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Rigby also faced death several times and actually died four of those times, but was swiftly resurrected. As of Rigby's Graduation Day Special, Rigby has finally graduated from high school. In the epilogue to "A Regular Epic Final Battle", Rigby quits The Park and moves in with Eileen. They eventually get married and start a family, and it is ...
The pages in this category are redirects from Regular Show fictional characters. To add a redirect to this category, place {{ Fictional character redirect |series_name=Regular Show}} on the second new line (skip a line) after #REDIRECT [[Target page name]] .
On April 8, 2013, J. G. Quintel announced on his Twitter page that an official Regular Show video game was in development at the time, titled Regular Show: Mordecai and Rigby in 8-Bit Land. It was developed by WayForward Technologies and published by D3 Publisher for Nintendo 3DS. The video game was released on October 29, 2013. [64]
The park workers and Mr. Maellard erect a memorial statue in honor of Pops and mourn him. After six years of working at the park, Mordecai and Rigby quit their jobs and move on with their lives. Mordecai becomes a successful artist, marries a female bat, and has three children with her. Rigby and Eileen get married and raise two daughters.
Mordecai and Rigby board Buckner's blimp, where he explains why he was after the turducken – it has a golden wishbone capable of wish fulfillment that he intends on using to gain the rights to Thanksgiving and have all his employees thank him, much to their shock. The duo fight Buckner with help from their friends; however, they fall out of ...
The Cartoon Network's Regular Show has got a brand-new mobile game starring Rigby and Muscle Man. We reviewed the game earlier today, now here are all of our top hints and tips for getting on top ...
The seventh season of the American animated comedy television series Regular Show, created by J. G. Quintel, originally aired on Cartoon Network in the United States, and was produced by Cartoon Network Studios. Quintel created the series' pilot using characters from his comedy shorts for the canceled anthology series The Cartoonstitute.
Quintel pitched Regular Show for Cartoon Network's Cartoonstitute project, in which the network allowed artists to create pilots with no notes to be optioned as a show possibly. After The Cartoonstitute was scrapped, and Cartoon Network executives approved the greenlight for Regular Show, production officially began on August 14, 2009. [2]