"Science makes sense, family doesn't."
Rick and Morty - Episode Highlights
Episode Highlights
Rick Potion #9
A love potion Morty asks Rick to make goes horribly wrong, infecting the entire planet and turning everyone into monstrous "Cronenbergs" obsessed with Morty. Unable to fix the problem, Rick's solution is not to save the world, but to abandon it entirely. He finds a nearly identical reality where their alternate selves have just died, and they slip in to take their places, burying their own bodies in the backyard.
This is the first episode to demonstrate the show's dark, high-stakes consequences and its commitment to its nihilistic premise. Morty's trauma from burying his own corpse becomes a foundational moment for his character arc, shattering his innocence and introducing the core theme that in an infinite multiverse, individual lives are disposable.
Total Rickall
The Smith family home is infested with telepathic alien parasites that implant themselves into memories, creating a proliferation of fake, quirky friends and family members. The family must figure out who is real and who is a parasite, realizing that the parasites can only create happy memories.
This episode is a masterclass in high-concept storytelling and character development. The solution—that only real family members are sources of both good and bad memories—is a surprisingly poignant statement on the nature of love and family. It also introduces the fan-favorite character Mr. Poopybutthole, whose ambiguous reality leads to a shocking and darkly comedic ending.
The Wedding Squanchers
The family attends the wedding of Rick's best friend, Birdperson, which is revealed to be a sting operation by the Galactic Federation. The wedding ends in a bloody shootout, and the Smith family becomes galactic fugitives. To save them, Rick turns himself in and is imprisoned by the Federation.
A major turning point for the series, this finale dramatically raises the narrative stakes. It's the first time Rick makes a truly selfless sacrifice for his family, showing a deeper layer to his character. It ends the season on a massive cliffhanger, with Earth under Federation control and Rick imprisoned, setting up the arc for Season 3.
The Ricklantis Mixup
While the main Rick and Morty go on an adventure to Atlantis, the episode's focus shifts entirely to the Citadel, a trans-dimensional city populated by countless versions of Ricks and Mortys. The episode follows several interconnected storylines: a rookie Morty cop, a group of Morty students searching for a mythical wishing portal, a factory worker Rick who rebels, and the presidential election of a charismatic Morty candidate.
Widely considered one of the best and most ambitious episodes of the series, it brilliantly expands the show's world-building. The final scene reveals that the newly elected president is the 'Evil Morty' from Season 1, who now controls the Citadel. This twist establishes him as a major, overarching antagonist and a genuine threat to Rick.
The Vat of Acid Episode
After Morty criticizes his "fake vat of acid" escape plan, Rick spitefully invents a "save point" device that allows Morty to retry any moment in his life. Morty uses it to live consequence-free, eventually finding true love. However, Jerry accidentally erases his progress, and Morty learns to his horror that he wasn't creating save points, but shunting himself to new realities, leaving behind countless versions of himself to suffer the consequences of his actions.
This episode won an Emmy and is a perfect example of the show's ability to blend humor, high-concept sci-fi, and devastating emotional gut-punches. It's a brutal exploration of consequence, free will, and morality, and serves as another deeply traumatic, character-defining experience for Morty.
Rickmurai Jack
The episode finally reveals Rick's full backstory through a mind-scan: his wife Diane and a young Beth were killed by another Rick (Rick Prime), sending him on a path of vengeance that led him to help create the Citadel and the Central Finite Curve. In the present, Evil Morty successfully executes his plan to destroy the Citadel and escape the Curve.
This episode is a massive payoff for years of fan theories and foreshadowing. It confirms Rick's tragic origin story, explains the true purpose of the Central Finite Curve, and brings Evil Morty's character arc to a stunning conclusion. By shattering the Curve, it fundamentally changes the status quo of the series' multiverse.
Unmortricken
Evil Morty lures Rick C-137 and his Morty into a trap to finally track down Rick Prime. The episode culminates in a brutal, universe-spanning confrontation where Rick C-137, with help from Evil Morty, finally corners and kills Rick Prime, the man who murdered his wife and daughter.
This episode subverts all expectations by resolving the show's main plot line—Rick's quest for revenge—midway through a season. Rick's victory is hollow, leaving him adrift without the purpose that has driven him for decades. It fundamentally alters Rick's character, forcing him to confront a future without his all-consuming hatred and setting a new, uncertain direction for the series.