Dalek variant: Difference between revisions
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==Standard Dalek== | ==Standard Dalek== | ||
See [[Standard Dalek|main article]]. | |||
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==Dalek Emperor== | ==Dalek Emperor== |
Revision as of 16:30, 25 February 2007
Although the general appearance of the Daleks has remained the same, the colours and some details of the model have evolved over time. The following entries make mention of both television and non-television portrayals of the Daleks. It should be noted that the canonicity of these non-television portrayals is uncertain.
Standard Dalek
See main article.
Dalek Emperor
See main article.
Dalek Supreme
See main article.
Imperial Dalek
See main article.
Imperial Dalek variants
Non-television Daleks
The following Daleks have never featured in any television appearances:
Spider Dalek
Spider Daleks were a proposed design by John Leekey for an early version of the Doctor Who television movie to be produced by Amblin Entertainment in 1994. The script was rejected and it was the Matthew Jacobs scripted television movie that saw production in 1996. The Spider Daleks ultimately appeared in John Peel's novel War of the Daleks, depicted as creations of Davros. Spider Daleks are slightly larger than normal, but with eight legs. They are more manoeuvrable than standard Daleks, but more vulnerable at their joints. In the novel, the Thals believed that this design had been abandoned for centuries. Giant-sized versions, known as Striders, are ten times larger than the standard Spider Dalek.
In the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip story Fire and Brimstone (DWM #251-#255), a faction of Daleks from a parallel universe resembled Spider Daleks, and were viewed as abominations by the Daleks of the "main" universe. The comic strip Spider Daleks had a square font in their speech-bubbles, rather than the regular angular Dalek font.
Marsh Dalek
Only featured in the 1964 Dalek annual written by Terry Nation and David Whittaker, these were large, bipedal Daleks that were used to control the Horrokon Monsters on the planet Gurnian. They appear to be a forerunner of the Striders referred to in John Peel's books.
Marine Dalek
Marine Daleks, also introduced in War of the Daleks, are torpedo-shaped with their eyes at the front, and have their gunstalk and a grappling arm parallel to their bodies. They are also larger than the standard Daleks.
Scout Dalek
In Ben Aaronovitch's novelisation of Remembrance of the Daleks the Imperial Dalek faction use a type of scout Dalek which is more streamlined than standard Daleks, with overpowered motors.
Transsolar Discs
The Dalek Annuals (circa.1966-8), the The Dalek Chronicles and later Doctor Who Magazine comic strips frequently depicted Daleks mounted on small flying platforms, circular with a railing around the edge. These were used for operation within a planetary atmosphere, with a fully-enclosed version used in vacuum. The television Daleks never used such apparatus; most recently, in Parting of the Ways, it was established that the Daleks of that era (post- Time War) were capable of flight in space without any external assistance.