Scooby Doo Scary Scary Games

11/24/2017by
Be Cool Scooby-doo Scary Christmas

The Scary Scooby was the disguise of Gordon Ticktockery. He looks exactly like the real Scooby. Top 10 scariest Scooby Doo episodes. I tried to calm my post-horror nerves by downing bagfuls of Scooby Snacks. What makes The Backstage Rage scary. Spooky Games is a direct-to-DVD special based upon the Scooby-Doo Saturday morning cartoons, created for the London 2012 Olympics, released on July 17. Paramania Taxi Manual.

This Halloween season, I want to spread appreciation for a rather underappreciated strain of the horror genre: Creepy cartoons. Horror is so much more than blood and gore, violence and terror. Some of the best that horror has to offer is delivered in a much more subtle manner. And for my money, the best example of this is cartoons. Whether it’s something mild like “It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown”, or something a bit edgier like Beetlejuice, the truth is — kids love horror. They always have, they always will.

Scooby Doo Scary Games

And this Halloween, my inner child is just howling for something spooky and fun. You had to know I’d kick off a “Creepy Cartoons” Halloween series with a post about the original creepy cartoon,. After 9+ major series incarnations over the past 47 years, Mystery Inc.

Has faced some seriously spooky capers. Considering this was a series meant for young children, there are some surprisingly scary episodes! Whether it was ghosts and ghouls in a castle, witches and werewolves in a swamp, or diabolical demons and desiccated corpses in a museum, Scooby and the gang were always ready with a nifty Freddy-trap and a box of Scooby Snax. Let the meddling begin!

Villains play a huge role in the scariness of a show, but the setting and story are equally important. That’s why instead of doing a list of scariest Scooby Doo villains, I decided that a list of the scariest episodes would be better.

Though for all intents and purposes, the list would probably be the exact same for both, with the order being the only difference. In the spirit of the show, let’s keep things suspenseful and go in descending order, all leading up to my #1 scariest Scooby Doo episode. Any of these would make for spooktacular Halloween viewing, so don’t be shy. If you want scary that’s also fun? Something to give you chills but still let you sleep? Then look no further.

Here are my Top 10 scariest Scooby Doo episodes. ***** 10- Scared a Lot in Camelot The Scooby Doo Show, S1E6 October 16, 1976 Villains: Merlin and the Black Knight (Zarko and Henchman) “The Scooby Doo Show” premiered in 1976, coming after two seasons of “Scooby Doo, Where Are You?” and “The New Scooby-Doo Movies” (1972-74).

This is my favourite of all the Scooby series. “Scared a Lot in Camelot” features the Scooby gang searching for Shaggy’s eccentric millionaire uncle who’s vanished from his castle — THE Camelot Castle which Uncle Shagworthy had shipped to America stone by stone. So naturally the castle is haunted by the ghosts of Merlin and his Black Knight. The sound effects in this one are spooky, but it’s Merlin’s evil laugh that takes things over the top. Was the episode’s magic show opening scene just a fun prelude to another mystery?

Or is Zarko the Magician hiding more than just a rabbit in his hat? ***** 9- The Night Ghoul of Wonderworld The Scooby Doo and Scrappy Show, S1E2 September 29, 1979 Villain: Night Ghoul (Mr. Marino) The name “Night Ghoul” alone evokes an image of a pretty scary villain, and this episode of “Scooby Doo and Scrappy” doesn’t disappoint. The Night Ghoul is, to me, the second scariest Scooby Doo villain, and “The Night Ghoul of Wonderworld” is my second favourite Scooby Doo episode. And no, not just because my beloved is in it. The Mystery Inc. Gang is taking a little vacation to what sounds like the coolest place on earth: Wonderworld.

Alien Vs Predator 2 Full Version. This is like a made to order adventure. Pick your destination, choose what you want to do there, and Mr. Marino will make it happen. “Welcome to Wonderworld.

Where your fantasies become reality!” Velma has always dreamed of solving a case with Sherlock Holmes, and her next stop is London World, where the famous detective (in robot form) is awaiting her arrival. The theft of the crown jewels of England. The gang solves the mystery pretty quickly or do they? When the REAL Night Ghoul arrives on the scene and steals the Jewels, Scooby and the gang find themselves embroiled in a game of 19th century English intrigue. But they’d better be wary of trusting Robot Holmes.

It would be a shame if someone were to tamper with his deductive wiring ***** 8- The Spooky Space Kook Scooby Doo, Where Are You?, S1E15 December 20, 1969 Villain: Space Kook (Henry Bascombe) If an alien spaceship lands in an abandoned airfield and leaves a trail of glowing footprints, are you really going to be surprised when reporters start banging on your door and the police are no help at all? Fans of Doctor Who will no doubt see the similarities between the Spooky Space Kook and arguably one of THE scariest DW villains, the Vashta Nerada. Well, actually the Vashta Nerada themselves were swarming microscopic creatures, but in the episode “Silence in the Library”, when they infect their astronaut victims, they start looking just like Scooby’s Spooky Space Kook. An abandoned airfield is a lot scarier than you might think, and paired with a glowing “Wooooooooo!”-ing skeleton astronaut/alien thing, it makes for one creepy cartoon episode. ***** 7- The Creepy Case of Old Iron Face The Scooby Doo Show, S3E7 October 21, 1978 Villain: Old Iron Face (Mama Mione) “The Creepy Case of Old Iron Face” — man, one of the things I love most about Scooby Doo is these wonderful episode titles.

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