This needs a stretch. (Feel free to remove when satisfied of completion.) Needed: Synopsis. |
The Revenger is the first of two stories in Scooby-Doo #51, by DC Comics. It was followed by Scare Wear.
Premise[]
The old gods lay claim to this place. begone!" An ancient Chinese god of revenge is haunting a troubled family business, but that's not the only mystery in this tale!
Synopsis[]
Insert details here.
Characters[]
Main characters:
Supporting characters:
Villains:
- Chin-Chang Fyu-Ya (only appearance)(Tiger Ling's disguise)
- Tiger Ling (only appearance)
Other characters:
- None
Locations[]
Objects[]
- TBA
Vehicles[]
- None
Suspects[]
Suspect | Motive/reason |
---|---|
Mow Lo | He would rather work on his paintings than train for the Kung Fu tournament. |
Culprits[]
Culprit | Motive/reason |
---|---|
Tiger Ling as Chin-Chang Fyu-Ya | To find the secret treasure of the House of Lo Art Gallery. |
Notes/trivia[]
- TBA
Coloring mistakes[]
- None known.
Inconsistencies/continuity errors and/or goofs/oddities[]
- None known.
Reception[]
Oh, you just know it's going to be a bad comic book week when Scooby-Doo sucks. In the first mystery, using the term loosely, Terrence Griep Jr. puts the reader in a stranglehold using lumps of Chinese mysticism and culture clotted together in passages of exposition.
The identity of the culprit is obvious since he's the only one left, and the costume while inventively designed by Karen Matchette can conceivably instill about as much terror as a cocker spaniel puppy.
The way in which the gang thwart this particular dog of a monster has something to do with waving fans, but I haven't the foggiest what they are supposed to do to the monster. He's far too heavy to float. That he has wings but doesn't use them is also a dead give away to fakery.[1]
Quotes[]
|
References[]
- ↑ Ray Tate in Line of Fire Reviews