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At the end of the series, after Ford and Stan leave Gravity Falls, Soos becomes the new Mr. Mystery of the Mystery Shack. After breaking up with his dating sim girlfriend, GIFfany, Soos enters a long-distance relationship with Melody, a girl from Portland who moves to Gravity Falls and becomes the Mystery Shack's new cashier after he takes over.
Gravity Falls is an American mystery comedy animated television series created by Alex Hirsch for Disney Channel and Disney XD.The series follows the adventures of Dipper Pines (Jason Ritter) and his twin sister Mabel (Kristen Schaal), who are sent to spend the summer with their great-uncle (or "Grunkle") Stan (Hirsch) in Gravity Falls, Oregon, a mysterious town full of paranormal incidents ...
The machine starts in its most intense mode, and the crew hide. Soos recommends to go to the manual switch-off, and devises a plan to distract the cowboy skull. While Mabel and Dipper distract the skull, Soos rides a minecart to the switch-off button. However, in turning the machine off, the machine would erase all data, including Soos' high score.
"Weirdmageddon 3: Take Back the Falls" [b] is the series finale of the American animated television series Gravity Falls, which was created by Alex Hirsch. The episode, which serves as the twentieth episode of the second season and the 40th episode overall, was written by Shion Takeuchi , Mark Rizzo, Josh Weinstein , Jeff Rowe , and Hirsch, and ...
Eventually, he uses a dating simulator to help him talk to girls. However, Giffany, the girl in the game, obsessively falls in love with Soos and eventually reveals herself as a sentient, malicious, and extremely jealous AI after Soos asks Melody, a girl who works at a meat stand, for a date.
"Not What He Seems" is the eleventh episode of the second season of the American animated television series Gravity Falls, which was created by Alex Hirsch, and the 31st episode overall. The episode was written by Shion Takeuchi, Josh Weinstein, Jeff Rowe, Matt Chapman, and Hirsch, and directed by
Hirsch explained in an interview with The A.V. Club during production of season 1, that a typical episode is conceived in a room reserved for writers, where a simple synopsis is presented, and from then on dramatic structure is defined, and the plot is modified to include a character-driven subplot, which Hirsch expresses as "the hardest thing... to find a character story that actually ...
Disney commissioned Hirsch to create an eleven-minute low-budget animated pilot [2] for Gravity Falls which he later described as "a short version of Tourist Trapped". [9] On December 9, 2010, it was announced that Disney Channel had greenlit Gravity Falls for a full series based on the pilot, which was originally slated to premiere in spring ...