the implication is that, somehow in an infinite amount of universes where there are people smarter than rick, everyone is a dumb wannabe george jetson doing things that are too advanced for them and ending up killing themselves in the process.
it's the writers not knowing how to write a world outside the central finite curve, so they imagine it's all pure chaos and somehow Rick (and the council & citadel and whathaveyou) were all correct in deciding to shut themselves off.
i could understand there being a large section of space that is like the chaos we see at the start of the episode, but in a TRULY infinite multiverse, there has got to be another version of the curve with some other super-genius at the helm. in fact, i just came up with a great idea.
in some far off universe, on the hypothetical other side of multiversal space from the central finite curve, there's a group of interconnected universes called The Aggregate Federation that first sprung up from 2 different (yet like minded) individuals making portal tech at the same time and encountering eachother's portal in a third universe. from there, they started to gradually branch out to other similar universes (only sometimes meeting alternate versions of themselves) until the point where they came across a universe where the Gromflomite Federation had been exerting control over all life for the past several millennia. It everything that Rick despises about his own Gromflomites taken to its logical conclusion, but the Aggregate is easily hoodwinked into "cooperating" because they see a universe that has already achieved interplanetary peace and think "well, if they could do it here, they could do it everywhere."
right, forgot that bit.
uhhh, the Aggregate Federation is by design built around infinite expansion, so they are constantly seeking out new universes to join their walled garden.
the dinosaurs did it
dinosaurs episode was fine, but only because you could imagine that happening on 1 earth rather than every earth. supersmart dinosaurs are like how you pronounce parmesan.
The implication is outside of the Ricks' walled off part of the infinite multiverse, its open season with an infinite amount of different inter-dimensional travelers, clogging up any universe that isn't walled off to them.
Now there should be a greater number of infinite universes than the amount of infinite portal travelers, so bumping into other portal travelers should really be fairly rare, but could happen by dumb luck or if certain universes are easier to get to than others.
portal travel?
Where is this from?
The Jetsons reboot, really great stuff. They even have meta humor and Judy Jetson has a lot of dry wit LOL
I can't find anything about any reboot
He's screwing with you, Anon. This is last night's Rick and Morty.
Is it as raunchy as the original Jetsons?
i thought you couldn't kill kids in shows
Dude, how many Mortys have we seen die? AS don't give a shit.
portal travel.....
Is he smarter than Rick?
Smarter than most Ricks actually but not Prime or Dead Wife Rick
>keeps killing himself and his family
You tell me
As someone who never liked The Jetsons, this was very amusing.
I had no idea this existed. Funny to see kids shows riffing Rick and Morty but I guess it's not that hard to believe.
This IS from Rick and Morty. You are looking at a series of Rick and Morty screenshots. You are not looking at a show that is not Rick and Morty.
So what was the deal with that? Is the implication that universes where Rick doesn't exist ends up with everyone portal travelling?
the implication is that, somehow in an infinite amount of universes where there are people smarter than rick, everyone is a dumb wannabe george jetson doing things that are too advanced for them and ending up killing themselves in the process.
it's the writers not knowing how to write a world outside the central finite curve, so they imagine it's all pure chaos and somehow Rick (and the council & citadel and whathaveyou) were all correct in deciding to shut themselves off.
i could understand there being a large section of space that is like the chaos we see at the start of the episode, but in a TRULY infinite multiverse, there has got to be another version of the curve with some other super-genius at the helm. in fact, i just came up with a great idea.
in some far off universe, on the hypothetical other side of multiversal space from the central finite curve, there's a group of interconnected universes called The Aggregate Federation that first sprung up from 2 different (yet like minded) individuals making portal tech at the same time and encountering eachother's portal in a third universe. from there, they started to gradually branch out to other similar universes (only sometimes meeting alternate versions of themselves) until the point where they came across a universe where the Gromflomite Federation had been exerting control over all life for the past several millennia. It everything that Rick despises about his own Gromflomites taken to its logical conclusion, but the Aggregate is easily hoodwinked into "cooperating" because they see a universe that has already achieved interplanetary peace and think "well, if they could do it here, they could do it everywhere."
You could make the assumption that stable sections of the multiverse are stable entirely because they wall themselves off from the rest of it.
right, forgot that bit.
uhhh, the Aggregate Federation is by design built around infinite expansion, so they are constantly seeking out new universes to join their walled garden.
dinosaurs episode was fine, but only because you could imagine that happening on 1 earth rather than every earth. supersmart dinosaurs are like how you pronounce parmesan.
the dinosaurs did it
The implication is outside of the Ricks' walled off part of the infinite multiverse, its open season with an infinite amount of different inter-dimensional travelers, clogging up any universe that isn't walled off to them.
Now there should be a greater number of infinite universes than the amount of infinite portal travelers, so bumping into other portal travelers should really be fairly rare, but could happen by dumb luck or if certain universes are easier to get to than others.
Why are they missing a finger?