in Little Sanchez" features a machine that creates physical representations of the way Beth and Jerry see each other, which is activated a great many times in that episode. That is, there exists a machine capable of mass-creating actual living beings, many of which are extremely powerful, based on nothing more than an idea in someone's mind. It's not even necessary for the person to know how to make the organism's characteristics (like Goddess Beth's telekinesis, for instance) biologically possible; the machine just figures it out. The episode does ''not'' do this technology justice by any means.
** Yes, you read that right. The machine created a literal ''goddess'', or at least a close approximation of one.
** The machine was also proved able to create a functional superhuman army.
* In the same episode's ending, Beth and Jerry decide to stick together until Morty finishes high school. Considering [[NotAllowedToGrowUp the rules of the series...]] [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments they basically decided to stick together forever.]]
* In "The Rickshank Redemption", it's made really clear that the federation considers Rick the cleverest mammal in the universe, and they aren't surprised that he finds a way to manipulate thoughts in a unique way (creating butts, specifically), so ''why'' would they use a obsolete model to deal with him?
** Either they think that Rick wouldn't care or even know how to get passed an obsolete model (hoping on the off chance that he hasn't studied it yet since it's so old), or they really ''aren't'' the brightest tools in the shed...
** This is also a commentary on bureaucracy: Technology exists that would have prevented this exact scenario, they were just too cheap/apathetic to use it.
* The immortality field. Apparently, it exists, but it's only used for that autogrill planet. Why only there? At the very least, Rick (and, by extension, the Council of Ricks) should be able to have that technology, and it could have been very useful to them.
** Just because someone invented a new technology doesn't mean that they're willing to share it. Not only that, but perhaps the resources needed to build it/keep it running are ridiculously high, hence why we only see it in a club for wealthy people. As for why the Ricks didn't have one, knowing their personalities, they probably conclude that if a Rick is not smart enough to keep himself alive, then they shouldn't get to live.
** In addition to what has already been stated the immortality field has two major drawbacks for Rick. The first and most obvious being that Rick lives to risk everything on a regular basis and come out on top not spend life as a coddled mass of directionless molecules like Jerry. The second more insidious risk is that technology like the immortality field can be turned against its user, its made abundantly clear that everyone does feel pain but because it ends moments later they don't mind it much, anyone who got the jump on a Rick could devise all manner of constant agonizing torture abusing the immortality field to keep that Rick alive until they simply broke.
** Imagine if the Citadel were under attack and the attackers could not be killed. Ain't nobody wants that. The field works great as a resort gimmick but has few practical applications.
* In "Rest and Ricklaxation", after Rick and Morty have purged what they thought their toxic parts of their personalities were, Rick states that he is proud to be Morty's gandpa. One of the toxic parts that Rick got rid of was his "illogical" love for Morty. So he said that objectively, without any emotional attachment to Morty making him say it.
** Non-Toxic Rick also lost Rick's cynicism and misanthrophobia, leaving him with an appreciation and love for all forms of life. He no doubt still does love Morty, just as he loves everything. But unlike regular Rick he doesn't love him so much he isn't willing to sacrifice him to save everything else.
** He also doesn't say that he ''loves'' Morty, he says he's ''proud to be his grandfather''. Morty's not great with book-smarts but he's got excellent people skills, and with Healthy!Morty's lack of insecurity and self-loathing, that part of him absolutely shines. Healthy!Rick doesn't have his arrogance or narcissism, so he's able to value that aspect of Morty's personality without devaluing him for not being the same kind of genius Rick is. That's the difference: Healthy!Rick appreciates Morty for the qualities he has but feels nothing for him personally, Toxic!Rick thinks Morty's a piece of shit but loves him to (his own literal, actual) death.
* Wouldn't Tommy be too young to produce sperm when he first started to mate with the indigenous creatures?
** Maybe Beth kept going to Froopyland during her early-to-mid adolescence. Maybe Tommy was a few years older than Beth, such that he was physically capable of mating when he got trapped in Froopyland. It's even possible that Tommy had an underlying condition that caused a [[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precocious_puberty precocious puberty]].
** Also, to echo Beth, "Who gets stuck in Honey?"
*** It's a honey swamp, although the honey itself was probably as breathable and harmless as the rainbow-water, it wouldn't be honey if it wasn't sticky as hell. He probably wasn't strictly ''stuck'', but depending on how far down he fell and how deep the honey was, it probably took him long enough to squirm out that Beth had long since gotten bored and wandered off (if she didn't just shove him in there and abandon him in Froopyland altogether).
* In ''Vindicators 3'', Rick's little Saw stunt ends with drunk!Rick being emotional and crying over [[spoiler: Noob Noob]] after all the snipping back and forth between him and Morty over Morty's admiration of the Vindicators. [[spoiler: But everything ''except'' the drunken rant on the video indicates that it really was intended for Morty, at least when Rick started building it. The rocket ride is too big for Noob Noob but fits Morty perfectly, the platform responded to Morty standing on it when anything except what Rick wanted would have caused the planet to explode, and Rick mentions hoping Noob Noob becomes a real Vindicator someday, even though if Noob Noob had been there to get the message, he would already have been one. You can also see the cardboard materials for the rainbow hands he made in the background, indicating that recording the videos was the last part of the prep.]] He really ''did'' intend it for Morty, his train of thought just derailed.
* In ''The [=ABC=]s Of Beth'', Tommy had to resort to impregnating the wildlife of Froopyland and [[EatsBabies cannibalizing the offspring]] to stay alive. However, Rick created Froopyland for Beth as her own personal play area, and went to insane levels to childproof it, from bouncy ground to oxygenated water. And yet, despite that, he apparently didn't put any sources of food in Froopyland, which is why Tommy nearly starved to death. One would wonder why that would be the case, unless Rick did it to keep out any potential choking hazards.
** Froopyland is a high-tech playpen, not a jail. Rick gave it to Beth as just another toy to play with, assuming she would come out of Froopyland to eat, sleep, go to school, play with other toys (she mentioned thinking a Nintendo was cooler), etc. There was never any need to provide food inside Froopyland because the assumption was if Beth got hungry she'd come out and ask for food.
** It was principally designed for Beth, who Rick actually cares about. If Beth had disappeared for an extended time into Froopyland, Rick would feel enough motivation to go back and get her. Now some random neighborhood kid that Rick seemed barely aware of? Rick wouldn't think to go check to see if anyone other than Beth was stuck in Froopyland.
* Many people see what Morty does to Ethan in "The Whirley-Durley Conspiracy" as the start of Morty transforming into an evil Morty. However, those who have siblings who have had their heart broken would see it as an action performed by a loving brother to even the score for their sister's pain (Ethan shamed Summer's body, making her image conscious as a result and leading her to try to alter herself and leading her to become a giant inside out monster. Morty made sure Ethan understood what he did by turning him into a deformed monster himself). Also, it shows that it runs in the family (as Rick did the same thing by killing King Jelly Bean after he attempted to rape Morty).
* The plot of ''Morty's Mind Blowers'' starts when Morty learns literally ''everything'' by looking at the Truth Turtle. Why, then, was he surprised to learn the existence of Rick's memory-erasing machine, or the content of his expunged memories? He should already know.
** The average human mind can't really contain knowledge of everything, much less store it in a cohesive manner. He was likely being bombarded by a near infinite amount of random information popping into his thoughts, hence his stress and discomfort even some time later. Also, the entirety of everything that Morty has been through would be a drop in the bucket when compared to infinite knowledge. Especially if he didn't know what to think about. Ultimately, Morty probably would have needed to have his memories reset regardless, just to avoid going insane in the long run.
* In ''The Vat Of Acid Episode'' Morty's "ResetButton" was on top of his open bag and next to Jerry for some reason. You'd think Morty would put it somewhere close to himself or have his bag closed which could have prevented Jerry or anyone else for that matter from pressing the button.
** Morty's got a fair amount of his father in him. Overlooking small issues that would prevent much bigger problems for himself is in his wheelhouse. Particularly when he's enjoying himself and relaxed.
* One that spans the whole series: Rick bases his cynicism and misanthropy on the fact that in an infinite multiverse, everything happens every possible way and everyone exists in infinite copies, and therefore nothing and no one really matters. Except... we have also seen time and again that Rick C-137 is orders of magnitude smarter and more capable than even other Ricks (each of which is, in turn, the smartest and most capable person in their own universe). As in, he can go through other Ricks like tissue paper with them being every bit as helpless to stop him as regular people are to stop them. He's also apparently the only Rick to have declined to join the Citadel, making him "the Rickest Rick," with every other Rick being a pale imitation of him. Thus, Rick C-137 proves by his very existence that his and every other Rick's philosophy is wrong - it ''is'' possible for a person to be unique and exceptional even in an infinite universe and therefore for their death to be an objective loss. (which in turn makes no sense, but still, that is the reality that the show presents to us by treating every Rick that isn't Rick C-137 as an easily dispatched mook).
* "Bethic Twinstinct"'s ending makes it abundantly clear that if Beth, Jerry or anyone else has sex from their bedroom, anyone from the Dining Room can clearly hear it. So this shouldn't even be the first time Morty or Summer hear their parents have sex.
** Hell, this isn't the first time this happens in the Series. Remember when Morty has Sex with Gwendolyn?
* In "Final [=Desmithation=]", we learn that fortune cookies are actually reality-binding tools created by a Lockerean creature. Knowing this, shouldn't it be possible for Rick or anyone else capable enough for the job for that matter to just create or grab another one and bend reality to his will?
* In "A Rick in King Mortur's Court", the previously-established Plutonians are completely absent from the episode. Why? Because they're no longer a planet.
* In "Get Shwifty" Birdperson feeds Morty a bowl of random debris from his carpet, explaining that he doesn't know what humans eat... despite the fact that he's dating Tammy, a human. The very next line even establishes that they've been dating for long enough to be sleeping together. Apparently, they never went out for a meal together, or even talked about food during all that time.
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!!The following have their own pages:
[[index]]
* [[FridgeBrilliance/RickAndMorty Fridge Brilliance]]
* [[FridgeHorror/RickAndMorty Fridge Horror]]
* [[FridgeLogic/RickAndMorty Fridge Logic]]
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* The revelation that "our" Rick isn't the native Rick of Main Morty's timeline but a dimension hopper who took his counterpart's place after Prime Rick killed his own timeline's version of his daughter actually explains a ''lot'' of Rick's JerkAss attributes. For starters, it neatly explains his cynical assertions that no individual is special and can easily by replaced by any of their multiversial counterparts; it's a philosophy he's using to justify using "our" Beth and her offspring as ReplacementGoldfish. It also explains why he'd go to the trouble of setting himself up to take another Rick's place as main Beth's dad, only to then neglect her; not only is Rick just inherently a toxic person, but in ''this'' Rick's case, he's also being a massive hypocrite, and there's only so much of that he can take.
** Building on from that, "our" Rick probably has idealized his own timeline's version of his daughter, since she was killed when she was a little kid. This would contribute to why he's so passive-aggressively abusive to the mainline characters; whilst Rick would hate Jerry as unworthy of his daughter in any case, for reasons he's spelled out, he's also got reasons to see mainline Beth as an InadequateInheritor. Firstly, the fact she was dumb enough to have sex with a loser like Jerry. Secondly, the whole Froopyland debacle; once he realized that this replacement Beth was so crazy, he almost certainly would have started demonizing her, especially since there's no evidence that her counterpart in Dimension C-137 acted in such a way.



* In "The ABC's of Beth", there was no happy ending to the situation with Tommy, no matter what Beth or Rick would try. That's why Rick decided to go home after seeing [[spoiler:Tommy's graphic demonstration of him sleeping with, impregnating a Froopy Land resident, and eating the resulting offspring. If Beth had managed to convince Tommy to come home, she would have had to tell his father and the authorities why she had abandoned him in her childhood chicken coop for ''thirty years''. Tommy would have stuck to his story that Beth deliberately drowned and abandoned him because she was jealous of his relationship with his dad. Even if Beth had lawyered up or the statute of limitations had expired, Tommy has lost his sanity living alone, being forced into bestiality, incest and cannibalism to stay alive, and believing his best friend betrayed him. He is also extremely violent, and he would need a lot of rehabilitation. All in all, Beth and Rick cloning Tommy was the least harmful decision because it means Tommy's father never found out the truth.]]

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* In "The ABC's of Beth", there was no happy ending to the situation with Tommy, no matter what Beth or Rick would try. That's why Rick decided to go home after seeing [[spoiler:Tommy's graphic demonstration of him sleeping with, with and impregnating a Froopy Land resident, and then eating the resulting offspring. If Beth had managed to convince Tommy to come home, she would have had to tell his father and the authorities why she had abandoned him in her childhood chicken coop for ''thirty years''. Tommy would have stuck to his story that Beth deliberately drowned and abandoned him because she was jealous of his relationship with his dad. Even if Beth had lawyered up or the statute of limitations had expired, Tommy has lost his sanity living alone, being forced into bestiality, incest and cannibalism to stay alive, and believing his best friend betrayed him. He is also extremely violent, and he would need a lot of rehabilitation. All in all, Beth and Rick cloning Tommy was the least harmful decision because it means Tommy's father never found out the truth.]]



** Froopyland is a high-tech playpen, not a jail. Rick gave it to Beth as just another toy to play with, assuming she would come out of Froopyland to eat, sleep, go to school, play with other toys(she mentioned thinking a Nintendo was cooler), etc. There was never any need to provide food inside Froopyland because the assumption was if Beth god hungry she'd come out and ask for food.

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** Froopyland is a high-tech playpen, not a jail. Rick gave it to Beth as just another toy to play with, assuming she would come out of Froopyland to eat, sleep, go to school, play with other toys(she toys (she mentioned thinking a Nintendo was cooler), etc. There was never any need to provide food inside Froopyland because the assumption was if Beth god got hungry she'd come out and ask for food.
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* "The Ricklantis Mixup" shows a Rick who lived "60 iterations off the Central Finite Curve" until he was kidnapped, and his memories of his Beth were harvested into wafers for the inhabitants of the Citadel of Ricks to eat. That Rick was later freed and sent to the blender dimension to die. "Unmortricken" later revealed that Weird Rick killed every iteration of Diane with the Weapon Too Cool For a Name. This means that the Beth who belonged to the late Simple Rick is now an orphan, since both of her parents are gone for good.
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!!FridgeSadness
[[folder:Fridge Sadness]]
* "Unmortricken" confirms that Rick's spaceship has Diane's voice. Now remember way back in the very first episode when Rick told Morty he'd just built the ship before getting drunk and trying to blow up the town - but making sure to spare Jessica for Morty's sake. It's like he learned the hard way that he couldn't fill the void and wanted to erase his past for good, but he also wants Morty to have a better shot at happiness.
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* Just like how "Rattlestar Ricklactica" showed the problem with time travel where time travelers will inevitably all go to one place to change time, creating utter chaos, "Unmortricken" shows it's the same with interdimensional travelers. Because infinite possibilities exist, so do infinite interdimensional travelers. And just like time travelers, they create utter chaos in places of interest.

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