The Daft Dimension (series): Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox Story | {{Infobox Story | ||
|image | |image = The Daft Dimension Logo.png | ||
|name | |name = The Daft Dimension | ||
|release date | |release date = [[21 August (releases)|21 August]] [[2014 (releases)|2014]] - present | ||
|writer | |writer = [[Lew Stringer]] | ||
|artist | |artist = Lew Stringer | ||
|publication | |publication = ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' [[DWM 477|477]] - present | ||
|publisher | |publisher = Panini Comics | ||
}}'''''The Daft Dimension''''' was a continuous series of mostly three-panel comics written and illustrated by [[Lew Stringer]] and printed in ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'', which replaced ''[[Nix View (comic series)|Nix View]]''. Some strips were purely parodical whereas others were just comedic ''Doctor Who'' stories akin to Titan's backup comics. As the name implied, the strips were intended to cohere into [[the Daft Dimension|their own continuity]], a "daft dimension" [[Parallel universe|parallel]] to the [[N-Space|mainstream ''Doctor Who'' universe]]. | }} | ||
'''''The Daft Dimension''''' was a continuous series of mostly three-panel comics written and illustrated by [[Lew Stringer]] and printed in ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'', which replaced ''[[Nix View (comic series)|Nix View]]''. Some strips were purely parodical whereas others were just comedic ''Doctor Who'' stories akin to Titan's backup comics. As the name implied, the strips were intended to cohere into [[the Daft Dimension|their own continuity]], a "daft dimension" [[Parallel universe|parallel]] to the [[N-Space|mainstream ''Doctor Who'' universe]]. | |||
== Stories == | == Stories == |
Revision as of 22:04, 16 August 2023
The Daft Dimension was a continuous series of mostly three-panel comics written and illustrated by Lew Stringer and printed in Doctor Who Magazine, which replaced Nix View. Some strips were purely parodical whereas others were just comedic Doctor Who stories akin to Titan's backup comics. As the name implied, the strips were intended to cohere into their own continuity, a "daft dimension" parallel to the mainstream Doctor Who universe.
Stories
Notes
- The title parodies the well-known unproduced anniversary story The Dark Dimension.
- The Daleks in these strips are consistently drawn with a single, human-like eyeball in their eye stalks for expression purposes.
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