![]() In contrast to the usual Hanna-Barbera style, the characters are redesigned in Warner Bros.Every once in a while, the characters would run into a villain with sympathetic motives - generally, these folks would be let off because "nobody got hurt" (though not for lack of trying, sometimes) or the case just dropped without fanfare. Anti-Villain: Used several times, a first for the franchise.Always Someone Better: Velma was this to a kid named Elliot Blender, who appeared in two episodes as both a Sore Loser, a Red Herring, and an all-around Jerkass.If the show's Valentine's Day Episode is anything to go by, they must be at least 18 or older (since they're all shown to be living on their own) note Daphne and Velma live together in one house while Fred, Shaggy and Scooby live together in another house back in their hometown. While most of the subsequent series have hinted toward the characters becoming older, but it's never explained just how old they are. Age Lift: In the production bible of the original series Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!, the characters were teenagers, with Fred and Shaggy being the oldest at 17 and Velma being the youngest at 15.In some cases, he seems even more scatterbrained than he was in A Pup Named Scooby-Doo! ![]() Daphne's already lovely body is even more curvaceous and buxom than in previous incarnations.In Velma's case, it might also be an influence of the Live-Action Adaptation, since Linda Cardellini as her was an example of Nerds Are Sexy.Adaptational Attractiveness: Most noticeably with Velma - who is given a cute face and an attractive figure here (whereas her original design had her be very plain and appeared slightly overweight) - and to a lesser extent Shaggy, who probably benefits more from the less rough art-style.Action Girl: Daphne Blake plays this up a lot more than she did in previous shows - she's the one to usually get the gang out of a jam and can defend herself well. ![]()
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