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Growing
up, Scooby-Doo was a morning staple. I'd watch it everyday
over a soggy bowl of Life cereal. We didn't have cable at the
time so it was a little grainy on cloudy days and the bright 70s
stylings didn't come through very well seeing as how the TV was
black and white. But to a little tyke like myself, there was nothing
like being happily scared to start my day.
Fast
forward a couple of decades and I still get a kick out of ole'
Scoob and the gang. Not Scrappy, not the spin-offs, not the new
versions - but the classic Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? It's
back on in reruns and it appears as though Mystery Inc. is bigger
than ever.
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Box
Break continues below.
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Inkworks'
Scooby-Doo: Mysteries and Monsters is something of a catch-all
for the entire Scooby-verse. It covers the old as well as the
new and all things in between - the good and the bad. With Sparkly
cards and stickers, it's a set geared at young children, but adults
should get a kick out of the product as well.
The
base set provides an abundance of information ranging from character
profiles, monster cards and behind-the-scenes cards. I found the
design to be solid, although the television border on some of
the subsets cluttered the card fronts.
As
far as inserts, stickers come one per pack. Don't get me wrong,
I love stickers, but having just nine stickers in a set meant
for a lot of duplicates and not much of a chance to do much trading
with anyone else who has busted a box.
Next
up are the fun Sparkly cards. Imposing a character on a shiny
background is a lot of fun. And falling one in every seven packs,
it's a solid challenge for low-end collectors like myself.
Each
box also comes with one of four box loaders cards, but I failed
to find a real theme running with mine. Oh, well, nice card nonetheless.
The
'hits' come in the forms of autographs and sketch cards. Neither
are guaranteed, but looking around, it looks like you should get
one or the other in every other box. My box was a dud in this
department, yielding neither. That's fine as they weren't guaranteed
and the box didn't cost a lot anyway.
Although
the composition of Mysteries and Monsters is solid, especially
when taking into consideration the target audience, I wasn't all
that happy with the way my box broke down. I completed one base
set but was still seven short of a second despite getting a handful
of triples and even a couple of quadruples. The collation woes
continued with the stickers as I only finished one set from the
box when I should have completed two and still had a bunch of
leftovers.
I
did beat the odds getting an extra Sparkly card, however that
was somewhat bittersweet as I received duplicates of SP6. As stated
earlier, no autographs or sketch cards were found in my box, something
I don't mind as I took that into account when I bought it. It
would have been a bonus to get one, but it's fine that I didn't.
Inserts
- Stickers
(1:1): 24 (S1 (3), S2 (3), S3 (4), S4 (3), S5 (3),
S6 (3), S7 (2), S8, S9 (2))
- Sparkly
(1:7):
4 (SP1, SP2, SP6 (2))
- Box
Loader (1/box):
1 (BL2)
Card
Gallery
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Base
card - front
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Base
card - back
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Sticker
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Sparkly
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Box
Loader
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Package
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Box
Breakdown
| Packs
per box: |
24
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| Cards
per pack: |
7
+ 1
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| Total
cards: |
193
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| Cards
in set: |
72
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| Singles: |
72
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| Doubles: |
65
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| Triples+: |
27
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| Inserts |
29
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| Stickers
(1:1): |
24
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| Sparkly
Cards (1:7): |
4
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| Box
Loader (1/box): |
1
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| Autographs: |
0
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| Sketch
Cards: |
0
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