Rick and Morty Season 6, Episode 2

2022 - 9 - 12

Post cover
Image courtesy of "Bam! Smack! Pow!"

Rick and Morty season 6, episode 2 live stream: Watch online (Bam! Smack! Pow!)

How can you watch Rick and Morty season 6, episode 2 live and online? What can you expect from the episode? Find out right here.

Rick and Morty took the wrong Jerry from Jerryboree. Look for that to happen close to the last two episodes of the season. In the next episode, titled “Rick: A Mort Well Lived”, Summer does a Die Hard. Jerry was in the wrong reality. [season 6 premiere of Rick and Morty](https://bamsmackpow.com/2022/09/04/rick-morty-season-6-episode-1-watch-online-live/) was better than anyone could have expected. Rick had to sacrifice getting revenge to save his family.

Post cover
Image courtesy of "GamesRadar+"

Rick and Morty season 6, episode 2 review, recap, and analysis ... (GamesRadar+)

'Rick: A Mort Well Lived' is Rick and Morty at the peak of its powers.

- The Nakatomi Paradigm, the book that provides Summer with Die Hard spoilers, is named after the Nakatomi Plaza, the skyscraper in the original movie. His plan involves dispatching one of his minions wearing a sandwich board carrying the message "I hate everybody" – a rather less incendiary version of the horribly racist phrase McClane wore in the film. The question is, will Roy/Rick convince them all to get on the spaceships that will carry them to the edge of the game – echoes of - Roy is also the codename John McClane uses in the original Die Hard when talking to LA cop Al Powell. Rick’s reluctance/inability to say “I love you” to his grandson ultimately has very tangible consequences, as a sizeable chunk of Morty’s personality – crucially, the bit that’s skeptical about Rick – is left behind in the videogame ether. Her enemies are a bunch of Jar Jar Binks-esque aliens led by a mustache-twirling bad guy voiced by Peter Dinklage, clearly having the time of his life as he rolls out an accent as impossible to place as Tyrion Lannister’s in Game of Thrones. The attention to detail in Morty World is impressive, everything feeling consistent with the limited world view of a naïve teenage boy – a veteran talks of befriending his translator in some "generic overseas war", for example, while the main current affairs broadcaster is known simply as Good Enough News. It’s also better than most of the Die Hard sequels. In fact, Summer’s efforts to singlehandedly overthrow a group of not-quite exceptional thieves in an amusement arcade are just the tip of a very clever sci-fi iceberg. This near-perfect spoof subsequently has indecent levels of fun messing around in a Nakatomi playground, reveling in a quickfire succession of gags ranging from the stupidly obvious to the smartly meta. Because while Morty’s sister gets busy educating herself in the ways of McClane, Rick plugs himself into arcade machine 'Roy: A Life Well Lived' as part of a virtual-reality rescue mission. When did "to Die Hard" become a verb?

Post cover
Image courtesy of "What Hi-Fi?"

How to watch Rick and Morty season 6, episode 2 for free – Rick: A ... (What Hi-Fi?)

Everything you need to know to watch "Rick: A Mort Well Lived" free online – preview, cast, air dates and more.

[ExpressVPN](https://xvtelink.com/offer/coupon?a_fid=744&data1=whathifi-gb-5248311514206117000&offer=3monthsfree) (opens in new tab). [ExpressVPN](https://xvtelink.com/offer/coupon?a_fid=744&data1=whathifi-gb-5248311514206117000&offer=3monthsfree) (opens in new tab) is one of the very best... In Canada, Rick and Morty season 6, episode 2 is available in tandem with the US on Sunday night via StackTV, which is one of the Amazon Prime Video Channels. Don't forget: lucky UK viewers can watch Rick and Morty season 6 free on Channel 4. For Rick and Morty, you may wish to choose 'UK' for Channel 4. Open up the VPN app and choose the location of the service you wish to access. There's 24/7 customer support and three months free when you sign-up A Virtual Private Network (VPN) helps you get around this obstacle. The show is free-to-air in the UK and available with and without cable in the US. Even if you have an All 4 account, you won't be able to stream Rick and Morty when outside the UK. Season six kicked off last week with antisocial scientist Rick and his long-suffering grandson Morty trying to pick up the pieces after the destruction of the Citadel of Ricks at the end of the last series. The wait is over for the second instalment of the new Rick and Morty series, with a certain 80s action film set to provide a key plot line for episode 2, Rick: A Mort Well Lived.

Post cover
Image courtesy of "Looper"

Rick And Morty Season 6 Episode 2 Recap: Planet Of The Morties (Looper)

It's time to "do a Die Hard," complete with Peter Dinklage as an alien Hans Gruber.

Unbeknownst to him, Summer has brushed up on the plot of "Die Hard" while hiding in the bathroom. Meanwhile, in "Roy," the Morty NPCs are launching ships that will take them out of the game. To reach the remaining eight percent of Morty NPCs, Rick and Marta meet with the in-game President of The United States. Marta tells him the remaining Morty NPCs will go home with him on one condition, the details of which come as a twist in the final moments of the episode. One of the Morty NPCs issues an ultimatum, refusing to have his country join the mission if Rick doesn't tell him, "I love you." Rick begs Marta to give up her fight, saying that, if he didn't love his grandson, he wouldn't be trying so hard to save him and asking whether he cares that Summer is fighting for her life in the real world. To get back, they will have to build spaceships and fly all of the Morty NPCs to the edge of the game map. It's a far cry from, "Keep Summer safe," and of the Smith family, Summer is the one who Rick seems to have rubbed off on the most. Back in reality, with Blips and Chitz under siege by alien terrorists, Rick explains that Summer needs to buy time while he works on extracting Morty from the Roy console. Now, Summer is fighting the terrorists while Rick plays the game himself, using the avatar of Roy to round up all the Morty NPCs so he can get Morty back to reality. One of the skateboarders dismisses it, saying, "He's one of those cult people. Titled "Rick: A Mort Well Lived," this is the "Die Hard" parody the show's creators have been teasing in trailers.

Post cover
Image courtesy of "Comicbook.com"

Rick and Morty Season 6 Traps the Duo in Roy Game With Episode 2 (Comicbook.com)

Rick and Morty's sixth season has kicked into high gear as the premiere episode introduced a whole new antagonist while setting the next status quo for the ...

- Rick says he got "every last piece," but then the plugged in Roy machine orders for the last game to keep running with an internal battery plugged in and locking it away in storage. - His extended pause then kicks off a huge civil war between the Mortys that want to stay in the game and those that want to go. - It's soon revealed that Rick is speaking through Roy and trying to tell everyone that they are his grandson named Morty and are stuck in a video game and he's trying to save them. At the same time, Marta Morty's Dad is brought to the other Mortys and he's since lost his wife and tries to pretend his Morty for his daughter's benefit. It turns out the answer is to follow the premiere with an episode that feels like the "classic" Rick and Morty adventures fans love to see play out as well with a welcome return to some more of the series' biggest moments and gags. Read on for a full breakdown of everything that happened in the [Rick and Morty](/category/rick-and-morty-comic/) Season 6 episode, "Rick: A Mort Well Lived": [0comments](#)

Post cover
Image courtesy of "Den of Geek"

Rick and Morty Season 6 Episode 2 Review: Rick: A Mort Well Lived (Den of Geek)

It Rick and Morty at its most Rick and Morty! And Dan Harmon at his most Die Hard.

As for the emotional character stuff, this episode does try to go for some of that between Morty and his grandpa, but the stakes feel kind of low because it’s hard not to assume that Rick will eventually convince Morty to not keep living inside of a video game forever. Overall, “Rick: A Mort Well Lived” is a solidly constructed, standard Rick and Morty episode. So, it’s fine for them to do another very Rick and Morty style plot and for Dan Harmon to dig deeper into his Die Hard obsession. It accomplishes this by virtue of the fact that Summer hasn’t seen Die Hard so she doesn’t know how to do a Die Hard and instead just wings it, telling the alien terrorists her name is Die Hard and repeatedly shouting “Die Hard!” as she kills them all. I would never suggest the Rick and Morty team is lazy; far from it, I feel like coming up with new, complex, meta storylines must only get more difficult the more they do them. The tag at the end of the credits, for example, is a reference to the censored television broadcast of Die Hard 3, the knowledge of which at this point feels like a pretty deep cut. [Die Hard](https://www.denofgeek.com/die-hard/).” If the concept going on inside the “Roy” arcade game feels like quintessential Rick and Morty,the concept outside the game is quintessential Dan Harmon. Also, time is accelerated inside the “Roy: A Life Well Lived” game world (which, come to think of it, makes “Rick: A Mort Well Lived” like a cross between “Auto Erotic Assimilation” and “Mort Dinner Rick Andre”), so these game characters age and even have children, which leads them to existentially question whether the spawn of a Morty-brained NPC would necessarily also be imbued with Morty’s consciousness. The subversion of the subversion at the end in which Summer learns just enough about Die Hard so that she can then do at least one Die Hard was clever enough that I added a .5 to my review score. Recent comments from the show’s creators suggest that we can expect to see this plotline continued this season, but you can’t lore all the time, so the second episode of season six returns to more familiar territory with a quintessential Rick and Morty one-off sci-fi adventure. Rick has inserted himself into the game as the titular character Roy, to try and liberate Morty’s mind from the game. It seems if you’re jacked into the game and the power goes out, the game will restart and splinter your consciousness across all the non-player characters, which is exactly what has happened to Morty.

Post cover
Image courtesy of "Collider.com"

'Rick and Morty' Season 6 Episode 2 Recap: Let's Do a 'Die Hard' (Collider.com)

We recap all the main events of Rick and Morty Season 6, Episode 2, "Rick: A Mort Well Lived."

So, instead of unplugging the Roy machine and killing the dissident part of Morty's conscience, Rick attaches a battery to the game and pays aliens to store it safely. Things escalate quickly once Rick proposes to leave the eight percent behind, killing a part of Morty's mind to save most of it. It turns out she needed to go to the bathroom in the middle of the fight, snatched a book about Die Hard to have some reading material, and learned all about the movie's ending. And when the president of the fake United States points out how Rick is pushy and never expresses his feelings, the most loyal part of Morty's conscience begins to doubt the plan. The only instruction she gets from Rick is "to do a Die Hard." Fortunately for Summer, her ignorance about Die Hard proves to be a blessing, since the terrorists are also using the film as a source of inspiration. While Rick and Morty are trapped inside "Roy: A Life Well Lived," Summer is left behind in Blips and Chitz to defend their bodies and take down the terrorists. As for Rick, he takes the part of Roy and becomes a cult leader while trying to save his grandson. Due to limited processing power, there's just a fraction of space loaded in the game, and if they can cross the borders of the game map, they can escape their current digital prison. The first time Rick and Morty took us to Blips and Chitz was way back in Season 2, Episode 2, "Morynight Run." Most importantly for us is that Blips and Chitz has an arcade machine named "Roy: A Life Well Lived," which sucks your conscience into the machine and allows you to live a whole life as a man named Roy, from birth to death. First, the new episode digs deep into the lore to bring Rick (voiced by Justin Roiland), Morty (voiced by Roiland), and Summer (voiced by Spencer Grammer) back to Blips and Chitz, the intergalactic arcade filled with wacky games.

Post cover
Image courtesy of "Game Rant"

Rick And Morty: Season 6 Episode 2 Review (Game Rant)

Summer does indeed pull off a Die Hard in another fantastic entry for Rick and Morty season six.

[the Die Hard plot continues being used](https://gamerant.com/best-die-hard-movie-clones-lot-of-fun/) in some shape or form to this very day, and it also does a fantastic job at continuing to establish Summer as Rick and Morty’s muscle. It’s hard to call this a power play on Morty’s behalf, especially since it’s not exactly clear how much of him was left behind in the video game, but the episode’s intent seems clear. Elsewhere in Roy’s world, after a few standoffs that between the leading Morty fraction, Marta, as well as having to clean up Rick’s image from the cult-like status it’s attained, the fractured Mortys suddenly have a change of heart of not wanting to go back teen reality. [alternate Ricks and Mortys is definitely not new](https://gamerant.com/rick-and-morty-best-alternate-mortys/) to fans of the show, especially once their nature got further development in last season's finale, however, here the concept gets a new spin put into it as viewers enter a universe where everyone talks like Morty. Rick and Morty endlessly plays on Summer’s Die Hard ignorance, as she basically stumbles her way past some of the movie’s most iconic scenes with her cute alien walkie-talkie, despite the villain's disdain over the 17-year-old’s lack of 80s cinema culture. Nevertheless, it’s safe to say “Rick: A Mort Well Lived” would do McClane proud as the original movie’s funniest moments are perfectly thrown into the Blips and Chitz arcade.

Post cover
Image courtesy of "Digital Mafia Talkies"

'Rick And Morty' Season 6, Episode 2: Recap & Ending, Explained ... (Digital Mafia Talkies)

It comes out that you can 'just do a Die Hard' without even seeing the "Die Hard." At least, that's what Summer did in "Rick and Morty: Die Hard-ish" ...

They later complain that a lady is still living her life in the game, which is most probably Marta, as we have seen her declining her identity as Morty and living her life as Marta. All in all, Episode 2 is enough to amaze us for a while; we see previous seasons’ Easter eggs, a hyped franchise’s major callbacks, and a fine storyline to connect all of them together. As it’s especially notable that one second, in reality, is equivalent to one month in the game, so hours of Rick and Morty’s being trapped inside the arcade, almost lead the generations to pass on in the game. Even while we all wonder how Summer got the idea of ending it as McClane did, here she explains that she took the book named ‘Nakatomi Paradigm,’ which gave her all the spoilers from the movie. Some alien-guards in that arcade find the ‘Roy machine’ is now wrecked weirdly, where Roy is dead, and the game is still going. But she doesn’t have to go so far as till then, Rick is back on the game, shooting all the aliens and kicking them out of the arcade. While Marta is outrageous to kill her emotionless Grandpa, Roy utters about the terrifying situation that Summer has to be in; he informs Marta that if he would be really ignorant about his grandson, he wouldn’t have to worry about Summer and Morty. Later, this “Grandsonism” cult turns out to be a “doomsday cult” for the rest of the Morty world. These Star Wars-derived’ Jar Jar Binks’ kind of aliens with a mafia lord mustache, in addition, want everything to be in a ‘Die Hard’ way, which, unbeknownst to Summer, she surpasses with her coolest tactics. It comes out that you can ‘just do a Die Hard’ without even seeing the “Die Hard.” At least, that’s what Summer did in “Rick and Morty: Die Hard-ish” second episode. But, out of Roy’s sight, the President implies to Marta the skepticism that Morty harbors for Rick, and that’s why some of them don’t want to follow Roy’s words. It’s that last week’s Summer, while her wolverine claws are on leave now, she has to do it in the ‘John McClane’ way to save Rick and Morty, trapped in a Meta world.

Post cover
Image courtesy of "Inverse"

'Rick and Morty' just exposed the biggest flaw with simulation theory (Inverse)

'Rick and Morty' brilliantly blurs the lines between cults, religion, and simulation theory in Season 6 Episode 2, “Rick: A Mort Well Lived.”

In that sense, belief is more powerful than truth, and that is a realization that renders simulation theory totally pointless. And the way that intersects with simulation theory, of course, is that the bigger destiny might be that you are a 14-year-old kid whose toast is burning. “They all come back to this idea that we don’t have to worry about whatever we think our little tiny scripted jam is because we are all part of some larger thing with a bigger destiny. The vast majority of Morty NPCs are about as dumb as Morty himself, but one young Jewish girl named Marta plays a major role in converting 92 percent of the world to Rick’s cause. And is being an NPC in Roy really so different than being a regular person on the real planet Earth? When you’re just a tiny fraction of a real person, how can you ever hope to grasp the scope of it all? Their loyalty to her says more about a lack of existential curiosity than it does their humanity. What comes to be known as “grandsonism” makes it clear that there is virtually no difference between a cult, a religion, and a peculiar fractured existence within a video game simulation. The show inherently doubles down on that a billionfold here in new and interesting ways. Imagine their shock and awe when Rick (playing as Roy) begins explaining the truth to as many people as possible. Morty is at the arcade with Rick and Summer playing the game when alien terrorists attack Blips and Chitz. Double frustrating is how everyone thinks that Roy is selling them on a cult or religion, which is a running bit the episode presents many times over.

Explore the last week