Summary SCREENRANT VIDEO OF THE DAY SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT While Rick and Morty's original premise has served the series well, season 7’s finale heavily implied that the show is finally ready to move on from this conceit. From the pilot's opening scene, wherein Morty talks a drunken Rick out of destroying everyone in the universe except for themselves, Rick and Morty has always lived up to its title.
As a result, it was a welcome surprise when season 7, episode 10, “Fear No Mort,” finally questioned whether Morty really needed Rick at all. Rick and Morty visited The Hole, a strange psychic space/tourist trap that showed its users their greatest fear and allowed them to overcome it. Rick and Morty went through a traumatic adventure that involved Rick’s late wife Diane coming back to life and Rick losing interest in his adventures with Morty, but that wasn’t the scariest part of the ordeal.
This made sense since season 7 had already given both Rick and Morty solo adventures of their own before its finale. Episode 3, “Air Force Wong,” was the first episode of the series to send Rick on an adventure alone, while episode 8, “Rise of the Numbericons: The Movie,” was Morty’s first solo story. Unfortunately, Rick and Morty season 7’s first Morty adventure left a lot to be desired, earning the season its lowest IMDb rating by far.
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