When Morty stupidly agrees to all the legal terms of a new face-altering gif app, he signs his life away to an unheard-of company that immediately seizes control of him for their own purposes.
Then, when Morty screws up Rick's rescue effort, the company steals Rick's portal gun and strands our heroes in an unexplored dimension--leaving them free to strip mine every aspect of Rick's inventions and the Smith family's lives for evil, capitalist purposes!
Rick & Morty: Corporate Assets takes some well-deserved shots at online influencers and certain toxic fandoms, but it's lacking in jokes and its hook comes off more as annoying than creative. Read Full Review
I really enjoyed that s personally I thought the story was a lot of fun and had me laughing quite often. I thought the art was great as well and the colors really popped. I'm looking forward to the next issue
The premise is similar to the episode of South Park where the TOS for an app tricks Morty into agreeing to something bad. Unfortunately, the artwork falls off-model at times.
My favorite parts are the ones that just happen without feeling the need for an explanation: Rick & Morty show up at the beginning covered in colorful worms that we just accept are a product of a lackluster adventure. Later, Rick shows up with a weapon that turns a man into a werewolf with one slash, which any reader familiar with Rick will accept without question.