Mortimer "Evil Morty" Smith of Dimension 79⊢⊇V is a fictional character and the main antagonist of Adult Swim's Rick and Morty franchise. Created by Stephen Sandoval and Ryan Ridley, and voiced by Justin Roiland for the first five seasons of the series, followed by Harry Belden beginning with the seventh season, Evil Morty is an inter-dimensional traveller and an alternate version of Morty Smith Prime (created by Roiland and Dan Harmon) from another dimension in the multiverse, where-in sick of the adventures his grandfather Rick Sanchez 79⊢⊇V would force him to endure, he had developed a mind control eyepatch to control his Rick, aiming to find a way to break free of the Central Finite Curve and the influence of the Ricks residing on it.
Introduced in "Close Rick-counters of the Rick Kind" as Eyepatch Morty and the controller of "Evil Rick", he takes on a new identity as Candidate Morty in "The Ricklantis Mixup" and is elected President Morty of the inter-dimensional Citadel of Ricks and Mortys (populated by numerous alternate versions of himself and Rick). In "Rickmurai Jack", now ironically dubbed "Evil Morty" by Morty Prime, he uses the Citadel's population as fuel to escape the Curve. The character returns in "Unmortricken" (the opening sequence of which exploring his origin story), in which after Rick C-137's search for Rick Prime messes with the stability of his Evil Morty's new home, he helps him find and defeat Rick Prime before acquiring the latter's device capable of erasing anyone from every universe, and asking that neither Rick or Morty attempt to track him down again lest he have to use it. Alternate versions of the character from parallel dimensions are featured in the 2017 comic book limited series Pocket Like You Stole It, the 2020 short film Rick and Morty vs. Genocider, the 2021 short film Rick + Morty in the Eternal Nightmare Machine, and the 2024 anime series Rick and Morty: The Anime.
In November 2021, Evil Morty was added as a playable character in the role-playing video game Pocket Mortys, and in August 2022, to the beta release of the crossover fighting game MultiVersus. The character has received a universally positive critical reception, praised for his iconic mind control eyepatch, theme song, and outwardly calm and understanding, yet inwardly cunning and ruthless demeanor.
The 2026 Asian Rifle/Pistol Championships took place from 2 to 14 February 2026, at Dr. Karni Singh Shooting Range, New Delhi, India.
Medal summary
Men
10 m air pistol |
|||
10 m air pistol team |
|
|
|
25 m rapid fire pistol |
{{flagmedalist |
}} |
{{flagmedalist |
25 m rapid fire pistol team |
{{}} |
{{}} |
{{}} |
25 m standard pistol |
|||
25 m standard pistol team |
|
|
|
50 m pistol |
|||
50 m pistol team |
|
|
|
10 m air rifle |
|||
10 m air rifle team |
|
|
|
50 m rifle prone |
{{flagmedalist |
}} |
{{flagmedalist |
50 m rifle prone team |
{{}} |
{{}} |
{{}} |
50 m rifle 3 positions |
{{flagmedalist |
}} |
{{flagmedalist |
50 m rifle 3 positions team |
{{}} |
{{}} |
{{}} |
Women
10 m air pistol |
|||
10 m air pistol team |
|
|
|
25 m pistol |
{{flagmedalist |
}} |
{{flagmedalist |
25 m pistol team |
{{}} |
{{}} |
{{}} |
10 m air rifle |
|||
10 m air rifle team |
|
|
|
50 m rifle prone |
{{flagmedalist |
}} |
{{flagmedalist |
50 m rifle 3 positions |
{{flagmedalist |
}} |
{{flagmedalist |
50 m rifle 3 positions team |
{{}} |
{{}} |
{{}} |
Mixed
10 m air pistol team |
|
|
|
10 m air rifle team |
|
|
|
Medal table
References
External links
Asian Shooting Championships Asian Category:Asian Shooting Championships Asian Shooting Championships Asian Shooting Championships
Fimihan Uthman Akinola (born 24 February 2001), known professionally as Fimiguerrero (often stylised in all caps), is a Nigerian-born British rapper based in London. Blending rage rap, trap and club music, he first drew attention with his 2019 single "Rubberbands" before releasing a run of projects including Human Anatomy (2019), Black (2023), Immigrant (2023), the mixtape New World Order (2024) and the collaborative album Conglomerate (2024) with Lancey Foux and Len.
Early life
Fimiguerrero was born in Nigeria as Fimihan Uthman Akinola and moved to the United Kingdom as a child with his mother and brother. The family lived in various parts of South East England, including Greenwich, Thamesmead, Newham and, briefly, Kent. During this period his brother moved away and his relationship with his mother became strained, although he later described her sending him videos of herself playing his music in her car.
He grew up listening to his mother's collection of fuji music, as well as singers such as Whitney Houston and Celine Dion, before discovering UK rap through online freestyle platforms like SB.TV. As a teenager he began recording songs using school headphones and playing them to friends. He later enrolled on a Fashion Marketing degree, but described repeating his first year twice and ultimately deciding university was not for him. Instead, he used student loan money to buy clothes, go on dates and finance recording sessions, developing a hustler mentality that fed into his music career.
Career
2019–2021: Early singles and first projects
In June 2019, Fimiguerrero released his debut single "Rubberbands", a trap-leaning track distributed through 1312104 Records DK. Later that year he issued the seven-track project Human Anatomy, continuing to experiment with short, high-energy songs. In January 2020, he followed with the single "Fifteen", again released independently through digital distributors.
After deciding to pursue music full-time, Fimiguerrero dropped out of university and spent extended periods sleeping and writing in recording studios between Manchester and Copenhagen, describing waking up on sofas with a microphone next to him. During this period he became closely aligned with 10V Elysium, a London-based creative collective and label run by his manager Bams, which combined music, fashion and events and released his work independently with distribution handled by Believe.
In 2021, he released two longer projects: the self-titled Fimiguerrero and No Way Out, both credited as albums on streaming services and issued through 10V. These projects refined his mix of melodic trap, cloud rap and club-influenced beats and laid the groundwork for his later rage-oriented sound.
2022–2023: Kʌnt, Black and Immigrant
In March 2022, he released the five-track EP Kʌnt through 10V Elysium. The project, featuring songs such as "2Fast" and "Christian Bale", has been described as an early distillation of his experimental rage and club-rap approach.
Fimiguerrero's breakout period arrived in 2023 with the back-to-back releases of Black and Immigrant, described by Wonderland as "future-forward manifestos" that plotted his ambitions beyond the UK underground. The article highlighted how the former includes politically charged writing, citing lines from the song "School Dinner", while Immigrant flips Brandy and Monica's 1998 hit "The Boy Is Mine" into the bouncy track "Rain". Both projects were issued through 10V and distributed by Believe, and are categorised as albums on streaming platforms.
During this time he also began collaborating closely with fellow UK rapper Lancey Foux. Their single "Dark Knight", produced by T99 and Lucid740, was noted in Wonderland as capturing their shared Nigerian heritage and mutual interest in fashion, with Fimiguerrero's verse framed as a symbolic "passing of the baton". The pair later reunited on "Doppelgänger", which critics described as a high-energy, back-and-forth rage track.
On the live side, Fimiguerrero undertook his first headline run of shows with the Black tour, performing in clubs around the UK and ending 2023 with a sold-out London date that featured surprise appearances from Len and Lancey Foux. Footage from these shows circulated online, helping build his reputation for chaotic mosh-pit performances.
2024: New World Order, Wireless Festival and Conglomerate
In 2024, Fimiguerrero released New World Order, widely described as a mixtape rather than a studio album. Reviewers characterised the project as a tightly sequenced trap and rage tape built around mosh-ready tracks such as "MVP" and "All My Cards". A viral X review by an underground critic also described it as "one banger after another" and a defining moment for the UK rage scene.
The single "MVP", a collaboration with fellow UK rapper YT, was accompanied by a video premiered on GRM Daily and helped introduce Fimiguerrero to a wider UK rap audience. Around the same time he appeared on a run of collaborative singles, including "Nkita" with Knucks, "patrol" with hako, "giveTake" with iankon, and "Orchid" with producer fakemink, released as a joint single in May 2024.
In live performance, 2024 marked Fimiguerrero's step up to major festival stages. In May he was announced as a late addition to the line-up of Wireless Festival 2024 in Finsbury Park, joining headliners including Nicki Minaj and Doja Cat. He performed at the festival on 14 July 2024, with setlists and video recaps circulating online.
Later that year he joined Lancey Foux and Len for the collaborative album Conglomerate, released in November 2024. New Wave described the project as a "highly anticipated" statement for the UK underground, highlighting the single "OSBATT" as a showcase of their chemistry. Pitchfork later reviewed Conglomerate as a "war cry" for the UK underground, singling out Fimiguerrero as "the hottest right now" and praising the "hyper-jerk" sound of New World Order as a precursor to the tape.
Discography
Studio albums
- Human Anatomy (2019)
- Fimiguerrero (2021)
- No Way Out (2021)
- Black (2023)
- Immigrant (2023)
- New World Order (2024)
Collaborative albums
- Conglomerate (with Len and Lancey Foux) (2024)
Extended plays
- kʌnt (2022)
- 2019 – "Rubberbands"
- 2020 – "Fifteen"
- 2021 – "Cheaters"
- 2021 – "Black Flag*"
- 2022 – "Helditup"
- 2023 – "Pull Up"
- 2023 – "Dark Knight" (featuring Lancey Foux)
- 2023 – “KILLUMINATI”
- 2024 – "Mandy"
- 2024 – "Vogue"
- 2024 – "MASHUP" (with 5EB)
- 2024 – "Orchid" (with fakemink)
- 2025 – "It's Cool" (with F1lthy and TeeboFG)
- 2025 – "Designer"
- 2025 – "my bad bro"
- 2025 – "Tartan" (with Reekz MB)
- 2025 – "Black Jeep" (with fakemink)
- 2025 – “Yesterday”
Singles as featured artist
- 2023 – "Doppelgänger" (Lancey Foux featuring Fimiguerrero)
- 2024 – "Kurt Cobain (Fimi)" (ësoteric featuring Fimiguerrero)
- 2024 – "100degrees (Fimi)" (ësoteric featuring Fimiguerrero)
- 2024 – "Nkita" (Knucks featuring Fimiguerrero)
- 2025 – "SHOW ME LUV" (Zaylevelten featuring Fimiguerrero)
- 2025 – "Platinum" (fakemink archive & Zukovstheworld featuring Fimiguerrero)
References
Category:2001 births Category:British rappers Category:Nigerian rappers Category:Living people
Dc2Trill (born Dillan Caster) is an American rapper and songwriter from Port Arthur, Texas. Known for a relaxed vocal delivery over bass-heavy, Southern-leaning production, he emerged from SoundCloud and later joined Lil Yachty’s Concrete Boys collective. He has released two studio albums, Family Matters (2023) and Drank Babies 4Life (2025).
Early life
Dc2Trill grew up in Port Arthur, Texas.
Career
Breakthrough and Family Matters (2023)
Dc2Trill’s breakthrough arrived with Family Matters, released on July 25, 2023 via Concrete Rekordz. It included appearances by Lil Yachty and Babyface Ray.
Drank Babies 4Life (2025)
In 2025 he released Drank Babies 4Life, a 17-track set with contributions including Teezo Touchdown, Rio Da Yung OG, Draft Day and Lil Yachty.
Concrete Boys
Dc2Trill is a member of the Concrete Boys, a collective led by Lil Yachty. In early 2024, the group rolled out singles ahead of their debut compilation It’s Us Vol. 1, including Dc2Trill’s solo cut “My Life,” released as part of the album campaign. It’s Us Vol. 1 was released on April 5, 2024 and framed by Hypebeast as a 16-track introduction to the collective’s world. Major-press coverage assessed individual roles on the project, with Pitchfork describing Dc2Trill as the crew’s smooth-talker and highlighting “My Life,” while noting the album’s easy-listening appeal overall. Additional coverage included Rolling Out and HotNewHipHop features on the campaign and affiliated releases. The collective continued collaborative activity in 2025, including a four-track tape with PlaqueBoyMax (fivestarcrete) featuring Lil Yachty, Dc2trill, Camo! and Draft Day.
Musical style and influences
Writers frequently describe Dc2Trill’s music as bass-forward, atmospheric Southern rap with a relaxed, melodic delivery. Coverage of It’s Us Vol. 1 and Drank Babies 4Life emphasized mood and consistency over maximal technical display, crediting his smooth, low-intensity approach as a distinctive contribution within the Concrete Boys.
Discography
Albums
- Drank Babies 2 (2020)
- Drank Babies 3 (2021)
- Moe's World (2022)
- Family Matters (2023)
- Drank Babies 4Life (2025)
Extended Plays
- Drank Babies (2020)
- In The Booth (2024)
- Community Service (2025)
Singles
- Bar For Bar (feat. Lil Yachty) (2021)
- Sorry For The Wait (2021)
- Doin Dat (2021)
- Hit My Cup (2022)
- Adventure Time (2022)
- Smooth Operator (2023)
- Ring Up The Price (2023)
- In Here (2023)
- I Get Busy / 6 Wolves (2023)
- Clap (2024)
- Summer Ends (2024)
- Present Day (2024)
- Alright (2024)
- Go To The Moon (2024)
- B.U.I.M.B (2024)
- CALLING 4 BACKUP (2024)
- She Wanna Be (2024)
- Trips (2025)
- Billy & Mandi (2025)
- New Tricks (2025)
- FIVE (freestyle) (2025)
- Ken Carson/N.T.G (2025)
- Can't Leave Me Alone (2025)
- Mafia (2025)
- Durk Eyed Ike (2025)
- Spaceship Crawler (2025)
Collaborative/mixtapes
- It’s Us Vol. 1 (2024), with Concrete Boys
Reception
Family Matters drew positive notices from indie outlets for cohesion and features, while Drank Babies 4Life was described as a solid, laid-back listen with room for growth. For the collective project It’s Us Vol. 1, major-press reviews highlighted individual roles—calling Dc2Trill a smooth-talker—and portrayed the album as an easy-listening compilation that foregrounded group chemistry over sharp contrasts.
References
External links
Category:American drill musicians Category:American trap musicians Category:American hip-hop musicians Category:People from Port Arthur, Texas Category:Musicians from Texas Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:Living people