>>130201704The awful artstyle killed any chance it had. Even Frank Welker hated it.
>As an example of a case where things on the creative side got a little too rambunctious, Welker points to the 2015 iteration, Be Cool, Scooby-Doo, which aired on Cartoon Network for two seasons. That series took place after the Scooby gang graduated high school, and hit the highways for a summertime road trip occasionally interrupted by marauding monsters. While the stories were classically Scooby, the animation style was anything but. “For me, they moved too far away,” Welker says. “Fred had kind of a big shovel face and little skinny legs. I think they were trying to match what was going on with Family Guy and SpongeBob and all that. It just didn’t feel right to me, but the stories were still good. And, to their credit, the studio is quick to see how the audience responds, and it wasn’t long after that that they went back to the classic look.”