As is tradition, stay for the credits to see a wooden Jerry trying (and failing) to find meaning in his immortality. Final Thoughts
The reveal of who—or what—is actually behind the squid costumes is one of the episode's many hilarious and bizarre subversions.
From wooden decoys to steampunk versions, the sheer variety of Smith families provides constant visual gags and high-stakes action. [S5E2] Mortyplicity
The episode kicks off with the Smith family being brutally murdered by "squid" assassins—only for us to realize that the family we just saw was a decoy. Rick explains he created "decoy families" as a buffer against his many enemies. However, the brilliance of Mortyplicity lies in its escalation: the decoys themselves started making their own decoys, creating a "decoy cascade" where no one knows who is real. Key Themes: Creation vs. Creator
Ironically, one of the Ricks who seems most "real" because he expresses genuine love for his family is the one who has to die, as the show’s status quo demands the "miserable bastard" version of Rick. Highlights of the Mayhem As is tradition, stay for the credits to
Rick-Ception: The Chaos of "Mortyplicity" If you thought Rick and Morty couldn't get any more meta, Season 5, Episode 2, "," arrived to prove us all wrong. This episode is a relentless, fast-paced dive into the "Decoy Protocol," where what starts as a simple safety measure quickly devolves into a planet-wide free-for-all of Smith family clones. The Premise: Layers of Deception
We never truly know which family is the "original" C-137 family until the very end. Each time a Rick declares himself a "god" or the "true" version, he is inevitably killed by another. The episode kicks off with the Smith family
"Mortyplicity" is Rick and Morty at its most chaotic and inventive. It manages to balance a complex, nested narrative with the show’s signature dark humor and existential dread. It’s an episode that demands multiple viewings just to catch every variant of the Smith family tree.