Rick and Morty Season 6 just fixed the show’s biggest sci-fi problem

The Season 5 finale has been undone.

A scene from the show Rick And Morty season 6

If Rick and Morty Season 6 has felt a bit strange, there’s a good reason for that. As Episode 6, “Juricksic Mort” reminds us several times over, Rick’s interdimensional Portal Gun technology is still on the fritz.

Most of Season 6 has felt pretty terrestrial as a result: Rick and Jerry foiled a fortune cookie conspiracy , the family enslaved their sleep-walking selves , Beth hooked up with her own clone, and Morty spent a lifetime trapped as billions of NPCs in Roy: A Life Well-Lived . In short, we’ve all been stuck inside the new universe that the family migrated to in the Season 6 premiere. But now, the most advanced alien civilization of all has set things right.

The dinosaurs are back, and their tech is better than Rick’s.

A scene from Rick and Morty season 6 episode 6

That weird rift is still hanging out.

The episode opens with Rick watching TV on a random schoolday morning, and the news anchor explains that “the mysterious rift is still there.” He’s talking about the rip in spacetime that Evil Morty used in the Season 5 finale to rocket himself to a place beyond the confines of the Central Finite Curve, which Rick had created years ago to isolate the realities where he’s the smartest man in the universe. These days, we know Rick did this to try and track down Rick Prime, but because Evil Morty also destroyed the Citadel, it also messed with Portal Gun technology in general.

Rick supposedly reset the tech in the Season 6 premiere, but as he shows Morty in Episode 6, it’s not quite functional yet. When he tries to use it, a Cthulhu-looking monster comes through the portal in the living room. So Rick has to bring Morty to school the old-fashioned way. Rick claims to have “a process,” but it’s clear he’s not actually sure how to fix it.

Enter the dinosaurs

In an obvious riff on 2016’s Arrival , several silvery monolithic ships appear at important places around the world: the Hollywood sign, the Eiffel Tower, and Harry Herpson High School, to name a few. Inside are a bunch of dinosaurs with magical helmets that seem to give them access to high-level telekinetics and psionics. And they can talk! ( Friends star Lisa Kudrow voices the orange T-Rex.)

They’ve traveled the cosmos for eons transforming entire planets into utopias using their techno-magic. But now they’ve come home and are dismayed to learn about the fate of their reptilian ancestors. Dinos peacefully take over and do everything for humanity, functionally ending world hunger, poverty, and virtually every issue imaginable. (Including a better portal pistol to replace Rick’s broken device.)

Of course, the humans hate it.

After making a deal with his frenemy, the president of the United States of America, it’s up to Rick to get rid of them. With Morty in tow, Rick visits all the planets the dinosaurs previously helped and learns that wherever the dinosaurs go, an apocalyptic meteorite follows. Turns out, these meteors are actually an alien species that evolved in parallel with the dinosaurs and hate them so much they chase them across the universe.

Rick and Morty season 6 featuring an asteroid

The best new Rick and Morty species is this angry asteroid that keeps screaming in gibberish.

The dinosaurs didn’t know any of this, but once Rick explains it they decide to evacuate to Mars and sacrifice themselves for the greater good. Of course, Rick shows up to insult the dinos one more time. In response, they casually command their mother ship to fix the giant rift out in space that Rick’s been ignoring. In response, he complains that the rift could have fueled enough adventures “for an entire season.”

The grand finale confirms that whatever Evil Morty did to this universe, it’s been undone. Rick fixes interdimensional travel and plans to celebrate with Morty by going on a trip to Boob World.

Essentially, we’re back to square one on Rick and Morty . This has fundamentally re-established a sense of normalcy. Evil Morty might be out of the picture for good (but we doubt it!). In all likelihood, this will mark the beginning of some bigger-picture conflict against Rick Prime, who murdered our Rick’s original wife and daughter.

New episodes of Rick and Morty will return on Sunday, November 20.

This article was originally published on Oct. 9, 2022

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'Rick and Morty' Season 6: Showrunner Explains That Venusian Wine

Scott Marder, Justin Roiland and other cast members also discuss reduced portal travel and what's coming up in the remainder of season 6.

portal travel rick and morty

I wonder if Morty still has those washboard abs.

Warning: Spoilers ahead. Come back when you've binged episodes 1 to 6 of Rick and Morty, season 6.

Angry-faced asteroids. Traumatizing fortune cookies. Aliens quoting Die Hard. The first half of Rick and Morty's sixth season was stacked with unforgettable adventures. Luckily, there are still four more episodes to come.

I spoke with showrunner Scott Marder and the Rick and Morty cast during the season 6 hiatus, which ends with the release of episode 7 on Sunday on Adult Swim . They shared some details about the "real deal" Rick from the premiere; the much-discussed ending to episode 3, Bethic Twinstinct (sorry to those who scrutinized the final scene -- it appears the Beths just partook in some plain old red wine); and why Rick didn't get portal travel up and running again sooner.

"I think fixing it is probably something that was within his means, but it's also something that Rick's, like, 'I'll get to it tomorrow,'" Marder told me over Zoom last week on Rick's inoperable portal travel gun. "So it made us laugh that Rick kind of kicked the can down the road to the point where [episode 6's genius dinosaurs] were, like, 'We can fix that.'"

portal travel rick and morty

The season premiere, Solaricks, found Rick and Morty stranded without a working portal gun after the events of the season 5 finale, which saw Evil Morty hack the gun. The device stays out of commission for several more episodes.

"We really wanted to make it feel like what Evil Morty did in [season 5, episode 10] wasn't just like a quick and easy thing," Marder said. "He's like a fan favorite villain. So we wanted what he did to have major ramifications."

Solaricks also included a character fans have come to know as integral to Rick's past.

When Rick flubs an attempt to reset portal travel, he and Morty are transported back to their realities of origin. Morty subsequently learns he shares that dimension with the Rick who tragically murdered our Rick's wife, Diane.

This character, who's been referred to by people who make the show as Rick Prime, appears at first dancing naked (he could either be himself or a clone) and later wearing his signature purple-ish jacket (he talks about just having been naked). It's anyone's guess when the villain will show up next and what might happen when he does. Justin Roiland, who co-created the show with Dan Harmon, told me a bit about this "very intelligent" Rick… and I'm a bit worried for our Rick and Morty.

"At least with our Rick, there's a little bit of empathy, a little bit of, maybe, as much as he doesn't want to admit it, like attachment to Morty and the family and stuff a little bit, right?" Roiland said. "We've seen it, you know, here and there. But with this Rick, there's just none of that."

There are "truly like, no fucks. No, like, really in a dark, dark way. An actively psychopathic, like malicious way," Roiland said. 

The mysterious 'Venusian' wine

On a lighter note, Solaricks also brought Space Beth back into the fold, allowing for an episode that gave a whole new meaning to "self love."

Rick previously cloned his adult daughter Beth, and Space Beth is either the original or the clone. In Bethic Twinstinct, Beth voice actress Sarah Chalke plays the dual versions of her character as they fall for each other.

"It was one of the more unique things that I've done in my career and in my career on Rick and Morty," said Chalke, who's also known for starring in the comedy series Scrubs.

Before their highly unconventional romance blossoms, the two Beths share some "Venusian" wine (from Venus , presumably). In the episode's final scene -- after Rick and his grandkids suffer though a meal while the adults get audibly frisky in another room -- Rick wordlessly unlocks a hidden cabinet with a remote, shelves the wine and purges the remote down a garbage disposal.

Following Rick's solo moment with the wine, some fans theorized the drink could have played a bigger role in what unfurled between the two Beths. (Did Rick know something we didn't know about its contents? Venus is the Roman goddess of love and beauty , after all).

While Rick and Morty the show often takes the more complicated route, this scene was actually meant to be pretty straightforward, according to Marder.

"That was just supposed to be a silly joke," Marder said. "I feel like the internet really took off with it."

Like, really? Nothing there at all?

"There was nothing supernatural to it," Marder said. "It was just what the two of them did to loosen up in the kitchen. I think Rick was just like, 'Damn you wine,' like, 'You'll get us into trouble time and time again.' I think that was all it really was."

Chalke's Beths speak "Venusian" in the episode, but it's actually just French. (Chalke spoke French in school from kindergarten to grade 12.) Marder said the show's co-creator Dan Harmon suggested they re-name "French" late in the game, and at first, Marder thought he was going to need to whip up a language.

"[Harmon's] like 'No, you just call it Venusian," Marder said. "It stays French."

More 'crazy' adventures to come

Another season 6 highlight is Night Family, an episode that sees the Smith family pass unwanted tasks off to their unconscious bodies while they sleep… with only a few minor consequences. In a twist, Rick's granddaughter Summer, not Rick, is designated the leader of their terrifying "night" counterparts. Voice actress Spencer Grammer said she embraced the chance to "be really evil."

"I've been wanting to do that for a while," Grammer said.

There's also Final DeSmithation, where Jerry (Rick's son-in-law, Beth's husband) becomes destined after reading a fortune cookie fortune to have sex with his mom. It sets off a hilarious Rick and Jerry adventure.

"I love the idea that you're reading a fortune cookie, but … there's some machinations behind the scene that actually cause you to have that fortune," said Chris Parnell, who voices Jerry. "I thought, "Wow, they can justify anything. They can come up with a way to make sense of anything."

According to Marder, the idea for that episode was an immediate yes.

Harmon, he said, "immediately put it on a Post-it, just slapped it on the board like 'Episode!'" 

A preview  for the rest of season 6 teases what looks like a humanoid bug in a letter jacket, Morty engaged in a sword fight and Rick paying a visit to recurring character Dr. Wong, who's voiced by Susan Sarandon. The intelligent therapist first appeared in the Emmy-winning season 3 episode Pickle Rick.

You should probably snag your pint of Gloppydrop-ice cream now, because Marder said the back half of the season is as stacked as the first.

"If you're happy with what you've seen so far in season 6, I think we've got some really action-packed, crazy ones for the rest of the season," Marder said. "One of the ones in these final four is like one of my absolute favorite episodes that the show's done."

New Rick and Morty episodes air on Sundays on Adult Swim . Rick and Morty's sixth season is expected to eventually hit HBO Max and Hulu (for those without Hulu Plus Live TV, who have access).

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  • When Is The Next Episode of 'Rick and Morty' Season 6 Premiering?
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Recap / Rick And Morty S 6 E 1 Solaricks

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Original air date: 9/4/2022

  • After the End : Earth in Main Morty's dimension (Cronenberg Dimension/Prime Dimension) has since been taken over by nature, and its Cronenberg inhabitants are far more sparse, either from Jerry thinning their numbers or simply dying off. Hermit Jerry is the sole human left on Earth, until Morty and then later Rick Prime are shunted back there by Rick's portal reset.
  • Rick froze time in his original dimension, presumably in hopes of getting revenge, finding a new Diane and young Beth and resuming his family life. Unfortunately, he forgot or was unable to stop the people of his universe from aging, meaning they are reliving the same day, while still aging. Given how old everyone appears, Rick has been gone for a while.
  • While eating the brain of a mutant, Hermit Jerry nonchalantly wonders if the person they used to be is still there but just trapped in a horrible existence.
  • Apocalypse How : By the end of his screentime, Mr. Frundles has assimilated earth itself, swallowing its oceans with its gigantic mouth and reducing it to a lifeless husk, thus being an example of Class 6 of Apocalypse How .
  • When Morty tries to explain to Hermit Jerry that Batman doesn't abandon allies, he gets hit with the clear fact that he abandoned his original family (even if it wasn't originally by his own choice).
  • After Rick tells AI Diane (the voice of his dead wife Diane who serves as the robot for his house and spaceship) that their granddaughter Summer reminds him of her , AI Diane asks if it's because Summer's dead too, prompting Rick to instantly shut down the conversation.
  • This is how Morty gets Rick to stop his Revenge Before Reason -fueled futile effort to try to kill Rick Prime and leave with him to go save the Beths and Summer. Rick makes a crack about Morty being Rick Prime's real grandson, only for Morty to respond that he's never met Rick Prime, and he (Main Rick) is Morty's actual grandpa where it counts, reminding him of their "Rick and Morty for a hundred years" motto.
  • Asshole Victim : It's easy to forget, but the original Jerry, Beth and Summer from the Cronenberg dimension didn't care that Rick and Morty went missing from their world, even expressing happiness that they were gone, and when Morty and Main Summer came there later, the Original Smiths shattered their portal gun, planned to force Morty to stay with them against his will, and were about to likely attack Summer. In that respect, knowing that they died, and that Jerry was left all alone (before his death in the hands of Rick Prime in The Stinger ), hits a little differently.
  • Season 2 Jerry, who served as the Main Jerry from the end of " Rick Potion #9 " to the end of " Mortynight Run ", returns, having been sent back to his original reality as a result of Rick's failed attempt to reset the portal travel system. Not long after his return, he carelessly releases Mr. Frundles , immediately gets infected , and the rest of the planet quickly follows suit, forcing Rick and Morty to once again abscond to another reality, this time with the rest of the Smith-Sanchez family (including Space Beth) in tow.
  • When Morty is sent back to his original reality, he once again reunites with Hermit Jerry, who reveals that Hermit Beth and Hermit Summer were both Killed Offscreen sometime between "The Rickshank Redemption" and this episode. Hermit Jerry himself also ends up dying, getting killed by Rick Prime during The Stinger .
  • Batman Can Breathe in Space : Both Rick and Morty can now breathe in space without issue. Morty is surprised, so Rick hand waves he "child-proofed" him just in case.
  • Rick and Morty are starving in the remains of the ship from the Citadel and prepare to quietly die, but Space Beth shows up and saves them.
  • Summer rescues both of the Beths from the stomach of the hydra-like space creature looting the Citadel remains. The three of them then regroup for another shot at fighting it...only for Rick and Morty to arrive and land their ship on top of it, and Rick easily dissolves and kills it.
  • Black-and-Grey Morality : Rick has never been a standup guy, but he did care about his original Diane and Beth and still cares about Morty and the rest of his current versions of the Smiths . His enemy Rick Prime cares for no one and killed Rick's family for fun.
  • Blatant Lies : Rick tells Beth that the family's counterparts in the new replacement dimension all died of natural causes. As we can see, their corpses are all maimed and mutilated and the living room has been damaged by an obvious explosion, indicating that the natural-causes explanation is total BS.
  • Boom, Headshot! : How Rick Prime finishes off Hermit Jerry, after shooting him in the stomach.
  • Breaking the Fourth Wall : First Rick mentions how Morty is trying to do something he already did "last season"; later, he mentions he's getting "Season 2" vibes from Jerry's original family that he was sent back to, and likewise calling the Jerry who's been living with said family "Season 2 Jerry"; and finally , after Mr. Frundles has assimilated Earth, Rick notes that, without portal travel, they'll have to do "the whole fucking episode" all over again to find a new reality to inhabit.
  • Brick Joke : When Rick and Morty find Rick Prime's hideout with a dancing naked clone of him, Rick Prime states on the monitor that that could be a clone or it could be the real him. When Rick Prime appears in The Stinger , he puts his pants back on and tells Hermit Jerry that he was naked "to fuck with a guy", revealing that it really was him there.
  • Bullying a Dragon : It's not certain whether Rick Prime would have killed Hermit Jerry anyway even if the latter hadn't attacked him; one of Rick's lines to Morty earlier in the episode ("If you had [seen Rick Prime], you'd be dead") implies that Rick Prime is Ax-Crazy enough to kill anyone he doesn't need, like Hermit Jerry, on sight, but this could just be Rick's (understandable) perception of him. Regardless, once Hermit Jerry tries and fails to kill Rick Prime thanks to the latter's Healing Factor , he quickly pays for it with his life.
  • Call-Back : One all the way back to "Pilot": Morty repeats the "Rick and Morty for a hundred years" line from Rick's tirade at the end of that episode to get through to Rick and convince him to leave Rick Prime's lair with him.
  • Calling the Young Man Out : After Morty reunites with his prime Jerry, after abandoning him during the Cronenberg-event and causing the deaths of his mother and sister, his father rightfully calls his son out on his selfish behavior, leaving him in tears over what he has done.
  • Casual Danger Dialogue : When Summer and her two moms fight the aliens guarding the beacon, they trash talk each other while killing off their attackers with ease .
  • Cerebus Syndrome : Parodied with the Season 2 universe. While everyone from the mainline show has become a better person, including Rick and Jerry, the family from the Season 2 universe has mostly stayed the same as a bunch of unhappy, cynical pricks. It's so bad that now all they do is sit around the table and bring up each other's failures. Morty even casually brings up that he was expelled, and all the family does is bitch him out and call him worthless.
  • Hermit Summer and Hermit Beth, the show's original Summer and Beth for the first six episodes who were abandoned in "Rick Potion #9" and briefly seen again in "The Rickshank Redemption", died offscreen between then and now after being frozen by the SWAT Team Ricks.
  • Hermit Jerry — who is likewise the series's original Jerry — is shot dead in The Stinger by Rick Prime.
  • What's more, "Season 2 Jerry"—who was the show's "main Jerry" from the end of "Rick Potion #9" until the end of "Mortynight Run" (at which point he was accidentally swapped with the third and current "main" Jerry at the Jerryboree)—is killed when he's bitten, infected, and overtaken by Mr. Frundles, who then proceeds to take over the entire planet Earth.
  • Rick is a lot more willing to admit to his flaws and issues and, even if he still certainly backslides quite a bit, is at least more willing to try to fix them and open up to others than he used to be. Probably the best examples are when AI Diane asks if Rick's leaving because he wants to move on from what happened to his original family, and he counters that he doesn't want to, but knows he has to; and when, ultimately, he listens to Morty and prioritizes saving his Family of Choice over getting revenge on his original family's killer.
  • Morty's higher cynicism and Seen It All attitude are shown once again at the end when burying his alternate self without so much as changing expression, and that he doesn't panic or get scared anywhere near as much here as he used to. The fact that he Grew a Spine and developed a greater understanding of Rick over time is highlighted when he picks up on several of Rick's explanations very quickly, tries to persuade him not to fight with Rick Prime because "it's an obvious trap", and knows exactly what to say and do to reach Rick and get him to leave with him.
  • Summer once again gets to show off her Action Girl chops and her status as The Reliable One for Rick, neither of which she started out with but have grown more and more over the series.
  • Beth's evolution from being a shrewish wife and unsupportive mom into a caring family woman is shown several times through her concern for her kids, but especially when the family comes to pick up Jerry from his original dimension. Jerry is shown being chewed out and demeaned by the alternate, shrill, resentful version of Beth who never divorced him, who then proceeds to yell at her version of Morty and call him "so fucking dumb" when he reveals he got expelled from school. Jerry gets up and answers the door to find the Beth he knows, who greets him with a smile and warmly hugs him.
  • On a related note, Jerry is shown to also be a lot happier, more confident, and less petty than he used to be, as seen in the brief interaction with Season 2 Jerry, who has been living with the alternates and stagnated in development since then, expecting the rest of the family to "bust [his] ass" and taking a hostile verbal potshot at Beth completely unprovoked. As for Main Jerry, briefly seeing his original family having likewise not developed causes him to realize that spending time divorced from Beth was good for them in the end, insight he probably would never have had in the beginning.
  • Even Space Beth gets a bit of development here after her argument with Earth Beth earlier; by the end, she states that, while setting boundaries is a good thing, she feels that she's set too many , and asks if she can come visit more often, which Earth Beth agrees to with a smile.
  • Clone by Conversion : Mr. Frundles is a triangle-shaped creature that causes whatever it bites to adopt his face, both organic and inorganic. Simply biting things around the Smith house quickly assimilates the entire planet.
  • Close-Enough Timeline : Or dimension in this case. The family has to flee to another dimension and bury their now-dead original inhabitants the same way that Rick and Morty did in Season 1. Rick assures them that everything is pretty much the same, except that the word "parmesan" is pronounced "Par-mee-zee-an".
  • Hermit Jerry has managed move on from the ruination of his world and the deaths of his wife and daughter by cutting himself off emotionally . He himself bitterly admits to Morty that, aside from having to talk to him, he considered his life to be perfect.
  • Demonstrated with most of the family over the course of the episode, with the exception of Main Jerry. Morty, both versions of Beth, and Summer have all been shown to be comparatively level-headed when dealing with post-apocalyptic worlds, extradimensional horrors, and the prospect of burying the bodies of their alternate selves. (Though this last point is downplayed for Summer and Earth Beth, who still look disturbed and unhappy when dealing with their alternates' corpses.)
  • When Beth wonders aloud where the original Rick and Morty from their dimension are, Summer rather casually responds, "Buried in the backyard," which Morty revealed to her in " Rixty Minutes " and she directly saw for herself and took advantage of in " The Rickshank Redemption ".
  • This episode confirms that two Jerrys were swapped at the Jerryboree back in "Mortynight Run", which was heavily implied at the time, and they all realize it here.
  • Hermit Jerry references how he, Hermit Beth, and Hermit Summer were frozen by the SWAT Team Ricks in "The Rickshank Redemption", and mentions that Summer and Beth actually died as a result of this because the Ricks never bothered to unfreeze them (a monster thawed them by licking them, but only Jerry survived).
  • After the Earth has been overtaken by Mr. Frundles, the family moves to another dimension where their counterparts all died at the same time and end up being buried by their replacements, like in "Rick Potion #9".
  • Rick uses a cybernetic implant in his spine to inject drugs directly into his bloodstream, an ability introduced in "Claw and Hoarder: Special Ricktim's Morty".
  • The frozen corpse of Fat Morty from " The Ricklantis Mixup " can briefly be seen floating in space alongside other dead Ricks and Mortys.
  • Hermit Jerry pre-emptively wrote a note to leave to Morty to explain how he's going to take all his stuff and run and the note is to stall him while he runs away. Then when Morty tries to leave the house to chase him, he's caught in a snare and hoisted to another note on the wall taped up-side-down, which Jerry scrawled in a hurry as he set the trap and was left just to mock Morty.
  • Rick Prime's lair is rigged with several minutes of video to talk to whoever finds it, a clone in a tank to mock them, kill bots to attack them, and an implicit Self-Destruct Mechanism . He prepared it so well that his pre-recorded videos are practically talking to the main Rick in realtime and even seem to be following Rick's movements with their eyes . (Because the clone isn't a clone; it's actually Rick Prime and he's there screwing with Rick in person.)
  • Cute Little Fangs : Mr. Frundles sports some. But he's not so nice.
  • Cuteness Proximity : After Mr. Frundles assimilates Earth into becoming like it, Beth finds out why Rick brought it: Beth : What the fuck, Dad?! Why would you bring that thing into our house?! Rick : It was cute! Fuck!
  • The aging population of Rick's original dimension, forced to re-live the same day while getting older, wish to end the agony. When the neighbor who comes to Rick's door starts to die after their conversation, he celebrates.
  • Rick tells AI Diane that he considers risking his life flying into a dimensional rift a "win-win", as in, even if Summer and the Beths have failed to set up the signal and he dies trying to reach them, he's still fine with it. Later, Morty tells Rick that going deeper into Rick Prime's lair will lead to his death, and Rick replies with a blunt "Good." It takes Morty reminding him what family really is for him to relent.
  • Desperately Looking for a Purpose in Life : The Stinger implies this for Rick Prime, though he may simply be wondering why he's been returned to his own universe. Hermit Jerry: (slowly dying from being shot in the stomach by Rick Prime) Why... are you here? Rick Prime: Buddy, I've been asking myself that exact (shoots Hermit Jerry again – this time in the head, killing him) same question.
  • Devoured by the Horde : The surviving Morties in the opening scene tear apart and eat one of their own .
  • Diabolus ex Nihilo : The entire Smith-Sanchez family returns home at the end, laughing and chatting about their awesome adventure and the Aesop of the episode, only to find Season 2 Jerry there, who found a never-before-seen alien creature in Rick's possessions called "Mr. Frundles", which he releases from its cage. It promptly begins infecting everything within reach, including Season 2 Jerry, and soon afterwards, the entire Earth , which forces the family to change dimensions once again.
  • Distracted by the Sexy : Morty follows the footprints he finds (which are Hermit Jerry's) to a convenience store, only to quickly get distracted by the magazine rack and the issue of Sex Vogue he finds there, with a hot, scantily-dressed model on the front. It's downplayed, though, since Morty is quick to turn around and strike when he hears someone (Hermit Jerry) behind him.
  • Don't Sneak Up on Me Like That! : Morty accidentally wounds Hermit Jerry with a spear throw after the latter sneaked up on him from behind.
  • Dramatic Space Drifting : We see dead Ricks and Morties floating in space in the opening scene.
  • Dropped a Bridge on Him : Hermit Beth and Hermit Summer (Main Morty's original Beth and Summer) are revealed by Hermit Jerry to have been Killed Offscreen (see below).
  • "Eureka!" Moment : Rick has this when he realizes, thanks to AI Diane, that the Rick he's been hunting for must have also been pulled back to his original reality and is likewise trapped there, giving Rick a far better chance of finding him since he knows which one it is (Cronenberg dimension).
  • As Rick, Morty, and Jerry are about to disappear and be returned to their native dimensions, Rick tries to build up to it with a big, "Here we GOOOOOO!", complete with Milking the Giant Cow ...only for it to take almost 30 more seconds, giving Jerry enough time to point out that Rick actually had a lot of time to explain what was going on while Rick can only sigh in exasperation.
  • Jerry tells off the versions of Beth, Summer, Morty, and Rick from his original dimension by announcing that he's now a multi-dimensional traveler, and tries to make a Mic Drop -style exit by Flipping the Bird at them with both hands...but bumps into the closed front door and has to awkwardly reach over with one of his hands to open it (though he still continues to flip them off with the other one).
  • At Rick Prime's lair, Rick makes a comment about Earth Beth and Space Beth being one universe's version of Morty's moms, and also alludes to Rick Prime being Morty's real grandfather. Morty immediately replies that he doesn't even know the guy; Main Rick is the one he considers his grandpa.
  • Ultimately, this is the case for the whole Smith-Sanchez family. Between the six of them, they originate from four different dimensions (the one where we've spent the show from the ending of "Rick Potion #9" is where Summer and the Beths come from, while Rick, Morty, and Jerry are each from a different one), but all affirm by the end that they consider each other their true family.
  • Flipping the Bird : Jerry (using both hands) to his original versions of the rest of his family, who have not undergone any of the same Character Development as the ones he's been living with since "Mortynight Run", and are still just as dysfunctional and unhappy now as they were when he left them.
  • Generation Xerox : Beth worries that Summer's starting to idolize Space Beth, who admits she has no interest in being a part of their family, the same way she spent the first three seasons idolizing and making excuses for Rick. Summer later dismisses this notion by making it clear she's aware Space Beth isn't a good mother or role model and doesn't favor her over the Beth that stayed. In the end Space Beth defies this by noting that she's been acting too aloof, and asks for permission to spend more time with the family.
  • Gilligan Cut : After the family is forced to flee from Mr. Frundles and Earth, Rick tells them how they're going to have to switch realities, and since that's so much more difficult without portal tech, they'll pretty much have to "do the episode all over again". Space Beth tries to offer up a different solution: Space Beth : Can't we just...go back and fix it? Mr. Frundles : (as it literally assimilates the entire Earth and turns into one large uninhabitable rock) MMMM, I'M MR. FRUNDLES!!! ( Long Beat as everyone stares at it) (Cut to the family in the living room in an alternate reality with dead versions of themselves.)
  • "Groundhog Day" Loop : Turns out Rick set up an imperfect one back in his home dimension. Imperfect, because while the same day ostensibly repeats from the perspective of the people trapped in the loop, things they did in previous iterations of the loop leave behind permanent changes (Rick's neighbor was able to leave behind written notes for himself, though this didn't help him very much because he would forget the context each time the loop reset), they are at least subconsciously aware that something is wrong with the way time behaves, and they physically age too, but are also not able to die even if their bodies have deteriorated way past the breaking point (it's uncertain how long that they have been trapped, but it is implied that it is at the very least a couple of decades). Rick somewhat ashamedly admits to himself that he did a sloppy job with setting up the loop, chalking it up to the fact that he did it at a time in his life where his alcoholism was even worse than it is now. Before he leaves, he flips a switch that implies the loop is finally turned off, granting everyone affected a much-needed death.
  • Hand Wave : Done in-universe and Played for Laughs with Morty surviving in the vacuum of space without a spacesuit with no problems. He outright lampshades this, only for Rick to tell him that he "childproofed" Morty while the latter was sleeping.
  • Healing Factor : Hermit Jerry slashes Rick Prime's throat , but the wound closes up after a few seconds.
  • Heal It With Fire : Hermit Jerry burns out the spear wound in his shoulder with a fire-heated knife.
  • History Repeats : After Mr. Frundles infects the entire world, Rick lampshades that the family has to repeat the whole process to find a new home. And, in a repeat of "Rick Potion #9", they hop to an alternate universe where their counterparts recently died, and bury them in the backyard, except that this time, instead of just Rick and Morty doing it, Summer, Jerry, and both Beths have counterparts to bury as well.
  • I Have No Son! : Hermit Jerry makes it clear that he blames Morty for the deaths of Hermit Beth and Hermit Summer and that having to interact with him is the only part of his life he doesn't consider "perfect".
  • I Need a Freaking Drink : When Rick is returned to his home universe and encounters AI Diane in his old house there, the first thing he does after she starts "haunting" him is open up a secret compartment with alcohol in it and pour himself a drink. And then when he finishes that, heads to the fridge for a beer.
  • Inertial Impalement : Morty kills an attacking Cronenberg monster by holding up a knife while the beast jumps onto him. Results in an Instant Death Stab .
  • Internal Reveal : Beth learns from Summer that their reality's original Rick and Morty died, which happened at the end of "Rick Potion #9" and which Summer learned from Morty in "Rixty Minutes".
  • Innocent Innuendo : When Rick Prime appears in The Stinger , he puts his pants back on and tells Hermit Jerry that he was naked "to fuck with a guy".
  • Irony : Morty finally meets an "improved" version of his father whose opinion he actually values only to be dismissed and insulted in a manner not too dissimilar to how he treats his current Jerry.
  • Jerkass Has a Point : Hermit Jerry is 100% justified in calling out Morty for abandoning his family. Morty left his versions of Jerry, Beth, and Summer behind on Cronenberg world and never looked back. When he finally returned, it was only to use them as props to demonstrate Rick's callousness to his current Summer, and he had no intention of staying. Jerry destroyed the portal gun to force him to stay, then the Citadel of Ricks kidnapped him and Summer, leaving the others frozen solid.
  • Killed Offscreen : Hermit Beth and Hermit Summer both died sometime after they were frozen in "The Rickshank Rickdemption". According to Jerry, Beth contracted a fatal disease and Summer "didn't thaw right."
  • Killer Rabbit : Mr. Frundles, a small triangular alien creature with an adorable-looking face, which is actually a deadly parasite that turns anything it bites into a clone of itself, while its clones can also assimilate other people/objects around them. This causes the end of the replacement dimension that had been a setting for almost every episode since Season 1's "Rick Potion #9" when Mr. Frundles assimilates the whole planet, and the Smith-Sanchez family are subsequently forced to find a new replacement dimension.
  • Laughably Evil : Rick Prime is a fun-loving sociopath with a sense of humour.
  • Let Me Get This Straight... : Rick tells Morty that they're going to "kill your grandpa". Morty responds in confusion that he doesn't understand, and asks if this means that his original Rick is the one who killed Main Rick's family, and the latter came to Morty's dimension in the first place with the hope that the former would come back someday. Rick just replies that, clearly, Morty actually understands the situation perfectly.
  • Luke, I Am Your Father : Rick Prime, who killed Main Rick's family, is the true Rick from the Cronenberg dimension, the biological grandfather of Main Morty. Though it's Main Rick instead of Rick Prime who tells Morty this, as he's never even met the latter.
  • Meet Your Early-Installment Weirdness : The Jerry that has been a part of the Smith-Sanchez Family for the majority of the series is not the one native to the dimension, having been accidentally swapped out with the second main Jerry at Jerryboree. Upon being returned to his true universe, he experiences how very little has changed in his original family, who are still constantly at each others' throats and bitter at one another. And after being reunited with his real family and returning home, they all meet "Season 2 Jerry": the aforementioned second main Jerry who was brought to Current Jerry's home reality accidentally, and as such, didn't undergo any of his Character Development .
  • Mike Nelson, Destroyer of Worlds : Season 2 Jerry is this after he accidentally releases Mr. Fru ndles .
  • Mooning : The naked possible-clone of Rick Prime (revealed in The Stinger to actually be the real one) in the capsule does this to Rick and Morty when they find his space station, rubbing his buttcheeks against the glass while jeering at them.
  • Never My Fault : While he is at least somewhat in the right to call out Morty, it was Hermit Jerry who burned that last bridge by destroying the portal gun to force Morty to stay and trying to kill Summer on top of that. He and his family then tried to attack the Citadel of Rick officers that tracked the unlicensed portal gun, leading to them being frozen. Any motivation Morty might have had to help his original family was lost when Hermit Jerry proved he couldn't be reasoned with.
  • Rick tries to reset the portal travel system, but ends up accidentally resetting portal travelers , sending himself, Morty, and Jerry back to their original realities and requiring a much more complicated system to reunite the whole family that takes the bulk of the episode to fix. By the end, the portal system still hasn't been rebooted yet.
  • Season 2 Jerry finds Mr. Frundles in Rick's stuff and releases it, only for it to quickly infect the entire planet Earth , forcing the Smith-Sanchez family to change realities again.
  • No Party Like a Donner Party : After the Citadel runs out of food, the rescued Mortys go feral and start to eat each other.
  • No-Sell : Hermit Jerry's throat slash attack on Rick Prime is this, due to the latter's previously unrevealed Healing Factor .
  • Nothing Is the Same Anymore : Subverted. The universe (or, at least, its version of Earth) that the main cast has been living in since "Rick Potion #9" note  Or, in Jerry's case, since "Mortynight Run" , which is Summer's and both Beths' native version of Earth, is completely taken over by Mr. Frundles and essentially destroyed, forcing them to hop realities again and replace dead versions of themselves, meaning that no one in the family is living in their original reality anymore. That being said, Rick claims that the new one they moved to is almost exactly the same as the previous one, except that the word "parmesan" is pronounced differently. note  It's "par-mee-see-ann"
  • No Time to Explain : Rick to Jerry and everyone else when he, Morty, and Jerry are about to be teleported back to their original realities and Jerry asks what's going on. It's quickly subverted when it ends up taking them about another half a minute to actually disappear, prompting Jerry to lampshade in annoyance, twice, that there was actually plenty of time to explain.
  • Oh, Crap! : When the original Mr. Frundles bites Season 2 Jerry's ankle and said ankle spawns a face and also calls itself Mr. Frundles, Jerry comments a nervous "Wait, but I thought he was Mr. Frundles." It's after this that Rick tells everyone that they need to leave and the family wisely flees, and not a moment too soon, as it promptly assimilates the whole house, and soon, the whole planet.
  • Orphaned Punchline : Lampshaded when we cut to the family arriving home laughing and Morty remarks what an amazing joke he just told.
  • "The Reason You Suck" Speech : The Jerry we know, who has been the "main Jerry" since the end of "Mortynight Run", is returned to his original reality (where "Season 2 Jerry" has been living) where the family, including his own alternate, has not undergone the Character Development of the main cast and is still unhappy, dysfunctional, and argumentative. Once his family comes to rescue him and take him back with them, he takes a moment to duck inside and give this to the other versions, telling them that even if he's originally from their dimension, he's traveled between universes, and they can "kiss my sci-fi ass", complete with Flipping the Bird with both hands.
  • Reclaimed by Nature : The Cronenberg world has almost completely grown over with trees and other vegetation.
  • Replacement Goldfish : Hermit Jerry calls out Morty for this mindset. Not only did Morty abandon his original family to find a world that wasn't ruined, but he only came back to prove a point to his current Summer, treating them more like curiosities rather than people. The only reparation Morty can come up with is offering to have Rick send Hermit Jerry to another dimension with a new Beth and Summer , and Jerry once again tells him he's not getting it.
  • The Reveal : Rick Prime—the guy who murdered Rick C-137's original Beth and Diane—is the real native Rick of the Cronenberg dimension (the one where the show began and Main Morty is originally from), meaning that he is Main Morty's original Rick. The real reason Rick C-137 came to the Cronenberg dimension in the first place was to try to hunt Rick Prime down, only to end up staying there when that didn't pan out and essentially adopting them (or, at least, Morty) as his family.
  • Revenge Before Reason : Rick falls into this when he and Morty find Rick Prime's trap-infested hideout, with Morty pointing out that, if Rick falls for Rick Prime's challenges, it's just gonna get him killed. Morty finally gets through to Rick by telling him he considers him to be his real grandpa, and they leave before Rick Prime destroys the whole place.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here : The Smith-Sanchez family briefly consider going back and attempting to fix the mess caused by Season 2 Jerry releasing Mr. Frundles, only to be greeted by the sight of it having just finished assimilating literally the entire planet, and a planet-sized Mr. Frundles now staring at them. The next shot is of them in another reality in the middle of cleaning up the dead bodies of that universe's family.
  • After Beth learns from Summer that the original Rick and Morty of their dimension are dead and their corpses buried in the backyard, her only comment is a nonchalant, " That's what the possums are after."
  • As the Smith-Sanchez family prepares to bury their dead alternate counterparts after hopping universes, Morty just wearily advises his mom on a way to move the corpse more easily (prompting her to incredulously ask how many times he's done this), and has the same resigned look on his face as Rick while burying his own corpse, while the others look more traumatized by it.
  • Rick tries to pull another "I don't actually care about any of you" on the rest of his family at the end, only for Summer, Jerry, and the Beths to respond with bored indifference at this point.
  • Self-Serving Memory : Jerry from the Cronenberg dimension guilt trips Morty when the two are reunited for abandoning their family after the events of Rick Potion #9. He conveniently ignores the fact that he didn't care that Morty vanished, and was perfectly content with it being just him, Beth and Summer.
  • Sequel Hook : Rick Prime is revealed to still be active, as he's teleported back to the Cronenberg dimension. He kills Hermit Jerry, and prepares to figure out how he was brought back there.
  • Shoot the Shaggy Dog : Thanks to the ship having lost power and food supply running out, the surviving Mortys that Rick and Morty saved from the imploding Citadel in "Rickmurai Jack" have, by the time of this episode, either gone feral or been torn apart and eaten by the feral ones.
  • The title is clearly a play on the science fiction novel Solaris .
  • The cold open with the protagonists stranded in the void of space and waiting for death is similar to how almost every episode of Final Space began.
  • Rick's opening monologue has him referencing Tony Stark's log in the opening of Avengers: Endgame . Space Beth even shows up to save them just like how Captain Marvel did.
  • Summer notes she gets paid by Rick in gadgets. Here she chooses "Wolverine Claws" , though they are only two to a fist, like Wolverine's clone daughter X-23 .
  • Cronenberg dimension Jerry read a lot of books after his Beth and Summer died, in particular The Dark Knight Returns .
  • Rick Prime compares his naked, maybe-clone self to Keyser Söze, the criminal mastermind of The Usual Suspects . He also states that the ambiguity of if the real him or a clone is in the tube is a Saw thing.
  • Earth Beth apologizes for "going all Dance Moms " on Space Beth about Summer.
  • Hermit Jerry calls his attack on Alternate Rick as " Fatality. Jerry Wins ".
  • Slashed Throat : Hermit Jerry does this to Rick Prime, but Rick Prime heals from the injury and shoots Hermit Jerry dead.
  • Rick was hoping Jerry would become this once the rest of the family is reunited, and is disappointed when Beth brings up that it's time to rescue him too.
  • Played straight, however, with Season 2 Jerry. The whole family arrives home at the end, only to find him there (since this is his original reality—before he got swapped into Main Jerry's original reality in "Mortynight Run"—that he's been returned to) and realize they forgot to take him back to the "Season 2 reality". Things quickly go downhill from there once Season 2 Jerry releases Mr. Frundles.
  • Averted and lampshaded by Rick in the opening scene when Space Beth tries to talk to him and Morty but can't because of the vacuum (and also the glass dome of the Citadel) being in the way.
  • Strangely Played Straight later on when Mr. Frundles assimilates Earth and introduces himself to the Smith family in their spaceship.
  • The Stinger : Rick Prime (who was indeed the supposed "clone" of himself that appeared at his space hideout) arrives back on Cronenberg Earth and meets its native Jerry, asking if he's seen Rick or Morty around. Hermit Jerry offers a Villain Team-Up with him to take them down, which Rick Prime casually turns down, and then the former tries to kill the latter by slashing his throat...only for Rick Prime to instantly heal from it with some kind of technology, and then shoot Hermit Jerry twice, killing him.
  • Stress Vomit : Jerry pukes on-screen when he has to bury the corpse of his own alternate counterpart.
  • The Tape Knew You Would Say That : Prime Rick pre-recorded messages for any Rick coming after him. In them, he correctly predicted Rick would shoot the first monitor the video is being played on.
  • This Is Gonna Suck : When Rick realizes he's been sent back to his original universe, he lets out an irriated " Fuck! "
  • Took a Level in Badass : The original Jerry took several, to the point where he can survive the ruined world on his own and was even able to (briefly) get the drop on Rick Prime. It doesn't take , but it's a lot closer than anyone else has gotten, to the point where even Rick Prime acknowledges him as badass before killing him.
  • Trash the Set : Or rather the Dimensional Earth that has been the main dimension since "Rick Potion #9". Season 2 Jerry, after being brought back there (as it's his native dimension), releases Mr. Frundles from his cage as he begins to infect the Earth with his personality and transforms it into a barren, lifeless rock, prompting the Smith-Sanchez Family (including Space Beth) to hop realities to another timeline.
  • Unobtainium : Without the Citadel, or a source for the portal gun fuel, Rick needs a new method of hopping dimensions, leading to this episode's plot.
  • Unusually Uninteresting Sight : Season 2 Jerry, when the rest of the family arrives back home after their adventure, just starts complaining and doesn't react at all to the presence of two different versions of his wife and an alternate version of himself .
  • Unwitting Instigator of Doom : "Season 2" Jerry has no idea how dangerous Mr. Frundles is. The moment he releases the alien, it bites and infects him, along with everything else on Earth.
  • Villain Respect : Rick Prime towards Hermit Jerry after the latter slits his throat (only failing to actually kill him because of his Healing Factor ), laughing and genuinely calling Jerry a badass... before pulling out his gun and shooting him in the stomach and then the head.
  • Virtual Ghost : Almost literally. Rick, in a fit of self-hatred, created an AI based on Diane who is explicitly designed to "haunt" him. When he walks through his old house, her voice moves so it always comes from one room away, forever just out of his reach. He also designed it so he can never mute it.
  • The Voice : In-universe, rather than the robotic female voice of Ship/Garage that we've come to know throughout the past five seasons, in Rick's original reality, he used the voice of his deceased wife, Diane, for his home and ship, making this the first time since "The Rickshank Redemption" that we've heard her voice. She even talks to him with affectionate pet names just like the real deal did. Rick notes that he made her during a time where his self-loathing was particularly bad and he wanted to torture himself.
  • Wham Episode : This episode reveals that Morty is the actual grandson of Rick Prime, the Rick originating from the Cronenberg dimension. He's the one who killed Rick's original family and sent him down the entire path to create the Citadel of Ricks and everything that transpired from it. Thanks to Rick resetting the portal technology and accidentally sending everyone back to their original dimensions, he's now back on Cronenberg Earth. What's more, the dimension that the main Smith-Sanchez family has been living in since Season 1 has its version of Earth destroyed/taken over by an alien virus by the end of the episode, requiring them to once again change universes and replace Dead Alternate Counterparts of themselves.
  • "My original Rick killed your family?!"
  • "Rick, is that you?" "Yeah... Diane."
  • What the Hell, Hero? : Hermit Jerry has every right to be angry at Morty for leaving him and his family, not once, but twice. The latter was the worst because Morty only returned to prove a point to Summer about why Rick isn't a good person, and they were left frozen in ice during "The Rickshank Redemption", which led to Hermit Beth and Summer dying. After ranting to his son about it, he leaves Morty in tears. Hermit Jerry: Don't take it personal, Morty. It's one of the four agreements. I don't know the other three, but I know Commissioner Gordon was cool with Batman moving on. Morty: Batman doesn't abandon people! Hermit Jerry: You abandoned us. Morty: I deserve that, but you know it... it improved you! Hermit Jerry: Ooooooh... am I cool enough for you now? ( scoffs ) It was easy... It only cost me fucking everything . Morty: Woah! Hey! I-I-I—! Hermit Jerry: You came back and talked about us like we weren't people , Morty! And you bailed ! And left us to freeze ! Morty: I-I was apologizing for that earlier! Hermit Jerry: Your mom and sister died , Morty! ( sighs ) And I moved on... from caring... and that is the best deal you'll ever get. So take it !
  • What Were You Thinking? : Beth berates Rick for bringing "Mr. Frundles" to Earth, leading to "Season 2 Jerry" to unwittingly release it and doom the world. Rick excuses it as being cute. "What the fuck , Dad?! Why would you bring that thing into our house?!"
  • Where It All Began : Rick, Morty, and Jerry, find themselves in their respective original dimensions. Rick's was revealed in a flashback in "Rickmurai Jack" last season, Morty's was abandoned in "Rick Potion #9" back in the very first season when almost everyone was turned into Cronenbergs, and Jerry's hasn't changed since early Season 2 when he was taken from it in "Mortynight Run".
  • You Just Had to Say It : Rick tells Morty that he's done some "childproofing" on him while the latter was asleep, and Morty comments that he should've childproofed Jerry as well. Beth then basically says, "Speaking of which, time to go get Jerry back", and Rick groans in chagrin, clearly having hoped that Jerry would just become Something We Forgot .
  • You Remind Me of X : A variation in that it's said to the "X" in question. Rick tells the AI Diane in his original reality that their granddaughter Summer reminds him of her, though he quickly winces and drops the subject when AI Diane asks if that means Summer's dead too.

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Smith-sanchez family.

After having been accidentally shunted back to his original dimension, Jerry Smith realizes how much he has changed and grown over the Seasons to become a much healthier and better person beyond the bitter angry "Season 2 Family" he was once a part of.

Example of: Family of Choice

Hermit Jerry ca...

Mr Frundles

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‘Rick and Morty’ is going back to its roots – here’s what you need to know

Now the portal gun is fixed, prepare for more planet-hopping chaos

Rick and Morty

Rick and Morty rewrote the extinction of the dinosaurs in latest episode ‘JuRicksic Mort’. No longer creatures to fear, the ancient creature have become harmonious, mildly condescending intellectuals who believe they’re spreading peace throughout the galaxy. They also don’t know their utopias have been consistently wiped out by an “angry species of rock”.

By the episode’s end, Rick has fixed his (long defunct) portal gun and promises a return to “classic episodes” of “portal-ing in, wrecking shit and portal-ing out.” Here’s what you need to know about the show’s most important object.

Wait, when did Rick’s portal gun actually break?

Season five finale, baby

Rick’s portal gun, along with the portal supply in the Citadel, was hacked by Evil Morty in the s eason five finale . This caused every portal to open a gateway to a deadly monster, killing many Ricks and Mortys in the process.

The season six premiere, ‘Solaricks’, confirmed Rick’s portal gun was still broken during his opening monologue while stranded in space. Since then, Rick’s progress on fixing the gun has been referred to throughout: later in the premiere Rick says “I’ll get to it when I get to it,” while in episode three, Morty barks, “Jesus Christ, you need to fix the portal gun, Rick!” while his parents engage in a threesome with Space Beth within earshot.

Rick and Morty

How did Rick fix the portal gun?

Recommended.

He just… fixed it

Once the dinosaurs are dealt with, Rick calls Morty to the garage following an explosion. Without any explanation as to how (who needs one, really?) Rick demonstrates the portal gun is working once again by opening a portal to a dimension where hats wear people.

In a reference to the seventh season of episode five, ‘Gotron Jerrysis Rickvangelion’, Rick then pulls out a “Boob World” hat for Morty, a place they planned to visit in that episode before getting distracted by mecha ferrets. Could a trip finally be on the cards for next week’s episode?

“It’s going to be classic episodes, Morty,” Rick remarks, as he blasts Morty between portals. “Portal-ing in, wrecking shit, portal-ing out, Morty. Adventures, Morty. Social commentary. Crude characters. Here we go, Rick and Morty time.”

What else could this connect to?

Remember Rick Prime?

Rick Prime was properly introduced in the opening episode of season six. He’s the Rick responsible for the deaths of Rick’s wife Diane and daughter Beth in dimension C-137, the catalyst which led Rick-137 (the main one) on a mission of vengeance to hunt him down. The other dynamic to Rick Prime’s existence is that he’s Morty’s actual grandfather, with Rick-137 admitting he joined the Smith family hoping that Rick Prime would return so he could kill him.

We last saw Rick Prime in the post-credits cutscene of the same episode, when he was sent to his original ‘Cronenberged Dimension’ after Rick-137 accidentally reset all portal travellers. As he confronts a rogue Jerry, Rick Prime is confused why he’s been sent back there. It’s noted earlier in the episode, however, that Rick Prime is likely facing the same difficulty as everyone else in escaping his original dimension, and that he might be “trapped”.

Considering Rick-137 found a way around the issue with beacons and wormholes, it’s possible Rick Prime escaped his original dimension via similar methods. If not though, and with his portal gun back in action, Rick-137 might be tempted to visit the ‘Cronenberged Dimension’ in the hope of enacting the revenge he’s been seeking all these years since his wife’s death.

Rick and Morty

Could Rick Prime team up with Evil Morty?

The closing of the rift might be significant

In ‘JuRicksic Mort’, the dinosaurs decided to help Rick by closing the massive rift in space caused by Evil Morty. At the end of season five, Evil Morty destroyed the Citadel and travelled through the rift into a multiverse beyond the Central Finite Curve, where Rick is no longer the smartest person in the universe.

Rick’s response to the rift’s closure is of meta dismay: “That was all canonical and shit, we could have milked that for a whole season.” While it’s played as gleeful tearing down of canon, the rift has been floating up there over the timespan of five episodes, so it’s possible something else passed through which could lead to galactic trouble down the line.

Alternatively, this could be the writers temporarily blocking off one plot thread to divert focus on another. Rick And Morty plays fast and loose with when it decides to tackle the serialised plot between the one-off adventures, but with Rick Prime now properly established, it feels like the course of season six is to bump his status as the immediate key villain.

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portal travel rick and morty

Rick and Morty: The Citadel of Ricks, Explained

  • Portal travel is a key element in Rick and Morty, allowing the characters to travel to different dimensions and timelines.
  • The Citadel of Ricks was created as a safe haven for Ricks from all dimensions to reside and avoid capture by the Galactic Federation.
  • The Citadel's leadership changed over time, with the Council of Ricks initially in control and later replaced by a democratic system. However, Evil Morty ultimately destroyed the Citadel, resulting in its downfall.

Portal travel is a huge part of Rick and Morty . With that ability, Rick is not only able to travel to another location or planet in an instant, but he can also travel to other dimensions or timelines. He's even relocated to different dimensions because he and Morty doomed the one they were in by turning everyone into Cronenbergs, or they got into squirrels' top secret business.

Relocating to a different dimension is actually the entire premise of Rick and Morty , as the Rick that stars in the show, Rick C-137, isn't even the original Rick of his new home. But if one Rick is deciding to relocate, then, inevitably, all the Ricks will want to relocate. But that obviously can't happen, logistically. The Citadel of Ricks was created for Ricks from all dimensions to have a place in the galaxy that they can safely reside, whether they are running from the Galactic Federation or because they simply want to be surrounded by their own kind.

RELATED: Rick and Morty: 8 Most Evil Versions of Rick

What is the Citadel of Ricks?

The Citadel of Ricks was founded by a group of Ricks -- including Rick C-137 -- as a place the Ricks of the multiverse can go to stay safe from the Galactic Federation or whatever other entity was hunting them down for their crimes. The Citadel itself is a space station and is large enough to be subject to an entire society of Ricks, who have their own government, offer normal employment opportunities (like factory workers or teachers), and even housing.

It was revealed in season 5 of Rick and Morty that the Citadel was even where Ricks began mass-producing Morty clones to give to Ricks whose Morty had died or disappeared. The Mortys would then go through school to learn how to be the best sidekick to Rick as they can, and then they'd be given to a Rick in need.

Rick C-137, despite having been one of the Citadel's co-creators, denounces the Citadel and wants no part in any of its existence. However, when he went to prison at the end of season 2 of Rick and Morty , the Citadel feared he would reveal their secrets and launched a mission to assassinate him. Rick C-137 evaded their assassination attempt, and went on to transport the entire Citadel into a Galactic Federation prison, causing mayhem and destruction that brought an end to the Citadel as it was for many years. But it did continue to run, just under different management.

Who's Been In Charge of the Citadel of Ricks?

For a long time, the Citadel was run by the Council of Ricks, a group of six trans-dimensional Ricks who co-founded the facility and continued to run it after Rick's departure. The Council was responsible for assigning Mortys to their new Ricks , as well as being lawmakers, judges, jury, and executioners. It wasn't particularly a democracy, although they never enforced out of the ordinary laws against any Ricks residing on the Citadel. Ricks living on the Citadel were for the most part free men.

Power changed, however, once Rick retaliated against SEAL Team Ricks' attempt to assassinate him, and he killed most of the Council. After their fall, the Ricks and Mortys of the Citadel decided to act as more of a democracy and elect their next president. Of the candidates made up of different Ricks, there was one Morty who decided to run for president.

This Morty candidate promised equality between the Ricks and Mortys of the Citadel, giving Mortys more of an identity beyond being Rick's sidekick/cloaking device. The Morty won the election and became the first Morty leader of the Citadel. But it was soon revealed that he was in fact the infamous Evil Morty, responsible for the deaths of 27 Ricks. So, while he was the first Morty president, he would be the last leader of the Citadel, ever.

What Happened to the Citadel of Ricks?

The Citadel was being run by Evil Morty, who in the shadows was designing a device to escape the Central Finite Curve : a plane of existence created by Rick C-137 and the other Citadel founders separate from the infinite realities where Rick doesn't exist. This way, they could remain the smartest man in the universe and keep the Mortys trapped in their own universe.

By leaving the Central Finite Curve, Evil Morty would create a sort of black hole that would destroy the entire Citadel in a matter of seconds. As he was preparing for his departure, he released a false warning to the people of the Citadel that would make them try and leave via their portal guns. But it was all part of his plan, as he hacked every last one of their portal fluid, making them not be able to leave and have to stay and be destroyed with the Citadel.

Evil Morty's plan was a success, as he escaped the Central Finite Curve and destroyed the Citadel. Rick and Morty C-137 both managed to escape, though, but had no way to teleport out of the facility. Space Beth eventually saved them, but the Citadel was left in ruins, and the Ricks and Mortys who were there were left dead along with it. Thus, marks the end of the Citadel in Rick and Morty .

MORE: Rick and Morty: Birdperson's Journey, Explained

Rick and Morty: The Citadel of Ricks, Explained

What The Portal Colors Really Mean On Rick And Morty

Rick in front of green portal

The fifth season of "Rick and Morty" has ended, and while some long-held theories have finally been confirmed , we have tons of new questions to replace the old ones. 

This last season featured a bizarre crossover , an anime short that left fans divided, and some problematic plot lines  – including the infamous incest baby (and yes, it's as strange as it sounds). But all things considered, the two-part finale ended in typical "Rick and Morty" fashion — with fans wanting more.

Among the many turns in the fifth season was a thorough examination of a what we thought was just a throwaway concept from way back: the Central Finite Curve.  Time travel is, of course, a main component of the show, and the Central Finite Curve is essentially what holds Rick's handcrafted multiverse together. 

As we were untangling this concept in the Season 5 finale, some fans noted that different portals used for traveling through time and space appear in different colors, depending on what kind of travel is getting done. It's a keen observation, and one that's likely to be important going forward, so let's take a look at the different portals and what they mean.

The portals could be symbolic

Since Season 1, there have been a few different colored portals on display: blue, green, and yellow ones, to be precise. But just what does each color mean? Are the colors significant? "Rick and Morty" fans tend to be a detail-oriented bunch, so some have taken to Reddit to share their theories.

On a post-finale Reddit thread , a user asked why the portal was suddenly a gold color at the end of the season, to which another user guessed: "It's a symbol of Morty finally breaking free from the finite universe. Morty [represents] yellow and rick blue (shirt color) which = green. Since evil morty broke free from the finite curve, [it means] the blue gets taken out, which = Yellow."

The color theory is an interesting take in itself, as colors are often used in media as symbols to represent important events, moods, or themes. But there's yet another theory that more fans seem to agree fits the pattern of evidence revealed thus far.

The portals are destination markers

On the same Reddit thread discussing "Rick and Morty" Season 5's ending, a user named u/freddy0820 brought up a colorful character from Season 2: Fart, the telepathic gaseous entity. They noted that Fart had five colors inside his gaseous cloud, and three of them have already been represented in Rick's portal tech — blue, green, and yellow. The fan here went on to hypothesize that perhaps we'll see the two other colors somewhere down the line, as well.

Another user named u/giovannikke22 responded with their own theory. According to their observations, they guessed, "Maybe the color indicates the type of portal. Blue for teleportation within a certain universe, green for teleportation between different universes, and yellow for something else."

Jumping off of that theory, it seems like the most likely explanation is that blue portals are used to travel within the same universe, green portals are used for travel between dimensions within the Central Finite Curve , and the ominous yellow portals are used to travel in the true multiverse. Hopefully in the next season we'll have more answers to these pressing questions.

Screen Rant

Rick & morty s6 gives rick’s portal gun a massive (& pointless) upgrade.

Rick’s iconic portal gun has been given an extremely unwelcome upgrade, which Rick ensures will never feature in future episodes of Rick and Morty.

Warning! This article contains spoilers for Rick and Morty season 6, episode 6! Rick and Morty season 6, episode 6 finally replaces Rick's missing portal gun with an upgrade, yet this development is ultimately pointless. During episode 6, "Juricksic Mort," Rick is gifted an apparent upgrade but is characteristically dismissive of it. In fact, it is because of his damaging pride that Rick's portal gun upgrade is actually pointless.

Rick has been without his trusty portal gun - which allows Rick (and Morty) to travel freely between infinite alternative dimensions - since season 5, episode 10, "Rickmurai Jack." During an encounter with the newfound leader of the Citadel of Ricks, President Morty, all portal guns are hacked and subsequently kill their user upon use. Rick's initial attempts to fix his portal gun are unsuccessful, leading to the single-universe adventures depicted in Rick and Morty season 6 as Rick continues to tinker with his iconic machine.

RELATED: Rick & Morty Season 6 Makes A Genuinely Terrifying Sci-Fi Into A Joke About Zebras

Fast-forward to Rick and Morty season 6, and Rick's portal gun has been upgraded by Earth's previous rulers now returned, the dinosaurs. The portal pistol, as they name it, shoots clear portals rather than the iconic, green swirls that Rick's emits. This is explicitly stated as an upgrade - allowing the user to see the dimension they are traveling into. This is clearly an improvement on the previous model, with which several Ricks, and various others, have blindly traveled into instantly deadly dimensions. However, during their initial interaction with Rick, the dinosaurs fail to recognize him as an equal, as a self-declared "God-person" which offends Rick's mighty yet fragile ego – prompting him to destroy the pistol and with it its potential travel opportunities (highlighting that, despite the changes in Rick and Morty season 6 , Rick's personality remains resolutely prideful). The instantaneous destruction of his new tool represents the pointlessness of the upgrade – however useful it may have been in reality.

Why Rick & Morty Couldn't Have Kept Its New Portal Gun

Regardless of Rick's bruised ego, there is also a very practical reason this upgrade is somewhat redundant as a permanent solution – namely that using clear portals would make animating complex sequences substantially more difficult from both a technical and narrative perspective. Rick and Morty is beloved partly for its convoluted storylines which often necessitate multiple portals. If each were transparent, the stories would be even more difficult to understand. The final sequence of "Juricksic Mort", for instance, features Morty falling in an infinite loop of classic portals - thanks to Rick demonstrating his now-mended portal gun - and is a prime example of this. Clear portals would have made this sequence difficult to watch and much more difficult to make. Moreover, the dimensional restriction has allowed other character storylines to flourish throughout Rick and Morty season 6, particularly involving Jerry .

The already-established complexity of Rick and Morty is largely the reason each season demands such attention and time to complete. Complicating this further would undoubtedly cause more unwelcome delays. Rick's expansive intelligence is regularly demonstrated to extend beyond the confines of the show, often breaking the fourth wall and referring to events in terms of seasons and episodes, suggesting that perhaps Rick's displeasure with the upgraded portal pistol is rooted in an awareness of production and animation. That said, it would be foolhardy to completely dismiss Rick's habit of allowing pride to dictate some extreme behavior, even if recent episodes suggest Rick's behavior is the least weird of Rick and Morty season 6 .

New episodes of Rick and Morty will return on Sunday, November 20.

NEXT: Rick & Morty Teases More From Its Weirdest Pairing

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Why Are Portal Guns Broken in Rick and Morty Season 6

Image of Brady Klinger-Meyers

The premier episode of Rick and Morty season 6 was heavy in story and canon, unlike many others that, for the most part, happen in a vacuum and have little effect on the show. Season 6 kicks off with a direct continuation of season 5’s final episode, wherein the Citadel of Ricks was destroyed and Rick and Morty are stranded. So, why are portal guns broken in Rick and Morty season 6, then? Can’t they portal out?

Portal guns are broken in season 6 of Rick and Morty because Evil Morty destroyed the Central Finite Curve. It was Evil Mortal’s master plan all along, and he’s more than happy to explain his reasons.

The Central Finite Curve which is just a sliver of the infinite universes—still infinite, but every universe shares a single characteristic: Rick Sanchez is the smartest man alive. Whenever Rick and Morty travel to another universe, they’re only traveling to ones that are part of the Central Finite Curve, never outside of that bubble.

To escape the Central Finite Curve, Evil Morty created a giant portal device that would punch a hole through the Curve and enter truly infinite possibilities, simultaneously destroying the Curve and preventing portal guns from functioning properly.

So, that’s why portal guns are broken in RIck and Morty season 6. It’s a side effect of Evil Morty’s plan to leave behind universes where Rick is the smartest. If you have a hankering for more Rick and Morty lore, catch up what happened to Rick’s first family or why Rick, Morty, and Jerry were glowing green .

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COMMENTS

  1. Portal Technology

    Portals allow travel between two different locations. Usually, these locations exist in the same universe. The only groups that have been known to manufacture intergalactic portal technology are versions of Rick and the Galactic Federation present in Dimension 35-C (Intergalactic Customs in "Pilot"). Prior to the start of the series, the mathematical formula for interdimensional portal travel ...

  2. Rick & Morty Season 6's Portal Reset Explained

    The story of the Rick and Morty season 6 premiere is a direct continuation of the Rick and Morty season 5 finale, meaning that the episode doesn't provide a full explanation as to why Rick is attempting to reset the portal fluid.Rick and Morty season 5, episode 10, "Rickmurai Jack," ends with series villain Evil Morty blowing up the Citadel of Ricks and breaking the Central Finite Curve, a ...

  3. Rick and Morty Confirms There's 1 Planet Immune to Rick's Portal Gun

    Rick and Morty can't use portal travel to get to ACD-1887 - a teleportation-proof celestial containment structure. They have to resort to using Rick's ship to reach this unique planet, as it's the ...

  4. Rick and Morty Season 6 just fixed the show's biggest sci ...

    The 'Rick and Morty' Season 5 finale saw Evil Morty rip open the Central Finite Curve and disrupt portal travel. The Season 6 mid-season finale just changed it.

  5. Rick and Morty

    While Rick's struggle to fix portal travel continues, Earth faces an even bigger problem: dinosaurs have returned. Rick and Morty season 6 returns Nov 20. St...

  6. Rick & Morty Confirms a Season 5 Villain Knows the Secret of Portal Tech

    In response, Rick Prime killed C-137's wife and daughter, which inspired him to come up with portal travel himself. While the episode ends with Rick denying any of that to be true, Rick and Morty season 5, episode 10 "Rickmurai Jack" recants that denial and confirms it all as the truth. This seems to indicate that portal tech is something ...

  7. 'Rick and Morty' Season 6: Showrunner Explains That Venusian Wine

    When Rick flubs an attempt to reset portal travel, he and Morty are transported back to their realities of origin. Morty subsequently learns he shares that dimension with the Rick who tragically ...

  8. Rick fixed Portal Travel

    Rick and Morty Season 6 Episode 6 JuRicksic MortFinally, Rick and Morty are back in the Portal Travel!Check out your future favorite Cartoon Artist!Instagram...

  9. Rick & Morty Introduces a Horrifying New Portal Gun

    Warning! This article contains spoilers for Rick and Morty #4 Rick's portal gun in Rick and Morty is perhaps his most useful and widely-recognized gadget in the series, and now, there's an all-new version of it within the franchise-and it's infinitely more horrifying.. Rick's portal gun allows him to travel to any universe he can think of with the press of a button.

  10. Only ones who ACTUALLY invented portal travel? : r/rickandmorty

    Apparently, C-137 was the first one who refused his offer, and then created portal travel on his own. Rick Prime went around the multiverse giving other Ricks the portal technology, but maybe Rick C-137 did this too, since he is the reason the citadel was created. A better version of this would be that Prime and C-137 are the ONLY ones who ever ...

  11. Rick And Morty S 6 E 1 Solaricks / Recap

    Rick tries to reset the portal travel system, but ends up accidentally resetting portal travelers, sending himself, Morty, and Jerry back to their original realities and requiring a much more complicated system to reunite the whole family that takes the bulk of the episode to fix. By the end, the portal system still hasn't been rebooted yet.

  12. Invention of portal travel : r/rickandmorty

    Invention of portal travel. It was stated that only Rick Prime and our Rick invented portal travel. Does that mean every "close" universe Rick uses to move Morty and/or the family to had a Rick who didn't? For example, after Rick Cronenbergs the first world we see, he takes Morty to a new universe where their Rick and Morty died, but ...

  13. Rick and Morty is going back to its roots with "classic episodes"

    10th October 2022. Rick has finally fixed his portal gun. CREDIT: Channel 4/Adult Swim. Rick and Morty rewrote the extinction of the dinosaurs in latest episode 'JuRicksic Mort'. No longer ...

  14. Only 2 Ricks that invented portal travel? : r/rickandmorty

    For fans of Rick & Morty. ... Even if Prime only gave portal travel to a half a dozen Rick's before meeting C-137, those half a dozen Rick's would then go on to give portal travel to 36 more Ricks, then 216, then 1296, and within 16 generations you have nearly 3 trillion Rick's who have portal travel. It spread like a virus.

  15. Rick and Morty: The Citadel of Ricks, Explained

    Portal travel is a key element in Rick and Morty, allowing the characters to travel to different dimensions and timelines. The Citadel of Ricks was created as a safe haven for Ricks from all ...

  16. Rick & Morty Season 6 Reuses The Pilot's Portal Gun Trick (& It's Genius)

    As it turns out, Rick's portal gun can only travel between dimensions within the Central Finite Curve, meaning that Evil Morty's plan has caused every portal gun to stop working. As is seen in Rick and Morty season 6, episode 1, "Solaricks," Rick tries to reset the portal gun fluid but fails, causing a mess that has to be resolved throughout ...

  17. Rick and Morty Finally Fixes Rick's Portal Gun

    Rick and Morty Finally Fixes Rick's Portal Gun. By Nick Valdez - October 10, 2022 11:06 pm EDT. Rick and Morty is taking a break for a while before coming back for the final episodes of Season 6 ...

  18. rick finally repairs portal travel

    Rick finally fixes portal travel after it was broken by Evil Morty.I do not own this clip. It is owned by cartoon network and adult swim.

  19. What The Portal Colors Really Mean On Rick And Morty

    On the same Reddit thread discussing "Rick and Morty" Season 5's ending, a user named u/freddy0820 brought up a colorful character from Season 2: Fart, the telepathic gaseous entity. They noted ...

  20. Rick & Morty S6 Gives Rick's Portal Gun A Massive (& Pointless) Upgrade

    Rick has been without his trusty portal gun - which allows Rick (and Morty) to travel freely between infinite alternative dimensions - since season 5, episode 10, "Rickmurai Jack." During an encounter with the newfound leader of the Citadel of Ricks, President Morty, all portal guns are hacked and subsequently kill their user upon use.

  21. Why Are Portal Guns Broken in Rick and Morty Season 6

    The premier episode of Rick and Morty season 6 was heavy in story and canon, unlike many others that, for the most part, happen in a vacuum and have little effect on the show.

  22. The difference between space and portal travel in Rick and Morty

    The Gromflomites (the insectoid aliens) do have a form of portal travel, but the portal device is large and non-portable. This is in the pilot episode. It's a blue portal which means it can't do interdimensional travel, just a regular teleporter. It only turns green after Rick changes the settings. A blue portal appears again in S3E10, used by ...

  23. Rick and Morty season 7

    The seventh season of the American adult animated television series Rick and Morty premiered on October 15, 2023 and concluded on December 17, 2023. It consisted of ten episodes. The season was ordered before the fourth season of the show finished airing, in May 2020. It is the first season not to feature Justin Roiland providing any voice work, following his dismissal from the franchise in ...