Well, it finally happened. Rick and Morty are in Hell, and we don't mean the DMV. It's fire, brimstone, and torture for all eternity. Typical Rick, he sees a way out of this mess and drags Morty with him on a horrific adventure to speak to...the manager.
This is a decent first issue that will please any diehard Rick and Morty fans. Casual fans might have a harder time though. Read Full Review
Overall its a fun set up for a new Rick and Morty series that has the promise to deliver something great moving forward. The pace of the issue may not be for everyone, and the visuals work are ok, but Im willing to see where this is all headed! Read Full Review
In Rick and Morty Go to Hell #1, Rick seems to deny all of it, which is puzzling for all the things we already know. The Art by Constanza Oroza does not perfectly emulate the show but it is still pretty good. I was a little disappointed that there weren't more Easter Eggs. The most important thing is that I am now intrigued, and can't wait for issue #2. Read Full Review
The setting itself and the way it's depicted with diverse demons muddling through their day jobs and the fiery aesthetic that just glances off Rick are the most redeeming parts of the story, but if you strip those away, you've got a pretty generic Rick and Morty adventure. Read Full Review
Rick is a fine one to deny the existence of Hell, when he and Summer beat it out of the Devil himself once. I hope this story won't just be a long quest for Rick and Morty where they end up eluding an angry mob led by Jerry, as they try to find a way out.
This shows promise to be an amusing story if it stays on the right track. Actually an angry mob led by Jerry would actually be pretty amusing, All the while, Beth trying to calm him down.
The devil rent-a-cops on bicycles were the highlight, but I already sense the story losing steam if we're just going to dive into a new circle of Hell with each issue.
The DMV joke was done in Beetlejuice, I'm surprised Rick didn't acknowledge that.