[s6e2] Rick: — A Mort Well Lived

While Rick is inside the machine, he tasks Summer with defending the arcade from the terrorists by "doing a Die Hard".

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. [S6E2] Rick: A Mort Well Lived

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. While Rick is inside the machine, he tasks

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 The episode returns to the intergalactic arcade ,

Review: Rick: A Mort Well Lived (S6E2) – A Fractured Soul and a Bad "Die Hard"

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"

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".