Forum:Magnus, Divided Loyalties and more: Difference between revisions

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{{Forumheader|Panopticon}}
{{archive|Panopticon archives}}[[Category:Discussions without clear resolution]]
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This started on the [[Magnus]] article. An original point stating that Gary Russell explicitly stated that Magnus in Flashback(comic) was always meant to be [[The Master]]. It grew from there. This is the entire discussion so far, which someone then chose to lock.


Talk:Magnus view source  30,817ARTICLES IN PROGRESS
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BACK TO PAGE
This thread was blanked by [[User:CzechOut|CzechOut]] at 14:21: Tue 06 Nov 2012. I am re-blanking and editing this forum post down to the most recent edits by [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]] in order bring some clarity to the discussion that the previous copied text from the [[Magnus]] talk page did not.


CONTENTS [show]  
The original discussion was at [[Talk:Magnus]].
MAGNUS IS SUPPOSED TO BE THE MASTER!
https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!topic/rec.arts.drwho/zR5mKB0Lqpg
Gary Russell


> >Jefferson Eng wrote: > >> > >> Great, now my enjoyment of the book has been ruined thanks to even yet > >> another AOL user...... > >> > >> You know who you are. > >> > > > >I agree with you in principal, but this spoiler was pretty > >insignificant, > >particularly since you pick up on that particular piece of information > >the instant that the character in question appears in the book. > > > >Everything else in the book relating to that character comes from an > >already-televised story. It isn't quite like the _Autumn Mist_ spoiler, > >which ruins one of the most effectinve scenes in the book and tips > >you off to the true nature of the antagonists far too early. > > > >deX! > > > > Very true. I was going to make a post (still will eventunately) about some of > the names in the Deca. The thought of spoiler space came to mind but then I > thought - what is it spoiling? - nothing really. > > I've seen the name Magnus used before (other than Magnus Greel from "Talons > of Weing Chang") He was a timelord in another story. Perhaps a novel. Anyone > remember which one?
To 41.133.0.18 do not copy and past the text from that talk page. Users who wish to follow the discussion ''so far'' can go to that talk page.  


Panopticon forum threads propose changes in the way we do things on this wiki.  In simple terms, please restate what it is you're trying to change, and what supporting evidence you have for that change. --[[User:Tangerineduel|Tangerineduel]] / '''[[User talk:Tangerineduel|talk]]''' 15:50, November 6, 2012 (UTC)
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He was in a strip I commissioned from Warwick Gray for the Time Lord special I did at Marvel. In Wick's original, he was called Magus and meant to be the Master but I cocked it up and called him Magnus. When Dave McIntee created Koschei, it struck me on re-reading Wick's strip that the character could just as easily, if not better, be the War Chief. Which he is in DL.
This started on the [[Magnus]] article. An original point stating that Gary Russell explicitly stated that Magnus in Flashback(comic) was always meant to be [[The Master]]. It grew from there.  


gee
==Summary==
1)Gary Russell himself states that both he and Warwick Scott Gray agreed that the Magnus in Flashback(comic) is [[The Master]].
 
2)The questions as to why/when/where things like Death Comes to time and Dimensions in Time are labelled non-DWU still stand. When did the creators of these, the Cushing movies, or various stories that tie into Dimensions in Time '''ever''' say those stories were non-DWU? And if they didn't what were the criteria for listing them as non-DWU here? Surely those criteria should be applied the same to every story, not just those select few?
 
 
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3)Even if it is felt, for whatever reason, that the War Chief and the Master are two separate characters, there is clearly NOTHING in any media that states that they ''can not be'' the same character. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 13:16, November 6, 2012 (UTC)
 
...Oh, and another point. The fact that Malcolm Hulke(writer of, amongst others, the War Games) stated that the Master and the Doctor were the '''only two''' renegade Time Lords he ever wrote for was dismissed, because it was "non-narrative". Yet, the supposed reason Death Comes Time is excluded from the DWU is because of a real-world statement that somebody ''thought'' he saw ''somewhere''. The real reason is of course because it contradicts the established continuity to the point where no amount of fanwankery can reconcile it with established fact. Same as Divided Loyalties. Of course, if that real-world("non-narrative") statement is valid, then what about Russell's or Hulke's or...? [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 13:55, November 6, 2012 (UTC)
: This issue is obviously '''very''' important to you. However, you don't seem to care about the people you are trying to convince. This page is a long wall of text that will turn away many readers. Instead of copy/pasting the other arguments, try giving a '''short''' summary of your arguments. Then you might get more discussion. [[User:Shambala108|Shambala108]] [[User talk:Shambala108|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 14:49, November 6, 2012 (UTC)
 
It started off at the [[Magnus]] disambiguation page. Basically, a post by Gary Russell stating that Mag(n)us from the Flashback(comic) was always supposed to be [[The Master]]. Confirmed by Warwick Scott Gray, the person who actually wrote Flashback(comic). And that there is nothing in any media which makes that an impossibility. Someone else then took that to mean that I was stating that the War Chief is the Master. Not my original intent, but he said he was "going to support me". This site's policy is that anything in a Target novelisation which gives extra background to, without contradicting the original tv serial counts. so, the long passages of text are from Target novelisations of [[The War Games]], [[Terror of the Autons]], The Doomsday Weapon([[Colony in Space]]) and [[The Sea Devils]]. As well as a real-world interview with Malcolm Hulke. This was then greeted with "But what about Timewyrm:Exodus and [[Divided Loyalties]]?" So, it was then a job to show how [[Timewyrm: Exodus]] doesn't contradict any of the above. Fine. Then came the biggie "Divided Loyalties". I had to give text from that book, as well as text from other narrative sources, showing how it can't possibly exist in the same universe. Another user appeared, demanding I take it to the forum, and locking that discussion. Someone else, then said that [[Death Comes to Time]] is excluded because someone supposedly said somewhere that it was non-canon. Despite no evidence. This, despite Hulke's and Russell's real-world statements being dismissed as "non-narrative"! The only way to get everything here, was to place the entire discussion here. Simply glimpsing bits will omit the development. The same person who locked the earlier discussion then blanked this one. They have also yet to actually state their position. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 15:00, November 6, 2012 (UTC)
 
:Oh. earlier, the same person told me that "the burden of proof [was] on [me] to show that Round 4 Part 3 of divided Loyalties can't be part of the DWU". Immediately after I did so, he locked the discussion, saying it's "unfair to other users". [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 15:04, November 6, 2012 (UTC)
 
::One thing I think needs to be made clear. When we tag things NOTDWU, we're not making a judgment on the "official" statement of canon, it is merely a statement of ''what we cover'' on this wiki towards in-universe articles.
 
::For these we've had several discussions involving inclusion, as was mentioned on the [[Talk:Magnus]] page these are in the [[Forum:Panopticon archives]], many of the pages have been categorised into further categories for ease of searching you can find the; inclusion debates in [[:Category:Inclusion debates]], the discussions relating to changes in policy in [[:Category:Policy changers]] and explanations of policy in [[:Category:Policy explanations]]. All of these have some bearing on your questions.
 
::You may also wish to see [[Tardis:Valid sources]] which explains these rulings in a simple to follow page.
 
::As to your query concerning ''[[Death Comes to Time (webcast)]]'' you can read the forum discussion here: [[Forum:Inclusion debate: Death Comes to Time]]. Although I'm not sure what this question has to do with your Magnus question.
 
::As far as contradictions in the valid sources goes, don't worry about it. It doesn't matter if the valid sources contradict one another, we just present the information. Just because there's contradictions doesn't mean we discount one source, and a contradiction doesn't mean source or another is invalid. As the [[T:VS|valid sources]] states "The DWU has messy continuity. A story can't be declared invalid just because it contradicts other stories".
 
::Finally "giving the text", a ''small'' quote is fine, but as Shambala108 and CzechOut have said, summarise your statements, the great chunks of unformatted text do not assist the discussion.
 
::Now to go back to your initial quote which started this whole thing:
 
:::''He was in a [[Flashback (comic story)|strip]] I commissioned from [[Scott Gray|Warwick Gray]] for the [[DWMS Winter 1992|Time Lord special]] I did at Marvel. In Wick's original, he was called Magus and meant to be the Master but I cocked it up and called him Magnus. When [[David A. McIntee|Dave McIntee]] created Koschei, it struck me on re-reading Wick's strip that the character could just as easily, if not better, be [[the War Chief]]. Which he is in [[Divided Loyalties (novel)|DL]].'' [https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!topic/rec.arts.drwho/zR5mKB0Lqpg Gary Russell rec.arts.drwho 04/11/1999]
 
::This quote if anything confirms what we have presented in our [[The War Chief]] article. That the War Chief is Magnus, as is in [[Divided Loyalties (novel)]] (or '''DL''' as Russell states).
 
::In Gray's original, it was ''meant'' to be the Master, but the editor; Russell "cocked it up".
 
::We take what's presented in the stories as the facts of the DWU universe, not what might have been. What might have been is interesting (when properly sourced), but it's stuff that goes in the "Behind the scenes" section on in-universe articles or the "Notes" section on story articles.
 
::I think from that incorrect assumption you running with that theory and creating an argument to sustain it. But going by your initial point that began this discussion, what appears in ''Flashback'' is pretty much what we've got on this wiki at the moment. Russell might have made a mistake in his editing of the strip, but later he didn't attempt a ret-con of the story, he read McIntee's ''[[The Dark Path (novel)|The Dark Path]]'' which is where Koschei comes from and wrote Magnus/the War Chief into ''Divided Loyalties'', influenced in part by ''Flashback''. --[[User:Tangerineduel|Tangerineduel]] / '''[[User talk:Tangerineduel|talk]]''' 06:37, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
I'm not sure you fully understand the point. Well, points actually. It started off as one thing, but is now a multi-purpose thing. However, separating them doesn't give a proper idea. which is why the original discussion at the Magnus discussion page is relevant to this discussion here. Even in a simplified, "bullet point", form. Gray and Russell both stated that Flashback was a Master origin story. Had this wiki existed then, it would have been a no-brainer to list that as a Master story. In fact, many wikis, books etc. still do just that. So, that was the point. Someone else(not me!) then stated "Are you saying the War Chief is the Master?" At that stage that wasn't my intention at all.But, after being spurred on, I found both narrative and real-world elements that showed they are. Then someone brought up Timewyrm:Exodus. Well, that wasn't a problem. Then came DL. And there's Russell's quote. There was a discussion about the Deca '''dream''' sequence, which apparently showed that the Deca sequences are dreamlike, not literal. Then I was told that i had to show that the epilogue sequence wasn't literal. So, the major continuity errors were shown, as well as the fact that elements from the dream sequence carry over into that epilogue. Then that discussion was locked. Now someone has looped back to the beginning! My original point was the real-world statement that Magnus=The Master. Who else was the Doctor's good friend in Gallifrey who he had a falling out with? But, apparently a dream sequence in a continuity-error-riddled book beats a real world statement. Fine.
 
The new issue is that on The War Games page it states something to the effect of "Myths:The War Chief is an earlier incarnation of the Master. But novels have disproven this". except they haven't. As shown on the Magnus discussion page, there is '''nothing''' in Timewyrm:Exodus that does that. There is plenty in the Target novelisations(the bits that give background without contradicting) that make them out to be the same. All we have against it is the '''dream sequence''' in DL that has Koschei(a name the Second Doctor had never heard before in The Dark Path) and Magnus together. But does that by itself prove that K'Anpo and Cho Je are two different Time Lords. Does The Two doctors prove that Troughton and C Baker were playing different characters. No. And as noted, the Round 4 Part 3 both contains dream elements carrying over and hopelessly contradicts both established continuity and the DL book itself! Now here's something someone said earlier:
 
''As far as contradictions in the valid sources goes, don't worry about it. It doesn't matter if the valid sources contradict one another, we just present the information. Just because there's contradictions doesn't mean we discount one source, and a contradiction doesn't mean source or another is invalid. As the [[T:VS|valid sources]] states "The DWU has messy continuity. A story can't be declared invalid just because it contradicts other stories". ''
 
Now, here's some quotes from those Target Books(which five background without contradicting):
 
There have been '''two''' stolen, you know.’ The young Time Lord didn’t know. ‘By our enemies?’ he asked. ‘No. By Time Lords. They '''both became bored with this place. It was too peaceful for them, not enough happening.'''’ The old Keeper smiled to himself, as though remembering with some glee all the fuss when '''two''' TARDISes were stolen. ‘One of them nowadays calls himself '''“the Doctor”. '''The other says he is '''“the Master”.'''
 
The War Chief took the Doctor into his private office just off the war room and told his bodyguards to leave. ‘Now,’ he said, ‘a traveller in a time-space machine. '''There is only one person you can be.’''' ‘I had every right to leave,’ said the Doctor. ‘And to steal a TARDIS?’ The War Chief smiled. ‘Not that I am criticising you. '''I left our people too. We are two of a kind.’ '''‘We most certainly are not!’ the Doctor protested. The War Chief shrugged. ‘Well, we were both Time Lords. Tell me, why did you decide to desert our kin?’ ‘I had reasons of my own. Rather different from yours, I imagine.’ ‘Probably they were. Why don’t you sit down?’
 
If ever he were caught, his fate would I be far worse than the Doctor’s exile. Once captured by the Time Lords, the Master’s life-stream would be thrown into reverse. Not only would he no longer exist, he would never have existed. It was the severest punishment in the Time Lords’ power. The Doctor knew that the Master’s presence on earth made matters far worse than he had feared. ‘You’re sure he’s here?’ he asked. The Time Lord nodded gravely. ‘We tracked him on the Monitor. Then there was some kind of alien interference and we lost contact.’
 
The Time Lord shook his head. ‘I’m afraid not, Doctor. As a matter of fact, I’ve come to bring you a warning, An old friend of yours has arrived on Earth.’ ‘One of our people? Who is it?’ The Time Lord pronounced a string of mellifluous syllables—one of the strange Time Lord names that are never disclosed to outsiders. Then he added, '''‘These days he calls himself the Master.’ '''
 
So, even if it's decided that the War Chief isn't the Master, tat "myth" and "there is evidence stating they aren't" should be removed. After all, one source(especially a dream-sequence in a continuity-error-full book) can not make the other invalid. Perhaps a change to something along the lines that he ''may'' be?[[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 08:29, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
:You don't need to quote me as "someone" that said something "earlier" you ''can'' just refer to my discussion point '''above'''. This is a discussion, not an online message board.
:I don't fully understand your point because you're making it ''really'' hard to understand.
:As I have said above, please stop repeating information that's on the Magnus talk page, the dense text copied text is not helping your argument.
:From the quote you've provided, Russell hasn't said that, he said Gray intended it and Russell cocked up it in the editing process. But what actually made it to print, that is what we use. Not what might have been, we also don't use deleted scenes to write in-universe articles either. But this isn't even that, it's something that was intended, but didn't make into print.
:As to the Deca question. That discussion; [[Forum:How to handle the Deca]] has been waiting on you to continue to interact with the discussion process.
:"Major" continuity errors don't invalidate a work. So, to answer your question yes. The information in a "continuity laden book" beats real world information. ''Divided Loyalties'' is not the only example of a continuity heavy book that contradicts what came before it.
:Without any side references, without any points that other people have made, without any quotes to other things, please state, preferable in short bullet pointed sentences what you're actually arguing.
:As at the moment all I have to go on is your initial statement at the top of the Magnus talk page and the citation of Russell's quote. I can't fathom ''why'' you're reeling off streams of novelisation info here, repeating what's on the Magnus talk page. Editors interested in this discussion will go to that talk page to see the information you're written there, or quite likely have already read the information there and followed the discussion here. --[[User:Tangerineduel|Tangerineduel]] / '''[[User talk:Tangerineduel|talk]]''' 09:32, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
Well, I stated it clearly and unambiguously above. If you honestly "don't fully understand", then perhaps someone who '''does''' should be the one responding to my posts? No offense, but I honestly don't know how I could have made that any simpler. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 09:49, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
: Now, 41, let's be a little more respectful to the admin. If it turns out the messiness of this discussion is my fault by the way, I apologise. 41, I expected at one point to back you up, but you'll have to organise your points before I consider still doing that. [[User:OttselSpy25|OS25]] ([[User Talk:OttselSpy25|talk to me, baby.]]) 12:23, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
I've chosen not to involve myself in this debate simply because I haven't read any of the sources in question. But from my understanding, ''[[The Quantum Archangel (novel)]]'' has appearances by the Deca. Hopefully that might be able to shed some further light on the subject and help out. --[[User:Revanvolatrelundar|Revan]]\[[User_talk:Revanvolatrelundar|Talk]] 12:58, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
:Well, what does it say? That's why I posted all those "walls of text". because that's what it actually says in the relevant books, magazines etc. I haven't read Quantum Archangel. Does anyone have the actual passage(s)? [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 13:04, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
::I'm really trying to understand where you're coming from and see your clear points.
::I take "above" means just below the summary section header, which is the only simple portion of your post not to have a large amount of copied text. The three numbered points left in your first post at 13:16, November 6, 2012.
::Point 1, you state that Russell  "and Warwick Scott Gray agreed that the Magnus in [[Flashback (comic story)|Flashback]] is The Master". But as the quote, that I have copied (unaltered) from the forum you provided clearly states it wasn't an agreement, Russell commissioned a strip from Gray.
::Point 2, as I have already said is not relevant to this discussion (and have pointed towards where these discussions are, I won't repeat them here). Russell's comments do not concern the validity of the strip, he even acknowledges the character exists and used the character himself in his own work.
::Point 3. I have already acknowledged that Russell's information is insightful enough that it should go on all three articles that are involved in this discussion; the Master's and the War Chief's (in the Behind the scenes sections) and in the Notes section of ''Flashback''. That no media states they can't be the same character is not an argument for them to be the same character. --[[User:Tangerineduel|Tangerineduel]] / '''[[User talk:Tangerineduel|talk]]''' 13:12, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
Well, it is relevant in as much as that you agree that Divided Loyalties contains multiple conitnuity errors, it can not be "definitive". And, of course, as you admit that nothing in any narrative prevents them being the same Time Lord...well then...
 
a)Why are there various "MYTH:The War Chief is The Master. But licensed narrative states explicitly that they aren't"? When you've just agreed that nothing of the sort exists. Does that necessarily mean that they ARE the same? No. But to unilaterally declare that they aren't it clearly a mistake.
 
b)The original discussion was about who MAGNUS was. Remember? So, as Divided Loyalties does not explicitly state that Magnus is the War Chief(the passage is on that discussion page), and as Divided Loyalties does not explicitly state that the Master can not be the War Chief.....who is Magnus? All we have is a non-narrative quote from Russell. Make of that what you will. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 13:18, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
::I was actually calling out the ridiculousness of your proposal. You need to start with evidence to prove something, you can't start with a lack of evidence as proof. That would be like saying; the Doctor and the Rani are the same person, because there's nothing in any media that says they aren't, which proves they could be.
::''Divided Loyalties'' may contain multiple continuity problems, but that doesn't prove anything. There are hundreds more stories that contain far more, bigger and greater contradictions that ''Divided Loyalties'' does. Compared to say ''[[War of the Daleks (novel)]]'' it's tiny.
::So '''''no''''' '''I do not believe''' that the fact that Divided Loyalties having ''perceived'' continuity problems is relevant to this discussion. In fact I don't believe it's relevant to any discussion that's not in the Howling.
::The point in the myths section of The War Games states that the FASA ''[[Time Lord (role playing book)]]'' states is where the War Chief = the Master is from.
::I thought you were arguing that Magnus/the War Chief was the Master? And I thought that the quote you provided from Russell and info in ''Divided Loyalties'' proves that the Magnus is the War Chief. Your initial heading to the Magnus discussion which said "Magnus is supposed to be The Master!" kinda suggested that was the main thrust of your argument.
 
::Finally, if we're to get into the Divided Loyalties discussion, right near the end on page 247/8 there is an epilogue which in amongst it states that;
:::''"Koschei who, after leaving Gallifrey to seek his fortune, came upon the DarkHeart, a malevolent force that was to imbue him with a new sense of direction."'' - Page 247
::and
:::''"Unlike Magnus, the only one of the Deca to leave Gallifrey and face a rather ignoble end. Obsessed with the Aliens and their war games, he fled his homeworld and joined them, offering his services to build TARDISes for them. [...] The War Lord, however, was not as foolish as he seemed, although he was prone to bouts of extreme paranoia. And it was in one of these moods that he had Magnus executed when the final war game scheme fell apart and the Time Lords finally carried out their threat of erasure."'' - Page 248
::Both are fairly explicitly different people and referring to different events, ''[[The Dark Path (novel)]]'' and ''[[The War Games (TV story)]]'' and are presented separately with Mortimus' account being between these two. --[[User:Tangerineduel|Tangerineduel]] / '''[[User talk:Tangerineduel|talk]]''' 14:53, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
:well now it's me who doesn't have any earthly clue what you are stating. Yes, originally the point was that Magnus is the Master, as Russell himself stated that was the intent, and when Flashback was published that was the understanding, as everyone who read that Special thought. But then someone said that is "non-narrative". And that being "non-narrative" was all that was required. Now, Divided Loyalties has more continuity errors than pretty much anything else ever. But even ignoring that...'''nowhere does it state in Divided Loyalties that Magnus is the War Chief'''. It is '''implied''' that he is, but in the same way it is implied that the Man with the Rosette is the Master. Or it is implied in the Target novelisations that the War Chief is the Master. Since,
 
:Since, Mortimus' account is the one preceding Magnus, it is simple English that Magnus is unlike Mortimus, not unlike someone mentioned before that. So, all that shows is that Magnus isn't Mortimus.
 
:Regardless of where that "myth" comes from, the point is that there's nothing that proves it is a myth! It doesn't matetr where it "comes from". There is no myth in the first place. Because there is nothing that proves it's a myth! According to you, there's nothing which proves it's true(eh?), but it shouldn't be there at all.
 
:Yes, originally, the point was that Russell's real world quote showed that Magnus was designed as the Master. After being shouted down a s"non-narrative" and being told that implication isn't proof, I then used YOUR argument to show that there is nothing that proves the Master is NOT the War Chief, and there is NOTHING in-universe which explicitly states who magnus actually is. Someone already edited the Man with the Rosette article to state that it's implied he's The Master, rather than state outright he's the Master. Which wasn't my actual intention, but is the first step, I guess. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 15:04, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
 
:::Oh, and btw the FASA Role Playing Game doesn't state that the Master is the War Chief. In Book 2 of 3(the Sourcebook) its states the opposite. On pages 6 and 7 it lists the Master and the War Chief as two separate Time Lords. On page 17 it explicitly states that the Master is the Meddling Monk. Now, this wiki considers the FASA Game to be non-DWU. But the point is that people(including you) repeatedly state that the FASA Game says the Master is the War Chief. When it doesn't. In fact '''it states the complete opposite, yet you stated matter-of-factly that it said that'''. By the same token, people here have said for instance that "Timewyrm:Exodus proves that the War Chief isn't the Master" or "The War chief dies in Timewyrm:Exodus". '''Neither''' of those statements is true. Just like people say that '''Divided Loyalties proves that the Master isn't the War Chief''' or '''Divided Loyalties states that Magnus is the War Chief'''. Neither of those statements is true. I honestly wonder when people here cite books, games, comics, audios, tv shows whether they've actually read/watched/listened to them, or whether it's just something they heard somewhere. I haven't read the  Quantum Archangel, so i admitted that. Rather than acting like an authority on something I've never read.
 
:::One take on it is this: Magnus isn't the Master or the War Chief. Why? Divided Loyalties never says he is either. And at the end of Divided Loyalties it explicitly states that he met an ignoble end, and was erased from ever having existed by the Time Lords. Magnus' activities with the War Lord in Divided Loyalties bear no resemblance to the War Chief's. And Divided Loyalties states that there were several different war games, not just the one seen on tv. The Flashback comic states that there is no chance of reconcilliation between The Doctor and Magnus. Going by a purely narrative in-universe manner(which you go far), the only rational explanation is that Magnus was another non-War Chief Time Lord, who had a falling out with the Doctor, left Gallifrey, worked with the War Lord(building TARDISes rather than SIDRATs), but was erased from history by the Time Lords. The war Chief presumably took up with the War Lord at a totally different time to Magnus, since from a purely in-universe, narrative perspectice they can't possibly be the same person. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 16:03, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
::::It's a pretty obvious implication as my above citation proves. The above quotes from ''Divided Loyalties'' proves pretty well that Magnus is the War Chief and isn't the Master. It describes both ''The Dark Path'' and ''The War Games'' to a tee.
::::Reading the information from ''Divided Loyalties'' in context with other ''Doctor Who'' stories the only reading of them reveals that they are from and about the events of ''The Dark Path'' and ''The War Games''.
::::Your "take" on it involves ignoring these stories and viewing ''Divided Loyalties'' in isolation, which it does not exist in. It is part of a greater series.
::::The myth can be removed from ''The War Games'' article, that isn't a huge issue.
::::Now, to be clear '''I''' did not state anything about the FASA game. I stated that ''The War Games'' articles currently states it. --[[User:Tangerineduel|Tangerineduel]] / '''[[User talk:Tangerineduel|talk]]''' 17:07, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
Er, my point was that it doesn't describe the War games to a tee. Quite the opposite, in fact. besides Magnus(whoever he is) working for the War Lord(whose description in Divided Loyalties is nothing like the War Lord in the War Games) everything else is different. Significantly:
 
1)It is never stated in Divided Loyalties that Magnus is the War Chief. Your reasoning for not counting the Flashback Magnus as the Master was that it never explicitly states that to be the case. it is merely implied. And you stated that real -world behind-the-scenes things don't count, it must be in-universe narrative. And in-universe narrative it is NOT stated that Magnus is the War Chief. Please show me where in Divided Loyalties the words "War Chief" are used. I can't find them.
 
2)The Magnus who appears in Divided Loyalties has a totally different set of adventures with the War Lord(assuming it even is the same War Lord) to the War Chief in the War Games. Building TARDISes rather than SIDRATs, having a paranoid War Lord, organising multiple war games. And, by far the most important, being erased from ever having existed by the Time Lords at the end of this.
 
3)Clearly that's not the War Chief, as he survived HIS War Games, and went on to work with Hitler under an assumed name(Timewyrm:Exodus). HE wasn't erased from ever having existed. And nowehere in Timewyrm:Exodus is the name "Magnus"  ever used. or the word "Deca". In fact, nowhere in the War Games are the words "Magnus" or "Deca" used either.
 
4)In the Flashback comic, the Doctor states that that incident was the last ever chance for reconcilliation between the Doctor and Magnus. Why? Because Magnus was erased from ever having existed not long after. Gary Russell was the Editor of Flashback, and the writer of Divided Loyalties. So he had control over both of Magnus' appearances. And he wrote a character with a totally different history to the War Chief. And again, it can't be retroactive continuity, because Divded Loyalties came out AFTER Timewyrm:Exodus.
 
Thus, Magnus can not possibly be the War Chief. Not the original thing I set out to show, but using this wiki's own rules, there is no other conclusion. 17:27, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
: Pure and simple speculation. [[Special:Contributions/170.185.224.19|170.185.224.19]]<sup>[[User talk:170.185.224.19#top|talk to me]]</sup> 18:36, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
 
Which part is "pure and simple speculation"? Could you elaborate?
 
1)Nowhere is Divided Loyalties is the phrase "War Chief" ever used.
 
2)Divded Loyalties does not describe the War Games to a tee. Most notably, the fact that Magnus is erased from ever having existed by the Time Lords at a time that is prior to Timewyrm:Exodus
 
3)Gary Russell edited Flashback and wrote Divided Loyalties
 
4)Nowhere in Flashback is the phrase "War Chief" ever used either
 
5)Flashback states that there is no chance for a reconcilliation between Thete and Magnus
 
6)It is stated here that Narrative elements define biographies, anything else gets mentioned in "behind-the-scenes"
 
7)Someone already removed the Master part from the biography of the Man with the Rosette, because while it implies he's the Master, and while the writer stated that it's meant to be the Master....it is never explicitly stated that the Man with the Rosette IS the Master
 
8)My Master=War Chief quotes from the novelisations, and real-life were deemed not good enough, because while it actually describe the supposed ''two characters'' as being the same to a tee, it never states explicitly that they are the same in-narrative


So Mag(n)us is The Master. Russell retconned him to be The War Chief. However, that sequence in Divided Loyalties is unquestionably a dream. One could also argue(as many have), that Divided Loyalties is set in a non-existent gap between The Visitation and Black Orchid, that it contradicts both The Celestial Toymaker and The Nightmare Fair. that The Doctor had never heard the name Koschei before The Dark Path, or that Divided Loyalties claims that The Monk left Gallifrey BEFORE The Doctor. Clearly the Magnus here needs to be a redirect to The Master, as well as the Flashback article corrected. 41.133.0.18talk to me 16:31, November 1, 2012 (UTC)
9)Likewise real-world sources wouldn't count, except as behind-the-scenes


Ah... I think I understand... Somewhat... But this will need discussion before change is done. The comic definitely seems like it was written for the Master, but the character looks like the War Chief. Greatly. And sense he retconned the character later into the War Chief, we can't change him to the Master now... Was he suggesting that the Master and the War Chief were the same person? At most, I think this needs a behind the scenes notice, nothing more. OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 19:03, November 1, 2012 (UTC)
10)Therefore....Magnus is not the War Chief from a narrative perspective. Again, '''Where in Divided Loyalties(or anywhere else) does it unambiguously state that Magnus is the War Chief?''' [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 05:21, November 8, 2012 (UTC)
But the point is that when Warwick "Scott" Gray wrote Flashback(comic) the two major characters were The Doctor(Thete) and The Master(Magnus). If someone can find an interview with Gray or a review of the comic story Flashback, it will identify that Time Lord as an early incarnation of The Master. Other sites refer to it as a "Master origin" story. Whatever Russell later did or didn't do is irrelevant. The point is that Gray wrote that character as The Master, everyone who read it identified it as The Master. and other wikis/websites etc. describe it as a Doctor/Master story.Of course, Divided Loyalties doesn't specifically state that "Deca member x grew up to be the name Time Lord known as y". The rationale that most people use is that "Koschei" was identified as The Master in The Dark Path, and Magnus talks about The War Lords. However, again a)Divided Loyalties could be used as a game of "Spot The Continuity Error" for the obsessive fan and, more importantly, b)the entire Deca sequence is a dream. We already know that other elements in the dream are incorrect, eg. Mortimus leaving Gallifrey before The Doctor/The Doctor knowing the name "Koschei" here when he doesn't even hear it until The Dark Path etc. We can thus surmise that this entire dream sequence contains "factual errors" as nobody's dreams are 100 per cent accurate representations of true events. Everyone's dreams get people/places/times muddled up. Especially if The Celestial Toymaker is involved! Thus, the only TRUE representation of Magnus is in Flashback(comic), and its author unambiguously stated that it's The Master. 41.133.0.18talk to me 12:19, November 2, 2012 (UTC)
== Clarification ==
Also interesting that you made the The War Chief=The Master deduction there. Going by real-world interviews with Malcolm Hulke(writer of The War Games, Colony in Space, The Sea Devils and Frontier in Space among many others) and Robert Holmes(writer of Terror of the Autons, The Deadly Assassin, The Ultimate Foe among many many others), the implications are very very strong that it's the same guy. The Target Books novelisations of, in particular, The War Games, Terror of the Autons and Doctor Who and the The Doomsday Weapon make that case seem a no-brainer. And the Autons novelisation was by none other than Terrance Dicks, who also edited the other books. Certainly, the only evidence AGAINST them being different incarnations of the same Time Lord is...Divided Loyalties! Which, as we illustrated, is only in a hopelessly jumbled-up Toymaker-induced dream sequence, where various "facts" are known beyond any doubt to be wrong. Thus there is nothing that really prevents The War Chief and The Master being the same Time Lord. Only the Russell-written factually-impaired Toymaker-induced dream sequence in a novel that exists in a "narrative gap" that never existed in the first place! 41.133.0.18talk to me 12:26, November 2, 2012 (UTC)
Okay. In ''one'' paragraph of no more than 5 short, non-bullet-pointed sentences please state your proposal. You (restarted) this page by saying "This started ..." What is ''this'', precisely?  What are you trying to get changed?  {{user:CzechOut/Sig}}{{User:CzechOut/TimeFormat}} 16:31: Fri 09 Nov 2012</span>


You may be able to make a case their. First off I would suggest you make an account so people will take you more seriously and so you can get easy updates. Next I would suggest you find sources in the novelisations to prove your point. Then I suggest you make a forum discussion on the subject. I think you have a good point and I intend to back you un on this subject. Yes, I completely agree with you. Why don't we work together to get this done? You make an account and get back to me and I'll look for novelisation info on the subject. OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 16:19, November 2, 2012 (UTC)
1)The original intention was rejected, as we have to go by narrative source, not real-world intentions, and not implications
BEGINNINGS
Malcolm Hulke(co-writer of War Games, sole writer of Colony in Space, The Sea Devils, and Frontier in Space)
Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon (Colony in Space) (both by Malcolm Hulke, writer of The War Games TV Story) (long one, Chapter 1):


1 A Missing Secret The young Time Lord sat at the side of the old Keeper of the Time Lords’ Files at the control console. The old Keeper of the Files played his spindly fingers across the console’s warmth-buttons: by touching the right combination of buttons he could project onto the screen before them any of the Time Lords’ most secret files and records. ‘These are the working-papers for the very first TARDIS,’ the old Keeper said. He touched some warmthbuttons and the picture of a small square box showed on the screen. ‘I often like to look at that, and to remember back into time.’ ‘Time has no meaning for us,’ said the young Time Lord. ‘It is neither forwards nor backwards.’ ‘For us as a species, no,’ said the old Keeper. ‘But for us as individuals there is a beginning, and, I regret, an end.’ He spoke with feeling. He was now well over 2,000 years old. Soon this young Time Lord, a mere 573 years of age, would become the new Keeper of the Files. The young Time Lord quickly changed the subject. ‘The first TARDIS was very small,’ he said. ‘On the outside, yes,’ said the old Keeper. ‘Inside it could carry up to three persons, four with a squeeze. Later we built much bigger ones. There have been two stolen, you know.’ The young Time Lord didn’t know. ‘By our enemies?’ he asked. ‘No. By Time Lords. They both became bored with this place. It was too peaceful for them, not enough happening.’ The old Keeper smiled to himself, as though remembering with some glee all the fuss when two TARDISes were stolen. ‘One of them nowadays calls himself “the Doctor”. The other says he is “the Master”. The TARDIS stolen by the Doctor has a serious defect. Two defects, to be correct.’ ‘Then how was he able to get away with it?’ ‘Oh, it flew all right,’ said the old Keeper. ‘It could fly through Time and Space, through Matter and anti-Matter. But he can’t direct it.’ ‘So he’s lost in Time and Space?’ asked the young Time Lord. ‘Hardly.’ The old Keeper was silent for a moment, and seemed almost about to drop off to sleep. The young Time Lord had become used to this and waited patiently. Suddenly the old Keeper’s failing energies returned. ‘Still, even if he cannot control it, others sometimes can.’ ‘I don’t understand,’ said the young Time Lord, ‘what others? Who?’ ‘Who? No, Who can’t control it... not always.’ The old Keeper dropped his voice, and there was a faint smile on his 2,000-years-old lips. ‘But others sometimes can.’ Obviously the question was not going to be answered. The young Time Lord hoped that eventually, perhaps in another thousand years, he would learn everything about the files and their secrets. For the time being though he had to be content with what the old Keeper cared to tell him. ‘The other defect,’ said the old Keeper, ‘was that that particular TARDIS had lost its chameleon-like quality. It was in for repairs, you see—that’s how the Doctor got his hands on it.’ ‘I don’t understand about the chameleon quality,’ said the young Time Lord, wishing he had taken over the job of the Files a few hundred years ago when the present Keeper was more lucid and awake and better able to explain things. ‘It’s a term we borrowed from a small, low-grade species of life on the planet Earth,’ said the old Keeper, as though addressing a classroom. ‘If a chameleon stands on the branch of a tree, it turns brown like the bark; but if it stands on a leaf, it turns green.’ ‘You mean TARDISes can change colour?’ ‘When they are working properly,’ said the old Keeper, ‘they change colour, shape, everything. From the beginning it was decided that a TARDIS must always look like something at home in its immediate background. You’ve never travelled, have you?’ ‘No, not yet.’ The young Time Lord was a little ashamed to admit it. ‘Pity. It broadens the mind.’ The old Keeper seemed to drop off to sleep again for a moment, then he suddenly woke up with a start. ‘I had to travel once. There were tens of thousands of humans from the planet Earth, stranded on another planet where they thought they were re-fighting all the wars of Earth’s terrible history. The Doctor’—even if he cannot control it, others sometimes can.’ ‘I don’t understand,’ said the young Time Lord, ‘what others? Who?’ ‘Who? No, Who can’t control it... not always.’ The old Keeper dropped his voice, and there was a faint smile on his 2,000-years-old lips. ‘But others sometimes can.’ Obviously the question was not going to be answered. The young Time Lord hoped that eventually, perhaps in another thousand years, he would learn everything about the files and their secrets. For the time being though he had to be content with what the old Keeper cared to tell him. ‘The other defect,’ said the old Keeper, ‘was that that particular TARDIS had lost its chameleon-like quality. It was in for repairs, you see—that’s how the Doctor got his hands on it.’ ‘I don’t understand about the chameleon quality,’ said the young Time Lord, wishing he had taken over the job of the Files a few hundred years ago when the present Keeper was more lucid and awake and better able to explain things. ‘It’s a term we borrowed from a small, low-grade species of life on the planet Earth,’ said the old Keeper, as though addressing a classroom. ‘If a chameleon stands on the branch of a tree, it turns brown like the bark; but if it stands on a leaf, it turns green.’ ‘You mean TARDISes can change colour?’ ‘When they are working properly,’ said the old Keeper, ‘they change colour, shape, everything. From the beginning it was decided that a TARDIS must always look like something at home in its immediate background. You’ve never travelled, have you?’ ‘No, not yet.’ The young Time Lord was a little ashamed to admit it. ‘Pity. It broadens the mind.’ The old Keeper seemed to drop off to sleep again for a moment, then he suddenly woke up with a start. ‘I had to travel once. There were tens of thousands of humans from the planet Earth, stranded on another planet where they thought they were re-fighting all the wars of Earth’s terrible history. The Doctor’—he interrupted himself—‘l told you about him, didn’t I?’ ‘Yes,’ said the young Time Lord, now used to the old Keeper forgetting what he had already said. ‘You mentioned the Doctor and the Master.’ ‘No, it wasn’t the Master,’ said the old Keeper in his confused way. ‘The Master never does anything good for anyone. He’s thoroughly evil. Now what was I saying?’ The Young Time Lord reminded him. ‘Humans on a planet refighting the wars of Earth’s history.’ ‘Oh, yes. Well, the Doctor had done the best he could to stop it all. But in the end we had to step in and get all those poor soldiers back to Earth, and to all the right times in Earth’s history.’ ‘And is that when you travelled?’ ‘That’s right,’ said the old Keeper, his eyes bright now with the memory of his one and only trip away from the planet of the Time Lords. ‘I and many others. When it landed, my TARDIS turned into a machine-gun post.’ ‘What’s that?’ The old Keeper glanced at the young Time Lord. ‘Oh, dear, you have a lot to learn.’ He seemed to forget the question, and went on: ‘Anyway, TARDISes are supposed to change colour and shape, but the one stolen by the Doctor stays all the time looking like a London police box.’ Before the young Time Lord could speak, the old Keeper added quickly ‘And don’t ask me what that is because I have no idea, not what they are for. Where were we?’ The young Time Lord indicated the small box on the screen. ‘The working-papers for the original TARDIS.’ ‘Then that’s enough of that,’ said the old Keeper, taking his finger from the ‘hold’ button. Instantly, the picture on the screen vanished. ‘It’s time we had a break now, don’t you think? I don’t want to overwork you.’ ‘We’ve only just started this session of tuition,’ said the young Time Lord. ‘But if you’re tired...’ The old Keeper sat up straight. ‘Not at all!’ He thrust a slender white hand into a pocket of his robe, fumbled about and brought out a scrap of paper. On it were mathematical symbols. ‘I made some notes here of things you ought to know about. Let me see...’ The young Time Lord watched as the old Keeper screwed up his watery eyes to read the symbols. ‘Ah, yes,’ said the old Keeper, ‘theDoomsday Weapon. You must know about the Doomsday Weapon.’ He put the scrap of paper back into his pocket, then spread both hands across the warmth-buttons. The young Time Lord asked, ‘I take it we have this weapon in safe keeping?’ ‘No,’ said the old Keeper. ‘It’s not necessary. It is hidden on a distant and remote planet, a hiding-place known only to us.’ He poised his fingers over a new combination of warmth-buttons. ‘Why is it called Doomsday?’ ‘Because,’ said the old Keeper, ‘that is its name. Anybody controlling that terrible weapon could bring instant doom to large sections of the Universe. It radiates anti-Matter at a million times the speed of light.’ He nodded his head at a button in the top left-hand corner of theconsole. ‘Could you put your finger over that button, please. It’s a safety measure, so that no one person with only two hands can activate the combination to produce the file on the Doomsday Weapon.’ The young Time Lord poised an index finger over the button. ‘Now lower your finger,’ said the old Keeper, ‘as I lower mine.’ The old Keeper lowered his fingers onto a pattern of buttons, and the young Time Lord brought his index finger down gently onto the one remote button. Then they looked up at the screen. Printing appeared and it read: ‘TOP SECRET. EXACT WHEREABOUTS OF THE DOOMSDAY WEAPON, AND INSTRUCTIONS FOR USE.’ ‘That’s just the title-page of the file,’ said the old Keeper. ‘Move your finger to the next button on the right’ The young Time Lord moved his index finger along to the adjacent button. Instantly, the printing disappeared and the screen went blank. ‘All right,’ said the old Keeper. ‘Now touch the button.’ The young Time Lord touched the button. One line of bold handwriting appeared on the screen from the first inside page of the secret file. It said: ‘Thank you for letting me know where to find the Doomsday Weapon. —The Master.’
2)There is nothing in a narrative sense that states unambiguously that Magnus is the War Chief(it's implied, but there are too many differences between the two, and it's never said outright in a way that is unambiguous)


Notes: a) Why in the first ever Target novelisation to feature The Master does the first chapter go into detail about the War Chief's plot in the War Games, unless the Master and the War Chief are the same? b) There have been two stolen, and They both became bored with this place. It was too peaceful for them, not enough happening.’ The old Keeper smiled to himself, as though remembering with some glee all the fuss when two TARDISes were stolen. ‘One of them nowadays calls himself “the Doctor”. The other says he is “the Master” Yes, two.
3)There is nothing in a narrative sense that unambiguously states that Koschei/The Master can not also be the War Chief. True, there is nothing narrative that unambiguously states that they are the same Time Lord. But there is nothing narrative that makes rules out the ''possibility''.


The War Games(The War Games, er right...) (Malcolm Hulke novel, Malcolm Hulke/Taerrance Dicks original tv serial)(from Chapter 9)
4)Just as the Man with the Rosette's article was changed to say that "behind-the-scenes" it was '''meant''' that he is The Master, while all narrative biography of him being the Master was removed...so Magnus/War Chief should be separated. There should be a separate Magnus article, with behind-the-scenes stating that he was meant to be the Master(in Flashback) and the War Chief(in Divided Loyalties). Magnus should also be mentioned in the behind-the-scenes of the War Chief and Master articles, but not included in the narrative biography proper


The War Chief took the Doctor into his private office just off the war room and told his bodyguards to leave. ‘Now,’ he said, ‘a traveller in a time-space machine. There is only one person you can be.’ ‘I had every right to leave,’ said the Doctor. ‘And to steal a TARDIS?’ The War Chief smiled. ‘Not that I am criticising you. I left our people too. We are two of a kind.’ ‘We most certainly are not!’ the Doctor protested. The War Chief shrugged. ‘Well, we were both Time Lords. Tell me, why did you decide to desert our kin?’ ‘I had reasons of my own. Rather different from yours, I imagine.’ ‘Probably they were. Why don’t you sit down?’
5)The Magnus, War Chief and Master articles should have behind-the-scenes references to the others. In particular, the War Chief and Master articles should have behind-the-scenes information, stating that some narrative implies that they are the same Time Lord, while other narrative implies that they are two different Time Lords. But this wiki should have no definite statement on the matter either way. Until a narrative element comes along definitively making a statement that is..... [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 05:15, November 10, 2012 (UTC)
:Nope.  Still no idea what you're talking about.  Point 1 is completely obscure.  Still not getting what this has to do with ''Divided Loyalties''. Come to the point, please. Assume I've read none of your previous comments, start over, keep it short, and don't bullet-point or number your paragraphs. Take one paragraph, 250 words max, and tell us simply what you want to change about this wiki. {{user:CzechOut/Sig}}{{User:CzechOut/TimeFormat}} 05:53: Sat 10 Nov 2012</span>


There is only one person The Doctor can be. The Doctor and The Master stole their TARDISes and left. If the War Chief had left later, then there are two people the Doctor could be.
:::??? What about the above don't you understand? Is English not your home language? "Point 1" was that I originally came here with real-world sources, as well as in-narrative sources that overwhelmingly implied something(but didn't state it 100% outright). But that was deemed not enough, as it needs to be a clear and unambiguous narrative element that is used for biographies/character histories etc. Any "Real-world" material can only be included in the "behind-the-scenes" section. Thus, using, purely narrative elements, there is nothing at all whatsoever that umambiguously states who "Magnus" is. We know who he's ''implied'' to be. But we need narrative elements. There is also nothing at all whatsoever that makes it impossible for the Master and the War Chief to be the same Time Lord. There is also nothing that unambiguously states they ARE the same. But there is nothing that means they ''can not'' be. Thus, any articles relating to these aspects need to be corrected. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 06:32, November 10, 2012 (UTC)


Another quote(Chapter 6) The War Chief’s eyes came to rest on the Doctor. Zoe thought she detected a moment of mutual recognition between the Doctor and the War Chief, as though they had once known each other.
Ok, so you're saying that we have to say that the Master and the War Chief are the same character because nothing in-universe says they're not?  By that logic, we could say that Rose is a chameleon arched version of the Rani. I mean, a chameleon arch changes a person's behavior as well as their genetics and the Rani could have regenerated before hand so she looks different.  It has never been stated in universe that she is or isn't, and it is entirely possible for them to be or not to be the same person.  However we do not go around adding "Rose and the Rani are the same person" to all relevant articles because the notion is completely absurd!  [[User:Imamadmad|Imamadmad]] [[User talk:Imamadmad|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 23:15, November 10, 2012 (UTC)
:I'm trying to help you, 41.  You clearly want something done around here, but you're not being very clear about what it is.  The title of this thread is ''very'' ambiguous, and what you've said in your most recent post bears little relation to your initial point.  I and others have asked you multiple times to clarify your position in simple language, but you haven't done it.  Now, you've moved on to insulting me. Please be aware that we do have a strict policy [[tardis:no personal attacks|against personal attacks]], and you have just crossed it. I'm going to assume you're just frustrated because this is all perfectly clear in your mind. However, trust me: as someone who has read and determined the archive status for ''every single'' Panopticon thread ever written, I can safely say I've never seen anything quite this opaque.


The Sea Devils(The Sea Devils)(both by Malcolm Hulke)(Chapter 2)
:I think the difficulty you're having is that you're assuming that we've all managed to connect the dots between [[Forum:How to handle the Deca]], [[Talk:Magnus]] and points that you've made at [[Tardis talk:Canon policy/Archive 2]] and [[Talk:Season 18B]]. 


The Master stroked his beard thoughtfully. Then, slowly, he shook his head. ‘I’m sorry, Doctor, it’s too much to ask.’ ‘But what use is your TARDIS to you while you’re in here?’ Jo asked: ‘It would be difficult for you to understand,’ said the Master, ‘but my TARDIS is my proudest possession.’ The Doctor laughed. ‘You don’t even own it! You stole it from the Time Lords!’ ‘As you stole yours!’ retorted the Master. ‘Now please, let’s not start to get all moral. I’m not going to render up my TARDIS to anyone
:Try simpler, more direct language.


and
:'''Do''' use language like "I propose that <whatever>" or "I think <this thing here> should be changed because of <those reasons over there>."
:'''Do''' give quotes of specific passages of existing text on the wiki that you think is wrong.
:'''Don't''' assume your audience has read ''Divided Loyalties''.
:'''Don't''' assume your audience cares.  Give us a compelling reason why this ''matters''.
:'''Consider''' breaking up your requests into discrete parts.  Perhaps you should finish the discussion at [[Forum:How to handle the Deca]], before moving to a discussion about a ''specific'' member of the Deca like Magnus.


Jo said, ‘Did you really think the Master would tell you where his TARDIS is?’ ‘Not really,’ said the Doctor without turning. ‘He’s defeated, and knowledge of its location is the only thing he’s got to cling on to.’ ‘Then why,’ she asked, ‘did we come all the way down here?’ The Doctor was evasive. ‘I thought a trip to the seaside might do us both good.’ ‘You’re really sorry for him, aren’t you?’ she said. ‘You wanted to be sure he was being treated properly.’ ‘We used to be great friends,’ said the Doctor. ‘Hundreds of years ago, when we were both young Time Lords, we were inseparable. After all, we had a lot in common.’ ‘What, for instance?’ He turned to her. ‘You know the Golden Rule of the Time Lords—just to sit and watch, but never actually do anything? He and I are different. We wanted to get out into the Universe, to meet other species, to explore.’ ‘One for good and the other for evil?’ said Jo. ‘Yes, you could say that.
:I ''am'' interested in trying to figure out what you're trying to say. But it's been days now, and this thread is no closer to making a solid proposal. That needs to change quickly, or we're going to have to archive this thread and move on. ''Please'' make your next post to this thread a succinct one. {{user:CzechOut/Sig}}{{User:CzechOut/TimeFormat}} 02:34: Sun 11 Nov 2012</span>


And here's an extract from an interview. Unsure of original date, but it's republished in Doctor Who Magazine issue 91(page 28)
Trying not to care but could the point of this discussion be summed up as: Magnus, the War Chief, and the Master should be at three separate articles with behind-the-scenes notes indicating how they are connected by authors' intents. This is how the Man with the Rosette is handled. Only two stories refer to this Magnus and neither name him as somebody else. Divided Loyalties implies he is the War Chief but the continuity is so poor it is a bad fit. (Don't worry about Quantum Archangel. It doesn't mention WC or Magnus.) --[[Special:Contributions/65.24.187.122|65.24.187.122]]<sup>[[User talk:65.24.187.122#top|talk to me]]</sup> 04:02, November 11, 2012 (UTC)
: Yeah, that sounds about right. [[User:OttselSpy25|OS25]] ([[User Talk:OttselSpy25|talk to me, baby.]]) 05:17, November 11, 2012 (UTC)


There was a peculiar relationship between the Master and the Doctor; one felt that the Master wouldn't really have liked to have eliminated the Doctor...you see the Doctor was the only person like him, at the time, in the whole universe, a renegade Time Lord and in a gunny sort of way they were partners in crime."
::65.24.187.122 pretty much nailed it. Although I said the same thing. Basically, as with the Man with the Rosette, we know what the author's '''intent''' was, but '''nothing''' in-narrative ever states who Magnus is. Thus, Magnus should get his own article, with the behind-the-scenes stuff mentioning the author's intent. As far as the Master and the War Chief, '''again''', there i nothing in-narrative that makes it impossible for them to be the same character. I '''never''' stated that the articles must be merged or anything like that. I merely stated that having someone state on [[The War Games]] article:"MYTH:The War Chief is The Master. Several licensed novels show they are not" is a mistake. They should remain separate articles. But any definite statements about whether they are or aren't the same should be removed. There should however, be "behind-the-scenes" information added. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 05:35, November 11, 2012 (UTC)


(Does the scene in the TV of Frontier in Space where the Doctor tells Jo about the War Games, and the eavesdropping Master looks like he knows it count?)
: There we go. Now I think the proplem here is that ''DL'' clearly hinted him to be the War Cheif, didn't it? [[User:OttselSpy25|OS25]] ([[User Talk:OttselSpy25|talk to me, baby.]]) 05:39, November 11, 2012 (UTC)


Hulke also apparently told a fanzine in the 70's that The War Chief and The master are different incarnations of the same Time lord. Can anyone find it?
::As I said upthread, statement in the Myths section of ''The War Games'' is easily excised, if someone could find a source for the myth that'd be nice and we could just leave it at that as a statement that there was a myth/fan theory. Otherwise it can be removed.
::@65.24 bad continuity does not exclude a source, otherwise we'd be ignoring ''[[Blood Harvest (novel)|Blood Harvest]]'' and ''[[The Eight Doctors (novel)|The Eight Doctors]]'' (which undermine each other's continuity) and ''[[War of the Daleks (novel)|War of the Daleks]]'' (which retcons every Dalek TV story), then there's ''[[Lungbarrow (novel)|Lungbarrow]]'' and every new series story that mentions youth on Gallifrey and the list goes on.
::@41.133 Coming at the discussion from the side that "there is nothing in-narrative that makes it impossible to be the same character" is ludicrous. As I and Imamadmad have said above that's using the lack of proof as proof. As I have shown above with 2 quotes from ''Divided Loyalties'' it's pretty clear that the Master and Magnus are separate people, and that Magnus is the War Chief.
::''Divided Loyalties'' does more than hint, as, again is shown in the quote upthread it basically summarises ''The War Games'' saying that Magnus was the one involved. --[[User:Tangerineduel|Tangerineduel]] / '''[[User talk:Tangerineduel|talk]]''' 06:06, November 11, 2012 (UTC)


Terrance Dicks(co-writer War Games, Script Editor from partway through Season 6 to partway through Season 11. Dicks was also the Editor of all the Target books mentioned here, and would have removed major continuity points he disagreed with)
:You're misunderstanding me again. I never said there was narrative proof that the Master is the War Chief. I said there is no narrative proof that the Master is not the War Chief. Two separate things. Divided Loyalties doesn't make it clear that Magnus is the War Chief. It ''implies'' it is the War Chief. The same way that Henrietta Street ''implies'' that the man with the rosette is the Master. And, using your logic, we should edit the [[Mindgame]] and [[Ace]] articles to say that Ace was in Mindgame. Because that's clearly what is implied. Though it is never stated outright. Divided Loyalties says that Koschei is the Master. It implies that magnus is the War Chief. Major difference. Or in The Hollows of Time, Professor Stream was written as the Master. However, in the finished version it never states that he '''is''' The Master. So he is just "Professor Stream". "The Man With The Rosette" is just that, nothing more. Sophie Aldred's character in Mindgame is just "Human". So why try and make Magnus the War Chief, when it never actually confirms that, merely suggests it? [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 07:20, November 11, 2012 (UTC)


Terror of the Autons(Terror of the Autons)(book by Terrance Dicks, original TV serial by Robert Holmes)(*the story that introduces the Master, or is it?)(Chapter 2)
To summarise '''again''':The author's real-world intentions are not used for the biography/character information, only for the "behind-the-scenes". Sp...first the words "War Chief: are never used in either Flashback or Divided Loyalties. Secondly, read the War Chief's background/motivation on page 187 of Timewyrm:Exodus. Now read Magnus' background/motivation in Divided Loyalties. That's not "just a continuity error". That's two totally separate characters. Now remember that the War Chief survived The War Games, and went on to Timewyrm:Exodus. Magnus didn't survive his time with "the war lord"(who is described totally differently to the War Lord from the War Games), and was erased from ever having existed. Thus, Magnus, whoever he was, could no possibly have gone on to work with Hitler. The '''only''' similarity is that both Magnus and the War Chief were known to work with "war lords". First, we have no way of knowing whether they were even the same war lords. Secondly, the Doctor and the Master both worked for UNIT. The Doctor and Romana both worked for the Guardian. The Monk and the Master both worked with the Daleks. What does that prove? Two different Time Lords both working for the same people/organisation does '''not''' mean that those two Time lords are the same Time Lord. And, judging by the description in Divided Loyalties, it doesn't even sound as though the people Magnus worked with were even the same people the War Chief worked with. Magnus, of '''Flashback(comic)''' and '''Divided Loyalties''', who went and played with a race devoting themselves to war was, in fact, a completely different person to the War Chief.[[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 08:32, November 11, 2012 (UTC)


He spun round and saw a distinguished-looking elderly gentleman in the full rigout of a city businessman, dark suit, rolled umbrella and bowler hat. The peculiar thing was that the stranger was nonchalantly standing in thin air, hundreds of feet above the ground. The Doctor showed no particular surprise at this. Nor did the new arrival as he became aware of it. ‘Dear me, my co-ordinates must have slipped a bit.’ He blurred, shimmered out of existence and reappeared, standing next to the Doctor on the little platform. The Doctor looked at him grimly. He’d recognised him at once, of course. One of the High Council of the Time Lords. Last time they had met was at the Doctor’s trial. After many years of happily wandering around the universe in his ‘borrowed’ TARDIS, the Doctor had been captured at last by his own people, and condemned to exile on the planet Earth for an indefinite period. But why had a Time Lord materialised himself here now? To give himself time to recover the Doctor said, ‘May I say you look quite ridiculous in those clothes?’ The Time Lord gave a complacent smile. ‘Merely merging with the natives, old chap. We Time Lords don’t care to be conspicuous.’ He shot a quick glance at the Doctor’s usual flamboyant outfit of narrow trousers, smoking jacket, frilled shirt and swirling cloak. ‘Most of us, that is,’ he added pointedly. A hope flashed into the Doctor’s mind. ‘You’ve come to tell me the exile is over...’ The Time Lord shook his head. ‘I’m afraid not, Doctor. As a matter of fact, I’ve come to bring you a warning, An old friend of yours has arrived on Earth.’ ‘One of our people? Who is it?’ The Time Lord pronounced a string of mellifluous syllables—one of the strange Time Lord names that are never disclosed to outsiders. Then he added, ‘These days he calls himself the Master.’ The Doctor was silent for a moment. The Master was a rogue Time Lord. So too was the Doctor, in a way. But all his interventions in the course of history were on the side of good. The Master intervened only to cause death and suffering, usually in the pursuit of some scheme to seize power for himself. More than that, he seemed to delight in chaos and destruction for its own sake, and liked nothing more than to make a bad situation worse, Already he had been behind several Interplanetary Wars, always disappearing from the scene before he could be brought to justice. If ever he were caught, his fate would I be far worse than the Doctor’s exile. Once captured by the Time Lords, the Master’s life-stream would be thrown into reverse. Not only would he no longer exist, he would never have existed. It was the severest punishment in the Time Lords’ power. The Doctor knew that the Master’s presence on earth made matters far worse than he had feared. ‘You’re sure he’s here?’ he asked. The Time Lord nodded gravely. ‘We tracked him on the Monitor. Then there was some kind of alien interference and we lost contact.’ ‘Is his TARDIS still working?’ ‘I’m afraid so. He got away before it could be deenergised.’ ‘Then he was luckier than I,’ said the Doctor sadly. He had never really got used to his exile. ‘Don’t be bitter, Doctor. Your punishment was comparatively light.’ The Doctor rounded on him angrily. ‘Whatever I’ve done, I too am still a Time Lord. Do you know what! it’s like to be restricted to one tiny planet, one limited era of time?’ The Time Lord shrugged. ‘It is your favourite planet after all!’ For moment the Doctor gazed up at the summer sky without speaking. Then he said, ‘Why did you take the trouble to warn me?’ ‘The Master knows you’re on this planet, Doctor. You have interfered with his evil schemes in the past, and he has sworn your destruction. The Council felt you should be warned of your danger.’ The Doctor looked at him suspiciously. ‘There’s more to it than that, isn’t there?’ The Time Lord paused, choosing his words carefully. ‘You and the Master will inevitably come into conffict. If in the proven he should be captured or destroyed...’ ‘I see. You want me to do your dirty work for you?’ The Time Lord twirled his umbrella. ‘Your sentence will come up for review one day, Doctor. Any service you have rendered the Council will be—considered.’ The Doctor knew he was trapped, but perversely refused to admit it. ‘I’m not going to worry about a renegade like the Master. The fellow’s an unimaginative plodder.’ The Time Lord chuckled. ‘You graduated at the same time, did you not? I believe his degree in Cosmic Science was in a higher category than yours?’ ‘I was a late developer,’ said the Doctor defensively. ‘Besides,’ the Time Lord went on, ‘would you call that little surprise unimaginative?’ He pointed towards the door of the control cabin. The Doctor peered through the crack. At first he saw only a deserted control room. Then he noticed an elaborate arrangement of thin twine leading from the inside handle of the door to a small metal canister perched precariously on the edge of a tall computer cabinet. The Doctor peered at the canister. ‘It’s a Volataliser,’ he said incredulously. ‘The Xanthoids use them for mining operations. If that thing falls—’ The Time Lord nodded. ‘It will destroy this tower, the Research Centre and about one square mile of the surrounding countryside. You will observe, Doctor, that the door opens outwards. The tension on the twine is such that the slighest touch on the door will cause the cylinder to fall. An amusing idea.’ The Doctor looked at him grimly. ‘Then you’d better think up some witty way of dealing with it.’ ‘I’m sorry, Doctor,’ said the Time Lord. He shimmered and vanished, leaving a faint ‘good luck’ floating on the air. The Doctor turned back to the door and considered the problem. He could try to untie the twine at the doorhandle end. But the door was open the merest crack. He’d never get his fingers through. He could climb on top of the cabin and get through the skylight—but the vibration he would cause might make the cylinder roll off. No, there was only one thing for it. The Doctor paused for a moment, calculating tension, angle velocities, and the effects of gravity on the estimated weight of the cylinder. He took a pace back, braced a foot against the guard rail, and gripped the door handle. Then he yanked the door open and catapaulted himself head first into the cabin.
::There is a greater amount of proof the states that Magnus is the War Chief than your above examples.  
::In the above quote, from Divided Loyalties, based on what we know of the War Games, the person "Magnus" can't be anyone other than the War Chief. This isn't the same as the Man with the Rosette, where it's actually very vague about who he is, or who "Human" in ''Mindgame'' is.  
::In ''Divided Loyalties'' we are presented in-narrative with what is essentially a plot summary of ''The War Games'' with the name "Magnus" at the start.
::On its own, on that quote above alone, you might not be able to directly attribute the War Chief = Magnus, but looking at it in addition to other sources, like ''The War Games'', the information presented between these two leaves little doubt that the War Chief and Magnus are the same person. We use ''Divided Loyalties'' as a starting point and then corroborate that information with other sources of in-narrative information. With your examples there are none to support their implications.  
::We only have the information of the DWU to work with, and there is only one "War Lord", we only have one example of a Time Lord building TARDISes for aliens, based on this information combined with ''The War Games'' it can't be any other person.
::As far as real world information, as I've continued to say it's interesting, but before you began this discussion I didn't know anything about the real world info and for the most part I've based my discussion on what's in-narrative. The behind the scenes info is an interesting side-note to the discussion. --[[User:Tangerineduel|Tangerineduel]] / '''[[User talk:Tangerineduel|talk]]''' 09:38, November 11, 2012 (UTC)


Notes: a)the only time anyone has ever had their "life stream thrown into reverse" was the War Games. The Master(a new alias) escapes because of alien interference. But when was the only time prior to Season 8 when aliens interfered with the Time Lords and Gallifrey? Why is the Doctor suprised to find out that the Master had a working TARDIS? The phrasing "then he was luckier than I" suggests they were at the same place at the same time when the Doctor was caught by the Time Lords. And of course, why don't the Time Lords just "reverse the Master's life stream" now they know exactly where he is? What is the "dirty work" the Doctor speaks of? Makes no sense...unless the Time Lords have already formally pronounced the Master "killed", only for him to escape to their surprise(because they were unaware he had a working TARDIS).
:Sorry, I don't agree. '''It never states in Divided Loyalties, or any other narrative source, that Magnus is the War Chief.''' All we have are some similarities. In fact, if you watch The War Games, read Timewyrm:Exodus, and then read Divided Loyalties, you come away with the feeling that they're two similar, yet essentially different characters. But, either way, there's nothing at all that explicitly and unambiguously states that "Magnus is the War Chief". There is some hinting, there are some similarities and also some MAJOR differences. And, going by your reasoning, I suggest you go and read the first chapter of "Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon".... [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 10:06, November 11, 2012 (UTC)


::So, as I read what you've said lately in this thread, I'm given to understand that this isn't really a policy matter, right?  This is just you trying to bounce ideas off the community to help you clarify the ''content'' of certain articles in the main namespace.  Despite the fact that you've been dropping in veiled references to problems you've had with site policy in the past, you're now actually trying to work within [[T:VS]] to rewrite articles you think are in violation of those policies.  Have I read you correctly? 


(Today Dicks tells us how he created The Master, but can anyone find anything from the time stating that? Of course they can't.)
::If that's what's going on, you probably wanted to be in [[Forum:Reference desk]] rather than [[Forum:Panopticon]].  This forum is for changing policy and the sort of "meta" issues that arise in the practical administration of a wiki.  The reference desk is for asking about the narratives themselves. {{user:CzechOut/Sig}}{{User:CzechOut/TimeFormat}} 02:44: Wed 14 Nov 2012</span>


First, you yourself were the one who said this discussion belongs here. Second, I'm not "bouncing off" anything. As has been stated several times(and you appear to be the only one who is unaware of this) I did originally provide a real-world source about a character. In addition the story featuring that character strongly implied who he was. I was told that real-world sources, as well as something merely being implied doesn't count. It needs a clear and unambiguous narrative connection. I then said "But there is no clear and unambiguous narrative connection in Divided Loyalties between the War Chief and Magnus". That's it. You have already moved the discussion from another place to here, and now you wish to move it again. Only after much trying to confuse the issue. Just when it appears that some sort of clear understanding is about to be reached, you appear and say "Oh no. This should have been in [forum x] all along" And then everyone is told to start from square one again, but explicitly told not to make any posts that were already made, while at the same time, not making any references ''to'' posts that were already made. I am sick and tired of this now, I have tried to work within your system, using your rules, your wiki policies. But now I see why so many people don't even try in the first place This whole thing has been an exercise in futility. Every time I produce what you're looking for, you change your mind, and say the discussion needs to be moved somewhere else. This is a complete and utter waste of time and effort. {{Unsigned-anon|41.133.0.18}}
'
: None of us have ever had any idea what you were talking about. [[User:OttselSpy25|OS25]] ([[User Talk:OttselSpy25|talk to me, baby.]]) 05:16, November 14, 2012 (UTC)


Robert Holmes(writer of more Doctor Who than anyone else. Ever. Also Script Editor from partway through Season 11 to partway through Season 15. He wrote episode 1 of The Ultimate Foe and all of The Deadly Assassin. But more importantly he wrote Terror of the Autons)
::Agreed with [[User:OttselSpy25]] here. This is definitely not an easy discussion to follow. [[User:Imamadmad|Imamadmad]] [[User talk:Imamadmad|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 05:28, November 14, 2012 (UTC)


Looking for interviews
:::I regret that you're frustrated, 41.  My role here is ''not'' that of a roadblock.  I've been desperately trying to help you frame your argument in a way that makes sense to other users.  As can be evidenced by the above two comments, '''you haven't done that'''.  
a)Holmes states that the Deadly Assassin was a sequel to the War Games
b)Holmes gives a list of ALL the renegade Time Lords to appear on the show up to that point...The Doctor, The Meddling Monk, The Master, Omega, Morbius.


c)(not interview) apparently one book states that Dicks' original idea for the Master was a new character. Holmes was brought in to write the script, but it underran and was lousy. Holmes suggested he rewrite it where the Master was the returning vengeful War Chief. Dicks loved the idea, and the rest is history.
:::I think the biggest problem you're having is that you are not actually answering the questions posed to you. For instance, in your response to my earlier comments today, I asked you twice whether this was a policy matter, and you never answered that directly. Your answer to a yes/no question was to complain about the question.


:::As for the implications of this discussion potentially being in the "wrong" forum, you're being well over-dramatic.  All that means is that we'd change the template at the very top of this page to read {{tlx|forumheader|reference desk}}.  That's it.  It wouldn't require a frustrating "restart".


......Why Timewyrm:Exodus doesn't disprove any of the above......
:::And as I recall, what I ''actually'' advised you to do was to finish the discussion at [[Forum:How to handle the Deca]]. I believe I said something like, "once you decide how to handle the Deca, you'll understand more about the Magnus situation."  I also thought, at the time, that you were trying to use this case to speak to policy, which would have made this the appropriate forum. But, and you've still not absolutely confirmed this, it now appears that you're merely talking about content, which is a matter for the reference desk. The reason it's important to choose the right forum is that it helps other users understand the broad context of your question.


The Second Doctor was "about 400, 450 years old" in Tomb of the Cybermen. The gap from Tomb of the Cybermen to the War games was at most a couple of years, probably less. In Time and the Rani the Seventh Doctor was 953 years old. The gap from Time and the Rani to Timewyrm:Exodus is at least a few years. So from the Doctor's perspective it's more than 500 years. From the War Chief's perspective, though, he went straight from the "aliens' planet" to 20th century Germany. Thus the two Time Lords are meeting out of sequence. This concept has been "canonised" by the tv show where the Eleventh Doctor and River Song aka Mels aka Melody Pond meet out of sequence. In fact River has multiple names, each of which is correct. And I think the Eighth Doctor met the Delgado Master in a novel as well.
:::Overall though the entire problem with all of this is that you've stubbornly avoided asking a question. You just info-dumped a ''theory'', with no particular ''application'' of that theory in sight. It took ''another anonymous user'' to finally bring some sort of clarity to this thread.  


Anyway, the point here is that the War Chief has remaining regenerations, but the events of Episode 9 of the War Games resulted in a failed regeneration, where he is deformed and thus looking for vengeance. In fact the War Chief in Timewyrm:Exodus behaves remarkably like The Master. However the War Chief's army in killed in the blast near the end of the novel(Chapter 14? need to find the book) The last mention of the character himself is:
:::It's unfortunate that you're frustrated with this process.  All I can say is that it's worked since 2005.  Hundreds of questions have been asked and answered in these forums.  Sometimes people have gotten frustrated with the fact that they've had to wait for a few days for obvious things to be resolved. But I've never seen anyone completely miss the point of forum communication quite the way you have.   All that's required for successful use of the forums is to ask simple questions, then ''directly'' answer those questions that others pose to you.  The reason you've been unsuccessful in your attempts is that you haven't done that.


Ace saw, just for a second, a young man, tall, dark, and satanically handsome, reaching up to her... The door closed, the TARDIS dematerialized, and they were gone.
:::Communication is not the same as info-dumping.  It's listening to what other parties have to say and directly addressing them.  It's phrasing things so as to influence action.  It's ''not only'' having an idea for change, ''but also'' crafting your words so as to achieve that change.  That's why, as I've tried to point out to you, your first post should be something along the lines of "I think <this situation here> should be changed because of <that situation there>" or "One of our articles says <this thing here>, but I've read <this bit there> so should we change our approach to our article?" 


So, the blast triggers a regeneration. Dicks himself shows that Time lords can meet out of sequence. the War Chief has regenerated. He still wants vengeance against the Doctor. The Doctor has interfered with his evil scheme once again. And then? "Tall, dark and satanically handsome" is an excellent description of Roger Delgado. But, "young"? Maybe he needed time to plot his next move, get his Tissue Decompresser etc.
:::What's even weirder to me is '''that you know this'''.  Take a look at your other thread, [[Forum:How to handle the Deca]]. Your first post there is ''very'' clear. You describe what the discussion is about and you say very clearly what you're proposing. I don't really understand why you're so vague in ''this'' thread, and why you've obstinately refused to give a clear statement of purpose here, despite being offered multiple chances to restart the thread. {{user:CzechOut/Sig}}{{User:CzechOut/TimeFormat}} 15:05: Wed 14 Nov 2012</span>


Or maybe: http://www.doctorwhoreviews.co.uk/MA33.htm Okay, it's an unofficial book, but it has a Wikipedia entry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time's_Champion, which I doubt any other unlicensed Doctor Who fiction book has. 41.133.0.18talk to me 17:25, November 2, 2012 (UTC)
No. You are making hollow personal insults. The only problem here is that you are deliberately trying to confuse the issue. This started out as a simple discussion which stated that the name "Magnus" was originally applied to a character in Flashback(comic) who both the editor and the actual writer unambiguously stated was The Master. However, you rejected that, as "only narrative elements count".


Hm... That's all very good, but at most this all looks like "Behind the scenes" info. Do you have any more solid evidence? OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 18:38, November 2, 2012 (UTC)
Fine, if that's the way this works. I then pointed out, that using '''only narrative elements''' there is nothing '''conclusive''' in "Divided Loyalties" who states who this particular "Magnus" really is. Author Gary Russell stated in a real-world interview that "Magnus" is supposed to be The War Chief. However, he also(as noted earlier) stated that "Magnus" in Flashback(comic) is supposed to be The Master? It is sort of '''implied''' in Divided Loyalties that this "Magnus" is The War Chief, however there is nothing that '''explicitly''' states that fact, merely some similarities(and also a lot of differences). So, your response to that was to a)say "Where? Say what is says" and b)lock the original thread, and say "Star again", c)Pretend like you don't understand what I mean,
What would that be? Could you be more specific? 41.133.0.18talk to me 11:55, November 3, 2012 (UTC)
MORE STUFF
Apparently, the spin-off media adds to this idea. Since this wiki has counts all officially licensed material as equal, that could help. Sadly, the only such item I possess is the 1974 World Distributors Annual. The Master appears in two text stories, and one comic story. The text stories are not relevant to this discussion, but the comic The Time Thief may be....The Master timescoops soldiers from various eras to create an army, with which he plans to conquer. 41.133.0.18talk to me 18:26, November 2, 2012 (UTC)
Further, I have found some links done by fans who know their stuff:


http://www.thevervoid.com/columns/sihunt/sihunt50.htm
So, I '''did''' cite the relevant passages, as well as relevant passages from several other episodes, books etc. that flatly contradict Divided Loyalties. Those other sources are all consistent with each other, yet contradict the later-written Divided Loyalties. Your response? Make insulting comments about how "stubborn and "obstinate" I am, and say "don't infodump". However, this so-called "infodumping" was precisely what I was told to do! Just like I was specifically told to start this new discussion here, only to now be told it's the wrong place. I notice you have also made some inaccurate edits to the locked "The Master" article, which shows that you either haven't actually read a word of what either I or various authors have actually put down or b)you couldn't care less about the actual Doctor Who lore/continuity, and only wish to push your own personal canon.  


http://davidrestal.blogspot.com/2007/09/is-master-war-chief.html
To sum up:a)there is NOTHING in Divided Loyalties that states "Magnus is the War Chief" b)the FASA GAme doesn't actually say what you claim it does b)Divided Loyalties is so riddled with continuity errors, that to cherry-pick one ''implied'' statement, while willfully ignoring everything else is totally point-of-view, and not in keeping with a supposed source of information d)there are countless narrative sources which make it overwhelmingly obvious that the Master is the War chief. Do any of them ever state "The Master is The War Chief" in those exact words? No. Do they all make it far more clear than your ONE muddled "Anti-source" in DL? Absolutely. However, I'm sure you're going to insult me about "walls of text", being "obstinate", say this is the wrong forum, and possibly add some line to The Master article about how Terror of the Autons '''explicitly''' says the Master knows the War Chief as a separate Time Lord, and how the Doctor and the Master haven't seen each other since they both left Gallifrey. My only concern is that some people may come to this wiki looking for genuine information about Doctor Who, and may believe some of the falsehoods that are all over this wiki.


http://www.dwad.net/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=151&start=10
::I'll let others be the judge of which of us has actually hurled insults in this thread. What I care about is understanding you and helping you express your concerns in a way that other people can comment upon them productively.


http://www.dwad.net/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=151&sid=186f472cc80537a63fbf34f5c3c4c861&start=20
::So far, I count at least five people in this thread who have no clear idea what you're talking about: me, [[user:Tangerineduel]], [[User:Shambala108]], [[User:Imamadmad]] and [[User:OttselSpy25]].  At least one other person, [[user:170.185.224.19]], seems to have divined your intent, but labelled it "pure speculation". Only one person responding to this thread has seemingly understood you and refactored things in a form that you agreed with.


(this chap says that Robert Holmes "stated outright" that the Master is the War Chief. Someone should contact this fellow and/or find said quote)
::If six people either don't understand you or don't agree with you, '''you have failed to make your case.'''  By any objective measure, the consensus of this thread is that we don't know what the heck you're talking about.  It's not my failure, it's not Tangerineduel's failure: it's ''six'' people independently arriving at the conclusion that, as OS25 said, "None of us have ever had any idea what you were talking about".


http://www.historyvortex.org/SixFaces.html
::I'm gonna give you one more shot, and if you don't give us something we can work with, I'm locking the thread and throwing away the key, because what''ever'' it is you're trying to say, you have zero consensus to proceed.


{in another discussion someone mentioned the Special Features on the Terror of the Autons DVD, and how this proves the Master isn't the War Chief. Which of course it doesn't. But I remember an interesting quote from Barry Letts which implies tat they were tweaking an existing character, rather than creating a new one. I'll have to watch that again soon)
::Please ''explicitly'' answer these questions, and keep your answers brief.


Oh, here's a link to the Magnus comic online(of course it's The Master):
::#Are you trying to change some policy of this wiki?  If so, what is that policy?
::#Is the following statement an accurate and complete statement of what you're trying to accomplish: "Magnus, the War Chief, and the Master should be at three separate articles with behind-the-scenes notes indicating how they are connected by authors' intents."


http://davidrestal.blogspot.de/2008/08/smug-overload.html
::{{user:CzechOut/Sig}}{{User:CzechOut/TimeFormat}} 01:49: Sun 25 Nov 2012</span>


Lastly, for the sake of continuity. How would this all fit together? The next link must be pointed out as being Fan Fiction. I am not counting this as canon or part of the DWU or anything like that. I am(well the person who actually wrote it is) merely showing how a simple, short story can easily show all the Master and War Chief stories as being a single continuity for a single character. This author has also worked alongside licensed authors. Anyway, it's a pity this story never made it into a Short Trips or Telos Novella or anything like that... http://www.doctorwhoreviews.co.uk/Veiled%20Memories.htm 41.133.0.18talk to me 18:26, November 2, 2012 (UTC)
41: Basically, as I see it, people aren't confused about the fact that you believe the Master and the War Chief are the same character, but everyone is confused about what you want to do about it. Well, that's my confusion anyway. There's no point in deciding a piece of information is right, or at least not wrong, if we can't do anything with it. This forum is aimed at understanding and changing wiki policy and the way articles are edited. So, if we agree (I'm not saying we are, but if) that the two characters are not not the same person, how can we use that information on this wiki? If it's just to edit the BTS sections of a couple of articles to say, while citing sources, that some stories suggest a connection between the characters, well, what's stopping you from doing that. As long as it's in the behind the scenes section and properly sourced, I can see any problem with the information. But discussing it further seems to suggest you want to do more with the info. Is this the case? If so, what do you want to do with it. If not, well, I personally think we're done here. [[User:Imamadmad|Imamadmad]] [[User talk:Imamadmad|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 12:25, November 27, 2012 (UTC)


NON-NARRATIVE
@czechout
The sources you've provided don't prove anything, you've interpreted them to lead to questions, but I can't see any proof.
Contradictions exist in the DWU, they are not open invitations to insert questions or to back fill answers into them. Please see Howling:The Howling for that.


Novelisations are good for providing background information, they are used up until they conflict with the TV version of the story.
1)I was told to come to this page. If this should be on separate "policy" page, nobody made that clear until well into this discussion. The only "policy" I m attempting to change is to the way certain articles are written.


As OttselSpy25 has said a lot of this could go in the behind the scenes sections. Though none of the "links done by fans who know their stuff", online message board forums that discuss anything Doctor Who related are going to have similar discussions like that.
2)Yes, as nothing in either "Flashback" or "Divided Loyalties" ever '''explicitly''' states who Magnus is.  


As far as Time's Champion (the book), just because Wikipedia has an article for it doesn't mean we cover it.
2b)In addition, other behind-the-scenes information should include who characters were '''supposed to be''', eg. The Man with the Rosette was '''intended''' to be The Master


From looking through all your information provided I can't really see anything that proves your information. It's a nice collection of theories what could be, what might be. But very little clear in-narrative information. --Tangerineduel / talk 16:25, November 3, 2012 (UTC)
2c)You have edited several articles to state that "Several novels explicitly state that the Master is not the War Chief" Could you provide a list of which novels, and where they say that?


None of these mean anything to you?
...So, yes, using this wiki's policies, the articles [[Magnus]], [[The War Chief]] and [[The Master]] should be three separate articles, although there must be behind-the-scenes information giving author's intent. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.1.212|41.133.1.212]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.1.212#top|talk to me]]</sup> 14:13, November 27, 2012 (UTC)
:Okay, so this ''whole'' thing was about '''confirming''' policy, not changing it?  Generally, people don't start discussions in which they argue ''agreement'' with policy.  If all you were doing was saying, "according to ''a'', ''b'' and ''c'' narratives, ''x'', ''y'' and ''z'' things are true, then you needn't have discussed that with anyone. That's just called, ''writing an article''.  Your tone throughout has suggested — and ''this'' is what I and a lot of people seem to think is confusing — that you were using this case of Magnus to grumble about policy.  Or to seek permission.  Or ''something'' other than, "I think the article should be written in ''this'' way because of ''these'' facts.  What do the rest of you think?"  Your tone here has been quite different than at [[Forum:How to deal with the Deca]], and it's that difference which has caused confusing. I think we've all believed there was something of policy ''substance'' at the centre of this particular Tootsie-Pop — and it turns out there's nothing, really. 


" There have been two stolen, you know.’ The young Time Lord didn’t know. ‘By our enemies?’ he asked. ‘No. By Time Lords. They both became bored with this place. It was too peaceful for them, not enough happening.’ The old Keeper smiled to himself, as though remembering with some glee all the fuss when two TARDISes were stolen. ‘One of them nowadays calls himself “the Doctor”. The other says he is “the Master”. "
:As for 2c), I honestly have no idea what you're talking about. I've not specifically edited any article as to that point. It's possible that some articles that I've edited have ''included'' that point, but I've not been the originator of such information. I don't even know which are the "several articles" to which you refer. It's a convention of Wiki editing that only the differences between edits (diffs) are that to which any particular editor can lay claim.


The War Chief took the Doctor into his private office just off the war room and told his bodyguards to leave. ‘Now,’ he said, ‘a traveller in a time-space machine. There is only one person you can be.’ ‘I had every right to leave,’ said the Doctor. ‘And to steal a TARDIS?’ The War Chief smiled. ‘Not that I am criticising you. I left our people too. We are two of a kind.’ ‘We most certainly are not!’ the Doctor protested. The War Chief shrugged. ‘Well, we were both Time Lords. Tell me, why did you decide to desert our kin?’ ‘I had reasons of my own. Rather different from yours, I imagine.’ ‘Probably they were. Why don’t you sit down?’
:If you're speaking of [[The Master]] do remember that this article's current base was written at The Master/Rewrite, which was largely assembled by others from the constituent "Master (incarnation)" series. So, yes, there's a point at which I imported /Rewrite into the main article, but that was purely technical. I wasn't "vouching" for any of the information, and hadn't even read it at that point, frankly. I was just accepting the community's months' long work as a starting point. {{user:CzechOut/Sig}}{{User:CzechOut/TimeFormat}} 18:03: Wed 28 Nov 2012</span>


There was a peculiar relationship between the Master and the Doctor; one felt that the Master wouldn't really have liked to have eliminated the Doctor...you see the Doctor was the only person like him, at the time, in the whole universe, a renegade Time Lord and in a gunny sort of way they were partners in crime."
First, as far as "permission" or "policy" I did attempt to edit one other page, but was told that this needed a discussion, and I was redirected here. Next, is it really necessary for you to use phrases like "grumble", "Toostie-Pop" and "there's nothing, really"?


NONE of these contradict anything. As, you say they provide background information. I am still looking for the interview Robert Holmes did where he listed every renegade Time Lord that had appeared in the tv series up until c1976, namely the Doctor, The Meddling Monk, The Master, Omega and Morbius.
Again, the discussion is about articles. When I have attempted have discussions of the relevant article's talk page, someone has immediately said "Go to the forum for changing policies". So here we are, and now you're making insults because I'm on the forum for changing policies!


(oh, and those fanlinks were just other people who came to the same conclusion making their own cases. Which i didn't think worthy cut-and-pasting the totality of those pages here. A readthrough makes a very strong case though.)
But the point is, does anyone have any relevant comments about the Magnus page, The War Chief page, The Master page? [[Special:Contributions/41.133.1.212|41.133.1.212]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.1.212#top|talk to me]]</sup> 05:28, November 29, 2012 (UTC)


Even if, for some reason, you think that this doesn't prove that the War Chief is the Master, the facts remain that:
:As much as I'm loathed to repeat myself…up thread I provided fairly inarguable proof that the Magnus is the War Chief, before 41.133 shouts me down on that point, I will also refer to a previous discussion regarding speculation, [[Forum:Speculation - What is and what isn't?]].
:And to quote CzechOut from that thread
::''"Authors don't need to spoon feed us a lot of exposition for us to come to a reasonable conclusion of what they're talking about. Do they? Isn't there a place for the sly reference and the well-written background note?"''
:In Divided Loyalties, page 248, it's not even a sly reference or background note. It states quite clearly that Magnus was the one who went and worked with the War Lords, then gives a summary of ''The War Games''. --[[User:Tangerineduel|Tangerineduel]] / '''[[User talk:Tangerineduel|talk]]''' 06:07, November 29, 2012 (UTC)


a)Magnus from Flashback(comic) is clearly and unambiguously The Master. Even Russell admitted as much
Actually, the description there is significantly different to The War Games. And Divided Loyalties also tells us(p96) that only people who have the "Rassilon Imprimature" can travel in time, control a TARDIS, and regenerate. It then later(p248) tells us that neither the Doctor nor the Master ever got that "Rassilon Imprimature".  


b)There is nothing in Timewyrm:Exodus that makes it impossible for the Master and the War Chief to be the same Time Lord. Of course the novel does not state that they are the same Time Lord. But neither does it state, or even imply, that they aren't.
But that's not the point. Again, as I have stated many times before. Read Chapter 1 of ''Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon''. Here we learn that there have only been two TARDISes stolen up to that point(one by the Doctor, and one by the Master). The Master was involved with ''There were tens of thousands of humans from the planet Earth, stranded on another planet where they thought they were re-fighting all the wars of Earth’s terrible history.'', but The Doctor interrupted that by alerting the Time Lords....Terrance Dicks' "Terror of the Autons'' tells us that the Doctor and The Master met recently before 'Autons', that "The Master" is a new name(ie. he had another name when he last met the Doctor), that he had been manipulating wars, that the Master's accomplices had had their life-streams  thrown into reverse. Not only did they not exist, they never would have existed. The Doctor is surprised to hear that the Master had a working TARDIS when they met, and the Master was at the same place the Doctor was when the Doctor was captured, only the Master got away. The actual tv serial shows us that they have both regenerated since their last recent meeting. The Doctor also mentions that he has seen the Master's powers of hypnotism, but that he has seen strong-willed people offer resistance to it. The novelisation of the ''War Games'' has the War Chief know for a fact that the "traveller in a time-space machine" MUST be the Doctor, as they are the '''only two''' renegade Time Lords. It also tells us that the War Chief and the Doctor were once friends. TV's ''Frontier In Space''(Episode 4) shows us that The Master knows the events of the ''War Games''. And, although you don't like real-world sources, it still must be said that Malcolm Hulke(who wrote the War Games and three Delgado stories) explicitly stated that during his era there were only '''two''' renegade Time Lords, the Doctor and the Master.


c)Considering the fact that the Koschei/Magnus scene from Divided Loyalties is a dream, and considering that we already know various aspects of that dream do not gel with continuity, the fact that Koschei and Magnus both appear in the same dream sequence is no more proof that the Master and the War Chief are different people than any other surreal, nonliteral events in any dream the Doctor or anyone else has ever had is proof of anything.
That is actually spoonfeeding. There is no way around that, except maybe to ignore it, as others have done. Note also, that the comic "Flashback" was written as a '''Master''' origin story. In fact the Marvel Encyclopedia lists it using those exact words. However, many people identified the similarity between Magnus(the pre-Delgado Master) and...the War Chief. Both Gary Russell and Warwick Scott Gray stated that it was, indeed, a Master origin story.


So, to summarise... all references to Magnus(from Flashback) should be redirected to The Master. And any reference stating that there is "evidence in novels clearly stating/proving/whatever that the War Chief and the Master are separate characters" should be removed. because there is NO such evidence. Regardless whether anyone agrees with listing the War Chief and the Master as the same Time Lord, they will still have to admit that there's nothing that proves they aren't the same Time Lord. 41.133.0.18talk to me 17:16, November 3, 2012 (UTC)
On the other side, we have a '''dream sequence''' in a novel that also tells us such fascinating facts as the "Rassilon Imprimature" one above, that Mortimus was at the Academy with the Doctor, and left Gallifrey BEFORE the Doctor, that the Rani left Gallifrey of her own accord(thereby nullifying the whole motivation behind the character in the first place, see "Mark of the Rani"), that the FIFTH Doctor finds out the Toymaker's origin(making the Sixth Doctor in the Nightmare Fair a complete imbecile)...and oh yeah read Timewyrm:Exodus where Kriegslieter explains his reason for leaving Gallifrey. Now read Divided Loyalties where Magnus explains his reasons for leaving Gallifrey. They're 100 per cent different.


So, AGAIN, people are ignoring ALL the evidence in the Target books and the actual TV EPISODES. People are ignoring the dozens of continuity errors throughout Divided Loyalties(that must actually place it in its own self-contained continuity). However, they are slavishly sticking to the idea that "Koschei is the Master, Magnus if the War Chief. Therefore it's two people". As I stated elsewhere, this is cherrypicking. And it is totally inconsistent, and utterly improper for what is supposed to be a factual bank. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.1.212|41.133.1.212]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.1.212#top|talk to me]]</sup> 08:08, November 29, 2012 (UTC)


Further, your argument is that some of the listed stuff is "non-narrative". But a LOT of stuff on this wiki is written the way it is as a result of common sense. As an example, nowhere in the books does it state that The Man With The Rosette is The Master. Yet this wiki has an article for such, and lists the man with the rosette as an incarnation of The Master. Because someone apparently thought that someone's else's intention was that the man with the rosette is the Master! So, that is a supposed non-narrative source that is now taken as 100% truth. And in this case the man with the rosette actually contradicts Utopia. However, we have Russell himself stating that Magnus is the Master. And we have narrative evidence that doesn't contradict anything else that makes it far clearer that the War Chief is the Master, than those books make clear that the man with the rosette is the Master. 41.133.0.18talk to me 17:41, November 3, 2012 (UTC)
:There is also the fact that it's a '''dream'''. We already know that the dream can '''not''' be a literal depiction of events(Timewyrm:Exodus' version of War Chief's motivation vs what happens in the DREAM, the whole Rasillon Imprimature thing and many many others). All we have at the end is Koschei being the Master(even though ''The Dark Path'' '''explicitly''' states that he was NOT called "Koschei" at the Academy. He only took that name MUCH later.). And Magnus, supposedly, becoming the War Chief based on '''some''' similarities. But are those two facts mutually exclusive? Since we '''know''' the dream can not possibly be a literal depiction of events, and since we've seen screwed-up dreams(eg. Tegan's Mara dreams), there is actually nothing at all stopping Magnus, Koschei, The War Chief and The Master all being the same character. Now, I'm 100% sure that someone will completely misinterpret what I am saying here. So, to summarise:
I don't know how long you've been editing here, but you may not be aware of the forums we have for discussing changes in policies. Many of the decisions made about what is and isn't narrative come from these discussions. I suggest you take some time to browse the forum archives, and you might find some clarification on why this issue has been decided the way it is. (As an added bonus, you can learn a lot about this wiki just by browsing the archives.) Shambala108 ☎ 18:16, November 3, 2012 (UTC)
Yes, I would also suggest a forum discussion. If you need help starting one, then just ask. All I have to say at this point is that your argument is... Somewhat weak. It's all basically based on suggestions and such. That isn't bad, if a suggested idea is strong enough, we often will end up using it... So with what you have, I think that it might get through discussion... Might. Let's see what happens. OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 21:48, November 3, 2012 (UTC)
I am unsure where in the archives this "discussion" is. The larger discussion here is perhaps best done somewhere else. But the original point, that is relevant to this specific page, that Magnus is The Master seems to have been ignored. 41.133.0.18talk to me 06:37, November 4, 2012 (UTC)
There is this discussion Forum:How to handle the Deca where (I believe it's still you 41.133) put forward your dream/flashback hypothesis for Divided Loyalties. --Tangerineduel / talk 07:37, November 4, 2012 (UTC)
There is no page there. 41.133.0.18talk to me 07:45, November 4, 2012 (UTC)
Sorry, I mistyped, now fixed. --Tangerineduel / talk 15:23, November 4, 2012 (UTC)
What was the conclusion of that discussion? Was there even a conclusion? As I noted earlier, various aspects of that sequence are mixed up, split, or just plain wrong. As noted on that page, Tegan had a dream in Snakedance, which was metaphorical, not literal. There are of course loads of other dreams, premonitions, hallucinations in Doctor Who that contain a mixture of fact and metaphor. We already know that significant parts of this dream can not possibly be literal. So why fixate on one aspect, especially when the person who wrote it made the quote at the beginning? 41.133.0.18talk to me 15:36, November 4, 2012 (UTC)
Forum:How to handle the Deca hasn't been archived. It's awaiting your further comment.
I think there's substantial doubt as to your original supposition. It's not at all clear that the book's representation of the Deca is entirely a dream. The most recent post in the thread is one in which I pointed to a specific passage in the book and asked you to clarify how it's part of the dream sequence. I admit that there are indeed large sections of dream sequences in the book, but I think that there are other sections which do not appear to be part of the dream which confirm the names of the Deca, as well as their basic relationship to the Doctor. The book seems to be saying that, as happens in real life, dreams are based on reality. If I have a dream about, say, my dog Lassie, she may do weird things like fly in the air. But I can also accurately dream that her name is Lassie, she's female, she's a collie, she lives in a dog house that I recognise as the one I built for her, and she has a particular way of playfully biting my arm. The burden of proof is on you to demonstrate that Divided Loyalties (Round 4, Part 3) is somehow still part of the dream sequence.
czechout ☎ ✍  13:51: Mon 05 Nov 2012
ROUND FOUR PART 3
First, there is nothing at all "definitive" in saying "Magnus became the War Chief" and "Koschei became the Master". How about this "K'anpo was a mentor to the Doctor" and "Cho Je met the Doctor when he was working for UNIT". Both those statements are true. And K'anpo and Cho Je were at the same place at the same time. And that WASN'T a dream sequence or "flashback". Not that "Divided Loyalties" ever explicitly states that "Magnus is the War Chief" or "Koschei is the Master". It only states that Koschei fought the Doctor many times, and was "always trying to be the Doctor's Master". but then that could just as easily apply to Davros or the Cyber Leader. And, again the Master FIRST used the name "Koschei" in The Dark Path. And, again, Gary Russell himself stated that the Magnus in the "Flashback" comic is/was The Master.
But, here are some fun things from Round Four Part 3...


Excerpts from the script for the TV serial "Mark of the Rani": (Episode 1, near the beginning, emphasis mine):
a)using the '''exact same''' criteria that removed the Man With the Rosette's being the Master, Magnus can not be the War Chief, the Master or anyone other than just Magnus.
b)There is nothing in any narrative source whatsoever that makes it impossible for the Master and the War chief to actually be the same person(although multiple articles here say it's "Explicitly stated in several novels". But of voruse no one can provide names and examples...)
c)If "the writers don't need to spoonfeed the public" then, as per my examples, and several others the Master is the War Chief.
d)The whole sequence with the Deca is a f**d-up DREAM, where the events are known for a fact to be totally different than what has been clearly established in several sources. Thus, either we accept that Divided Loyalties is NOT a literal depiction, but rather some sort of "Alice in Wonderland"-style jumbled-up retelling, OR Divided Loyalties exists in a continuity all of its own.
e)What do '''these'' two statements "prove"? i)K'Anpo Rimoche was a mentor to the Doctor when the Doctor was a boy. b)The Third Doctor first met Cho Je on Earth, after Mike Yates tipped the Doctor off to some mysterious happenings,,,? Yes, K'Anpo Rimoche IS Cho Je AND there were several scenes where they were in the same place at the same time. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.1.212|41.133.1.212]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.1.212#top|talk to me]]</sup> 08:23, November 29, 2012 (UTC)


MASTER: When the Time Lords exiled you, they made a cardinal error.
I would be remiss in not mentioning ''The Time Thief'' from the 1974 Doctor Who Annual. Generally the Annuals were treated as lesser, but this wiki regards all narrative sources as valid. A brief recap...military forces from various periods in Earth's history are attacking UN cargoes. Actually not ALL eras, only up until the First World War. The Doctor and Jo investigate, and are transported to another planet. The Doctor knows who's behind it "Take me to the Master" he says to the soldiers. Arriving at a psychedelic-looking base, the doctor discovers that the Master is working with a group of aliens. Using hypnotism, and the ability to take humans from any period in Earth's history, he plans to create a superarmy. "Up to your old tricks again", says The Doctor. However, the Doctor is able to reprocess the hypnotised soldiers, and use a control panel which appears to be controlled by moving around geometric shapes to return the Earth military to their proper periods. The Doctor and Jo escape back to earth, the aliens turn on the Master. It appears that it's the end of The Master(and Jo even believes as much). But The Doctor has seen him escape from a situation like this before. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.1.212|41.133.1.212]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.1.212#top|talk to me]]</sup> 08:53, November 29, 2012 (UTC)


RANI: Yes, they did, and they'll learn to regret it. And so will anyone else who interferes!
:Nice. There's also these quotes from transcripts of the episodes:


(Episode 2, near the end, emphasis mine):
''The War Games'':
DOCTOR: But to help people like that to conquer the galaxy?
WAR CHIEF: Not people like that, people like us. I intend to take over as Supreme Galactic Ruler. You can help me to rule, if you will cooperate
...
WAR CHIEF: We were both Time Lords and we both decided to leave our race.
DOCTOR: I had reasons of my own.
WAR CHIEF: Just as I had.
DOCTOR: Your reasons are only too obvious. Power!
WAR CHIEF: How much have you learnt of our plans?
DOCTOR: I know that you've been kidnapping soldiers from the Earth from various times in it's history and bringing them here to kill one another.
WAR CHIEF: But do you realise our ultimate objectives?
DOCTOR: No objective can justify such slaughter.
WAR CHIEF: The war games on this planet are simply the means to an end. The aliens intend to conquer the entire galaxy. A thousand inhabited worlds.
DOCTOR: Yes, but why choose the people of the Earth?
WAR CHIEF: They are the most suitable recruits for our armies. Man is the most vicious species of all.
DOCTOR: Well, that simply isn't true.
WAR CHIEF: Consider their history. For a half a million years they have been systematically killing each other. Now we can turn this savagery to some purpose. We can bring peace to the galaxy, and you can help. You see, I'm not the cold-hearted villain you suppose me to be. My motives are purely peaceful.
...
WAR CHIEF: We are going to bring a new order to the galaxy, one United Galactic Empire.
DOCTOR: An empire of slaves, with you as one of it's rulers.


RANI: I don't make mistakes.
''Colony In Space'':


MASTER: If that were true you'd still be on Gallifrey. Ugh.
MASTER: Doctor, why don't you come in with me? We're both Time Lords, we're both renegades. We could be masters of the galaxy! Think of it, Doctor, absolute power! Power for good. Why, you could reign benevolently, you could end wars, suffering, disease. We could save the universe.
DOCTOR: No, absolute power is evil.
MASTER: Consider carefully, Doctor. I'm offering you a half-share in the universe.
...
MASTER: You must see reason, Doctor.
DOCTOR: No, I will not join you in your absurd dreams of a galactic conquest.
MASTER: Why? Why? Look at this. Look at all those planetary systems, Doctor. We could rule them all!
DOCTOR: What for? What is the point?
MASTER: The point is that one must rule or serve. That's a basic law of life. Why do you hesitate, Doctor? Surely it's not loyalty to the Time Lords, who exiled you on one insignificant planet?
DOCTOR: You'll never understand, will you? I want to see the universe, not rule it.
MASTER: Then I'm very sorry, Doctor.
(The Master aims his laser gun at the Doctor, and the Guardian's panel rises.)
MASTER: What's happening?
DOCTOR: Wait and see.
(The Guardian's throne comes out of the wall.)
MASTER: What is it?
DOCTOR: The ultimate development of life on this planet.
GUARDIAN: Why have you returned? What do you want here?
MASTER: I want to restore this city and this planet to their former glory.
DOCTOR: Don't listen to him, sir.
MASTER: You have here a wonderful weapon. Why, with it you could bring good and peace to every world in the galaxy.  
DOCTOR: On the contrary. He'll bring only death and destruction.  


RANI: Experiments are always subject to the unexpected. They can be capricious.
[[Special:Contributions/137.158.153.203|137.158.153.203]]<sup>[[User talk:137.158.153.203#top|talk to me]]</sup> 07:17, November 30, 2012 (UTC)


MASTER: Capricious? Turning mice into monsters?
The problem here is that the discussion has basically gone something like this"


RANI: A marginal error, quickly corrected.
41:I have real-world sources saying that Magnus from Flashback was specifically created to be The Master, and that the writers of the Brayshaw and Delgado serials say the Master and the War Chief are the same guy.


MASTER: The Time Lords didn't think so.
TW:Sorry, we only go with '''narrative''' sources. Those real-world sources can go in behind-the-scenes information, but it's narrative sources we want.


RANI: Petty spite on the part of the Lord President, just because they ate his cat.
41:(supplies multiple narrative sources providing overwhelming evidence that the Master is the War Chief)


And, now an excerpt from Round 4 Part 3 of Divided Loyalties(again, emphasis mine):
TW:Er, No, that's just ''implied''. Do you have anything that ever explicitly says "The War Chief is The Master"?


Ushas also departed Gallifrey. feeling that she was never forgiven for that one, itsy-bitsy tiny incident with the genetically augmented mouse and the President's cat, she opted out of Time Lord society and settled on the planet Miasamoria Goria.
41:Not in those exact words, no.


Well, that's not right, is it?
TW:Well, then, it's not good enough.


How about the description of Magnus from Divided Loyalties Round Four Part 3(empahsis mine again):
41:Ok, but then it never explicitly says in Divided Loyalties that magnus is the War Chief, it's only implied. By the way, why does it say on multiple pages that "Several novels explicitly state that The War chief isn't The Master", when in fact, '''one''' novel ''implies'' it, but in fact nothing ever states that explicitly?


Unlike Magnus, the only one of the Deca to leave Gallifrey and face a rather ignoble end. Obsessed with the aliens and their war games, he fled his homeworld and joined them, offering his services to build TARDISes for them. he claimed that he deliberately built in defects so that the Alien War Lord would always need his services. The War Lord, however, was not as foolish as he seemed, although he was prone to bouts of extreme paranoia. And it was on one of these moods that he had Magnus executed when the final war game scheme fell apart and the Time Lords finally carried out their threat of erasure.
TW:We didn't edit that, someone else must have(...note some of those articles are locked, and only admins can edit them. So if the admins didn't...) Oh, and we don't need the narrative sources to spoonfeed us, a sly reference will do. And it mentions the War Games in divided Loyalties, and that Magnus was part of it.


Er, what? How many war games were there? Whenever did the cool, emotionless War Lord EVER have bouts of extreme paranoia. Wasn't that the Security Chief? And the War Lord's order for the War Chief's execution came after he had irrefutable proof of the War Chief's betrayal/real plan, NOT "during one of his paranoid moods". Sounds like the Doctor is still getting things in his head jumbled up while dreaming. Oh, and the War Chief never built TARDISes for the War Lord and his men, he built SIDRATS. That's actually a MAJOR plot point in "The War Games". The bit about the deliberate defects also contradicts the tv story again. But it's the bit about Magnus' "ignoble end" and his "erasure by the Time Lords" that places this well into the realms of fantasy. This book was written AFTER Timewyrm:Exodus. There is no excuse for that. Interestingly, in the entire history of Doctor Who, there's only one evil renegade Time Lord that the Time Lords threatened with erasure. Guess who? From Terrance Dicks' novelisation of Terror of the Autons(and it gives background, without contradicting anything):
41:Ok, if we don't actually need explicit mentions after all, then what about the numerous implied narrative sources linking the Master to the War games, the Master to the War Chief etc.?


If ever he were caught, his fate would be far worse than the Doctor’s exile. Once captured by the Time Lords, the Master’s life-stream would be thrown into reverse. Not only would he no longer exist, he would never have existed. It was the severest punishment in the Time Lords’ power. The Doctor knew that the Master’s presence on earth made matters far worse than he had feared. ‘You’re sure he’s here?’ he asked. The Time Lord nodded gravely. ‘We tracked him on the Monitor. Then there was some kind of alien interference and we lost contact.
TW:You are a stubborn, obstinate, hollow Tootsie-Pop. We only go with '''narrative''' sources. And it needs to '''explicitly''' state something.


So, Divided Loyalties, round 4 Part 3 is even more jumbled up and dreamlike than the Deca sequence. And since it's the sequel to the DREAM, common sense means the dreamlike qualities continue. In fact, the only coherent parts strongly imply that the War Chief is the Master. And NOWHERE in Divided Loyalties, just like NOWHERE in Timewyrm:Exodus is there evidence that the War Chief and the Master can't be the same Time Lord. Quite the opposite in fact.
(repeat) [[Special:Contributions/41.133.1.212|41.133.1.212]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.1.212#top|talk to me]]</sup> 13:56, November 30, 2012 (UTC)


Although the Deca sequence may point to Divided Loyalties being similar to that other Past Doctor Adventure novel Scream of the Shalka...41.133.0.18talk to me 17:14, November 5, 2012 (UTC)
: No, it's more like this:
: 41:I have real-world sources saying that Magnus from Flashback was specifically created to be The Master, and that the writers of the Brayshaw and Delgado serials say the Master and the War Chief are the same guy.


Please keep the discussion on this point in the forum. You started Forum:How to handle the Deca. Please use what you've created.
:TW:Sorry, we only take narrative sources
czechout ☎ ✍  09:08: Tue 06 Nov 2012
MAGNUS' "IGNOBLE END AND ERASURE"
Well. Having thought this over, it appears that Divided Loyalties can be placed alongside Death Comes to Time. In Death Comes to Time the Seventh Doctor dies. There is no regeneration. Despite the fact that there was already a substantial body of canon that featured the Eighth Doctor. Including The TV Movie, where the Seventh Doctor met his end and regenerated into the Eighth Doctor. This website doesn't consider Death Comes to Time to be part of the DWU. Even though it was made by the BBC, was on the BBC website, and was released as a BBC Audio CD. I agree with Death Comes to Time's non-DWU status. Because it can not possibly exist in the same universe as everything else.
But what about Divided Loyalties? In Timewyrm:Exodus we discover that the War Chief escaped the War Games with a partial/unsuccessful regeneration. He then went to Germany etc. More importantly, this is a significant part of the Timewyrm series of books(Genesis, Exodus, Apocalypse, Revelation), the first four VNA! And the other VNA follow on from the Timewyrm saga, often referencing it! Key elements from these VNA are later referenced in both the DWM Comics as well as the Big Finish Audio. However, Divided Loyalties states that Magnus met an ignoble end at the end of the War Games, and was erased from ever having existed by the Time Lords. Meaning that in the Divided Loyalties Universe, Timewyrm:Exodus can not possibly exist. Which logically means that in the universe of Divided Loyalties, NONE of the VNA(remember the "Koschei" problem) can exist. Meaning many of the DWM Comics and BFA can not exist! The only sensible conclusion is to declare Divided Loyalties a non-DWU adventure. It would not be without precedent. Another PDA(Scream of the Shalka) is listed as such. Divided Loyalties clearly does not exist in the same Universe as the Television Show, VNA, VMA, BFA and DWM Comics. 41.133.0.18talk to me 07:32, November 6, 2012 (UTC)


Dude, I understand your argument on Flashback... But... I think you misunderstand our policy.
:41:(supplies multiple narrative sources providing overwhelming evidence that the Master is the War Chief)
When we say that we include all valid recources... Well, they don't cancel out. You can't argue against the inclusion of a book by referencing plot holes or continuity errors... That'll never get through. Basically the main reason for non inclusion is usually that someone can find a quote of a creator of the book claiming that it isn't in this universe, or of a current producer dissing it canon wise. Death Comes to Time was excluded, if I understand correctly, because someone found chat quotes or something of the creators saying it wasn't canon. The story will never be considered "non-valid" because of the loose logic you seem to be using here.
Also remember this: no matter how much you can prove your point, the pages The War Chief and The Master will never become one. At most, if your point goes through, the Master's page will reference that "The Master may have been the War Cheif" and describe why and why not. And that's at most.
In the case if Flashback, it is up to argument I suppose wheather the authors intent then or now is more important, but I'm leaning towards now. At most there there may be a little tid bit about the Master at first being in the story but DL retconning it not so. OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 08:58, November 6, 2012 (UTC)
This is not the place for an inclusion debate on Divided Loyalties. If you wish to propose we exclude it, please do so in the forums. This section of this talk page is summarily closed, as it's not fair on the community to have such an important debate on the talk page of an obscure disambiguation page.
Furthermore, this entire page is locked to further editing indefinitely. This is a disambiguation page. This entire discussion is completely irrelevant to the editing of this page. This page will always be a disambiguation page. Return to the forums with this discussion, please. Figure out how to handle the Deca, and you'll figure out how to handle all the points recently raised on this page.
czechout ☎ ✍  09:45: Tue 06 Nov 2012


:TW:Uh, no, that was just a bunch of text, none of it suggested anything.


So, it was locked. I wished to ask a few questions, and make the relevant points. I did so on the admin's discussion page, which I repost here.
:41:Not in those exact words, no.


WHO IS MAGNUS? edit
:TW:What? Look, if you don't have anything else to go on-
That discussion WAS relevant to the disambiguation page. If you had read the original point of the discussion, it was that Magnus was an earlier incarnation of The Master. A message by Gary Russell confirmed that both he and Flashback(comic)'s author Warwick Scott Gray intended Magnus to be The Master. Anyone who has ever read that comic comes to the same conclusion:Magnus=The Master. That other person then said "Oh, are you saying that the War Chief is the Master?" Well, that was NOT my original intent. My original intent was that the Magnus on the disambiguation page should be a link to The Master. That's it. From there, however, the point became "Gary Russell and Warwick Scott Gray both state that Magnus was created as an earlier incarnation of the Master. But Divided Loyalties says..." Of course, all the stuff clearly illustrating that Hulke, Dicks and Holmes had the Delgado Master as the regenerated War Chief, explaining the obvious points about how Timewyrm:Exodus doesn't in any way shape or form mean that the War Chief can't also be the Master, and the pointing out the inherent flaws and contradictions in Divided Loyalties were to reinforce the point that Magnus in Flashback is the Master. In fact, even if we count Divided Loyalties as fully "canon", there is STILL nothing in it that means that Magnus can't be the Master. The other interesting points are that only when the creators say something isn't part of the main DWU/canon/whatever is it listed as such here. That is not true. When did anyone ever state that Death Comes to Time is non-DWU? When did anyone ever state that Dimensions in Time is non-DWU? When, for that matter, did the makers of the Peter Cushing films state that those films are non-DWU? But the original point remains....Magnus was written as The Master. Even Gary Russell says so. And there is nothing in any medium that prevents him from being precisely that. 41.133.0.18talk to me 13:04, November 6, 2012 (UTC)


:41:Ok, but then it never explicitly says in Divided Loyalties that magnus is the War Chief, it's only implied. By the way, why does it say on multiple pages that "Several novels explicitly state that The War chief isn't The Master", when in fact, '''one''' novel ''implies'' it, but in fact nothing ever states that explicitly?


==Summary==
:TW:That was almost strait out said, with very strong implying. What you have, in the mean while... Was just quotes about the Master and the War Chief described similarly...
 
:41:Ok, if we don't actually need explicit mentions after all, then what about the numerous implied narrative sources linking the Master to the War games, the Master to the War Chief etc.?
 
:TW:Give me some and I'll listen!
 
: Basically, you think that the most simple things are sources when they aren't you say that something not being stated out as wrong makes it right. You say that loose quotes and speculation are enough to write an article off of. You say a lot of things and we disagree. [[User:OttselSpy25|OS25]] ([[User Talk:OttselSpy25|talk to me, baby.]]) 15:09, November 30, 2012 (UTC)
 
What? Again? My "repeat" comment was prescient, no?
 
Off the top of my head...
 
a)the novelisation of Colony In Space has two Time lords stating that only two TARDISes have ever been stolen, one by someone calling himself "The Doctor", and one by someone calling himself "The Master". The Master was involved with a scheme where humans from various periods in earth's history were taken to another planet, and hypnotised into thinking they were still fighting in those wars. The Doctor alerted the Time Lords to this.
 
b)the novelisation of Terror of the Autons states that the Master was involved in manipulating wars. The Doctor alerted the Time Lords, but the Master got away. He got away, because it was believed he didn't have a working TARDIS, when if fact he did. The Doctor is angry because the Time Lords took him, and made him stand trial for his crimes, even though the Master's ere far worse. The Doctor's punishment was to be exiled to Earth. The Master's accomplices were erased from history(as though they never existed). The Master was using a different name during these events, however, and "The Master" is a new name.
 
c)The actual television serial of Terror of the Autons tells us that the Doctor and The Master met recently, although both were in different incarnations. The Doctor knows about the Master's powers of hypnotism, has recently seen them, but also saw that certain stubborn humans are able to offer resistance. The Master has come after the Doctor after the Doctor recently ruined his scheme by alerting the Time Lords.
 
d)In Frontier In Space(television) The Master knows the events of the War Games, which is odd, considering those events were erased from history/undone by the Time Lords. So only, the Doctor, the War Chief, and those three Time Lords would know these events ever happened. And the Master ain't the Doctor or a member of the High Council.
 
e)In the novelisation of the War Games when the War Chief learns that a "time-space machine" has landed, he immediately knows it '''must''' be The Doctor, because the Doctor and him are the '''only two''' renegade Time Lords.
 
f)In the novelisation of The Sea Devils The Doctor and Jo have a conversation where the Doctor tells Jo that he and The Master are the'''only two''' renegade Time Lords.
 
Now, anyone with any common sense can know that that is indeed straight out saying they are the same character.
 
My only conclusions here are that you are either
 
a)someone whose first language clearly is not English
 
b)possessing a religious belief about this.
 
:Furthermore it wasn't "just a bunch of text". Have you actually read any of it? Have you actually read Divided Loyalties? the one with that "Rassilon Imprimature" stuff?
 
The main difference between the Master's war games, and Magnus' war games is that the Master's actually resemble the War Chief's War Games from tv. Magnus'(in Divided Loyalties) had him building TARDISes(the War chief built SIDRATs), working for a moody paranoid war lord(The War Chief worked for an icy War Lord). It was during one of these bouts of paranoia that the paranoid war lord had Magnus executed. It was after the Security Chief provided irrefutable evidence that the War Chief was planning on betraying him that the War Lord(whose mood hardly changed at all) had the War Chief shot. The Time Lords erased Magnus from ever having existed. The War Chief got away from the Time Lords and went after the Doctor for revenge.
 
That doesn't convince me in the slightest, nice try though. I'm not sure he is the one with the religious belief here. [[User:TARDIS43|TARDIS43]] [[User talk:TARDIS43|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 16:06, November 30, 2012 (UTC)
 
I dislike your personal attacks on me. For the record, I am agnostic. [[User:OttselSpy25|OS25]] ([[User Talk:OttselSpy25|talk to me, baby.]]) 16:39, November 30, 2012 (UTC)


1)Gary Russell himself states that both he and Warwick Scott Gray agreed that the Magnus in Flashback(comic) is [[The Master]].
Well it just shows that you don't understand simple English then. Because by "religious beliefs", I clearly meant you had an absolute belief in something, and no evidence to the contrary will change your deeply rooted dogmas.


2)The questions as to why/when/where things like Death Comes to time and Dimensions in Time are labelled non-DWU still stand. When did the creators of these, the Cushing movies, or various stories that tie into Dimensions in Time '''ever''' say those stories were non-DWU? And if they didn't what were the criteria for listing them as non-DWU here? Surely those criteria should be applied the same to every story, not just those select few?
And, to "TARDIS43", if that really "doesn't convince you in the slightest", then you must be mentally challenged. You know what? I don't need this nonsense. This isn't a "TARDIS Wikia". It's a "Tard Wikia". You are all arrogant, narrow-minded idiots. You have done nothing but be personally insulting, demeaning, and dismissive. '''because I provided in-universe narrative sources that proved something you dislike'''. Everything has been dismissed out of hand. I'm sure none of you even read a word of it. All you do is cling to some book that also tells us that the Doctor can't travel in time, control a TARDIS or regenerate. And I'm quite sure most of you haven't even read that either. But hey, Malcolm Hulke(writer of the War Games, Colony in Space, the Sea Devils and Frontier in Space, and MANY others) and Robert Holmes(writer of Terror of the Autons, the Deadly Assassin, The Ultimate Foe and MANY MANY MANY others) both stated outright that the Master is the War Chief. Warwick Scott Gray(writer of Flashback and MANY others) stated outright that Magnus is the Master. But what does any of that count for when there are fucktards like YOU who can't understand simple fucking English. Fuck all of you and your pathetic excuse for a Wiki. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.1.212|41.133.1.212]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.1.212#top|talk to me]]</sup> 17:42, November 30, 2012 (UTC)


3)Even if it is felt, for whatever reason, that the War Chief and the Master are two separate characters, there is clearly NOTHING in any media that states that they ''can not be'' the same character. [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 13:16, November 6, 2012 (UTC)
You can believe what you want, but you are wrong and no amount of insulting people who don't take to your poor evidence will ever change that. Perhaps you can start your own wiki? This one clearly isn't for you.[[User:TARDIS43|TARDIS43]] [[User talk:TARDIS43|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 18:37, November 30, 2012 (UTC)


...Oh, and another point. The fact that Malcolm Hulke(writer of, amongst others, the War Games) stated that the Master and the Doctor were the '''only two''' renegade Time Lords he ever wrote for was dismissed, because it was "non-narrative". Yet, the supposed reason Death Comes Time is excluded from the DWU is because of a real-world statement that somebody ''thought'' he saw ''somewhere''. The real reason is of course because it contradicts the established continuity to the point where no amount of fanwankery can reconcile it with established fact. Same as Divided Loyalties. Of course, if that real-world("non-narrative") statement is valid, then what about Russell's or Hulke's or...? [[Special:Contributions/41.133.0.18|41.133.0.18]]<sup>[[User talk:41.133.0.18#top|talk to me]]</sup> 13:55, November 6, 2012 (UTC)
: You know what? Think this wikia is really horrible. I invite you, no I IMPOLORE YOU, visit [[w:c:Southpark|South Park wikia]]. Then dare call this a bad wikia, simply because your speculation is being ignored. [[User:OttselSpy25|OS25]] ([[User Talk:OttselSpy25|talk to me, baby.]]) 18:55, November 30, 2012 (UTC)
: This issue is obviously '''very''' important to you. However, you don't seem to care about the people you are trying to convince. This page is a long wall of text that will turn away many readers. Instead of copy/pasting the other arguments, try giving a '''short''' summary of your arguments. Then you might get more discussion. [[User:Shambala108|Shambala108]] [[User talk:Shambala108|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 14:49, November 6, 2012 (UTC)
==Closing==
When the F-bomb gets dropped in anger, the thread — and the editing rights — go away. This discussion is well and truly over. Please do not restart on any other page. {{user:CzechOut/Sig}}{{User:CzechOut/TimeFormat}} 03:37: Sat 01 Dec 2012</span>

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This thread was blanked by CzechOut at 14:21: Tue 06 Nov 2012. I am re-blanking and editing this forum post down to the most recent edits by 41.133.0.18 in order bring some clarity to the discussion that the previous copied text from the Magnus talk page did not.

The original discussion was at Talk:Magnus.

To 41.133.0.18 do not copy and past the text from that talk page. Users who wish to follow the discussion so far can go to that talk page.

Panopticon forum threads propose changes in the way we do things on this wiki. In simple terms, please restate what it is you're trying to change, and what supporting evidence you have for that change. --Tangerineduel / talk 15:50, November 6, 2012 (UTC)

This started on the Magnus article. An original point stating that Gary Russell explicitly stated that Magnus in Flashback(comic) was always meant to be The Master. It grew from there.

Summary

1)Gary Russell himself states that both he and Warwick Scott Gray agreed that the Magnus in Flashback(comic) is The Master.

2)The questions as to why/when/where things like Death Comes to time and Dimensions in Time are labelled non-DWU still stand. When did the creators of these, the Cushing movies, or various stories that tie into Dimensions in Time ever say those stories were non-DWU? And if they didn't what were the criteria for listing them as non-DWU here? Surely those criteria should be applied the same to every story, not just those select few?


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3)Even if it is felt, for whatever reason, that the War Chief and the Master are two separate characters, there is clearly NOTHING in any media that states that they can not be the same character. 41.133.0.18talk to me 13:16, November 6, 2012 (UTC)

...Oh, and another point. The fact that Malcolm Hulke(writer of, amongst others, the War Games) stated that the Master and the Doctor were the only two renegade Time Lords he ever wrote for was dismissed, because it was "non-narrative". Yet, the supposed reason Death Comes Time is excluded from the DWU is because of a real-world statement that somebody thought he saw somewhere. The real reason is of course because it contradicts the established continuity to the point where no amount of fanwankery can reconcile it with established fact. Same as Divided Loyalties. Of course, if that real-world("non-narrative") statement is valid, then what about Russell's or Hulke's or...? 41.133.0.18talk to me 13:55, November 6, 2012 (UTC)

This issue is obviously very important to you. However, you don't seem to care about the people you are trying to convince. This page is a long wall of text that will turn away many readers. Instead of copy/pasting the other arguments, try giving a short summary of your arguments. Then you might get more discussion. Shambala108 14:49, November 6, 2012 (UTC)

It started off at the Magnus disambiguation page. Basically, a post by Gary Russell stating that Mag(n)us from the Flashback(comic) was always supposed to be The Master. Confirmed by Warwick Scott Gray, the person who actually wrote Flashback(comic). And that there is nothing in any media which makes that an impossibility. Someone else then took that to mean that I was stating that the War Chief is the Master. Not my original intent, but he said he was "going to support me". This site's policy is that anything in a Target novelisation which gives extra background to, without contradicting the original tv serial counts. so, the long passages of text are from Target novelisations of The War Games, Terror of the Autons, The Doomsday Weapon(Colony in Space) and The Sea Devils. As well as a real-world interview with Malcolm Hulke. This was then greeted with "But what about Timewyrm:Exodus and Divided Loyalties?" So, it was then a job to show how Timewyrm: Exodus doesn't contradict any of the above. Fine. Then came the biggie "Divided Loyalties". I had to give text from that book, as well as text from other narrative sources, showing how it can't possibly exist in the same universe. Another user appeared, demanding I take it to the forum, and locking that discussion. Someone else, then said that Death Comes to Time is excluded because someone supposedly said somewhere that it was non-canon. Despite no evidence. This, despite Hulke's and Russell's real-world statements being dismissed as "non-narrative"! The only way to get everything here, was to place the entire discussion here. Simply glimpsing bits will omit the development. The same person who locked the earlier discussion then blanked this one. They have also yet to actually state their position. 41.133.0.18talk to me 15:00, November 6, 2012 (UTC)

Oh. earlier, the same person told me that "the burden of proof [was] on [me] to show that Round 4 Part 3 of divided Loyalties can't be part of the DWU". Immediately after I did so, he locked the discussion, saying it's "unfair to other users". 41.133.0.18talk to me 15:04, November 6, 2012 (UTC)
One thing I think needs to be made clear. When we tag things NOTDWU, we're not making a judgment on the "official" statement of canon, it is merely a statement of what we cover on this wiki towards in-universe articles.
For these we've had several discussions involving inclusion, as was mentioned on the Talk:Magnus page these are in the Forum:Panopticon archives, many of the pages have been categorised into further categories for ease of searching you can find the; inclusion debates in Category:Inclusion debates, the discussions relating to changes in policy in Category:Policy changers and explanations of policy in Category:Policy explanations. All of these have some bearing on your questions.
You may also wish to see Tardis:Valid sources which explains these rulings in a simple to follow page.
As to your query concerning Death Comes to Time (webcast) you can read the forum discussion here: Forum:Inclusion debate: Death Comes to Time. Although I'm not sure what this question has to do with your Magnus question.
As far as contradictions in the valid sources goes, don't worry about it. It doesn't matter if the valid sources contradict one another, we just present the information. Just because there's contradictions doesn't mean we discount one source, and a contradiction doesn't mean source or another is invalid. As the valid sources states "The DWU has messy continuity. A story can't be declared invalid just because it contradicts other stories".
Finally "giving the text", a small quote is fine, but as Shambala108 and CzechOut have said, summarise your statements, the great chunks of unformatted text do not assist the discussion.
Now to go back to your initial quote which started this whole thing:
He was in a strip I commissioned from Warwick Gray for the Time Lord special I did at Marvel. In Wick's original, he was called Magus and meant to be the Master but I cocked it up and called him Magnus. When Dave McIntee created Koschei, it struck me on re-reading Wick's strip that the character could just as easily, if not better, be the War Chief. Which he is in DL. Gary Russell rec.arts.drwho 04/11/1999
This quote if anything confirms what we have presented in our The War Chief article. That the War Chief is Magnus, as is in Divided Loyalties (novel) (or DL as Russell states).
In Gray's original, it was meant to be the Master, but the editor; Russell "cocked it up".
We take what's presented in the stories as the facts of the DWU universe, not what might have been. What might have been is interesting (when properly sourced), but it's stuff that goes in the "Behind the scenes" section on in-universe articles or the "Notes" section on story articles.
I think from that incorrect assumption you running with that theory and creating an argument to sustain it. But going by your initial point that began this discussion, what appears in Flashback is pretty much what we've got on this wiki at the moment. Russell might have made a mistake in his editing of the strip, but later he didn't attempt a ret-con of the story, he read McIntee's The Dark Path which is where Koschei comes from and wrote Magnus/the War Chief into Divided Loyalties, influenced in part by Flashback. --Tangerineduel / talk 06:37, November 7, 2012 (UTC)

I'm not sure you fully understand the point. Well, points actually. It started off as one thing, but is now a multi-purpose thing. However, separating them doesn't give a proper idea. which is why the original discussion at the Magnus discussion page is relevant to this discussion here. Even in a simplified, "bullet point", form. Gray and Russell both stated that Flashback was a Master origin story. Had this wiki existed then, it would have been a no-brainer to list that as a Master story. In fact, many wikis, books etc. still do just that. So, that was the point. Someone else(not me!) then stated "Are you saying the War Chief is the Master?" At that stage that wasn't my intention at all.But, after being spurred on, I found both narrative and real-world elements that showed they are. Then someone brought up Timewyrm:Exodus. Well, that wasn't a problem. Then came DL. And there's Russell's quote. There was a discussion about the Deca dream sequence, which apparently showed that the Deca sequences are dreamlike, not literal. Then I was told that i had to show that the epilogue sequence wasn't literal. So, the major continuity errors were shown, as well as the fact that elements from the dream sequence carry over into that epilogue. Then that discussion was locked. Now someone has looped back to the beginning! My original point was the real-world statement that Magnus=The Master. Who else was the Doctor's good friend in Gallifrey who he had a falling out with? But, apparently a dream sequence in a continuity-error-riddled book beats a real world statement. Fine.

The new issue is that on The War Games page it states something to the effect of "Myths:The War Chief is an earlier incarnation of the Master. But novels have disproven this". except they haven't. As shown on the Magnus discussion page, there is nothing in Timewyrm:Exodus that does that. There is plenty in the Target novelisations(the bits that give background without contradicting) that make them out to be the same. All we have against it is the dream sequence in DL that has Koschei(a name the Second Doctor had never heard before in The Dark Path) and Magnus together. But does that by itself prove that K'Anpo and Cho Je are two different Time Lords. Does The Two doctors prove that Troughton and C Baker were playing different characters. No. And as noted, the Round 4 Part 3 both contains dream elements carrying over and hopelessly contradicts both established continuity and the DL book itself! Now here's something someone said earlier:

As far as contradictions in the valid sources goes, don't worry about it. It doesn't matter if the valid sources contradict one another, we just present the information. Just because there's contradictions doesn't mean we discount one source, and a contradiction doesn't mean source or another is invalid. As the valid sources states "The DWU has messy continuity. A story can't be declared invalid just because it contradicts other stories".

Now, here's some quotes from those Target Books(which five background without contradicting):

There have been two stolen, you know.’ The young Time Lord didn’t know. ‘By our enemies?’ he asked. ‘No. By Time Lords. They both became bored with this place. It was too peaceful for them, not enough happening.’ The old Keeper smiled to himself, as though remembering with some glee all the fuss when two TARDISes were stolen. ‘One of them nowadays calls himself “the Doctor”. The other says he is “the Master”.

The War Chief took the Doctor into his private office just off the war room and told his bodyguards to leave. ‘Now,’ he said, ‘a traveller in a time-space machine. There is only one person you can be.’ ‘I had every right to leave,’ said the Doctor. ‘And to steal a TARDIS?’ The War Chief smiled. ‘Not that I am criticising you. I left our people too. We are two of a kind.’ ‘We most certainly are not!’ the Doctor protested. The War Chief shrugged. ‘Well, we were both Time Lords. Tell me, why did you decide to desert our kin?’ ‘I had reasons of my own. Rather different from yours, I imagine.’ ‘Probably they were. Why don’t you sit down?’

If ever he were caught, his fate would I be far worse than the Doctor’s exile. Once captured by the Time Lords, the Master’s life-stream would be thrown into reverse. Not only would he no longer exist, he would never have existed. It was the severest punishment in the Time Lords’ power. The Doctor knew that the Master’s presence on earth made matters far worse than he had feared. ‘You’re sure he’s here?’ he asked. The Time Lord nodded gravely. ‘We tracked him on the Monitor. Then there was some kind of alien interference and we lost contact.’

The Time Lord shook his head. ‘I’m afraid not, Doctor. As a matter of fact, I’ve come to bring you a warning, An old friend of yours has arrived on Earth.’ ‘One of our people? Who is it?’ The Time Lord pronounced a string of mellifluous syllables—one of the strange Time Lord names that are never disclosed to outsiders. Then he added, ‘These days he calls himself the Master.’

So, even if it's decided that the War Chief isn't the Master, tat "myth" and "there is evidence stating they aren't" should be removed. After all, one source(especially a dream-sequence in a continuity-error-full book) can not make the other invalid. Perhaps a change to something along the lines that he may be?41.133.0.18talk to me 08:29, November 7, 2012 (UTC)

You don't need to quote me as "someone" that said something "earlier" you can just refer to my discussion point above. This is a discussion, not an online message board.
I don't fully understand your point because you're making it really hard to understand.
As I have said above, please stop repeating information that's on the Magnus talk page, the dense text copied text is not helping your argument.
From the quote you've provided, Russell hasn't said that, he said Gray intended it and Russell cocked up it in the editing process. But what actually made it to print, that is what we use. Not what might have been, we also don't use deleted scenes to write in-universe articles either. But this isn't even that, it's something that was intended, but didn't make into print.
As to the Deca question. That discussion; Forum:How to handle the Deca has been waiting on you to continue to interact with the discussion process.
"Major" continuity errors don't invalidate a work. So, to answer your question yes. The information in a "continuity laden book" beats real world information. Divided Loyalties is not the only example of a continuity heavy book that contradicts what came before it.
Without any side references, without any points that other people have made, without any quotes to other things, please state, preferable in short bullet pointed sentences what you're actually arguing.
As at the moment all I have to go on is your initial statement at the top of the Magnus talk page and the citation of Russell's quote. I can't fathom why you're reeling off streams of novelisation info here, repeating what's on the Magnus talk page. Editors interested in this discussion will go to that talk page to see the information you're written there, or quite likely have already read the information there and followed the discussion here. --Tangerineduel / talk 09:32, November 7, 2012 (UTC)

Well, I stated it clearly and unambiguously above. If you honestly "don't fully understand", then perhaps someone who does should be the one responding to my posts? No offense, but I honestly don't know how I could have made that any simpler. 41.133.0.18talk to me 09:49, November 7, 2012 (UTC)

Now, 41, let's be a little more respectful to the admin. If it turns out the messiness of this discussion is my fault by the way, I apologise. 41, I expected at one point to back you up, but you'll have to organise your points before I consider still doing that. OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 12:23, November 7, 2012 (UTC)

I've chosen not to involve myself in this debate simply because I haven't read any of the sources in question. But from my understanding, The Quantum Archangel (novel) has appearances by the Deca. Hopefully that might be able to shed some further light on the subject and help out. --Revan\Talk 12:58, November 7, 2012 (UTC)

Well, what does it say? That's why I posted all those "walls of text". because that's what it actually says in the relevant books, magazines etc. I haven't read Quantum Archangel. Does anyone have the actual passage(s)? 41.133.0.18talk to me 13:04, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
I'm really trying to understand where you're coming from and see your clear points.
I take "above" means just below the summary section header, which is the only simple portion of your post not to have a large amount of copied text. The three numbered points left in your first post at 13:16, November 6, 2012.
Point 1, you state that Russell "and Warwick Scott Gray agreed that the Magnus in Flashback is The Master". But as the quote, that I have copied (unaltered) from the forum you provided clearly states it wasn't an agreement, Russell commissioned a strip from Gray.
Point 2, as I have already said is not relevant to this discussion (and have pointed towards where these discussions are, I won't repeat them here). Russell's comments do not concern the validity of the strip, he even acknowledges the character exists and used the character himself in his own work.
Point 3. I have already acknowledged that Russell's information is insightful enough that it should go on all three articles that are involved in this discussion; the Master's and the War Chief's (in the Behind the scenes sections) and in the Notes section of Flashback. That no media states they can't be the same character is not an argument for them to be the same character. --Tangerineduel / talk 13:12, November 7, 2012 (UTC)

Well, it is relevant in as much as that you agree that Divided Loyalties contains multiple conitnuity errors, it can not be "definitive". And, of course, as you admit that nothing in any narrative prevents them being the same Time Lord...well then...

a)Why are there various "MYTH:The War Chief is The Master. But licensed narrative states explicitly that they aren't"? When you've just agreed that nothing of the sort exists. Does that necessarily mean that they ARE the same? No. But to unilaterally declare that they aren't it clearly a mistake.

b)The original discussion was about who MAGNUS was. Remember? So, as Divided Loyalties does not explicitly state that Magnus is the War Chief(the passage is on that discussion page), and as Divided Loyalties does not explicitly state that the Master can not be the War Chief.....who is Magnus? All we have is a non-narrative quote from Russell. Make of that what you will. 41.133.0.18talk to me 13:18, November 7, 2012 (UTC)

I was actually calling out the ridiculousness of your proposal. You need to start with evidence to prove something, you can't start with a lack of evidence as proof. That would be like saying; the Doctor and the Rani are the same person, because there's nothing in any media that says they aren't, which proves they could be.
Divided Loyalties may contain multiple continuity problems, but that doesn't prove anything. There are hundreds more stories that contain far more, bigger and greater contradictions that Divided Loyalties does. Compared to say War of the Daleks (novel) it's tiny.
So no I do not believe that the fact that Divided Loyalties having perceived continuity problems is relevant to this discussion. In fact I don't believe it's relevant to any discussion that's not in the Howling.
The point in the myths section of The War Games states that the FASA Time Lord (role playing book) states is where the War Chief = the Master is from.
I thought you were arguing that Magnus/the War Chief was the Master? And I thought that the quote you provided from Russell and info in Divided Loyalties proves that the Magnus is the War Chief. Your initial heading to the Magnus discussion which said "Magnus is supposed to be The Master!" kinda suggested that was the main thrust of your argument.
Finally, if we're to get into the Divided Loyalties discussion, right near the end on page 247/8 there is an epilogue which in amongst it states that;
"Koschei who, after leaving Gallifrey to seek his fortune, came upon the DarkHeart, a malevolent force that was to imbue him with a new sense of direction." - Page 247
and
"Unlike Magnus, the only one of the Deca to leave Gallifrey and face a rather ignoble end. Obsessed with the Aliens and their war games, he fled his homeworld and joined them, offering his services to build TARDISes for them. [...] The War Lord, however, was not as foolish as he seemed, although he was prone to bouts of extreme paranoia. And it was in one of these moods that he had Magnus executed when the final war game scheme fell apart and the Time Lords finally carried out their threat of erasure." - Page 248
Both are fairly explicitly different people and referring to different events, The Dark Path (novel) and The War Games (TV story) and are presented separately with Mortimus' account being between these two. --Tangerineduel / talk 14:53, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
well now it's me who doesn't have any earthly clue what you are stating. Yes, originally the point was that Magnus is the Master, as Russell himself stated that was the intent, and when Flashback was published that was the understanding, as everyone who read that Special thought. But then someone said that is "non-narrative". And that being "non-narrative" was all that was required. Now, Divided Loyalties has more continuity errors than pretty much anything else ever. But even ignoring that...nowhere does it state in Divided Loyalties that Magnus is the War Chief. It is implied that he is, but in the same way it is implied that the Man with the Rosette is the Master. Or it is implied in the Target novelisations that the War Chief is the Master. Since,
Since, Mortimus' account is the one preceding Magnus, it is simple English that Magnus is unlike Mortimus, not unlike someone mentioned before that. So, all that shows is that Magnus isn't Mortimus.
Regardless of where that "myth" comes from, the point is that there's nothing that proves it is a myth! It doesn't matetr where it "comes from". There is no myth in the first place. Because there is nothing that proves it's a myth! According to you, there's nothing which proves it's true(eh?), but it shouldn't be there at all.
Yes, originally, the point was that Russell's real world quote showed that Magnus was designed as the Master. After being shouted down a s"non-narrative" and being told that implication isn't proof, I then used YOUR argument to show that there is nothing that proves the Master is NOT the War Chief, and there is NOTHING in-universe which explicitly states who magnus actually is. Someone already edited the Man with the Rosette article to state that it's implied he's The Master, rather than state outright he's the Master. Which wasn't my actual intention, but is the first step, I guess. 41.133.0.18talk to me 15:04, November 7, 2012 (UTC)


Oh, and btw the FASA Role Playing Game doesn't state that the Master is the War Chief. In Book 2 of 3(the Sourcebook) its states the opposite. On pages 6 and 7 it lists the Master and the War Chief as two separate Time Lords. On page 17 it explicitly states that the Master is the Meddling Monk. Now, this wiki considers the FASA Game to be non-DWU. But the point is that people(including you) repeatedly state that the FASA Game says the Master is the War Chief. When it doesn't. In fact it states the complete opposite, yet you stated matter-of-factly that it said that. By the same token, people here have said for instance that "Timewyrm:Exodus proves that the War Chief isn't the Master" or "The War chief dies in Timewyrm:Exodus". Neither of those statements is true. Just like people say that Divided Loyalties proves that the Master isn't the War Chief or Divided Loyalties states that Magnus is the War Chief. Neither of those statements is true. I honestly wonder when people here cite books, games, comics, audios, tv shows whether they've actually read/watched/listened to them, or whether it's just something they heard somewhere. I haven't read the Quantum Archangel, so i admitted that. Rather than acting like an authority on something I've never read.
One take on it is this: Magnus isn't the Master or the War Chief. Why? Divided Loyalties never says he is either. And at the end of Divided Loyalties it explicitly states that he met an ignoble end, and was erased from ever having existed by the Time Lords. Magnus' activities with the War Lord in Divided Loyalties bear no resemblance to the War Chief's. And Divided Loyalties states that there were several different war games, not just the one seen on tv. The Flashback comic states that there is no chance of reconcilliation between The Doctor and Magnus. Going by a purely narrative in-universe manner(which you go far), the only rational explanation is that Magnus was another non-War Chief Time Lord, who had a falling out with the Doctor, left Gallifrey, worked with the War Lord(building TARDISes rather than SIDRATs), but was erased from history by the Time Lords. The war Chief presumably took up with the War Lord at a totally different time to Magnus, since from a purely in-universe, narrative perspectice they can't possibly be the same person. 41.133.0.18talk to me 16:03, November 7, 2012 (UTC)
It's a pretty obvious implication as my above citation proves. The above quotes from Divided Loyalties proves pretty well that Magnus is the War Chief and isn't the Master. It describes both The Dark Path and The War Games to a tee.
Reading the information from Divided Loyalties in context with other Doctor Who stories the only reading of them reveals that they are from and about the events of The Dark Path and The War Games.
Your "take" on it involves ignoring these stories and viewing Divided Loyalties in isolation, which it does not exist in. It is part of a greater series.
The myth can be removed from The War Games article, that isn't a huge issue.
Now, to be clear I did not state anything about the FASA game. I stated that The War Games articles currently states it. --Tangerineduel / talk 17:07, November 7, 2012 (UTC)

Er, my point was that it doesn't describe the War games to a tee. Quite the opposite, in fact. besides Magnus(whoever he is) working for the War Lord(whose description in Divided Loyalties is nothing like the War Lord in the War Games) everything else is different. Significantly:

1)It is never stated in Divided Loyalties that Magnus is the War Chief. Your reasoning for not counting the Flashback Magnus as the Master was that it never explicitly states that to be the case. it is merely implied. And you stated that real -world behind-the-scenes things don't count, it must be in-universe narrative. And in-universe narrative it is NOT stated that Magnus is the War Chief. Please show me where in Divided Loyalties the words "War Chief" are used. I can't find them.

2)The Magnus who appears in Divided Loyalties has a totally different set of adventures with the War Lord(assuming it even is the same War Lord) to the War Chief in the War Games. Building TARDISes rather than SIDRATs, having a paranoid War Lord, organising multiple war games. And, by far the most important, being erased from ever having existed by the Time Lords at the end of this.

3)Clearly that's not the War Chief, as he survived HIS War Games, and went on to work with Hitler under an assumed name(Timewyrm:Exodus). HE wasn't erased from ever having existed. And nowehere in Timewyrm:Exodus is the name "Magnus" ever used. or the word "Deca". In fact, nowhere in the War Games are the words "Magnus" or "Deca" used either.

4)In the Flashback comic, the Doctor states that that incident was the last ever chance for reconcilliation between the Doctor and Magnus. Why? Because Magnus was erased from ever having existed not long after. Gary Russell was the Editor of Flashback, and the writer of Divided Loyalties. So he had control over both of Magnus' appearances. And he wrote a character with a totally different history to the War Chief. And again, it can't be retroactive continuity, because Divded Loyalties came out AFTER Timewyrm:Exodus.

Thus, Magnus can not possibly be the War Chief. Not the original thing I set out to show, but using this wiki's own rules, there is no other conclusion. 17:27, November 7, 2012 (UTC)

Pure and simple speculation. 170.185.224.19talk to me 18:36, November 7, 2012 (UTC)

Which part is "pure and simple speculation"? Could you elaborate?

1)Nowhere is Divided Loyalties is the phrase "War Chief" ever used.

2)Divded Loyalties does not describe the War Games to a tee. Most notably, the fact that Magnus is erased from ever having existed by the Time Lords at a time that is prior to Timewyrm:Exodus

3)Gary Russell edited Flashback and wrote Divided Loyalties

4)Nowhere in Flashback is the phrase "War Chief" ever used either

5)Flashback states that there is no chance for a reconcilliation between Thete and Magnus

6)It is stated here that Narrative elements define biographies, anything else gets mentioned in "behind-the-scenes"

7)Someone already removed the Master part from the biography of the Man with the Rosette, because while it implies he's the Master, and while the writer stated that it's meant to be the Master....it is never explicitly stated that the Man with the Rosette IS the Master

8)My Master=War Chief quotes from the novelisations, and real-life were deemed not good enough, because while it actually describe the supposed two characters as being the same to a tee, it never states explicitly that they are the same in-narrative

9)Likewise real-world sources wouldn't count, except as behind-the-scenes

10)Therefore....Magnus is not the War Chief from a narrative perspective. Again, Where in Divided Loyalties(or anywhere else) does it unambiguously state that Magnus is the War Chief? 41.133.0.18talk to me 05:21, November 8, 2012 (UTC)

Clarification

Okay. In one paragraph of no more than 5 short, non-bullet-pointed sentences please state your proposal. You (restarted) this page by saying "This started ..." What is this, precisely? What are you trying to get changed?
czechout<staff />    16:31: Fri 09 Nov 2012

1)The original intention was rejected, as we have to go by narrative source, not real-world intentions, and not implications

2)There is nothing in a narrative sense that states unambiguously that Magnus is the War Chief(it's implied, but there are too many differences between the two, and it's never said outright in a way that is unambiguous)

3)There is nothing in a narrative sense that unambiguously states that Koschei/The Master can not also be the War Chief. True, there is nothing narrative that unambiguously states that they are the same Time Lord. But there is nothing narrative that makes rules out the possibility.

4)Just as the Man with the Rosette's article was changed to say that "behind-the-scenes" it was meant that he is The Master, while all narrative biography of him being the Master was removed...so Magnus/War Chief should be separated. There should be a separate Magnus article, with behind-the-scenes stating that he was meant to be the Master(in Flashback) and the War Chief(in Divided Loyalties). Magnus should also be mentioned in the behind-the-scenes of the War Chief and Master articles, but not included in the narrative biography proper

5)The Magnus, War Chief and Master articles should have behind-the-scenes references to the others. In particular, the War Chief and Master articles should have behind-the-scenes information, stating that some narrative implies that they are the same Time Lord, while other narrative implies that they are two different Time Lords. But this wiki should have no definite statement on the matter either way. Until a narrative element comes along definitively making a statement that is..... 41.133.0.18talk to me 05:15, November 10, 2012 (UTC)

Nope. Still no idea what you're talking about. Point 1 is completely obscure. Still not getting what this has to do with Divided Loyalties. Come to the point, please. Assume I've read none of your previous comments, start over, keep it short, and don't bullet-point or number your paragraphs. Take one paragraph, 250 words max, and tell us simply what you want to change about this wiki.
czechout<staff />    05:53: Sat 10 Nov 2012
??? What about the above don't you understand? Is English not your home language? "Point 1" was that I originally came here with real-world sources, as well as in-narrative sources that overwhelmingly implied something(but didn't state it 100% outright). But that was deemed not enough, as it needs to be a clear and unambiguous narrative element that is used for biographies/character histories etc. Any "Real-world" material can only be included in the "behind-the-scenes" section. Thus, using, purely narrative elements, there is nothing at all whatsoever that umambiguously states who "Magnus" is. We know who he's implied to be. But we need narrative elements. There is also nothing at all whatsoever that makes it impossible for the Master and the War Chief to be the same Time Lord. There is also nothing that unambiguously states they ARE the same. But there is nothing that means they can not be. Thus, any articles relating to these aspects need to be corrected. 41.133.0.18talk to me 06:32, November 10, 2012 (UTC)

Ok, so you're saying that we have to say that the Master and the War Chief are the same character because nothing in-universe says they're not? By that logic, we could say that Rose is a chameleon arched version of the Rani. I mean, a chameleon arch changes a person's behavior as well as their genetics and the Rani could have regenerated before hand so she looks different. It has never been stated in universe that she is or isn't, and it is entirely possible for them to be or not to be the same person. However we do not go around adding "Rose and the Rani are the same person" to all relevant articles because the notion is completely absurd! Imamadmad 23:15, November 10, 2012 (UTC)

I'm trying to help you, 41. You clearly want something done around here, but you're not being very clear about what it is. The title of this thread is very ambiguous, and what you've said in your most recent post bears little relation to your initial point. I and others have asked you multiple times to clarify your position in simple language, but you haven't done it. Now, you've moved on to insulting me. Please be aware that we do have a strict policy against personal attacks, and you have just crossed it. I'm going to assume you're just frustrated because this is all perfectly clear in your mind. However, trust me: as someone who has read and determined the archive status for every single Panopticon thread ever written, I can safely say I've never seen anything quite this opaque.
I think the difficulty you're having is that you're assuming that we've all managed to connect the dots between Forum:How to handle the Deca, Talk:Magnus and points that you've made at Tardis talk:Canon policy/Archive 2 and Talk:Season 18B.
Try simpler, more direct language.
Do use language like "I propose that <whatever>" or "I think <this thing here> should be changed because of <those reasons over there>."
Do give quotes of specific passages of existing text on the wiki that you think is wrong.
Don't assume your audience has read Divided Loyalties.
Don't assume your audience cares. Give us a compelling reason why this matters.
Consider breaking up your requests into discrete parts. Perhaps you should finish the discussion at Forum:How to handle the Deca, before moving to a discussion about a specific member of the Deca like Magnus.
I am interested in trying to figure out what you're trying to say. But it's been days now, and this thread is no closer to making a solid proposal. That needs to change quickly, or we're going to have to archive this thread and move on. Please make your next post to this thread a succinct one.
czechout<staff />    02:34: Sun 11 Nov 2012

Trying not to care but could the point of this discussion be summed up as: Magnus, the War Chief, and the Master should be at three separate articles with behind-the-scenes notes indicating how they are connected by authors' intents. This is how the Man with the Rosette is handled. Only two stories refer to this Magnus and neither name him as somebody else. Divided Loyalties implies he is the War Chief but the continuity is so poor it is a bad fit. (Don't worry about Quantum Archangel. It doesn't mention WC or Magnus.) --65.24.187.122talk to me 04:02, November 11, 2012 (UTC)

Yeah, that sounds about right. OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 05:17, November 11, 2012 (UTC)
65.24.187.122 pretty much nailed it. Although I said the same thing. Basically, as with the Man with the Rosette, we know what the author's intent was, but nothing in-narrative ever states who Magnus is. Thus, Magnus should get his own article, with the behind-the-scenes stuff mentioning the author's intent. As far as the Master and the War Chief, again, there i nothing in-narrative that makes it impossible for them to be the same character. I never stated that the articles must be merged or anything like that. I merely stated that having someone state on The War Games article:"MYTH:The War Chief is The Master. Several licensed novels show they are not" is a mistake. They should remain separate articles. But any definite statements about whether they are or aren't the same should be removed. There should however, be "behind-the-scenes" information added. 41.133.0.18talk to me 05:35, November 11, 2012 (UTC)
There we go. Now I think the proplem here is that DL clearly hinted him to be the War Cheif, didn't it? OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 05:39, November 11, 2012 (UTC)
As I said upthread, statement in the Myths section of The War Games is easily excised, if someone could find a source for the myth that'd be nice and we could just leave it at that as a statement that there was a myth/fan theory. Otherwise it can be removed.
@65.24 bad continuity does not exclude a source, otherwise we'd be ignoring Blood Harvest and The Eight Doctors (which undermine each other's continuity) and War of the Daleks (which retcons every Dalek TV story), then there's Lungbarrow and every new series story that mentions youth on Gallifrey and the list goes on.
@41.133 Coming at the discussion from the side that "there is nothing in-narrative that makes it impossible to be the same character" is ludicrous. As I and Imamadmad have said above that's using the lack of proof as proof. As I have shown above with 2 quotes from Divided Loyalties it's pretty clear that the Master and Magnus are separate people, and that Magnus is the War Chief.
Divided Loyalties does more than hint, as, again is shown in the quote upthread it basically summarises The War Games saying that Magnus was the one involved. --Tangerineduel / talk 06:06, November 11, 2012 (UTC)
You're misunderstanding me again. I never said there was narrative proof that the Master is the War Chief. I said there is no narrative proof that the Master is not the War Chief. Two separate things. Divided Loyalties doesn't make it clear that Magnus is the War Chief. It implies it is the War Chief. The same way that Henrietta Street implies that the man with the rosette is the Master. And, using your logic, we should edit the Mindgame and Ace articles to say that Ace was in Mindgame. Because that's clearly what is implied. Though it is never stated outright. Divided Loyalties says that Koschei is the Master. It implies that magnus is the War Chief. Major difference. Or in The Hollows of Time, Professor Stream was written as the Master. However, in the finished version it never states that he is The Master. So he is just "Professor Stream". "The Man With The Rosette" is just that, nothing more. Sophie Aldred's character in Mindgame is just "Human". So why try and make Magnus the War Chief, when it never actually confirms that, merely suggests it? 41.133.0.18talk to me 07:20, November 11, 2012 (UTC)

To summarise again:The author's real-world intentions are not used for the biography/character information, only for the "behind-the-scenes". Sp...first the words "War Chief: are never used in either Flashback or Divided Loyalties. Secondly, read the War Chief's background/motivation on page 187 of Timewyrm:Exodus. Now read Magnus' background/motivation in Divided Loyalties. That's not "just a continuity error". That's two totally separate characters. Now remember that the War Chief survived The War Games, and went on to Timewyrm:Exodus. Magnus didn't survive his time with "the war lord"(who is described totally differently to the War Lord from the War Games), and was erased from ever having existed. Thus, Magnus, whoever he was, could no possibly have gone on to work with Hitler. The only similarity is that both Magnus and the War Chief were known to work with "war lords". First, we have no way of knowing whether they were even the same war lords. Secondly, the Doctor and the Master both worked for UNIT. The Doctor and Romana both worked for the Guardian. The Monk and the Master both worked with the Daleks. What does that prove? Two different Time Lords both working for the same people/organisation does not mean that those two Time lords are the same Time Lord. And, judging by the description in Divided Loyalties, it doesn't even sound as though the people Magnus worked with were even the same people the War Chief worked with. Magnus, of Flashback(comic) and Divided Loyalties, who went and played with a race devoting themselves to war was, in fact, a completely different person to the War Chief.41.133.0.18talk to me 08:32, November 11, 2012 (UTC)

There is a greater amount of proof the states that Magnus is the War Chief than your above examples.
In the above quote, from Divided Loyalties, based on what we know of the War Games, the person "Magnus" can't be anyone other than the War Chief. This isn't the same as the Man with the Rosette, where it's actually very vague about who he is, or who "Human" in Mindgame is.
In Divided Loyalties we are presented in-narrative with what is essentially a plot summary of The War Games with the name "Magnus" at the start.
On its own, on that quote above alone, you might not be able to directly attribute the War Chief = Magnus, but looking at it in addition to other sources, like The War Games, the information presented between these two leaves little doubt that the War Chief and Magnus are the same person. We use Divided Loyalties as a starting point and then corroborate that information with other sources of in-narrative information. With your examples there are none to support their implications.
We only have the information of the DWU to work with, and there is only one "War Lord", we only have one example of a Time Lord building TARDISes for aliens, based on this information combined with The War Games it can't be any other person.
As far as real world information, as I've continued to say it's interesting, but before you began this discussion I didn't know anything about the real world info and for the most part I've based my discussion on what's in-narrative. The behind the scenes info is an interesting side-note to the discussion. --Tangerineduel / talk 09:38, November 11, 2012 (UTC)
Sorry, I don't agree. It never states in Divided Loyalties, or any other narrative source, that Magnus is the War Chief. All we have are some similarities. In fact, if you watch The War Games, read Timewyrm:Exodus, and then read Divided Loyalties, you come away with the feeling that they're two similar, yet essentially different characters. But, either way, there's nothing at all that explicitly and unambiguously states that "Magnus is the War Chief". There is some hinting, there are some similarities and also some MAJOR differences. And, going by your reasoning, I suggest you go and read the first chapter of "Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon".... 41.133.0.18talk to me 10:06, November 11, 2012 (UTC)
So, as I read what you've said lately in this thread, I'm given to understand that this isn't really a policy matter, right? This is just you trying to bounce ideas off the community to help you clarify the content of certain articles in the main namespace. Despite the fact that you've been dropping in veiled references to problems you've had with site policy in the past, you're now actually trying to work within T:VS to rewrite articles you think are in violation of those policies. Have I read you correctly?
If that's what's going on, you probably wanted to be in Forum:Reference desk rather than Forum:Panopticon. This forum is for changing policy and the sort of "meta" issues that arise in the practical administration of a wiki. The reference desk is for asking about the narratives themselves.
czechout<staff />    02:44: Wed 14 Nov 2012

First, you yourself were the one who said this discussion belongs here. Second, I'm not "bouncing off" anything. As has been stated several times(and you appear to be the only one who is unaware of this) I did originally provide a real-world source about a character. In addition the story featuring that character strongly implied who he was. I was told that real-world sources, as well as something merely being implied doesn't count. It needs a clear and unambiguous narrative connection. I then said "But there is no clear and unambiguous narrative connection in Divided Loyalties between the War Chief and Magnus". That's it. You have already moved the discussion from another place to here, and now you wish to move it again. Only after much trying to confuse the issue. Just when it appears that some sort of clear understanding is about to be reached, you appear and say "Oh no. This should have been in [forum x] all along" And then everyone is told to start from square one again, but explicitly told not to make any posts that were already made, while at the same time, not making any references to posts that were already made. I am sick and tired of this now, I have tried to work within your system, using your rules, your wiki policies. But now I see why so many people don't even try in the first place This whole thing has been an exercise in futility. Every time I produce what you're looking for, you change your mind, and say the discussion needs to be moved somewhere else. This is a complete and utter waste of time and effort. The preceding unsigned comment was added by 41.133.0.18 (talk). '

None of us have ever had any idea what you were talking about. OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 05:16, November 14, 2012 (UTC)
Agreed with User:OttselSpy25 here. This is definitely not an easy discussion to follow. Imamadmad 05:28, November 14, 2012 (UTC)
I regret that you're frustrated, 41. My role here is not that of a roadblock. I've been desperately trying to help you frame your argument in a way that makes sense to other users. As can be evidenced by the above two comments, you haven't done that.
I think the biggest problem you're having is that you are not actually answering the questions posed to you. For instance, in your response to my earlier comments today, I asked you twice whether this was a policy matter, and you never answered that directly. Your answer to a yes/no question was to complain about the question.
As for the implications of this discussion potentially being in the "wrong" forum, you're being well over-dramatic. All that means is that we'd change the template at the very top of this page to read {{forumheader|reference desk}}. That's it. It wouldn't require a frustrating "restart".
And as I recall, what I actually advised you to do was to finish the discussion at Forum:How to handle the Deca. I believe I said something like, "once you decide how to handle the Deca, you'll understand more about the Magnus situation." I also thought, at the time, that you were trying to use this case to speak to policy, which would have made this the appropriate forum. But, and you've still not absolutely confirmed this, it now appears that you're merely talking about content, which is a matter for the reference desk. The reason it's important to choose the right forum is that it helps other users understand the broad context of your question.
Overall though the entire problem with all of this is that you've stubbornly avoided asking a question. You just info-dumped a theory, with no particular application of that theory in sight. It took another anonymous user to finally bring some sort of clarity to this thread.
It's unfortunate that you're frustrated with this process. All I can say is that it's worked since 2005. Hundreds of questions have been asked and answered in these forums. Sometimes people have gotten frustrated with the fact that they've had to wait for a few days for obvious things to be resolved. But I've never seen anyone completely miss the point of forum communication quite the way you have. All that's required for successful use of the forums is to ask simple questions, then directly answer those questions that others pose to you. The reason you've been unsuccessful in your attempts is that you haven't done that.
Communication is not the same as info-dumping. It's listening to what other parties have to say and directly addressing them. It's phrasing things so as to influence action. It's not only having an idea for change, but also crafting your words so as to achieve that change. That's why, as I've tried to point out to you, your first post should be something along the lines of "I think <this situation here> should be changed because of <that situation there>" or "One of our articles says <this thing here>, but I've read <this bit there> so should we change our approach to our article?"
What's even weirder to me is that you know this. Take a look at your other thread, Forum:How to handle the Deca. Your first post there is very clear. You describe what the discussion is about and you say very clearly what you're proposing. I don't really understand why you're so vague in this thread, and why you've obstinately refused to give a clear statement of purpose here, despite being offered multiple chances to restart the thread.
czechout<staff />    15:05: Wed 14 Nov 2012

No. You are making hollow personal insults. The only problem here is that you are deliberately trying to confuse the issue. This started out as a simple discussion which stated that the name "Magnus" was originally applied to a character in Flashback(comic) who both the editor and the actual writer unambiguously stated was The Master. However, you rejected that, as "only narrative elements count".

Fine, if that's the way this works. I then pointed out, that using only narrative elements there is nothing conclusive in "Divided Loyalties" who states who this particular "Magnus" really is. Author Gary Russell stated in a real-world interview that "Magnus" is supposed to be The War Chief. However, he also(as noted earlier) stated that "Magnus" in Flashback(comic) is supposed to be The Master? It is sort of implied in Divided Loyalties that this "Magnus" is The War Chief, however there is nothing that explicitly states that fact, merely some similarities(and also a lot of differences). So, your response to that was to a)say "Where? Say what is says" and b)lock the original thread, and say "Star again", c)Pretend like you don't understand what I mean,

So, I did cite the relevant passages, as well as relevant passages from several other episodes, books etc. that flatly contradict Divided Loyalties. Those other sources are all consistent with each other, yet contradict the later-written Divided Loyalties. Your response? Make insulting comments about how "stubborn and "obstinate" I am, and say "don't infodump". However, this so-called "infodumping" was precisely what I was told to do! Just like I was specifically told to start this new discussion here, only to now be told it's the wrong place. I notice you have also made some inaccurate edits to the locked "The Master" article, which shows that you either haven't actually read a word of what either I or various authors have actually put down or b)you couldn't care less about the actual Doctor Who lore/continuity, and only wish to push your own personal canon.

To sum up:a)there is NOTHING in Divided Loyalties that states "Magnus is the War Chief" b)the FASA GAme doesn't actually say what you claim it does b)Divided Loyalties is so riddled with continuity errors, that to cherry-pick one implied statement, while willfully ignoring everything else is totally point-of-view, and not in keeping with a supposed source of information d)there are countless narrative sources which make it overwhelmingly obvious that the Master is the War chief. Do any of them ever state "The Master is The War Chief" in those exact words? No. Do they all make it far more clear than your ONE muddled "Anti-source" in DL? Absolutely. However, I'm sure you're going to insult me about "walls of text", being "obstinate", say this is the wrong forum, and possibly add some line to The Master article about how Terror of the Autons explicitly says the Master knows the War Chief as a separate Time Lord, and how the Doctor and the Master haven't seen each other since they both left Gallifrey. My only concern is that some people may come to this wiki looking for genuine information about Doctor Who, and may believe some of the falsehoods that are all over this wiki.

I'll let others be the judge of which of us has actually hurled insults in this thread. What I care about is understanding you and helping you express your concerns in a way that other people can comment upon them productively.
So far, I count at least five people in this thread who have no clear idea what you're talking about: me, user:Tangerineduel, User:Shambala108, User:Imamadmad and User:OttselSpy25. At least one other person, user:170.185.224.19, seems to have divined your intent, but labelled it "pure speculation". Only one person responding to this thread has seemingly understood you and refactored things in a form that you agreed with.
If six people either don't understand you or don't agree with you, you have failed to make your case. By any objective measure, the consensus of this thread is that we don't know what the heck you're talking about. It's not my failure, it's not Tangerineduel's failure: it's six people independently arriving at the conclusion that, as OS25 said, "None of us have ever had any idea what you were talking about".
I'm gonna give you one more shot, and if you don't give us something we can work with, I'm locking the thread and throwing away the key, because whatever it is you're trying to say, you have zero consensus to proceed.
Please explicitly answer these questions, and keep your answers brief.
  1. Are you trying to change some policy of this wiki? If so, what is that policy?
  2. Is the following statement an accurate and complete statement of what you're trying to accomplish: "Magnus, the War Chief, and the Master should be at three separate articles with behind-the-scenes notes indicating how they are connected by authors' intents."

czechout<staff />    01:49: Sun 25 Nov 2012

41: Basically, as I see it, people aren't confused about the fact that you believe the Master and the War Chief are the same character, but everyone is confused about what you want to do about it. Well, that's my confusion anyway. There's no point in deciding a piece of information is right, or at least not wrong, if we can't do anything with it. This forum is aimed at understanding and changing wiki policy and the way articles are edited. So, if we agree (I'm not saying we are, but if) that the two characters are not not the same person, how can we use that information on this wiki? If it's just to edit the BTS sections of a couple of articles to say, while citing sources, that some stories suggest a connection between the characters, well, what's stopping you from doing that. As long as it's in the behind the scenes section and properly sourced, I can see any problem with the information. But discussing it further seems to suggest you want to do more with the info. Is this the case? If so, what do you want to do with it. If not, well, I personally think we're done here. Imamadmad 12:25, November 27, 2012 (UTC)

@czechout

1)I was told to come to this page. If this should be on separate "policy" page, nobody made that clear until well into this discussion. The only "policy" I m attempting to change is to the way certain articles are written.

2)Yes, as nothing in either "Flashback" or "Divided Loyalties" ever explicitly states who Magnus is.

2b)In addition, other behind-the-scenes information should include who characters were supposed to be, eg. The Man with the Rosette was intended to be The Master

2c)You have edited several articles to state that "Several novels explicitly state that the Master is not the War Chief" Could you provide a list of which novels, and where they say that?

...So, yes, using this wiki's policies, the articles Magnus, The War Chief and The Master should be three separate articles, although there must be behind-the-scenes information giving author's intent. 41.133.1.212talk to me 14:13, November 27, 2012 (UTC)

Okay, so this whole thing was about confirming policy, not changing it? Generally, people don't start discussions in which they argue agreement with policy. If all you were doing was saying, "according to a, b and c narratives, x, y and z things are true, then you needn't have discussed that with anyone. That's just called, writing an article. Your tone throughout has suggested — and this is what I and a lot of people seem to think is confusing — that you were using this case of Magnus to grumble about policy. Or to seek permission. Or something other than, "I think the article should be written in this way because of these facts. What do the rest of you think?" Your tone here has been quite different than at Forum:How to deal with the Deca, and it's that difference which has caused confusing. I think we've all believed there was something of policy substance at the centre of this particular Tootsie-Pop — and it turns out there's nothing, really.
As for 2c), I honestly have no idea what you're talking about. I've not specifically edited any article as to that point. It's possible that some articles that I've edited have included that point, but I've not been the originator of such information. I don't even know which are the "several articles" to which you refer. It's a convention of Wiki editing that only the differences between edits (diffs) are that to which any particular editor can lay claim.
If you're speaking of The Master do remember that this article's current base was written at The Master/Rewrite, which was largely assembled by others from the constituent "Master (incarnation)" series. So, yes, there's a point at which I imported /Rewrite into the main article, but that was purely technical. I wasn't "vouching" for any of the information, and hadn't even read it at that point, frankly. I was just accepting the community's months' long work as a starting point.
czechout<staff />    18:03: Wed 28 Nov 2012

First, as far as "permission" or "policy" I did attempt to edit one other page, but was told that this needed a discussion, and I was redirected here. Next, is it really necessary for you to use phrases like "grumble", "Toostie-Pop" and "there's nothing, really"?

Again, the discussion is about articles. When I have attempted have discussions of the relevant article's talk page, someone has immediately said "Go to the forum for changing policies". So here we are, and now you're making insults because I'm on the forum for changing policies!

But the point is, does anyone have any relevant comments about the Magnus page, The War Chief page, The Master page? 41.133.1.212talk to me 05:28, November 29, 2012 (UTC)

As much as I'm loathed to repeat myself…up thread I provided fairly inarguable proof that the Magnus is the War Chief, before 41.133 shouts me down on that point, I will also refer to a previous discussion regarding speculation, Forum:Speculation - What is and what isn't?.
And to quote CzechOut from that thread
"Authors don't need to spoon feed us a lot of exposition for us to come to a reasonable conclusion of what they're talking about. Do they? Isn't there a place for the sly reference and the well-written background note?"
In Divided Loyalties, page 248, it's not even a sly reference or background note. It states quite clearly that Magnus was the one who went and worked with the War Lords, then gives a summary of The War Games. --Tangerineduel / talk 06:07, November 29, 2012 (UTC)

Actually, the description there is significantly different to The War Games. And Divided Loyalties also tells us(p96) that only people who have the "Rassilon Imprimature" can travel in time, control a TARDIS, and regenerate. It then later(p248) tells us that neither the Doctor nor the Master ever got that "Rassilon Imprimature".

But that's not the point. Again, as I have stated many times before. Read Chapter 1 of Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon. Here we learn that there have only been two TARDISes stolen up to that point(one by the Doctor, and one by the Master). The Master was involved with There were tens of thousands of humans from the planet Earth, stranded on another planet where they thought they were re-fighting all the wars of Earth’s terrible history., but The Doctor interrupted that by alerting the Time Lords....Terrance Dicks' "Terror of the Autons tells us that the Doctor and The Master met recently before 'Autons', that "The Master" is a new name(ie. he had another name when he last met the Doctor), that he had been manipulating wars, that the Master's accomplices had had their life-streams thrown into reverse. Not only did they not exist, they never would have existed. The Doctor is surprised to hear that the Master had a working TARDIS when they met, and the Master was at the same place the Doctor was when the Doctor was captured, only the Master got away. The actual tv serial shows us that they have both regenerated since their last recent meeting. The Doctor also mentions that he has seen the Master's powers of hypnotism, but that he has seen strong-willed people offer resistance to it. The novelisation of the War Games has the War Chief know for a fact that the "traveller in a time-space machine" MUST be the Doctor, as they are the only two renegade Time Lords. It also tells us that the War Chief and the Doctor were once friends. TV's Frontier In Space(Episode 4) shows us that The Master knows the events of the War Games. And, although you don't like real-world sources, it still must be said that Malcolm Hulke(who wrote the War Games and three Delgado stories) explicitly stated that during his era there were only two renegade Time Lords, the Doctor and the Master.

That is actually spoonfeeding. There is no way around that, except maybe to ignore it, as others have done. Note also, that the comic "Flashback" was written as a Master origin story. In fact the Marvel Encyclopedia lists it using those exact words. However, many people identified the similarity between Magnus(the pre-Delgado Master) and...the War Chief. Both Gary Russell and Warwick Scott Gray stated that it was, indeed, a Master origin story.

On the other side, we have a dream sequence in a novel that also tells us such fascinating facts as the "Rassilon Imprimature" one above, that Mortimus was at the Academy with the Doctor, and left Gallifrey BEFORE the Doctor, that the Rani left Gallifrey of her own accord(thereby nullifying the whole motivation behind the character in the first place, see "Mark of the Rani"), that the FIFTH Doctor finds out the Toymaker's origin(making the Sixth Doctor in the Nightmare Fair a complete imbecile)...and oh yeah read Timewyrm:Exodus where Kriegslieter explains his reason for leaving Gallifrey. Now read Divided Loyalties where Magnus explains his reasons for leaving Gallifrey. They're 100 per cent different.

So, AGAIN, people are ignoring ALL the evidence in the Target books and the actual TV EPISODES. People are ignoring the dozens of continuity errors throughout Divided Loyalties(that must actually place it in its own self-contained continuity). However, they are slavishly sticking to the idea that "Koschei is the Master, Magnus if the War Chief. Therefore it's two people". As I stated elsewhere, this is cherrypicking. And it is totally inconsistent, and utterly improper for what is supposed to be a factual bank. 41.133.1.212talk to me 08:08, November 29, 2012 (UTC)

There is also the fact that it's a dream. We already know that the dream can not be a literal depiction of events(Timewyrm:Exodus' version of War Chief's motivation vs what happens in the DREAM, the whole Rasillon Imprimature thing and many many others). All we have at the end is Koschei being the Master(even though The Dark Path explicitly states that he was NOT called "Koschei" at the Academy. He only took that name MUCH later.). And Magnus, supposedly, becoming the War Chief based on some similarities. But are those two facts mutually exclusive? Since we know the dream can not possibly be a literal depiction of events, and since we've seen screwed-up dreams(eg. Tegan's Mara dreams), there is actually nothing at all stopping Magnus, Koschei, The War Chief and The Master all being the same character. Now, I'm 100% sure that someone will completely misinterpret what I am saying here. So, to summarise:

a)using the exact same criteria that removed the Man With the Rosette's being the Master, Magnus can not be the War Chief, the Master or anyone other than just Magnus. b)There is nothing in any narrative source whatsoever that makes it impossible for the Master and the War chief to actually be the same person(although multiple articles here say it's "Explicitly stated in several novels". But of voruse no one can provide names and examples...) c)If "the writers don't need to spoonfeed the public" then, as per my examples, and several others the Master is the War Chief. d)The whole sequence with the Deca is a f**d-up DREAM, where the events are known for a fact to be totally different than what has been clearly established in several sources. Thus, either we accept that Divided Loyalties is NOT a literal depiction, but rather some sort of "Alice in Wonderland"-style jumbled-up retelling, OR Divided Loyalties exists in a continuity all of its own. e)What do 'these two statements "prove"? i)K'Anpo Rimoche was a mentor to the Doctor when the Doctor was a boy. b)The Third Doctor first met Cho Je on Earth, after Mike Yates tipped the Doctor off to some mysterious happenings,,,? Yes, K'Anpo Rimoche IS Cho Je AND there were several scenes where they were in the same place at the same time. 41.133.1.212talk to me 08:23, November 29, 2012 (UTC)

I would be remiss in not mentioning The Time Thief from the 1974 Doctor Who Annual. Generally the Annuals were treated as lesser, but this wiki regards all narrative sources as valid. A brief recap...military forces from various periods in Earth's history are attacking UN cargoes. Actually not ALL eras, only up until the First World War. The Doctor and Jo investigate, and are transported to another planet. The Doctor knows who's behind it "Take me to the Master" he says to the soldiers. Arriving at a psychedelic-looking base, the doctor discovers that the Master is working with a group of aliens. Using hypnotism, and the ability to take humans from any period in Earth's history, he plans to create a superarmy. "Up to your old tricks again", says The Doctor. However, the Doctor is able to reprocess the hypnotised soldiers, and use a control panel which appears to be controlled by moving around geometric shapes to return the Earth military to their proper periods. The Doctor and Jo escape back to earth, the aliens turn on the Master. It appears that it's the end of The Master(and Jo even believes as much). But The Doctor has seen him escape from a situation like this before. 41.133.1.212talk to me 08:53, November 29, 2012 (UTC)

Nice. There's also these quotes from transcripts of the episodes:

The War Games: DOCTOR: But to help people like that to conquer the galaxy? WAR CHIEF: Not people like that, people like us. I intend to take over as Supreme Galactic Ruler. You can help me to rule, if you will cooperate ... WAR CHIEF: We were both Time Lords and we both decided to leave our race. DOCTOR: I had reasons of my own. WAR CHIEF: Just as I had. DOCTOR: Your reasons are only too obvious. Power! WAR CHIEF: How much have you learnt of our plans? DOCTOR: I know that you've been kidnapping soldiers from the Earth from various times in it's history and bringing them here to kill one another. WAR CHIEF: But do you realise our ultimate objectives? DOCTOR: No objective can justify such slaughter. WAR CHIEF: The war games on this planet are simply the means to an end. The aliens intend to conquer the entire galaxy. A thousand inhabited worlds. DOCTOR: Yes, but why choose the people of the Earth? WAR CHIEF: They are the most suitable recruits for our armies. Man is the most vicious species of all. DOCTOR: Well, that simply isn't true. WAR CHIEF: Consider their history. For a half a million years they have been systematically killing each other. Now we can turn this savagery to some purpose. We can bring peace to the galaxy, and you can help. You see, I'm not the cold-hearted villain you suppose me to be. My motives are purely peaceful. ... WAR CHIEF: We are going to bring a new order to the galaxy, one United Galactic Empire. DOCTOR: An empire of slaves, with you as one of it's rulers.

Colony In Space:

MASTER: Doctor, why don't you come in with me? We're both Time Lords, we're both renegades. We could be masters of the galaxy! Think of it, Doctor, absolute power! Power for good. Why, you could reign benevolently, you could end wars, suffering, disease. We could save the universe. DOCTOR: No, absolute power is evil. MASTER: Consider carefully, Doctor. I'm offering you a half-share in the universe. ... MASTER: You must see reason, Doctor. DOCTOR: No, I will not join you in your absurd dreams of a galactic conquest. MASTER: Why? Why? Look at this. Look at all those planetary systems, Doctor. We could rule them all! DOCTOR: What for? What is the point? MASTER: The point is that one must rule or serve. That's a basic law of life. Why do you hesitate, Doctor? Surely it's not loyalty to the Time Lords, who exiled you on one insignificant planet? DOCTOR: You'll never understand, will you? I want to see the universe, not rule it. MASTER: Then I'm very sorry, Doctor. (The Master aims his laser gun at the Doctor, and the Guardian's panel rises.) MASTER: What's happening? DOCTOR: Wait and see. (The Guardian's throne comes out of the wall.) MASTER: What is it? DOCTOR: The ultimate development of life on this planet. GUARDIAN: Why have you returned? What do you want here? MASTER: I want to restore this city and this planet to their former glory. DOCTOR: Don't listen to him, sir. MASTER: You have here a wonderful weapon. Why, with it you could bring good and peace to every world in the galaxy. DOCTOR: On the contrary. He'll bring only death and destruction.

137.158.153.203talk to me 07:17, November 30, 2012 (UTC)

The problem here is that the discussion has basically gone something like this"

41:I have real-world sources saying that Magnus from Flashback was specifically created to be The Master, and that the writers of the Brayshaw and Delgado serials say the Master and the War Chief are the same guy.

TW:Sorry, we only go with narrative sources. Those real-world sources can go in behind-the-scenes information, but it's narrative sources we want.

41:(supplies multiple narrative sources providing overwhelming evidence that the Master is the War Chief)

TW:Er, No, that's just implied. Do you have anything that ever explicitly says "The War Chief is The Master"?

41:Not in those exact words, no.

TW:Well, then, it's not good enough.

41:Ok, but then it never explicitly says in Divided Loyalties that magnus is the War Chief, it's only implied. By the way, why does it say on multiple pages that "Several novels explicitly state that The War chief isn't The Master", when in fact, one novel implies it, but in fact nothing ever states that explicitly?

TW:We didn't edit that, someone else must have(...note some of those articles are locked, and only admins can edit them. So if the admins didn't...) Oh, and we don't need the narrative sources to spoonfeed us, a sly reference will do. And it mentions the War Games in divided Loyalties, and that Magnus was part of it.

41:Ok, if we don't actually need explicit mentions after all, then what about the numerous implied narrative sources linking the Master to the War games, the Master to the War Chief etc.?

TW:You are a stubborn, obstinate, hollow Tootsie-Pop. We only go with narrative sources. And it needs to explicitly state something.

(repeat) 41.133.1.212talk to me 13:56, November 30, 2012 (UTC)

No, it's more like this:
41:I have real-world sources saying that Magnus from Flashback was specifically created to be The Master, and that the writers of the Brayshaw and Delgado serials say the Master and the War Chief are the same guy.
TW:Sorry, we only take narrative sources
41:(supplies multiple narrative sources providing overwhelming evidence that the Master is the War Chief)
TW:Uh, no, that was just a bunch of text, none of it suggested anything.
41:Not in those exact words, no.
TW:What? Look, if you don't have anything else to go on-
41:Ok, but then it never explicitly says in Divided Loyalties that magnus is the War Chief, it's only implied. By the way, why does it say on multiple pages that "Several novels explicitly state that The War chief isn't The Master", when in fact, one novel implies it, but in fact nothing ever states that explicitly?
TW:That was almost strait out said, with very strong implying. What you have, in the mean while... Was just quotes about the Master and the War Chief described similarly...
41:Ok, if we don't actually need explicit mentions after all, then what about the numerous implied narrative sources linking the Master to the War games, the Master to the War Chief etc.?
TW:Give me some and I'll listen!
Basically, you think that the most simple things are sources when they aren't you say that something not being stated out as wrong makes it right. You say that loose quotes and speculation are enough to write an article off of. You say a lot of things and we disagree. OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 15:09, November 30, 2012 (UTC)

What? Again? My "repeat" comment was prescient, no?

Off the top of my head...

a)the novelisation of Colony In Space has two Time lords stating that only two TARDISes have ever been stolen, one by someone calling himself "The Doctor", and one by someone calling himself "The Master". The Master was involved with a scheme where humans from various periods in earth's history were taken to another planet, and hypnotised into thinking they were still fighting in those wars. The Doctor alerted the Time Lords to this.

b)the novelisation of Terror of the Autons states that the Master was involved in manipulating wars. The Doctor alerted the Time Lords, but the Master got away. He got away, because it was believed he didn't have a working TARDIS, when if fact he did. The Doctor is angry because the Time Lords took him, and made him stand trial for his crimes, even though the Master's ere far worse. The Doctor's punishment was to be exiled to Earth. The Master's accomplices were erased from history(as though they never existed). The Master was using a different name during these events, however, and "The Master" is a new name.

c)The actual television serial of Terror of the Autons tells us that the Doctor and The Master met recently, although both were in different incarnations. The Doctor knows about the Master's powers of hypnotism, has recently seen them, but also saw that certain stubborn humans are able to offer resistance. The Master has come after the Doctor after the Doctor recently ruined his scheme by alerting the Time Lords.

d)In Frontier In Space(television) The Master knows the events of the War Games, which is odd, considering those events were erased from history/undone by the Time Lords. So only, the Doctor, the War Chief, and those three Time Lords would know these events ever happened. And the Master ain't the Doctor or a member of the High Council.

e)In the novelisation of the War Games when the War Chief learns that a "time-space machine" has landed, he immediately knows it must be The Doctor, because the Doctor and him are the only two renegade Time Lords.

f)In the novelisation of The Sea Devils The Doctor and Jo have a conversation where the Doctor tells Jo that he and The Master are theonly two renegade Time Lords.

Now, anyone with any common sense can know that that is indeed straight out saying they are the same character.

My only conclusions here are that you are either

a)someone whose first language clearly is not English

b)possessing a religious belief about this.

Furthermore it wasn't "just a bunch of text". Have you actually read any of it? Have you actually read Divided Loyalties? the one with that "Rassilon Imprimature" stuff?

The main difference between the Master's war games, and Magnus' war games is that the Master's actually resemble the War Chief's War Games from tv. Magnus'(in Divided Loyalties) had him building TARDISes(the War chief built SIDRATs), working for a moody paranoid war lord(The War Chief worked for an icy War Lord). It was during one of these bouts of paranoia that the paranoid war lord had Magnus executed. It was after the Security Chief provided irrefutable evidence that the War Chief was planning on betraying him that the War Lord(whose mood hardly changed at all) had the War Chief shot. The Time Lords erased Magnus from ever having existed. The War Chief got away from the Time Lords and went after the Doctor for revenge.

That doesn't convince me in the slightest, nice try though. I'm not sure he is the one with the religious belief here. TARDIS43 16:06, November 30, 2012 (UTC)

I dislike your personal attacks on me. For the record, I am agnostic. OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 16:39, November 30, 2012 (UTC)

Well it just shows that you don't understand simple English then. Because by "religious beliefs", I clearly meant you had an absolute belief in something, and no evidence to the contrary will change your deeply rooted dogmas.

And, to "TARDIS43", if that really "doesn't convince you in the slightest", then you must be mentally challenged. You know what? I don't need this nonsense. This isn't a "TARDIS Wikia". It's a "Tard Wikia". You are all arrogant, narrow-minded idiots. You have done nothing but be personally insulting, demeaning, and dismissive. because I provided in-universe narrative sources that proved something you dislike. Everything has been dismissed out of hand. I'm sure none of you even read a word of it. All you do is cling to some book that also tells us that the Doctor can't travel in time, control a TARDIS or regenerate. And I'm quite sure most of you haven't even read that either. But hey, Malcolm Hulke(writer of the War Games, Colony in Space, the Sea Devils and Frontier in Space, and MANY others) and Robert Holmes(writer of Terror of the Autons, the Deadly Assassin, The Ultimate Foe and MANY MANY MANY others) both stated outright that the Master is the War Chief. Warwick Scott Gray(writer of Flashback and MANY others) stated outright that Magnus is the Master. But what does any of that count for when there are fucktards like YOU who can't understand simple fucking English. Fuck all of you and your pathetic excuse for a Wiki. 41.133.1.212talk to me 17:42, November 30, 2012 (UTC)

You can believe what you want, but you are wrong and no amount of insulting people who don't take to your poor evidence will ever change that. Perhaps you can start your own wiki? This one clearly isn't for you.TARDIS43 18:37, November 30, 2012 (UTC)

You know what? Think this wikia is really horrible. I invite you, no I IMPOLORE YOU, visit South Park wikia. Then dare call this a bad wikia, simply because your speculation is being ignored. OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 18:55, November 30, 2012 (UTC)

Closing

When the F-bomb gets dropped in anger, the thread — and the editing rights — go away. This discussion is well and truly over. Please do not restart on any other page.
czechout<staff />    03:37: Sat 01 Dec 2012