Scooby-doo On Zombie Island 99%
Lena and Beau are arrested by the coast guard. As the sun rises, the island feels lighter. The moss sways. The water ripples.
Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island: Curse of the Sunken Bell Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island
It’s been two years since the gang split up after a string of too-easy ghost cases. Now, Velma runs a skeptical debunking blog, Fred hosts a home renovation show, Daphne has a true-crime podcast, and Shaggy and Scooby work at a struggling food truck. When Daphne gets a tip about “real zombie sightings” on Haunted Hollow Island—site of a vanished 19th-century slave plantation and a legendary cursed church bell—she convinces everyone to reunite for a “comeback special.” Lena and Beau are arrested by the coast guard
The Mystery Inc. gang reunites for a true-crime podcast investigation on a remote Louisiana island, only to discover that the “zombies” are real—and so is the ancient evil they’re chained to serve. The water ripples
Here’s a fresh story concept for Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island , keeping the horror-comedy tone of the original but with a new mystery:
Upon arrival, the island feels wrong. The moss hangs too still. The bayou water doesn’t ripple. Locals warn them: “Don’t ring the bell. Don’t dig the grave. And don’t stay past sunset.”
The twist: Lena and Beau aren’t just locals. They’re descendants of the plantation owners, and they’ve been luring paranormal investigators to the island to feed the zombies’ eternal hunger for justice. Every intruder “taken” by the zombies becomes part of the soil, strengthening the curse. Lena genuinely mourns the cycle but believes it’s the only way to keep the truth buried.