This episode is the second of the "focused episodes" where a relation between two particular Sides is explored, and this time, it's Logic and Morality's turn. The biggest handicap of the episode is the same of most episodes of the first age of the series that ends with this episode: it's too short. Other previous episodes managed to use their little available time to explore the main topic and make the most of it (some didn't, as I discussed in previous reviews). This episode did in fact explore everything they wanted to say, but it felt a little rushed. If it had been just a couple of minutes longer, they could have taken that time to slow the pace down a little bit and it would have been a way better result overall.
Still, though, that doesn't mean it's a bad episode at all. In fact, highlights overshadow lowdowns. We see Logic's personality getting away from the Teacher Guy from the shorts, where he was just, at the time, an alternate version of the Dad Guy with necktie, to the super-serious, over-analytic guy that hates feelings and emotions, which is the character we would know in the rest of the series. Joan S. was present in filming, giving minor assistance to Thomas in this episode, and when they saw Logic's new personality, they knew the series had potential and asked Thomas to join in the series as a writer, something that would happen in the next episode.
Thomas has always praised Joan for how much characters have evolved in the series thanks to them, but Joan in turn has said that it was actually Thomas who started the spark of that evolution with Logic in this episode, and you can actually see it. Logic in previous episodes acted as goofily as Morality at times and was more prone to smiling like him. This is the first time we see Logic suffering over having accidentally made a pun, being embarrased over being caught wearing a onesie, and in a way asking everyone in the room to take him seriously, even if not yet directly. That was to be explored later on in the series when it would become big, but all that evolution was started here, by Thomas himself, in the last episode he wrote alone. And that is commendable.