Rick And Morty Virtual Rick-ality Mods

Beyond the Portal Gun: The Ultimate Guide to Rick and Morty: Virtual Rick-ality Mods

When Owlchemy Labs released Rick and Morty: Virtual Rick-ality in 2017, it was hailed as a watershed moment for licensed VR games. Unlike cash-grab tie-ins, this game captured the chaotic, nihilistic, and hyper-intelligent humor of the show. Players got to live the fantasy: being a Morty clone, crawling through vents, crafting the Plumbus, and enduring Rick’s verbal abuse in true-to-life VR.

2. The "Mr. Poopybutthole" Player Model

The Problem: You are a Morty clone. Morty is neurotic and weak. You want to be... someone else. The Solution: A skeleton-swap mod that replaces the player’s arm/hand model with the rounded, yellow, slightly despairing hands of Mr. Poopybutthole. It also modifies the player’s collision height to be shorter. The Experience: Crawling through the vent as Mr. Poopybutthole, hearing your own muffled "Ooh wee!" every time you pick up a screwdriver, is a surreal, hilarious power fantasy. It doesn't break the narrative (Rick treats you the same), but the visual comedy is worth the install alone. Rick And Morty Virtual Rick-ality Mods

"I'm Mr. Meeseeks! Look at me! Life is pain!" the tiny Jerrys yelled in unison, trying to file their taxes on Morty’s shoes. Beyond the Portal Gun: The Ultimate Guide to

Final Verdict: For VR tinkerers and die-hard Rick and Morty fans, mods transform a short, polished demo into a chaotic, ever-expanding sandbox. Just keep a backup handy, and don’t mod the butter-passing robot. That thing knows what it did. Morty is neurotic and weak

A notable community-made map on the Steam Workshop recreates the "Virtual Rick-ality" aesthetic as a Call of Duty: Zombies map.

, the community primarily focuses on technical enhancements to improve the base game's immersion and story delivery. The game itself is a short, narrative-driven experience where you play as a expendable Morty clone. Community Mods & Technical Adjustments