Rick and Morty MCP. Query Character Lore and Multiverse Data
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Rick and Morty MCP Server queries a complete database of the show's multiverse. It lets your AI agent find detailed info on 200+ characters, track planets across dimensions, or pull up full episode guides—all from natural language prompts.
You can search by status (alive/dead), filter locations by type (Planet/Dimension), and retrieve batches of data in a single query.
What your AI agents can do
Get character
Retrieves detailed information for a single specified character.
Get characters
Fetches profiles for multiple characters simultaneously.
Get episode
Gets full details (cast, date) for one specific episode.
Retrieves full profiles (species, origin, status) for one designated character.
Returns a filtered roster of characters based on criteria like species, gender, or whether they are alive or dead.
Gets detailed information about a single location, including its dimension and type.
Retrieves a filtered list of places across the multiverse using criteria like 'Planet' or 'Dimension'.
Pulls comprehensive information for one specific episode, including its air date and character cast.
Grabs multiple characters, locations, or episodes in a single API call.
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Supported MCP Clients
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Rick and Morty MCP Server: 9 Tools for Multiverse Data
Use these nine tools to query the full Rick and Morty canon database. You can retrieve character, location, and episode data by name, status, or batch.
019d8478get character
Retrieves detailed information for a single specified character.
019d8478get characters
Fetches profiles for multiple characters simultaneously.
019d8478get episode
Gets full details (cast, date) for one specific episode.
019d8478get episodes
Retrieves data for several episodes at once.
019d8478get location
Gets detailed information about a single location or dimension.
019d8478get locations
Fetches profiles for multiple locations simultaneously.
019d8478list characters
Lists and filters characters by status, species, gender, or name.
019d8478list episodes
Lists and filters episodes using their code (SXXEXX) or name.
019d8478list locations
Lists and filters places based on type (Planet, Dimension) or name.
Choose How to Get Started
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What you can do with this MCP connector
The get_character tool lets you pull up full profiles for any single character in the multiverse. You're not looking at some fan wiki; this is structured data. Use it to get every detail on one designated person—their species, where they originated, and if they're still alive or dead. It’s quick, precise data lookup.
When you need to filter a roster of characters, use list_characters. You can narrow down the cast by checking their status (are they alive or dead?), filtering by gender, identifying their species, or just searching by name. This tool gives you a manageable list based on your criteria.
If you're pulling data for multiple people at once, use get_characters. That lets you grab profiles for several characters in one go, saving you time querying them individually.
For location deep dives, start with the get_location tool. You plug in a specific spot or dimension name and it spits out all the detailed info on that single place—its type and its coordinates within the multiverse. It’s your one-shot source for dimensional data.
The list_locations tool lets you browse every known area across the show's dimensions. You can filter these spots by their type, like 'Planet' or 'Dimension,' or search them directly by name. This is how you get a full rundown of the map.
If you know exactly which locations you need data for, use get_locations. That lets your agent grab multiple location profiles simultaneously in one single API call. You don't have to query every spot individually; it’s faster that way.
Need the scoop on a specific episode? Start with get_episode. This tool gives you comprehensive details for just one installment, including its air date and who was in the cast. It pulls all that info together in one packet of data.
If you're trying to track several episodes at once, use get_episodes. That lets you retrieve a batch of episode data simultaneously, saving you from doing multiple calls for different parts.
To find out what episodes exist or filter them down, use list_episodes. You can narrow your search by the episode code (like SXXEXX) or just by its name. This is how you get a filtered list of available shows and movies across the timeline.
Finally, when you need to check multiple places at once, use get_locations for location data, get_characters for character profiles, or get_episodes for episode guides. These batch tools let your agent handle massive amounts of structured data in a single request. You're always working with the whole database—the characters, the dimensions, and every damn episode guide—all accessible through natural language prompts.
How Rick and Morty MCP Works
- 1 Subscribe to the server. No API key is needed; the Rick and Morty API is open.
- 2 Your AI client sends a natural language query (e.g., 'Find all human characters in dimension C-137').
- 3 The agent selects the necessary tool (
list_charactersorget_location), runs it, and returns structured data to your workflow.
The bottom line is: you talk to your AI client; the client talks to this server using specific tools; the server gives back clean, usable JSON data.
Who Is Rick and Morty MCP For?
Anyone who deals with structured lore or complex reference material. This is for the sci-fi writer building a world bible, the game designer needing character stats, or the deep-dive researcher tracking fictional timelines. If your job involves gathering details from disparate sources, this server saves you hours of clicking.
Needs to cross-reference characters and dimensions across multiple seasons to ensure continuity when writing a novel or game script.
Requires structured data sets (like species type, status, etc.) for balancing character abilities or populating NPC lists in a new title.
Must maintain an accurate, searchable index of every known location and character from the show's history.
What Changes When You Connect
- Stop sifting through wiki pages. Use
list_charactersto instantly filter the entire roster by status (alive/dead) or species, giving you a clean list of relevant characters. - Need to track plot points? Run
get_episodewith an episode code to pull up full cast lists and air dates without leaving your chat interface. - The multiverse is huge. Use
list_locationsto filter down from every dimension to only the 'Planet' type, narrowing your search quickly by name or dimension tag. - Don't call tools one-by-one. Pass a batch request using
get_charactersorget_locationsto pull multiple records in a single shot, saving time and tokens. - Get deep character context. Use
get_characterwhen you need specifics—like knowing an alien’s exact origin point (C-137) rather than just their name.
Real-World Use Cases
The Lore Master Needs a Roster
A writer needs to verify every character who appears in the Season 5 finale, but they can't remember all the names. They prompt their agent: 'List all characters that are Human and alive.' The agent uses list_characters to return an accurate, filtered list of names and species, letting them check off their story bible instantly.
Tracking a Specific Dimension
A game designer is building a level set in a specific dimension but needs to know if there are any known facilities or planets nearby. They ask the agent to use list_locations and filter by 'Dimension Name: XYZ'. This returns all relevant coordinates and location types, letting them build their map accurately.
Comparing Character Stats
A researcher wants to compare Rick Sanchez and Morty Smith's full profiles. Instead of looking up each person separately, they ask the agent to use get_characters with both IDs. This pulls all data—origin, status, appearance count—into one structured block for direct comparison.
Checking Episode Continuity
A student is writing a paper on time travel and needs details about the first episode (S01E01). They ask to run get_episode with that code. The agent returns the full summary, air date, and a complete list of 16 characters involved in the plot.
The Tradeoffs
Listing vs. Getting
Asking for 'all locations' when you only need data on one planet.
→
Don't use list_locations if you know the specific location name or type. Instead, pass that detail directly to get_location. This is faster and gives you immediate, deep context.
Sequential Lookups
Calling get_character, then get_location, then get_episode in three separate chats.
→
Use batch calls. If you know multiple IDs, use get_characters or get_locations. This bundles the requests and keeps your chat history clean.
Ambiguous Queries
Simply asking 'What about that place?' when you're talking about a dimension.
→
Be specific. Use list_locations and tell the agent to filter by 'type: Dimension'. This forces the tool to narrow its search scope immediately.
When It Fits, When It Doesn't
Use this server if your goal is structured data retrieval from defined entities (Character, Location, Episode). You should use it when you need an answer that comes with metadata—like a character's species and their status. Don't use it if you just want general lore discussion or plot summaries; the agent can handle those parts. Also, don't use list_characters if you know the exact ID of the character; call get_character for maximum efficiency. The difference is simple: do you need a list (use 'list') or do you have enough information to grab one specific thing (use 'get')?
Independent Platform Disclaimer: Vinkius is an independent platform and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, sponsored by, verified by, or otherwise authorized by Rick and Morty API. All third-party trademarks, logos, and brand names are the property of their respective owners. Their use on this website is strictly for informational purposes to identify service compatibility and interoperability.
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Works with Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and more
The Model Context Protocol standardizes how applications expose capabilities to LLMs. Instead of operating in isolation, your AI gains direct access to external platforms, live data, and real-world actions through secure, standardized connections.
This server provides 9 capabilities that interface natively with Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and any MCP client. No middleware. No custom integration required.
Available Capabilities
Copying and pasting stats from wikis sucks.
Right now, if you want to build a character profile—say, Beth Smith's full bio—you open the show's wiki. You click 'Character,' find her entry, scroll down to status, read her species, and then maybe copy-paste three different bits of info into your notes. This process is slow, prone to error, and you lose context every time you switch tabs.
With this MCP server, you just tell your agent: 'Get me the full profile for Beth Smith.' The agent uses `get_character`. It returns all that structured data—species, status, origin, etc.—in a single block of text. You get everything in one go.
The Rick and Morty MCP Server: Structured Data Retrieval
Manually researching the multiverse means jumping between character databases, dimension maps, and episode guides. If you need to know where a planet is *and* which characters were there, you're juggling three different data sets just to make one connection.
Now, your agent handles it all. You can ask: 'List all planets in the Dimension C-137 that featured Rick and Morty.' The server coordinates the request, using `list_locations` combined with episode data to give you a precise answer. No juggling necessary.
Common Questions About Rick and Morty MCP
How do I check if characters are alive or dead using list_characters? +
You filter by status directly in the prompt. Just tell your agent, 'List all characters with status: Dead.' The list_characters tool handles this filtering immediately.
Do I need to use get_locations for every planet? +
No. If you only want a quick list of potential places and their types, use list_locations. Use get_location only when you need deep details on one specific place, like its full dimensional coordinates.
What’s the difference between get_characters and list_characters? +
Use list_characters when you want a filtered roster (e.g., 'Show all female characters'). Use get_characters when you already know several specific character IDs and need their full profiles in one batch.
Can I find episode details using list_episodes? +
No, not really. If you want a filtered list of episodes by name or code, use list_episodes. But if you know the exact code and need full cast/air date details, you must run get_episode.
When using `list_characters`, what filters can I use besides just name or status? +
You can filter by species, type, and gender. This lets you pinpoint specific character groups without having to retrieve the full database first.
If I need data for several dimensions, is it better to use `get_locations` or `get_multiple`? +
You should use get_locations. It handles multiple records in one request. This reduces the number of calls and improves overall execution performance.
Do I need an API key to access tools like `get_characters` or any other function? +
No, you don't. The Rick and Morty API is free and open, so there’s no authentication setup required from your end.
When using `list_episodes`, what format do I need to use for the episode codes? +
You must use the standard season and episode code format, like 'S01E01'. Using this structured input ensures the API accurately identifies the specific installment you're looking for.
Do I need an API key or account? +
No! The Rick and Morty API is completely free and open with no authentication required. Just subscribe and start exploring.
Can I filter characters by whether they're alive or dead? +
Yes! Use the list_characters tool with the status parameter set to alive, dead, or unknown. You can combine it with other filters like species or name.
Can I see which characters appear in a specific episode? +
Yes! Use get_episode with the episode ID to get the full list of character URLs, or use list_episodes filtered by episode code (e.g., 'S01E01') to find it first.
Use it with your favorite AI tools
Connect this server to Cursor, Claude, VS Code, and more.
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