In the 1987 series, "Gold Fever" was a recurring, legitimate (though less fatal) ailment. DuckTales Season 2 Episode 10 Review: The 87 Cent Solution!
The title is a nod to the Sherlock Holmes pastiche The Seven-Per-Cent Solution .
In the DuckTales (2017) universe, few episodes blend high-stakes psychological warfare with absurd comedy as well as . This episode isn't just a wacky mystery; it’s a masterclass in how Flintheart Glomgold—arguably the best/worst rival in television—finally uses his "smart ball" to push Scrooge McDuck past the brink of sanity. The Breakdown: Scrooge’s 87-Cent Descent DuckTales 2x10
The premise is classic Scrooge: he discovers that exactly are missing from his multi-billion-dollar Money Bin. While his family dismisses it as a minor oversight or a symptom of his head cold, Scrooge enters a spiral of "Gold Fever," a disease Huey finds in his Junior Woodchucks Guidebook. What follows is pure chaos:
The TV Tropes entry for this episode highlights how it subverts the "Antagonist in Mourning" trope. When Scrooge fakes his own death to lure out the thief, Glomgold doesn't just show up to the funeral—he crashes it wearing a glittery white tuxedo, dancing to "All I Do Is Win" by DJ Khaled. Themes of Family vs. Greed In the 1987 series, "Gold Fever" was a
The number is a tribute to the 1987 premiere of the original DuckTales series.
Beyond the jokes, the episode tackles the theme of . According to reviewers at Den of Geek , the episode effectively mirrors Scrooge's obsession with Glomgold’s own destructive greed. Ultimately, Scrooge’s recovery comes from acknowledging his vulnerability and relying on his family to outsmart his rival. Key Trivia for Fans: In the DuckTales (2017) universe, few episodes blend
Scrooge commissions Gyro Gearloose to install extreme security measures, including a force field that Donald immediately (and predictably) walks into.