| Script: | ? |
| Pencils: | Derek Fridolfs (signed) |
| Inks: | Derek Fridolfs (signed) |
| Colors: | Valerio Chiola (signed) |
| Letters: |
Art credits confirmed by Valerio Chiola.
No editor credited in indicia. Editors are credited for the individual stories, but not for the issue overall. Printed by Transcontinental Printing Interweb Montreal, a division of Transcontinental Printing, Inc., Boucherville, QC, Canada 8/06/2021 (per indicia).
All advertising in this issue is for DC or Warner product. No non-house ads or activity pages appear. Of those ads, 14 are for DC Graphic Novels for Kids, and one depicting the first issue of the DC Comics 12-issue series The Batman and Scooby-Doo Mysteries. https://www.comics.org/issue/2215942/
| Script: | Derek Fridolfs (credited) |
| Pencils: | Valerio Chiola (credited) |
| Inks: | Valerio Chiola (credited) |
| Colors: | Valerio Chiola (credited) |
| Letters: | Saida Temofonte (credited) |
| Editing: | Courtney Jordan (credited) |
New story.
Art credits verified by Valerio Chiola.
Twice this month, Scooby and the gang have encountered a mummy. In this issue, released on 2021-08-17, and in The Batman and Scooby-Doo Mysteries (DC 2021 Series) #5 released a week earlier on 2021-08-10. https://www.comics.org/issue/2253620/
| Script: | Sholly Fisch (credited) |
| Pencils: | Fabio Laguna (credited) |
| Inks: | Fabio Laguna (credited) |
| Colors: | Heroic Age (credited) |
| Letters: | Saida Temofonte (credited) |
| Editing: | Kristy Quinn (credited) (editor) Jessica Chen (credited) (assistant editor) |
Earl Daleheart is a parody reference to racing legend Dale Earnhardt (or his son, Dale Earnhardt Jr.). Dick and Vern would be parody references to popular sportscasters Dick Enberg and Verne Lundquist - and are sort of drawn to look like their real-life counterparts.
Great Bit: Sholly Fisch, who also writes the Looney Tunes comic book for DC, has Earl Daleheart, dazed and confused after his run-in with the Terry the Terror monster, say the following when Earl's pit crew tries to coax him back into the race: "No more for me, thanks... I'm driving...", a line which astute fans will recognize as originally having been delivered by a similarly dazed and confused Daffy Duck, in the Bugs Bunny cartoon "Rabbit Seasoning" (1952).
Reprint information is inaccurately described in the indicia as originating with "Scooby-Doo 36" (which would be from the 1997 series, and cover-dated July 2000), when it is actually reprinted from Scooby-Doo Where Are You? (2010 Series) #36 (October 2013). Though copyright for this story, listed in the indicia as 2013, is accurate.
The original cover credits for this story, as they appeared in Scooby-Doo Where Are You? (2010 Series) #36 (October 2013), "Cover by Fabio Laguna with Jason Lewis", appear as part of this reprint even though Laguna and Lewis' cover is NOT reprinted in this issue.