Rick and Morty Season 8 Episode 3’s post-credits scene parallels the episode’s actual ending (& fans may not have noticed it)

Rick and Morty Season 8 ( Image via Youtube / Adult Swim )
Rick and Morty Season 8 ( Image via Youtube / Adult Swim )

Rick and Morty Season 8, Episode 3, "The Rick, The Mort & The Ugly," offers a richly layered story about clone identity, legacy, and the ridiculous politics of the multiverse. But while most fans were concerned with the emotional repercussions between clone Ricks and Mortys inside the Citadel, the post-credits scene of the episode softly echoed the final tone of the episode, although not in the manner some may have anticipated.

Inserted after the credits is a follow-up to an earlier, easily missable joke: two anthropomorphic dice, seen for the first time during a background game of dice among clone Ricks, emerge out of the wreckage and continue their vendetta. This "post-credit scene" is more uncomplicated than it looks, and some fans may have shrugged it off as an afterthought joke.

Though the post-credit scene of Season 8 Episode 3 does not include Jerry—or any iteration of Jerry—it is still a thematic resonance for the episode's central concepts. It repeats the pattern of conflict and outstanding tension, both visible and accessible in what is observed not only with the dice but throughout the various clone factions. It also provides broken identities that are taken up by the episode. Thus, the scene serves as a lighter, but narrative-coherent, conclusion.


What actually happens in the post-credit scene in Rick and Morty Season 8?

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The post-credits scene begins with the two animated dice figures who had previously been witnessed fighting in the middle of the game during the Citadel's destruction. Amid the ruins, they crawl out of the debris, hurt, but alive and kicking. They stare silently at one another…and continue their fight. This scene, though comic and surreal to behold, does not deviate far from the themes that abound in the show. It's a satirical reference to the never-ending cycle of war, even between the most absurd characters.

At the same time, the audience has their fun scene with the primary Rick and Morty. They visit the remains of the Citadel and erroneously hold Arcade Morty responsible for murdering Hillbilly Rick and burning his home. The charge is baseless, and Morty quickly finds his missing fidget spinner, a small but symbolic closure, and the two depart, utterly overlooking the severity of what actually transpired. This short exchange is humorous, ridiculous, and deliberately removed, further reinforcing the show's overall tone of carefree randomness.


A parallel through absurdity and continuity in Rick and Morty Season 8

The post-credits sequence mirrors the end of the episode in tone and form. The dice, perpetuating their meaningless battle, represent how patterns of conflict continue to repeat themselves even when everything falls apart. This on-screen metaphor is reminiscent of how the Citadel, which was previously a reminder of authority and order among clones, implodes due to ego, uprising, and fractured identity. The post-credits battle is a smaller-scale representation of the episode's overall themes.

Also, the uncertainty among the primary Rick and Morty and Arcade Morty casually replicates the nebulous boundaries of identity that the episode meticulously constructs. Clone Ricks and clone Mortys wonder what they are for, leadership is a mess, and all the characters battle for authenticity. Amidst all of this, a throwaway line about identity confusion and a fidget spinner somehow feels appropriate—it illustrates that even canonic characters are still oblivious to greater struggles in alternate existences.

The episode is built around the destruction of the Citadel and the intricate relationship dynamics between clone incarnations of Rick and Morty. This is significant because it points to how the series decides when to highlight specific characters, and here, Jerry is not part of the storytelling being unraveled.


In the end, the post-credit scene in Rick and Morty Season 8 Episode 3 doesn't tie the episode up with emotion or dramatic resolution. Rather, it settles on chaos, comedy, and open-ended conflict—exactly as the main plot does. Bringing back the dice characters to their squabble, and Rick and Morty's clueless misinterpretation of what happened at the Citadel, reaffirms a greater message: in the multiverse, resolution is not always clean, and comprehension is often shallow.

Despite what viewers might have been anticipating of Rick and Morty Season 8 episode 3, the post-credit scene remains faithful to the style of Rick and Morty—witty humor, low-key social commentary, and just so much bizarreness to keep you wondering. The scene doesn't resolve the plot, but it doesn't need to. It just keeps the madness going.

Also read: Rick And Morty Season 8 Episode 4: Release date, time, streaming details and more

Edited by Ayesha Mendonca