Rick and Morty Explained — Episode by Episode
Years ago, Rick built robot duplicates of the Smith family and scattered them across the country to absorb assassination attempts — and the decoys have no idea they aren't real. When alien squid assassins begin picking them off, it triggers an "Asimov Cascade": every decoy realizes what it is, discovers it has been quietly building decoys of its own, and starts hunting all the others. What follows is a nationwide chain reaction of fake Smiths killing fake Smiths — Italian vacationers, scarecrow Ricks harvesting skin, wooden Glockenspiel sermonizers, squid-suited looters, and a self-varnishing Jerry — escalating until a Star-Fox-styled beacon lures the survivors into a final battle royale. The throwaway target-suit man from the cold open walks in and finishes the last family standing. The real Smiths, meanwhile, spend the whole story off in space with Space Beth, having never heard the word "decoy." The episode turns its own premise into a thesis on Rick: protecting his family and playing god are the same impulse, since every Rick in the cascade is both creator and the deity the cold-open Rick set out to kill. It rewards attention to how the show narrates itself — characters openly mock B-stories, the beacon taunt reads the audience's own doubts back at them, and the cruelest gag (Jerry's cowardice is the one constant across every branch) doubles as character study. By the end you understand why "Mortyplicity" is built on ontological vertigo: nobody you follow is who they think they are, and the show treats that crisis as something best resolved with a fart joke.
19 episodios
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