Wobbly linework, gross-out sci-fi gags, and multiverse backdrops. Great for parody, pitch decks, and weird comedy.
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A western adult sci-fi cartoon look built on wobbly ink, uneven pupils, and backgrounds that feel busier than the punchline. It is a popular reference for parody boards, pitch frames, and meme-friendly stills when you want "multiverse lab sitcom" energy without copying any specific character.
The Rick and Morty look is wobbly Adult Swim cartooning: droopy eyes, sci-fi sitcom gags, and interdimensional garage labs. The aesthetic is less about polish and more about readable exaggeration: thick wandering outlines, pupils that do not quite match, and props that look like they were glued together five minutes before the scene started.
Color often swings to neon lime, acid green, and bruised purple against flat skin tones, with haze and rim light selling portal spill without needing a paragraph of lore. Backgrounds carry the joke as much as faces: cluttered workbenches, fast-food parking lots, alien bazaars, and rental spacecraft interiors stuffed with greeble. When you prompt, give the environment a shopping list (cables, specimen tanks, fast-food cup, broken dial) so the gag reads in one glance.
Think in beats when you write a scene: one setting noun, one emotional posture, one sci-fi gross-out or absurd gadget, and a lighting line (rim, under-glow, sickly fluorescent). That structure keeps the multiverse mood readable and gives each panel a clear punchline.
Try the look on your own prompt. Start from one of the examples below.
"Rick and Morty style, scientist and kid, portal in messy garage, droopy round eyes, thick outline, comedic, no text"
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"Rick and Morty style, floating head-planet in lime sky, green portal, wobbly bazaar, acid haze, greebled kiosks, wide shot, no text"
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"Rick and Morty style, chibi gift shop, nervous wobbly smile, slimy gags, wiggly line, bright acid palette, not photoreal, no text"
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Cables, tanks, and dimensional tears that are busy in the back, simple in the front.
Off-model charm: uneven pupils, lolling tongue, deadpan vs panic in one still.
Goo, slime, and mutagen humor that read gross-cute rather than gory.
Couch, driveway, and garage scenes that are emotionally messy but visually simple.
Lime, bruised purple, and under-glow that sell dimensional leak in one line of lighting text.
Wide two-shots, a messy midground, and one readable prop so the gag reads at phone width.
Describe your vision for Rick and Morty style in plain language.
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Try droopy round eyes, thick wandering outline, messy lab, interdimensional portal, floating citadel, beat-up minivan, nervous smile, and a lime or acid palette. Stack two or three of these in one prompt rather than vague style labels.
Keep the head shape and outline confident, then let only the pupils, eyelids, and mouth wobble. Mismatched pupil size, a half-closed eyelid, and a slack mouth read as character rather than a drawing mistake. Hands and props should stay graphic-clean for contrast.
Cluttered garage labs with dangling cables, cosmic bazaars with awnings made of weird fabric, fast-food parking lots under green skies, and rental spacecraft cabins stuffed with greeble. Dense midground, simple foreground, and one strong portal arc tend to read clearly.
Keep slime and goop in flat graphic shapes (drips, bubbles, rings) and stay away from realistic body fluid detail. A confused face with a single comedic stain reads funnier than a frame full of viscera, and stays safe for thumbnails and pitch decks.
Mix one Rick-coded silhouette cue (lab coat, drool, cosmic gadget belt) with one fresh trait that does not exist in the show: a different species head shape, an unusual prop, or a swapped color scheme. Stay away from the canonical white hair and unibrow combo.
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