- For other incarnations, see Charlie the Funland Robot (disambiguation).
Charlie the Haunted Robot is an exhibit at the Crystal Cove Spook Museum.
Physical appearance[]
He looks like a metallic human figure with yellow eyes.
Powers and abilities[]
He has superhuman strength.
History[]
Early life[]
Charlie was designed to run an amusement park by Mr. Jenkins, but he lost control of it.[1]
Scooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated[]
Season one[]
Charlie was part of the exhibits at the Crystal Cove Spook Museum that Velma showed to a tour group. She decided to deviate from her script to reveal that none of the ghosts on display were real, explaining that Charlie the Haunted Robot was never haunted and was actually created by a man named Mr. Jenkins to be a robot employee for an amusement park.[1]
Season two[]

Charlie the Haunted Robot unmasked.
The gang discovered that Charlie was missing from the Spook Museum. When they eventually captured and unmasked the Krampus, they were stunned to discover that Krampus was a reprogrammed Charlie in costume. Later that night, Professor Pericles, Mr. E, Brad, and Judy discovered a recording that revealed the entire Krampus case was staged by the gang. They had secretly taken Charlie from the museum and turned him into the Krampus as part of a complex scheme to trick the original Mystery Incorporated members into stealing fake Planispheric Disk pieces while leaving their own real ones unguarded in Mr. E's lair for Marcie to take.[2]
Appearances[]
- Scooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated
- 101. Beware the Beast from Below (exhibit)
- 116. Where Walks Aphrodite (exhibit)
- 213. Wrath of the Krampus (no lines)
Notes/trivia[]
- He is based on Charlie the Funland Robot from the Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! episode Foul Play in Funland. Like the other ghosts and monsters on display at the Crystal Cove Spook Museum, Charlie's origin story mirrors the storyline from the original series.
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Beware the Beast from Below, season 1, episode 1.
- ↑ Wrath of the Krampus, season 2, episode 13.