[s6e2] Rick: A Mort Well Lived Direct
Because time in the game moves at an accelerated rate, Rick spends decades building a global movement. The fragments of Morty’s mind eventually form a religion around Rick’s message, though some factions resist, leading to a massive civil war.
Review: Rick: A Mort Well Lived (S6E2) – A Fractured Soul and a Bad "Die Hard" [S6E2] Rick: A Mort Well Lived
After a lore-heavy season premiere, Rick and Morty Season 6, Episode 2, "Rick: A Mort Well Lived," shifts gears into a high-concept, twin-narrative adventure that explores Morty’s fractured identity and a hilariously incompetent Die Hard parody. The A-Plot: Five Billion Mortys Because time in the game moves at an
While Rick is inside the machine, he tasks Summer with defending the arcade from the terrorists by "doing a Die Hard". The A-Plot: Five Billion Mortys While Rick is
One fragment, Marta, represents Morty’s rebellious side and his desire for Rick’s genuine love. In the end, she stays behind in the simulation to live a full life, while the rest of Morty returns to the real world, notably more "subservient" to Rick than before. The B-Plot: "Doing a Die Hard"
The episode returns to the intergalactic arcade , where Morty is playing the life-simulator game Roy: A Life Well Lived . When alien terrorists attack and cause a power surge, Morty’s consciousness is shattered and distributed across all 5 billion non-player characters (NPCs) within the game.
Rick enters the game as Roy to convince the NPCs—who each represent 1/5 billionth of Morty—that they are part of a larger consciousness and must leave the planet in spaceships to "re-assemble".