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Review
Feb 19, 2020 14:52:13 GMT -5
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Post by scoobylover on Feb 19, 2020 14:52:13 GMT -5
Boring, awfully off pace. This series is an insult to the fandom. The idea was different yet poorly executed, the plot was basically non-existent, Daphne, Fred and Velma rarely get to talk, this is utter trash and there should be some sort of petition cuz damn. The references to old monsters were useless and did not work, apart from the key out of the window gag from the classic episode, however that one also turned out to be quite lame
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Post by Doo on Feb 21, 2020 0:03:58 GMT -5
I disagree with the above sentiment on this episode. This episode was definitely a departure from the norm of this series, but I appreciated how they changed it up instead of forcing the nostalgia. Shaggy and Scooby's relationship with the Flash/Barry Allen was really cute and the giant teddy bear as the villain was some good quirky fun even if it wasn't perfect.
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Review
Feb 21, 2020 0:47:29 GMT -5
via mobile
Post by barneynedward on Feb 21, 2020 0:47:29 GMT -5
I disagree with the above sentiment on this episode. This episode was definitely a departure from the norm of this series, but I appreciated how they changed it up instead of forcing the nostalgia. Shaggy and Scooby's relationship with the Flash/Barry Allen was really cute and the giant teddy bear as the villain was some good quirky fun even if it wasn't perfect. A giant teddy bear? Okay I'm calling it, the villain has to be the Trickster.
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Review
Feb 21, 2020 0:47:55 GMT -5
via mobile
Post by barneynedward on Feb 21, 2020 0:47:55 GMT -5
I disagree with the above sentiment on this episode. This episode was definitely a departure from the norm of this series, but I appreciated how they changed it up instead of forcing the nostalgia. Shaggy and Scooby's relationship with the Flash/Barry Allen was really cute and the giant teddy bear as the villain was some good quirky fun even if it wasn't perfect. A giant teddy bear? Okay I'm calling it, the villain has to be the Trickster. That kind of gimmick falls right in with the rest of his modus operandi.
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Review
Feb 22, 2020 8:01:17 GMT -5
Post by scoob16 on Feb 22, 2020 8:01:17 GMT -5
This was a pretty darn good episode! I loved seeing all the classic Scooby-Doo villains but the Flash helping them catch every single one of them and showing it in detail grew tiring. But all in all, I liked it.
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Review
Feb 28, 2020 19:42:29 GMT -5
Post by elemage on Feb 28, 2020 19:42:29 GMT -5
This episode was cute. And Mark Hamill coming back again was fun, especially with him doing double duty as Joker (as a disguise) and Trickster. But hands down the best part about this episode was that it confirmed that Guess Who is an alternate universe, since they captured all the Where Are You monsters with the Flash's help, which obviously did not happen in the original timeline. (Barry, stop messing with the timelines!)
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Review
Feb 28, 2020 22:17:20 GMT -5
Post by barneynedward on Feb 28, 2020 22:17:20 GMT -5
This episode was cute. And Mark Hamill coming back again was fun, especially with him doing double duty as Joker (as a disguise) and Trickster. But hands down the best part about this episode was that it confirmed that Guess Who is an alternate universe, since they captured all the Where Are You monsters with the Flash's help, which obviously did not happen in the original timeline. (Barry, stop messing with the timelines!) I just figured The Trickster was breaking the classic villains out of prison and recruiting relatives of the ones he couldn't bust out. I figure Simone from the Kenan Thompson episode is actually the daughter of Big Bob Oakley and the Mr. Carswell in this episode was either the brother or a cousin of the original.
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Review
Feb 28, 2020 23:45:13 GMT -5
Post by elemage on Feb 28, 2020 23:45:13 GMT -5
This episode was cute. And Mark Hamill coming back again was fun, especially with him doing double duty as Joker (as a disguise) and Trickster. But hands down the best part about this episode was that it confirmed that Guess Who is an alternate universe, since they captured all the Where Are You monsters with the Flash's help, which obviously did not happen in the original timeline. (Barry, stop messing with the timelines!) I just figured The Trickster was breaking the classic villains out of prison and recruiting relatives of the ones he couldn't bust out. I figure Simone from the Kenan Thompson episode is actually the daughter of Big Bob Oakley and the Mr. Carswell in this episode was either the brother or a cousin of the original. It was already hinted to be a different continuity in earlier episodes (Scooby and Shaggy never having met Speed Buggy in the Funky Phantom episode, Daphne having no martial arts abilities in the Wonder Woman episode, Velma not being scared of clowns in the Kenan Thompson episode, and Daphne's childhood butler being Albert instead of Jenkins in the Batman episode). Not to mention, the Gang don't seem like they're familiar with these villains or their culprits at all, plus they're fighting them in the original settings of each mystery (this is most apparent with the Creeper on the farm). However, I will concede that you might be right about Trickster helping the classic villains escape because he does compliment Carswell on his Creeper costume and tells him he's a fan of Carswell's work, and a quick Google search implies that the Trickster does not have 4th wall breaking abilities, though it could've been a meta nod from the writers. But I still think it's a different timeline.
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Review
Feb 29, 2020 14:18:18 GMT -5
Post by ShaphneLegacy27 on Feb 29, 2020 14:18:18 GMT -5
Didn't they reveal every show after 13 Ghosts was it's own timeline awhile ago?
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Review
Feb 29, 2020 14:24:38 GMT -5
Post by jonathanmuddlemore on Feb 29, 2020 14:24:38 GMT -5
Didn't they reveal every show after 13 Ghosts was it's own timeline awhile ago? They didn't reveal any such thing since there is no actual coherent Scooby-Doo timeline. Fans just want there to be.
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Review
Feb 29, 2020 16:01:06 GMT -5
Post by ShaphneLegacy27 on Feb 29, 2020 16:01:06 GMT -5
Didn't they reveal every show after 13 Ghosts was it's own timeline awhile ago? They didn't reveal any such thing since there is no actual coherent Scooby-Doo timeline. Fans just want there to be. They actually did in a comic: reddit.com/r/Scoobydoo/comments/d9sttb/scoobydoo_multiverse_comic
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Post by jonathanmuddlemore on Feb 29, 2020 16:17:09 GMT -5
They didn't reveal any such thing since there is no actual coherent Scooby-Doo timeline. Fans just want there to be. They actually did in a comic: reddit.com/r/Scoobydoo/comments/d9sttb/scoobydoo_multiverse_comic I was wondering if you meant that. Well in that comic, 13 Ghosts isn't canon with the original show either since that Daphne doesn't know who Fred is. Anyway, i'd be genuinely surprised if anything established in that comic gets carried over into the animated stuff.
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Review
Mar 12, 2020 19:44:54 GMT -5
Post by wileyk209 on Mar 12, 2020 19:44:54 GMT -5
This was a fun episode; it was interesting hearing the Flash's antics being accompanied by Hanna-Barbera sound effects (except for the lightning when he'd speed along or the Warner Bros. cell door "Clang!") I also enjoyed the appearances by those other classic Scooby-Doo ghosts and monsters. It was fun hearing Mark Hamill reprise his role of the Trickster; when I heard his voice reading the letter to the Flash I started to get excited. I also really enjoyed the gag with the Trickster wearing a rubber mask of the Joker; that was a fun in-joke to one of Hamill's other most famous roles!
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Review
Mar 14, 2020 21:14:01 GMT -5
Post by elemage on Mar 14, 2020 21:14:01 GMT -5
Didn't they reveal every show after 13 Ghosts was it's own timeline awhile ago? No. They suggested as much in the final issue of Scooby-Doo Team-Up, but that comic itself contradicts several shows and movies throughout its 50-issue run, so it's very likely its own separate timeline. Especially since the Hex Girls claimed they weren't as beloved as the Gang, which in real life is 100% false. Basically, every show up until What's New has very few, if any, discrepancies with each other and the movies (aside from obvious things like the three live-action timelines). So 1969-2005 could be taken as a single, cohesive timeline. (With the odd exception like Scooby Goes Hollywood, The Scooby-Doo Project, etc.) Then Get A Clue established that Scooby and Shaggy weren't each other's first pet and master, respectively (contradicting Happy Birthday Scooby Doo and Pup). And Mystery Inc. was firmly its own universe due to no Madelyn Dinkley (contradicting Abracadabra Doo), Fred's parents not being Skip and Peggy Jones (contradicting Pirates Ahoy!), Shaggy being an only child (contradicting Wedding Bell Boos and Pup) and the Gang having solved several of the classic mysteries in Crystal Cove rather than in and outside of Coolsville (contradicting Where Are You, Pup and What's New). And then Be Cool contradicted everything that came before by giving Fred yet another set of parents, with his dad being Donald Jones, rather than Skip Jones, Brad Chiles or Fred Jones Sr. Not to mention, it's heavily implied that the Gang have only known each other since High School, since Fred is shown as a Pup-aged child in several flashbacks, with none of the Gang in sight, which of course contradicts What's New, Pup, and even Mystery Inc. And they also solved several classic cases in that show under different circumstances (Ghost of Elias Kingston, Charlie the Haunted Robot, Spooky Space Kook, Phantom Shadows, Ghost Clown, etc.) And now Guess Who has established that Speed Buggy is not a celebrity (which he was in The New Scooby-Doo Movies), and that the Gang have not solved ANY of their classic capers in this timeline.
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Post by ShaphneLegacy27 on Mar 15, 2020 23:29:20 GMT -5
I think Pup and What's New? are separate from the 1969 to 1985 timeline with Scooby's origin in Pup contradicting New Mysteries and 13 Ghosts.
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