>>150220612
Actually, the OG Ducktales already made Donald's nephews' personalities distinct, but it wasn't immediately noticeable because Donald's nephews looked the same. Huey was the leader, Dewey was the brains of the trio, and Louie just wanted peace and was afraid of dangerous things. The Ducktales episode "Duck in the Iron Mask" in particular showed this because Dewey hated being mixed up with the other brothers the most when people called him by the wrong name, so he wanted to stand out later and wore clown clothes just to feel different. He later realized that he was better with his brothers after all. Later, the Quack Pack made them totally different as if they were teenagers, but the thing is, they still felt like brothers and acted together as triplets, despite being teenagers.

>>150223198
This is well done and it really shows the difference between Quack Pack and the Ducktales 2017 version, although some would say that they just swapped their personalities, which is partly true. Although I'll be honest, it's not bad that Huey, Dewey and Louie had separate personalities in Ducktales 2017, but I don't like how their personality development was terribly bad, and they didn't feel like real brothers, especially as triplets. You can say all sorts of things about the Quack Pack version of Huey, Dewey and Louie, but there it was more natural for them to have separate personalities (puberty especially), but they still acted like real brothers and triplets, plus they understood their Uncle Donald more than the others. That's not the case for DT17. By the way, I've been reading newer comics and books of various versions (Area 15, Spookyzone, Duckscares and others) and I can only say that the personalities of Donald's nephews in those versions are more similar to Donald's nephews from Quack Pack than to the versions from Ducktales 2017, which I find quite interesting. Which means that Quack Pack has also influenced other media quite a bit (of course a little).