Rick and Morty Corporate Assets #1
SCORE: 34
Rick and Morty Corporate Assets #1 is the
last comic book that was purchased during the free comic book day trip
that has been references and explained in other reviews. We did not
notice the mature readers rating when we purchased Rick and Morty
Corporate Assets #1. That is something we will be mindful of in the
future. Comic book ratings are a bit strange and hard to figure out. The
ESRB is flawed and fails a lot but at least we know what the ratings
mean, and where they are listed.
Rick and Morty Corporate Assets #1 is filled with blood, gore,
profanity, lack of attire, enticement to lust, sexual content, hate, bad
attitudes, and more. Morty gets kidnapped in Rick and Morty Corporate
Assets #1 after agreeing to the legal terms of a free app. Rick tries to
explain to him why free apps are a bad thing. Morty did not listen. So
Rick goes to try and rescue him while Morty was replaced with a robot
version. The family unit in Rick and Morty Corporate Assets #1 is
horrible.
Part of the profanities in Rick and Morty Corporate Assets #1 are
asterisked out. So the middle two letters of the s word for example. It
is blatantly obvious what word they are saying in Rick and Morty
Corporate Assets #1. No one in Rick and Morty Corporate Assets #1
bothers listening to others and shows what a horrible world it is when
people do not listen. Rick and Morty Corporate Assets #1 shows an evil,
vile and wicked world full of selfishness.
Capitalism is attacked in Rick and Morty Corporate Assets #1. The irony
is the people behind Rick and Morty Corporate Assets #1 are getting paid
really well for the work they do. So they benefit from what they are
attacking. It makes their hate filled attacks all the more hollow to me
and anyone with half a brain cell that comprehends any form of logic.
Too many Christians and conservatives have left these industries leaving
them to the radical far left that uses them to promote their extremist
views.
Rick and Morty Corporate Assets #1 is twenty-two pages long with a
creator spotlight after that and some advertisement pages. There is
absolutely nothing they advertise that actually interests me. Part of
the comic book industry hard times has to do with the garbage they put
on the market. I was recently at that comic book store and had real
problems finding much of anything of interest that was semi family
friendly. Why is that?
- Paul
Graphics: 30%
Writing: 40%
Replay/Extras: 50%
Story: 30%
Family Friendly Factor: 20%
System: Comic Book
Publisher: Oni Press
Author: Asmus, Williams, Lawson
Rating: ‘MR’ for Mature Readers
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