Entertainment

Scooby-Doo Meets Riverdale in the Fan-Made Mystery Incorporated Pilot

mystery inc. van logo blood

Jinkees! A brand new fan-made Scooby-Doo project has just debuted on Youtube. Titled, Mystery Incorporated and directed by Dante Yore, the project takes a different look at the franchise, telling a new story through a modern lens, similar to shows like Riverdale.

Recommended Videos

You can check out a brief description of the plot, the overall vision of Mystery Incorporated, and the pilot episode, “Welcome to Coolsville,” right down below.

Mystery Incorporated is a fresh new series designed to tell the story of the characters from Hanna-Barbera’s “Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?” with a modern filter for a new generation.

Set in the small town of Coolsville, OH and inspired heavily by shows like “Supernatural”, “Riverdale”, and the original “Scooby-Doo” cartoons. We enter a world where monsters are real, demons guard every crossroad, and spirits lurk in the dark.

The journey begins as Fred Jones sets out to investigate the creature who murdered his parents. His search leads him into resident skeptic Velma Dinkley and the two must form a quick bond to fight back against the evil they have accidentally unleashed.

The cast for Mystery Incorporated includes:

  • Dade Elza as Fred Jones
  • Jessica Chancellor as Daphne Blake
  • Chris Villain as Norville “Shaggy” Rogers
  • Thor Von Schultz as Scooby-Doo
  • Dayeanne Hutton as Velma Dinkley

The team behind Mystery Incorporated hopes to build an entire 12-episode season and bring this story of Scooby-Doo to life in an all-new way. Anyone interested in helping them accomplish that goal can head over to their official Indiegogo site here.

Featured Image Source: Youtube

About the author

Andrew McMahon

Andrew was Twinfinite's Features Editor from 2020 through until March 2023 and wrote for the site from 2018. He has wandered around with a Bachelor's Degree in Communications sitting in his back pocket for a while now, all the while wondering what he is going to do for a career. Luckily, video games have always been there, especially as his writing career progresses.

Comments