Twelfth Doctor: Difference between revisions
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{{pullout|{{Cleanup|As detailed at [[Thread:264489]], to avoid overly long articles, highly-recurring character pages' biography should only have AT MOST 2-3 sentences per story, not whole paragraphs of plot detail. This page needs a major cleanup in that area.}}}} | |||
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{{Infobox Individual | {{Infobox Individual | ||
|image = | |image = TwelveLooksAtMissy2.jpg<!--do not change this image or remove this image; see talk page for details--> | ||
|alias = [[Aliases of the Doctor| | |alias = '''''[[Aliases of the Doctor#Twelfth Doctor|see list]]''''' | ||
|species = | |species = The Doctor's species | ||
|origin = | |||
|origin = | |||
|job = Caretaker | |job = Caretaker | ||
|job2 = President of Earth | |job2 = President of Earth | ||
|job3 = Lecturer | |job3 = Lord President | ||
|affiliation = | |job4 = Lecturer | ||
|affiliation2 = | |job5 = Time Agent | ||
|affiliation3 = | |affiliation = Coal Hill School | ||
|first mention = Silence in the Library (TV story) | |affiliation2 = High Council | ||
|first | |affiliation3 = St Luke's University | ||
|spouse = River Song | |||
|first mention cs = Silence in the Library (TV story) | |||
|first cs = The Day of the Doctor (TV story) | |||
|actor = Peter Capaldi | |actor = Peter Capaldi | ||
| | <!--"Other actors" is reserved for actors who have portrayed this Doctor in the absence of the main actor, not for stunt doubles who stand in for the actor during tough scenes. Doubles can be included if they are assisting the main actor in a dual role.--> | ||
|other actor = Paul Kasey | |||
|other actor2 = Steve Phelps | |||
|voice actor = Jacob Dudman<!--Do not add until another actor surpasses Dudman's credit count of 6.--> | |||
|other voice actor = [[Jonathon Carley]] | |||
|appearances = {{appears}} | |||
|trailer = Thank You Peter – The Best of the Twelfth Doctor | |||
|trailer2 = The Twelfth Doctor's Best Moments - Doctor Who - BBC | |||
|clip = "I Am An Idiot!" - Death In Heaven - Doctor Who - BBC | |clip = "I Am An Idiot!" - Death In Heaven - Doctor Who - BBC | ||
|clip2 = The Doctor's Speech - The Zygon Inversion - Doctor Who - BBC | |clip2 = The Doctor's Speech - The Zygon Inversion - Doctor Who - BBC | ||
|clip3 = Breaking The Wall - Heaven Sent - Doctor Who - BBC | |clip3 = Breaking The Wall - Heaven Sent - Doctor Who - BBC | ||
|bts = DOCTOR WHO Exclusive PETER CAPALDI on the New Alien Doctor - New Season SAT 8 7c BBC AMERICA | |bts = Peter Capaldi Talks Series 9 and 10 - Doctor Who The Fan Show | ||
| | |bts2 = DOCTOR WHO Exclusive PETER CAPALDI on the New Alien Doctor - New Season SAT 8 7c BBC AMERICA | ||
|leitmotif = | |bts3 = DOCTOR WHO's Peter Capaldi on the Hardest Part of Being The Doctor - BBC AMERICA Exclusive | ||
|leitmotif = | |||
}}{{doctors}} | }}{{doctors}} | ||
{{Twelfth Doctor counterparts}} | |||
<!--For the introduction brief, avoid using story links, as this paragraph is a reflection of how the Doctor lived their life, and thus covers a wider range than goes beyond a single story entry.--> | |||
The first [[incarnation]] of the [[regeneration cycle]] bestowed upon him by the [[Time Lord]]s at [[Clara Oswald]]'s urging at the end of the [[Siege of Trenzalore]], the '''Twelfth Doctor''' valued a pragmatic approach with an acerbic and blunt insensitivity, often dispensing with niceties in a tense situation, becoming cold and calculative when needed. However, despite his ruthless exterior, the Doctor was actually deeply caring and empathetic, always striving to help others for the sake of being kind. Exploiting his vast intelligence and experiences without a fear of hiding his age, he could be difficult to deal with when there was work to be done, but remained capable of incredible compassion towards even the least likely of folk, determined the save anyone he could if it was an option, while not wasting time trying to save someone who was doomed beyond salvation. | |||
Unique amongst his incarnations, the Twelfth Doctor would not travel full time with the large majority of his companions, with some like [[Clara Oswald]] and [[Bill Potts]] taking breaks from the TARDIS between travels, some like [[Hattie Munroe]] taking the occasional trip, and some like [[Jata]] being involved in various side quests during a longer trip. He was also known to go long periods of time in one location, such as the town of [[Краснодар]], his [[confession dial]], 1970s [[Brixton]], [[Darillium]] and [[St Luke's University]]. | |||
Assured of the survival of [[Gallifrey]], the Doctor was no longer chained down by guilt, becoming a less amiable character, as he no longer needed to cover the pain of what he thought was the extinction of the Time Lords, which left him to wonder if he was still a "good man", a question left more uncertain by his failure to reform [[Rusty (Into the Dalek)|a Dalek]], and when compared to the more idealistically heroic characters like [[Robin Hood]] and [[Danny Pink]]. As he continued to drive people away with his apparent callousness, even Clara found herself wanting to leave the Doctor when he took his disinterest too far, until he proved his worth to her by defeating [[the Foretold]], although this left Clara trying to emulate him in their battles with the [[Boneless]] and the [[Umbra (The Eye of Torment)|Umbra]], further confusing the Doctor on his moral standings, which was not resolved until his first confrontation with [[Missy]], where she tried to corrupt him by handing him [[3W Cyberman|an army]] of [[Cybermen]] to force his ideas of peace of the universe, and he realised that he was simply "an idiot with [[The Doctor's TARDIS|a box]] and [[The Doctor's sonic screwdriver|screwdriver]]" who went around helping where he could. However, the fallout of Missy's plan left the Doctor and Clara deciding to part ways. | |||
After they were reunited in an attack by the [[Dream crab]]s, the Doctor and Clara experienced dreams of what their lives would be like without the other and decided to take a second chance with adventuring together, with the Doctor showing his goofier side more clearly and forging a closer bond with Clara as they faced machinations from the likes of [[Davros]], Missy and the [[Fisher King]]. | |||
However, the threat of a mythical creature called [[the Hybrid]] would haunt their travels, as the Doctor combined [[Mire]] technology to render a Viking girl named [[Ashildr]] immortal, and she would continue to watch him and Clara from the shadows of history, as they stopped a [[Zygon]] rebellion and saved [[Jess Collins]] from the [[Corvid]]s at [[Highgate Cemetery]]. Eventually, Ashildr would make her move against the Doctor at the behest of {{Sumpter}}, and Clara was killed as the Doctor was trapped in a [[Confession Dial]] and forced to endure four-and-a-half billion years of torture to get him to confess what he knew of the Hybrid. After he manged to escape, the Doctor [[Coup against Rassilon|ousted]] Rassilon from Gallifrey and tried to resurrected Clara with an [[extraction chamber]], but only succeeded in retrieving her from the seconds before her death. Fleeing Gallifrey to the [[end of the universe]], the Doctor retrieved Ashildr to help him erase Clara's memories of him to hide her from the Time Lords, but ultimately had his memories of her erased with the [[neural block]], leaving Clara and Ashildr to travel the universe while he continued his solitary exploits. | |||
Now content with being "an old man messing about in time and space", the Doctor was reunited with [[Gabby Gonzalez]] by [[the Moment]], and joined forces with his previous companions to take down [[Josiah W. Dogbolter]]. He also enjoyed some adventures with guitarist [[Hattie Munroe]], and spend some time living with Jess's family when his TARDIS was left recovering from an implosion. After seeing to the formation of the [[Coal Hill defenders]] at [[Coal Hill Academy]], the Doctor helped the [[Osumaran]] [[Jata]] return to [[Osumare]], and was helped in solving a mystery with [[Alex Yow|Alex]] and [[Brandon Yow]]. Following his accidental gifting of superpowers to [[Grant Gordon]] with the [[Hazandra]] gemstone, the Doctor was reunited with [[River Song]] and had their fated final night on [[Darillium]], which lasted for twenty-four years. | |||
Once his night on Darillium ended, the Doctor was joined by River's assistant, [[Nardole]], when he was charged with guarding Missy in [[The Vault (The Pilot)|a vault]] at [[St Luke's University]], with the Doctor working to rehabilitate her so they could mend their old friendship. However, despite Nardole trying to keep him grounded, the Doctor would find reasons to sneak away from the Vault to adventure in his TARDIS, which happened even more frequently when he began tutoring [[Bill Potts]] by Christmas 2016. Once he decided to make her an official companion after saving her from some [[sentient oil]], the Doctor and Bill fought [[Emojibot]]s at [[Gliese 581d]], saved [[Sea creature (Thin Ice)|a sea serpent]] during the [[1814]] [[Frost fair]] and faced off threats from the [[Dreamspace]] being sent by [[Fey Truscott-Sade]]. | |||
After a rescue mission on [[Chasm Forge]] left him blinded from exposure to vacuum of space, the Doctor was unable to stop an invasion by the [[Monk (species)|Monks]] when Bill brokered a deal with them to restore his sight, and had to endure six months of undercover work to exile them from the Earth, though found that his absence had caused Missy to undergo self-reflection. When she later saved him from [[Mars]], the Doctor granted her access to the TARDIS so that she could watch him, Bill and Nardole adventure against [[light-eating locust]]s and show her a better way of living. However, a final test on Missy's rehabilitation on a [[Mondasian]] [[Colony ship (World Enough and Time)|colony ship]] resulted in Bill becoming a [[Cyberman]], Missy leaving with the [[Saxon Master]] and Nardole having to be left behind. As he was left mortally wounded in [[Battle of Floor 0507|the battle against the Cybermen]], the Doctor resisted the [[Regeneration|regenerative process]], having grown weary of constantly changing personas and losing companions, but was encouraged to regenerate by [[glass avatar]]s of Bill and Nardole after he crossed paths with his [[First Doctor|first incarnation]] and the [[Testimony]]. Accepting his impending regeneration and his responsibility to life itself, the Doctor used his last moments to give his successor some words of advice before finishing his regeneration into [[Thirteenth Doctor|a female body]]. | |||
== Biography == | == Biography == | ||
=== | === A day to come === | ||
<!--This section if for the hints and teases the Doctor finds out about his future regenerations. Unlike other examples, instances where the Eleventh Doctor talks about regenerating do not count here, as the Eleventh Doctor was bluffing on those occasions. Multi-Doctor events do not belong in this section, as such events are removed from the younger Doctor's memory and he forgets the encounter, though trace memories may count.--> | |||
{{Section stub|Info from ''[[Lost Property (audio story)|Lost Property]]'', ''[[A Matter of Life and Death (comic story)|A Matter of Life and Death]]'', & ''[[How to be a Time Lord (novel)|How to be a Time Lord]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
During a visit to | After sealing [[Gallifrey]] away in a [[pocket dimension]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Day of the Doctor (TV story)}}) the Seventh Doctor was able to recall teaming up with his other twelve incarnations to save Gallifrey. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Cold Fusion (audio story)}}) | ||
During the Last Great Time War, the [[War Doctor]] began [[retro-regeneration|degenerating]] through his past incarnations after being struck by a degeneration weapon. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Past Lives (audio story)}}) While trying to restore himself, the Doctor ended up [[Planetoid 50]], where an encounter with [[the Master]] enabled him to degenerate into future incarnations. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Martian Invasion of Planetoid 50 (audio story)}}) After ending up at the [[Diamond Array]], the Doctor was captured, but pushed himself forward into the Twelfth Doctor in order to escape. After briefly taking on the forms of the [[Tenth Doctor]] and the [[Eleventh Doctor]], he took on the form of the Twelfth Doctor again. He talked briefly with [[Susan Foreman]] and [[River Song]], with both the Doctor and River noting they were able to briefly access future memories, seeing their night on [[Darillium]]. Degeneration took hold again, and he shifted back to the [[Eighth Doctor]]. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Union (audio story)}}) | |||
When the [[Tenth Doctor]] met River Song, she told him about his future self giving her a [[sonic screwdriver]] ([[TV]]: {{cs|Silence in the Library (TV story)}}) and about her last meeting with "the future [him]" at [[Darillium]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Forest of the Dead (TV story)}}) Due to being on his last regeneration, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Time of the Doctor (TV story)}}) the [[Eleventh Doctor]] believed River had been talking about him. ([[HOMEVID]]: {{cs|Last Night (home video)}}) Upon meeting [[Jackson Lake]], a man who believed himself to be the Doctor due to tampering with an [[infostamp]] to protect himself from the [[Cybusmen]], the Tenth Doctor believed Lake to be "the next Doctor" or "the next but one", with Lake telling him that he "regenerated" when the Cybermen "made [him] change". However, the Doctor eventually figured out Lake was not a future incarnation after finding many inaccuracies about him, finally confirming Lake's true identity with his initialised [[fob watch]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Next Doctor (TV story)}}) | |||
When encountering the "[[Gabby Gonzalez|Vortex Butterfly]]", the Tenth Doctor was cryptically told that he would not be "limited" to "thirteen lives". ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Vortex Butterflies (comic story)}}) When the Eleventh Doctor was attacked by [[the Then and the Now]] on [[Lujhimene]], the Twelfth Doctor was among the faces seen as the Doctor's timeline was almost destroyed. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Running to Stay Still (comic story)}}) When the Eleventh Doctor and River were invited to a party held by the [[fish people]], River told the Doctor that, if the party went badly, she would "tell the next version of [him], [she had] told [him] so". ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|An Adventure in Brine and Plaice (comic story)}}) During a visit to [[Parallel universe (The Girl Who Loved Doctor Who)|a parallel universe]] where he was a fictional character in a television series, the Eleventh Doctor told the actor [[Matt Smith (The Girl Who Loved Doctor Who)|Matt Smith]] that [[Peter Capaldi (The Girl Who Loved Doctor Who)|Peter Capaldi]] would be a good choice to play him on the show, as the Doctor had previously saved [[N-Space|his universe]]'s [[Peter Capaldi (A Letter from the Doctor)|Peter Capaldi]] from a [[Mandrel]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Loved Doctor Who (comic story)}}) | |||
Despite all of this, the existence of the Twelfth Doctor was not always assured. At one point, the Eleventh Doctor was forced to visit [[Trenzalore]], the place where he was said to be buried, in its future. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Name of the Doctor (TV story)}}) Sometime later, upon discovering [[Gallifrey]] was hidden away via the [[crack in time]] on the planet, the Eleventh Doctor did choose to defend the planet and accept his fate. Due to the [[War Doctor]] and the [[Human-Time Lord Meta-Crisis]], the Doctor was on the final of his original thirteen lives by this incarnation. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Time of the Doctor (TV story)}}) In the original timeline, the Eleventh Doctor died on Trenzalore without regenerating, [[the TARDIS]] becoming his grave. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Name of the Doctor (TV story)}}) However, [[Clara Oswald]] prevented this by convincing the [[Time Lord]]s to give him a new set of [[regeneration]]s. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Time of the Doctor (TV story)}}) | |||
=== Post-regeneration === | === Post-regeneration === | ||
[[File:Twelfth Doctor Post-Regeneration.jpg|thumb|left|A befuddled Twelfth Doctor stares at Clara Oswald immediately after his thirteenth regeneration. ([[TV]]: | {{Main|Fall of the Eleventh}} | ||
[[File:Twelfth Doctor Post-Regeneration.jpg|thumb|left|A befuddled Twelfth Doctor stares at Clara Oswald immediately after his thirteenth regeneration. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Time of the Doctor (TV story)}})]] | |||
After fighting in the [[Siege of Trenzalore]] for nine hundred years, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Tales of Trenzalore (short story)}}) the [[Eleventh Doctor]] was granted a new regeneration cycle by the [[Time Lord]]s after an appeal by [[Clara Oswald]]. After using the energy from the explosive reset that followed to destroy the Dalek forces, the Doctor returned to his TARDIS to complete his regeneration, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Time of the Doctor (TV story)}}) making a quick phone call to Clara, during which he learned his next incarnation would be old and grey-haired. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) Later in the TARDIS, the Doctor spoke with a sorrowful Clara who begged him not to change. The Doctor reassured Clara before suddenly changing in a flash before Clara's eyes, the new Doctor voicing his surprise at having new kidneys as the TARDIS began crash landing. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Time of the Doctor (TV story)}}) Crashing in pre-historic Earth, the TARDIS was chased and subsequently swallowed by a female [[tyrannosaur]]; when the Doctor brought the TARDIS to [[1890s]] [[London]], the dinosaur was accidentally brought along with it. | |||
After the TARDIS was spat out, the Doctor, in a severe bout of post-regenerative trauma, acted wild and irrationally, until he passed out in front of the [[Paternoster Gang]]. Though put to bed to stabilise, the Doctor soon awoke and, hearing the dinosaur in pain, climbed out onto the rooftop and left on horseback when he saw the T-Rex was being burned to ashes. Deciding to investigate, but still suffering a degree of post-regenerative stress, the Doctor wandered the streets of London. Talking to [[Barney (Deep Breath)|a passing tramp]], the Doctor examined his new facial features, noticing that he had [[Lobus Caecilius|seen it before]], before trading in his previous incarnation's favourite watch for the tramp's coat. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) | |||
Seeing an ad in a newspaper placed by [[Missy]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) which seemed to be a message from Clara, the Doctor infiltrated a suspicious restaurant, where he and Clara learned that time travelling [[Clockwork Droid]]s, under the leadership of the [[Half-Face Man]], had been harvesting [[human]]s to repair themselves and reach the [[Promised Land]]. Trying to speak on peaceful terms, the Doctor snapped the Control Node out of his illusion of the Promised Land by revealing the true state of his existence. Conflicted and unsure, the Half-Face Man fell out of his [[escape pod]], either jumping or having been pushed by the Doctor. | |||
Returning to his TARDIS, the Doctor briefly left Clara behind ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) due to the calculations he had been working on through all his prior incarnations finally being completed, and he went to help his previous twelve incarnations place [[Gallifrey]] in a [[pocket universe]] at the end of the [[Last Great Time War]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Day of the Doctor (TV story)}}) joining [[the General]] in the [[War Room]] to coordinate disaster relief. With Gallifrey saved, the Twelfth Doctor went to a [[tea]] party in the [[Under Gallery]] to celebrate with his other incarnations. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Day of the Doctor (novelisation)}}) The Doctor then redecorated the TARDIS console room and settled on a new outfit, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) creating his new control console in a bathroom. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Body Electric (comic story)}}) | |||
Returning for Clara, the Doctor spoke of the suspicious way Clara had met him in his previous incarnation, only for Clara to likewise voice her uncertainty of the Doctor's identity and asked to be returned home. Attempting to return Clara home, the Doctor ended up in [[Glasgow]] by mistake. However, Clara decided to go out for coffee with the Doctor after the Eleventh Doctor called her and encouraged her to help the Doctor through his regeneration. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) | |||
=== Early experiences === | |||
Wanting to investigate a series of murders, the Doctor went to get Clara some coffee from the [[Intergalactic Coffee Roasting Station]], where he bumped into an old acquaintance, [[78351 (Lights Out)|78351]], and witnessed the murder of a female customer. Deciding to take 78351 on as a companion, the Doctor examined the dead body and determined that all the caffeine in her system had been drained from two bite marks on her neck, just as a [[Blowfish]] was also murdered. Using his sonic screwdriver, the Doctor found that 78351's adrenaline levels had increased, and, fearful that he would be the next victim, took him to the master control centre to draw out the killer. Finding the technicians murdered, and that they had been killed fourteen hours before the first victim, the Doctor realised that 78351 was the killer. | |||
Wanting to take him off the station, the Doctor had 78351 take him to his ship and they fled the ICRS. Turning out the ship's lights to see 78351's true form, the Doctor likened 78351's transformation to [[puberty]], and told him he had to decide if he wanted to control his adult body. When he also told him that he might not have the energy to stabilise himself, 78351 set his ship to collide with a nearby sun to get the energy burst. Promising to buy 78351's friend a coffee from him, the Doctor left the ship in an escape pod, and returned to the ICRS. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Lights Out (short story)}}) | |||
Intending to return to Clara with some coffee, the Doctor saved a [[Combined Galactic Resistance]] fighter pilot named [[Journey Blue]] from a [[Dalek flying saucer|Dalek saucer]] attack ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) in the [[Ryzak solar system]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Secret Lives of Monsters (short story)}}) though left [[Kai Blue|her deceased brother]] behind in the explosion. After prompting her into asking nicely, the Doctor returned Journey to her command ship, the ''[[Aristotle (spacecraft)|Aristotle]]'', where Colonel [[Morgan Blue]] introduced him to a [[Dalek]] that had developed a fault and turned good. Returning for Clara, three weeks later from her perspective, the Doctor asked her if she thought he was a good man, a question that Clara found herself unable to answer, and returned to base to help the Dalek. | |||
Joined by Journey and two other soldiers named [[Gretchen Carlisle]] and [[Ross (Into the Dalek)|Ross]], the Doctor and Clara used a [[moleculon nanoscaler]] to miniaturise themselves and enter the Dalek, whom the Doctor nicknamed "[[Rusty (Into the Dalek)|Rusty]]". After losing Ross to the [[Dalek antibody|Rusty's antibodies]], the Doctor discovered a radiation leak from within Rusty and learned that he had turned good after seeing a star being born. Following the radiation, the Doctor discovered damage to Rusty's power source was slowly killing him, and repaired the damage with his [[the Doctor's sonic screwdriver|sonic screwdriver]]. However, fixing Rusty's power core resulted in the malfunction that turned Rusty good to be reversed, with Rusty's destructive nature returning, and causing Rusty to go on a killing spree, as well as send a distress beacon to summon the Daleks to the rebels' base. | |||
After getting slapped and lectured by Clara for his apathy, the Doctor realised he could turn Rusty good again by reawakening his memory of the star being born. Instructing Clara to find a way to restore Rusty's memories of the star, the Doctor made his way to the [[Kaled mutant]] within Rusty to mind link with him, causing Rusty to see the Doctor's hatred of the Daleks and destroy the Daleks that had responded to his distress beacon. Leaving to continue his crusade against the Daleks, Rusty commented that Doctor would have made a good Dalek before both of them left. After declining Journey's request to travel with him and Clara, the Doctor returned Clara home, both still unsure if the Doctor was a good man, but with Clara convinced he was at least trying to be one. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) The Doctor then thought about what kind of Dalek he would be. ([[POEM]]: {{cs|Dalek (poem)}}) | |||
The Doctor joined a crew of six travellers, including a young [[Geoffrey Chaucer]], on a journey to the church at [[Santiago de Compostela]] to avoid the plague. At the church, one of the travellers gave birth, and then the group was attacked by life-feeding aliens disguised as wooden skeletons. However, the aliens recoiled in horror upon seeing the new baby. The Doctor realised the church was actually the aliens' disguised spaceship, and he and the crew escaped as the ship took off. The Doctor explained to Chaucer that the baby, representing new life, was enough to frighten away the death-conquering aliens. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Mercy Seats (short story)}}) | |||
=== New adventures with Clara === | |||
{{Section stub|Info from ''[[The Blood Cell (novel)|The Blood Cell]]'', & ''[[The Charge of the Night Brigade (audio story)|The Charge of the Night Brigade]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
After he was forced to disguise himself as a [[nun]] to escape the [[Church of Vindication's Inquisitors]], ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Swords of Kali (comic story)}}) the Doctor became alerted to a creature that disguised itself as a motorway to consume planets into other dimensions. Summoning Clara to assist him, the Doctor was surprised when the creature disappeared, unaware that Clara had tricked the creature into consuming itself. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Road Rage (Twelfth Doctor comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor was given some [[chips]] by Clara, and then rambled about how great they tasted. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Untitled (12D comic story)}}) Attempting to get a reservation at a restaurant on [[Calbaron III]], the Doctor and Clara found there was a three-year wait for a table. They booked and went three years to the future, only to learn the restaurant was closed to celebrate the third anniversary of the overthrowing of a tyrannical emperor. They finally made their booking six years prior for three years later. When the Doctor found that the tyrannical emperor had scratched his TARDIS, he decided to overthrow him, resulting in the anniversary. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Planet of the Diners (comic story)}}) The Doctor repaired the scratch on the TARDIS, but found that the damage had caused time within the TARDIS to temporarily run backwards, much to Clara's annoyance when she tried to converse with him. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Inversion of Time (comic story)}}) | |||
When the TARDIS was swarmed with [[Adipose]], the Doctor claimed he was "not an Adipose person." He then had Clara take out the rubbish, as he claimed he wasn't a "taking-the-bin-out" person, with Clara declaring his attitude had to stop. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Bin Dilemma (comic story)}}) | |||
Deciding to return to Victorian London, the Doctor and Clara reunited with the [[Paternoster Gang]] to investigate a carnival at the Frost Fairs, where some performers had gained powers, in connection with a death that had occurred. They discovered these events were linked to weapon-creator [[Orestes Milton]], who was hiding from the [[Shadow Proclamation]]. The Doctor stopped Milton's anger-inducing machine, but was unable to prevent his escape. However, Affinity, a shape-shifter created by Milton, tricked him into thinking the Shadow Proclamation wanted his help, and the real Shadow Proclamation destroyed Milton's ship when it attempted to leave Earth. The humans altered by Milton retained their powers, and decided to resume their work at the fair. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}) | |||
[[File:12 and Robin.jpg|thumb|right|The Doctor finally acknowledges Robin Hood as a real person. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}})]] | |||
Deciding to give Clara the choice of their next destination, the Doctor took her to [[Sherwood Forest]] to meet [[Robin Hood]], though he was sceptical of Robin's actual existence. He was proven wrong when Robin shot his TARDIS with an arrow seconds after they arrived; however, he refused to believe Robin and his [[Merry Men]] were real upon visiting their camp. After participating in an [[archery]] contest for a golden arrow, the Doctor got himself, Clara and Robin captured by the [[Sheriff of Nottingham]], who had allied with alien robots disguised as [[Knight (Robot of Sherwood)|his knights]]. | |||
Escaping, the Doctor and Robin found out the robots were trying to reach [[Nethersphere|the Promised Land]], but lacked sufficient [[gold]] to repair their engine. Believing Robin was also a robot, the Doctor was re-captured by the Sheriff as Robin took Clara and escaped through a window. Leading a revolution in the Sheriff's dungeon, the Doctor was informed by the Sheriff that Robin Hood was not a robot, just as Robin came to his rescue and defeated the Sheriff. Assisting Robin with Clara's help, the Doctor helped launch the golden arrow into the ship to allow it to escape velocity and explode harmlessly in space. As he departed, the Doctor left [[Maid Marian]], whom he had met in the Sheriff's dungeon, behind to be reunited with Robin. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara used a [[goo bomb]] to foil the [[Sibro]]'s attempt to weaponise a Conlanian clock tower, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Chime Time (comic story)}}) orchestrated a ceasefire in a war between anthropomorphic [[cat]]s and [[dog]]s by allying them against an army of alien fleas that planned to attack every planet in the universe, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Once Bitten (comic story)}}) and helped the [[World Brain]] find a new way of life after crash landing on its factory planet. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Crash Landing (comic story)}}) | |||
On [[Hoopoe]], the Doctor acted as Clara's [[lawyer]] when she was arrested for walking on the ground by the [[Court of Birds]]. His attempt to convince them she and him weren't cats backfired when the owls accused them of being mice, but the Doctor had foreseen this and had recruited the native cats to attack the owls with makeshift wings, but ensured that the wings were too difficult to use properly, rendering them useless in the cats' pursuit of the owls. As he left with Clara in the TARDIS, the Doctor rewarded the cats with a box of canned tuna. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Court of Birds (comic story)}}) | |||
Becoming obsessed with the idea that a creature designed to hide was following him around, and that everyone was similarly being followed, the Doctor began searching for such a creature. ([[TV]]: '{{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) In his pursuit, the Doctor encountered an individual who also feared such an entity, and told them that the fear they felt was something he had lived with all his life while travelling in his TARDIS. ([[WC]]: {{cs|Listen (webcast)}}) Still unable to find the creature, the Doctor recruited Clara's help in finding the creature by using the TARDIS [[telepathic circuits]] to find it in her past. However, Clara got distracted by a phone call from [[Danny Pink]], and piloted them into his past instead, back when Danny was a child called "Rupert" and living in a care home. Finding a [[Figure (Listen)|figure]] under Rupert's bed sheet, the Doctor had Clara and Rupert turn their backs to allow the being to walk out the room unobserved, leaving them unsure if it really was the creature or just another child playing a trick on Rupert. | |||
Returning Clara to her date, the Doctor continued to follow his theory by trying to use a trace of Clara left in the telepathic circuits, ending up at the [[end of the universe]] where a time traveller named Colonel [[Orson Pink]] had been trapped for six months. Intrigued by how following Clara's timeline led him to Orson, the Doctor returned for Clara and had them wait at the end of the universe for the night, believing it to be the perfect time to find out if the creatures were real. Finding a chance to confront the creature outside the ship, the Doctor sent Clara into the TARDIS and seemed to get a look at what he'd been chasing before the atmospheric shell broke and Orson had to rescue him. As the Doctor was knocked out, and the TARDIS seemed to be under attack, Clara used the telepathic circuits to fly the TARDIS away. The Doctor woke up to find Clara gone, but, before he could investigate, Clara re-entered the TARDIS and made him promise to leave and not find out where they had landed. Afterwards, the Doctor returned Orson and Clara to their own times and, satisfied by what he had learned, underlined the ''"LISTEN"'' that had been written on his chalkboard. ([[TV]]: '{{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor planned to rendezvous with Clara at Coal Hill School, but instead arrived at a replica of the school on an [[Planet (The Monsters of Coal Hill School)|unnamed planet]], where Clara and [[Jeff Delobel]], a French teacher, had been abducted by [[Creature (The Monsters of Coal Hill School)|primitive aliens]] planning to infiltrate Earth via Coal Hill School. In order to thwart the invasion, the Doctor told the aliens a tale of Earth's Guardian, informing them that he was the guardian, scaring the aliens off. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Monsters of Coal Hill School (comic story)}}) | |||
Returning to pick up Clara, and persuade her to away from a date with Danny in favour of other travel destinations, the Doctor received a call from Madame [[Karabraxos]], who requested he free [[The Teller (Time Heist)|the Teller]] and its mate from the [[Bank of Karabraxos]], as he had done on the day she met him. Realising the ramifications of this request, the Doctor built up the identity of "the Architect", using this identity to stage a bank heist for him to commit, with the assistance of Clara, an [[augmented human]] named [[Psi]], and a shape shifting [[mutant human]] named [[Saibra]]. Using [[memory worm]]s to erase the plan from their minds and prevent the Teller from alerting the young Karabraxos, the Doctor and Clara found themselves already in the Bank with their accomplices, their last memory being the [[TARDIS phone]] ringing. | |||
Receiving instructions from the Architect on their location, objective, and the Bank's security system, the team infiltrated the Bank. Entering a safety deposit box, the team set of a [[dimensional shift bomb]] into a service corridor, where the team found a briefcase containing six teleporters disguised as [[atomic shredder]]s. Seemingly losing Saibra and Psi to the shredders when the Teller locked onto them, the Doctor figured out that time travel was involved with the heist plan when a perfectly-timed [[solar storm]] unlocked the Bank's vault. Retrieving what the Architect had promised Psi and Saibra as payment, the Doctor and Clara were caught by the Teller and delivered to the bank manager, Ms. [[Delphox]]. After Delphox left them to be executed, the Doctor and Clara were saved by Psi and Saibra, who revealed the true nature of the "shredders". | |||
Venturing into the Bank's private vault to find his and Clara's reward, the Doctor instead found Director Karabraxos, and discovered that Delphox, as well as a majority of the bank's staff, was an exact clone of Karabraxos. Seeing Karabraxos' hatred of her own clones caused the Doctor to have an epiphany on the identity of the Architect, and he gave his phone number to Karabraxos as she fled from the solar storm about to hit the Bank. Subjecting himself to the Teller's powers, the Doctor regained his lost memories and realised the true objective of the bank heist. Freeing the Teller and its mate to a place to live in solitude, the Doctor then parted ways with Psi and Saibra, giving them their rewards, and returned Clara home for her date. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara were left to the mercy of [[sand piranha]]s while chained to posts on a [[Planet (The Caretaker)|desert planet]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) helped stranded [[Seevith]] launch their ship, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|More Than Meets the Eye (comic story)}}) and helped Professor [[Faster]] end the [[17th century]] witch trials. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Witch Work (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara rendezvoused with [[Fish person|fish people]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) were saved from being "turned into toast by an [[Aaraanandal slime beast]]" by [[Simon (When the Wolves Came)|Simon]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|When the Wolves Came (short story)}}) had a dinner date in [[1937]] [[Berlin]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}) outran soldiers to escape in the TARDIS, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) and saved a small village from a [[Cephla]] at [[Christmas]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Gift Snatched! (comic story)}}) | |||
Planning to visit [[Eden 2]], the Doctor was joined by a reluctant Clara, after she phoned him to drop her off at work after she overslept. When the duo arrived, they found the planet under assimilation by the [[Vladlack]], but it turned out that the planet was a trap to lure in and arrest invaders of planets. Fearing that innocents could be inappropriately punished, the Doctor set up a warning beacon around the planet, then dropped Clara off at Coal Hill School. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Freeze (comic story)}}) | |||
=== Meeting Danny and Courtney === | |||
[[File:Doctor giving commands to the Skovox.jpg|thumb|left|An undercover Doctor dissuades a Skovox Blitzer from using its [[self-destruct]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}})]] | |||
During one of his visits to Clara, the Doctor discovered a [[Skovox Blitzer]] near [[Coal Hill School]], and went in "deep cover" as the school's temporary caretaker to dispatch of the killer robot. To keep Clara from interfering, the Doctor revealed his plan was to use [[chronodyne generator]]s to send the Blitzer thousands of years into the future. | |||
However, the Doctor's plan was accidentally foiled by [[Danny Pink]]; Danny had seen the Doctor act suspiciously and believed the devices were of malicious intent, deactivating some. As a result, the Blitzer was sent a short time into the future, rather than centuries. After Clara introduced Danny as her boyfriend, the Doctor took a dislike to him as he was a former soldier and feared he wasn't good enough for Clara. He changed his plan to using a communication device to make the Blitzer think the Doctor was its superior. | |||
When the Blitzer returned during the next evening, Danny used his military training to help keep the Blitzer occupied, allowing the Doctor to repair the malfunctioning device. After successfully commanding the Blitzer to deactivate, the Doctor took it into space and ejected it from the TARDIS, taking Clara's troublesome pupil [[Courtney Woods]] with him after she discovered his identity, deciding that there was no harm in having Courtney tag along as a travelling companion, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) but didn't see anything special in her. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}) | |||
=== Further adventures with Clara === | |||
Discovering that a group of aliens were going to turn a planet of anthropomorphic pink [[Hippopotamus|hippopotami]] into stone, the Doctor intercepted the aliens at the early stages of their invasion and led them to ancient [[Egypt]], where they petrified a large cat-like alien, creating the [[Sphinx]] and getting crushed in the process. He and Clara then returned to the planet of the anthropomorphic pink hippopotamuses to reverse the petrified effect. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Petrified (DWA comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara turned Captain [[Ratlett]]'s crew against him and showed them a better life, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Wheelers (comic story)}}) were almost consumed by robotic bananas for stealing food from the [[moon]] [[Luna Schlosser]], ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Five a Day (comic story)}}) and saved the Cloud City of [[Mirmi 24]] from being eaten by an alien snake. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Very Hungry Snake (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor sought out [[Dracksil Forg]] and foiled the plans of his customers who bought his evil ideas. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Best-Laid Plans (audio story)}}) | |||
While attempting to hang [[flower]]s on the exterior of the TARDIS, the Doctor was spooked by a future Clara and fell out of the TARDIS into the orbit of an [[asteroid]]. When Clara's attempt to avert the crisis ended up causing it, the TARDIS was able to save the Doctor by creating a time field around him. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|A Long Way Down (short story)}}) | |||
Heading for [[Rome]], the Doctor and Clara wound up in a German forest, where they were apprehended and taken into a nearby encampment, where they learnt that [[robot]]ic [[mosquito]]es were spreading [[disease]] and killing off the [[soldier]]s. Tracking the energy fields of the mosquitoes to a tower in the woods, the Doctor discovered the occupants were using the mosquitoes to search for a cure to a plague infecting their own world. The Doctor convinced them to leave. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silver Mosquitoes (short story)}}) | |||
=== Fallout with Clara === | |||
[[File:Doctor Refusing to Interfere.jpg|thumb|The Doctor refuses to help humanity make a critical decision when time is in flux. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}})]] | |||
At Clara's urging, the Doctor took her and Courtney to the Moon in [[2049]], so that Courtney could be the first girl on the Moon to bolster her confidence. Landing instead in a recycled space shuttle heading for the moon, the Doctor was informed by Captain [[Lundvik]] that the moon had inexplicably gained mass, and that she and her crew were going to use nuclear bombs to dispose of the additional mass. Investigating a disused mining base from a previous mission, the Doctor, his companions and the astronauts found corpses preserved in webs and research that suggested that the moon was disintegrating. Soon after, the group was attacked by a spider creature, which Courtney killed with washing up equipment, but not before Lundvik's whole crew was killed. | |||
Taking a scared Courtney back to the TARDIS, the Doctor voiced his uncertainty of the Moon's fate to Clara, calling it a "grey area" in time. Exploring the moon's surface for the reason behind the deterioration, the Doctor, Clara and Lundvik discovered a horde of spider germs beneath the Moon's surface, as well as amniotic fluid, prompting the Doctor to investigate beneath the Moon for answers. Scanning the Moon's core, the Doctor discovered that the Moon was, in fact, an egg for an ancient creature that was hatching. Reuniting with Clara and Lundvik after the shuttle and the TARDIS fell into a canyon, the Doctor informed them of his discovery after establishing contact with Courtney's phone. While Clara and Lundvik argued about killing the creature for the sake of the Earth, the Doctor had Courtney bring the TARDIS to him via a DVD, deciding that it was not his place to decide the Moon's future, and left in his TARDIS for Clara, Lundvik and Courtney to decide on behalf of humankind. | |||
After Clara chose to spare the creature, despite humanity voting for its death, the Doctor returned for the three women, taking them to a beach on Earth to see the creature hatch and the Moon harmlessly disintegrate in Earth's atmosphere. Confirming that the sight of the moon hatching kick started the humans pioneering into space, and seeing the creature hatch a new egg with same mass as the old Moon, the Doctor returned Courtney and Clara to Coal Hill School. However, Clara, angered by the position the Doctor had put her in, asked the Doctor if he had known the egg was harmless, which the Doctor confirmed as true. Tired of the Doctor's apathy, Clara argued with the Doctor about how he had almost caused her to kill an unborn creature, and, deeply hurt by the Doctor's constantly patronising attitude toward humanity in general, she told him to leave and not return for her. The Doctor was left stunned by her reaction and immediately took off. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}) | |||
=== Time away from Clara === | |||
Responding to a distress call from a Dalek prisoner aboard a [[Cyber-ship]], the Doctor discovered that the Daleks, [[Cyberman|Cybermen]] and [[Sontaran]]s were searching for the [[Orb of Fates]] to gain control of a powerful Time Lord weapon called the ''[[Starbane]]''. The Doctor joined forces with the Dalek prisoner, who had been altered by the Cybermen and had "seen the light", and nicknamed it "[[Lumpy]]". Following the Orbs' [[artron energy]] to the [[Cyber-tomb]]s of [[Telos]], the Doctor restored a minimum of Lumpy's power, not trusting the Dalek to allow full use of its power, and sent him to retrieve the second Orb while he studied the first in the TARDIS. | |||
As Lumpy descended into the depths of Telos, the Doctor discovered that the Orbs were powered by temporal energy, and the only way to destroy them was to create a temporal implosion. Leaving Telos for [[Sontar]], the Doctor and Lumpy were trapped in a [[stasis field]] by [[Major]] [[Skar]], but the Doctor was able to open the field and allow Lumpy to escape undetected while he stayed behind as a diversion. After Lumpy acquired the last Orb and deactivated the stasis field, the Doctor escaped with Lumpy. They next travelled to the ''Starbane'', which was already occupied by [[Dalek]]s. When the Doctor learned that Lumpy had not turned to good, he found a way to access Lumpy's controls remotely and used this ability to destroy the ''Starbane'', while he piloted the TARDIS away. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|The Doctor and the Dalek (video game)}}) | |||
On Christmas Eve 2014, the Doctor teamed up with [[Ceri (Behind You)|Ceri]], an understudy, to stop an [[Addos]] attempt to recreate a [[Mummers play]] by genetically altering actors from the [[Palace Theatre]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Behind You (short story)}}) | |||
The Doctor had several adventures with [[Gertie (Super Gran)|Gertie]]. These included exploring [[Mars]] before it became a dead planet, stopping a [[Gestalt Creature]] from superheating the planet's surface and being chased by a [[mummy]]. The Doctor eventually dropped her off in [[1986]] and promised to return. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Super Gran (comic story)}}) | |||
[[File: | === Clara re-joins === | ||
[[File:Orient dress.jpg|left|thumb|The Doctor and Clara enjoy their final trip. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}})]] | |||
When Clara decided she and the Doctor should have "one last hurrah" before parting ways for good, the Doctor took her to the space-bound ''[[Orient Express (spacecraft)|Orient Express]]'', choosing the destination with an inkling that something exciting would happen after having been lured with phone calls, mysterious summons and free train tickets in the past. After discovering the death of [[Pitt (Mummy on the Orient Express)|an elderly passenger]], and urging himself to investigate, the Doctor went to the engine room to examine the dead passenger's [[Excelsior Life Extender]], meeting [[Perkins (Mummy on the Orient Express)|Chief Engineer Perkins]] in the process, and learned the legend of the [[Foretold]]. Seeking advice from [[Emile Moorhouse]], a fellow passenger who was a Professor of Alien Mythology, the Doctor soon discovered a second death had occurred in the kitchen. | |||
[[ | Confronting Captain [[Hector Quell]] with his theory, but getting ignored, the Doctor joined Perkins and Moorhouse in the engine room to research the deaths. Calling Clara to update her, the Doctor discovered that she and [[Maisie Pitt]] were trapped in a storage cart with a sarcophagus. Fearing that Clara was trapped with the Foretold, the Doctor tried to rewire the door open, only to find the sarcophagus empty, and himself under arrest by Quell for being a stowaway. However, after witnessing a third death first hand, Quell realised that the Doctor was right and allied with him, just as the Doctor [[deduce]]d the true nature of the Orient Express; the passengers were all experts and scientists in specific fields of study, gathered there to study the Foretold. With a lab revealed and the hologram passengers disappearing, the train's computer, [[Gus (Mummy on the Orient Express)|Gus]], gave the scientists the necessary instructions and equipment. Losing Moorhouse to the Foretold, the Doctor and Perkins figured out that the Foretold was targeting the weaker passengers after looking at the medical history of the previous victims, just as Quell was killed by the creature, as he had [[post-traumatic stress]], but not before he gave the Doctor the necessary description to defeat the Foretold. | ||
=== | Realising that Maisie was next due to her breakdowns, the Doctor told a reluctant Clara to bring Maisie to the lab, where the Foretold appeared to Maisie, but the Doctor saved her by implanting a replica of her grief into his head, confusing the Foretold into thinking the Doctor was Maisie. Deducing that the Foretold was an ancient soldier augmented with technology, the Doctor surrendered, and, after a final salute, the ancient soldier crumpled to dust, with only the technology that kept him alive remaining. With the objective completed, Gus released the air out of the cabin, but the Doctor beamed all the dying passengers into the TARDIS, and tried to hack Gus to find out who had created him, but this trigged a security measure, causing the train to self-destruct. Dropping everyone but Clara and Perkins off at the nearest civilised planet, the Doctor waited for Clara to awaken on a beach before explaining everything. | ||
Back in the TARDIS, the Doctor invited Perkins to travel with him, but Perkins politely declined and he and the Doctor bade each other goodbye. Reflecting on a conversation she had with Maisie, Clara, having forgiven the Doctor, decided to continue travelling with him, telling the Doctor that her leaving was all Danny's idea. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}) | |||
=== Resumed travels with Clara === | |||
{{Section stub|Info from ''[[Unearthly Things (comic story)|Unearthly Things]]'' & ''[[War Wounds (audio story)|War Wounds]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
Picking up a signal, the TARDIS arrived on the [[Quartz Wastes]] of [[Asmoray]]. Although the Doctor believed it was an uninhabited wasteland, Clara pointed out there was a harvester nearby extracting [[electricity]] from the quartz. The Doctor and Clara were brought aboard the harvester by two workers, where beings within the electricity had broken through and killed four workers. Their leader, [[Luther (The Body Electric)|Luther]], was insistent on continuing their work regardless. Investigating, the Doctor and Clara found the creatures were only attacking because they were being sucked into the harvester's storage batteries. With Clara's help, the Doctor was able to free the electricity beings back into the quartz. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Body Electric (comic story)}}) | |||
Taking Clara to the [[Taj Mahal]] in [[India]] for a holiday, the Doctor was chosen to act as a hostage by [[Stellar Nexus]] while Nexus tried to get payment for Earth's supposed tax bills. When the Doctor challenged Nexus's claim by pointing out the illogic in his statement, and then insulted him by asking why he had never heard of Nexus's Empire, the Doctor was locked in a cell while an illusion of him was set against a dragon in a gladiator battle. When Clara managed to pilot the TARDIS into the Doctor's cell, the Doctor used his sonic screwdriver to deactivate Nexus's illusions, exposing that Stellar Nexus was a child-sized con artist whose entire Empire was an illusion. Sending the defeated Nexus away, the Doctor decided to treat Clara to a [[curry]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Empire's Fall (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor took Clara to see the [[Lights of Tanzarr]], but instead found that the [[Nameless Mist]] had entered N-Space and was threatening to devour the cosmos. Originally wanting to flee, the Doctor was convinced by Clara to save the inhabitants of [[Ferrous-Ferra]], and was inspired to recruit [[Cold Steel]] to headline the "loudest rock show in history of sound". While Clara triangulated the transmissions to cover the local galaxy, the Doctor used the loud music to thwart off the Nameless Mist. With the day saved, the Doctor returned to the concert to celebrate with crowd surfing. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Big Hush (comic story)}}) | |||
[[File:Twelve Tiny TARDIS Railroad Track Peril.jpg|thumb|Failing to maneouver his shrunken TARDIS from the railway line, the Doctor hears a train approaching. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}})]] | |||
Trying to return Clara home, the Doctor instead landed in [[Bristol]] when the [[Boneless]] began draining power from the TARDIS, drawing it off course and causing the exterior to shrink. Sending Clara to find the cause, the Doctor re-entered the TARDIS to study the shrinking effect, only for the TARDIS to shrink further, trapping him inside. Equipping Clara with his [[psychic paper]] and [[sonic screwdriver]], the Doctor used nanotechnology to hack into Clara's optic nerve and establish a visual contact with the outer world. After Clara recruited the aid of a local named [[Rigsy]], pretending to be the Doctor while doing so, the duo discovered that creatures from a two-dimensional universe were killing and dissecting missing locals to understand their three-dimensional bodies. | |||
After discovering that Clara had lied to him about Danny's approval, the Doctor realised that a mural dedicated to local missing people was the missing people, killed and worn by the creatures as camouflage. With Clara leading a gang of surviving community servers, the Doctor theorised that the creatures were trying to communicate, and that the deaths were but a mere misunderstanding. When the theory was proved wrong, the Doctor invented a device that could reverse the creatures' flattening abilities, which he called a [[2Dis]], as Clara and her gang retreated to an underground tunnel. | |||
After Clara accidentally dropped the TARDIS onto a train line, the Doctor activated the TARDIS's [[siege mode]] to protect it from an oncoming train. Now unable to even open the doors, which had been removed by the activation of siege mode, and with the life support systems failing as the power drain continued, the Doctor congratulated Clara for being worthy of the title "Doctor", unsure if she could hear him or even if she was still alive. Clara and Rigsy were able to trick the creatures into supplying the TARDIS with the necessary power to restore it to full working conditions. Naming his adversaries "the Boneless", the Doctor banished them back to their home universe. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor landed on the ''[[Pollyanna]]'', the first of the [[Ninth Era]] [[sunship]]s, which had been on an expedition to circumnavigate [[Sol|the Sun]]. Seeing one of the [[Umbra (The Eye of Torment)|Umbra]] come out of the Sun and enter a [[plasma intake]], the Doctor rushed to the [[plasma lab]] and carried the injured [[Professor]] [[Alice Dubrovnik]] to safety. The Umbra, who had been trapped in the [[chromosphere]] for millions of years, began swarming the ''Pollyanna'', anchoring the ship to the Sun to try and hijack it and use it as a way of reaching Earth. As the Umbra on board took on more humans as vehicles, the Doctor was ejected out of a plasma intake to attract the Umbra to his regret. He set up the final link to Alice's [[graviton inverter]] on the hull of the ship, allowing Alice to briefly boost the inverter and create a secondary [[gravity]] envelope, which inverted the gravity and the heat, freezing the Umbra on the ship to death. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Eye of Torment (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor brought Clara to the planet [[Isen VI]] to check on a faint warning signal of Gallifreian origin. They found the planet being [[terraform]]ed by [[Kano Dollar]] and his company, [[Dollar Intergalactic]], which woke up a [[Hyperion (species)|Hyperion]] named [[Rann-Korr]], who was hiding in hibernation since the alliance of races led by [[Rassilon]] defeated [[Hyperios]]. The Doctor managed to freeze Rann-Korr by reversing the terraforming process while using himself as a bait. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Terrorformer (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor tried taking Clara to the [[1641]] [[frost fair]], but was instead drawn off course and landed in the [[Sahara Desert]] in [[1941]], where they were captured by [[Nazi]]s. While negotiating with Field Marshall [[Erwin Rommel]], the Doctor learnt that the [[Tuareg]] tribesmen had made allies of "men from the stars", which he learned were the [[Sontaran]]s, under the command of [[Commander]] [[Kygon Brox]]. Brox, believing the Doctor was looking for the [[Warsong]], tried interrogating the Doctor with a [[mind scythe]], but the Doctor instead used the link to gather information of the weapon, such as how the Warsong was taken to Earth, and that the Sontarans were seeking the weapon after signals from it began increasing exponentially. | |||
After Nazi officer [[Heinz Bruckner]] was exposed as a [[Rutan Host|Rutan]] [[spy]], the Doctor witnessed the Warsong being triggered, just as he realised that Bruckner had taken Clara with him to the Warsong's activation. While having the [[Allies (World War II)|Allied]], Axis and Sontaran forces distract Bruckner by converging towards the Warsong, the Doctor and Rommel broke through its defences. Rommel threw Bruckner into the Warsong, killing him, while the Doctor destroyed the "orchestra" of the Warsong by using his sonic screwdriver to blow it up. Afterwards, he brought Clara to the frost fair. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Instruments of War (comic story)}}) | |||
Answering a summons from [[Tiger Maratha]] to [[2315]] [[India]], the Doctor and Clara found that he had been drained of life, and were told by his daughter, [[Priyanka Maratha|Priyanka]], that Tiger had worked for a group known as the [[Scindia family|Family Scindia]]. While searching the Scindia's ancestral home to find information, the Doctor stumbled through a dimensional door into [[1825]] [[India]], where he was attacked by a demon, but rescued by renegade Amazon [[Rani Jhulka]]. The Doctor and Rani found a [[necro-cloud]] harvesting the spirits of the dead, and then were attacked by more of the demons. Before they could be overpowered by the demons, the TARDIS arrived due to Priyanka having unintentionally activated the telepathic circuits, and the Doctor was informed of Clara being taken by the demons. | |||
Returning to 2315, the Doctor, Priyanka and Rani found a final recorded message from Tiger made before his death, in which he explained he had collected three of the four mythic swords of the [[god]]dess [[Kali]] for the Family Scindia and had a premonition of evil over the swords. The Doctor was then summoned to see the patriarch of the Scindia family, [[Chandra Scindia]], and deduced that they were beings known as the [[Kaliratha]], putting themselves throughout time and space and Hindu mythology. Chandra revealed he had Clara hostage, forcing the Doctor to agree to find the fourth sword of Kali for them. The Doctor, Priyanka and Rani collected the fourth sword and returned to Chandra, who revealed he had used Clara as a host for the resurrection of Kali. As the Doctor battled with Kali, he revealed he had hid his sonic screwdriver in the fourth sword, so that Kali unwittingly freed the evil spirits from her and released Clara's body, while Rani killed Chandra. The Doctor, Clara, Rani and Priyanka then attended a festival in [[Mumbai]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Swords of Kali (comic story)}}) | |||
After Clara accidentally freed the [[Djinx]] from his imprisonment, the Doctor was trapped in his TARDIS by the vengeful entity. Sending Clara instructions on her phone, the Doctor was able to instruct Clara on how to defeat the Djinx and free himself. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Doctor in a Bottle (comic story)}}) The Doctor and Clara then foiled a plot by [[Zorgo]] the Terrible, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Zorgo the Terrible (comic story)}}) and eventually reunited with Gertie in [[2016]] atop of the [[Time dragon]] he acquired from him, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Super Gran (comic story)}}) as well as meet [[Diana Winter]]. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Gods of Winter (audio story)}}) | |||
[[ | After stopping a hostile invasion in the future, the Doctor travelled to [[Tower of London|UNIT HQ]], where he shut down a [[the Void|Void]] portal. The Doctor came into conflict with the [[Fracture]]s, natives of [[the Void]] that possessed humans, who believed they had to drag anyone marked with [[Void stuff]] into the Void to protect reality from unravelling. The chaos was started by a [[UNIT]] scientist from an [[alternate Earth]], [[Paul Foster]], who wished to be with a version of his family. Recruiting UNIT, [[Kate Stewart]] and the Fosters' help, the Doctor and Clara opened the Void, drawing the Fractures back inside and freeing their victims. At Clara's insistence, the Doctor allowed the alternate Paul to join his family in N-Space, knowing the Fractures were entirely out for him now. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Fractures (comic story)}}) | ||
After visiting an uninhabited world, Clara asked the Doctor about [[Marinus]], but he did not remember the planet. That night, as he slept, the Doctor worked out that Clara was up to something, and woke up to find Clara missing and the TARDIS in [[1923]] [[Paris]]. Looking for Clara in a café, the Doctor ran into his two previous incarnations, who were also heading to meet their respective companions. | |||
When the three Doctors barged into the café to confront each other, Clara, [[Alice Obiefune]] and [[Gabby Gonzalez]] explained that an alternative Gabby from a bad future had warned them of the plan devised by a future "alternate" version of the Twelfth Doctor, which involved using a [[continuity bomb]] to make his timeline concrete, and had then planned to rise the [[Voord]] on Marinus to be a new race of [[Time Lord]]s and to conquer the universe. Realising that the picture still existed of the three Doctors arguing, they decided that going to Marinus was still part of the new timeline, and the three left Paris calmly, avoiding the [[Blinovitch Limitation Effect]] that summoned the [[Reaper]]s and destroyed the café. | |||
On Marinus, the Doctors posed for the picture and purposefully fell into the [[continuity bomb]], entering the [[Eleventh Doctor]]'s alternate timeline and used the TARDIS to go to the Voord's pocket universe. Met with Voord soldiers, the Twelfth Doctor pretended to be his alternate self to gain authority, but a Voord soldier, believing the deception, connected the Twelfth Doctor to the Voord's group mind, where he encountered his alternate self, and the two fought within the mindscape. Realising that his alternate self was too powerful to take on alone, the Doctor brought his other selves and their companions into the hive mind. Inside the group mind, the [[Tenth Doctor]] turned off the city's force field, threatening to wipe them out with acid lest he change the timeline, and the Eleventh Doctor reprogrammed the dimensional controls to return the Voord to the main universe. Convinced by Clara, the alternate Twelfth Doctor agreed and let history take its normal course, regressing the Voord and Marinus back to their primitive evolution. | |||
Seeing the new Marinus, populated by large cities and primitive Voord, the six returned to Paris, and considered eating at the café, until they saw the [[Ninth Doctor]] and [[Rose Tyler]] seated inside, with the Twelfth Doctor saying that the Ninth Doctor had been left out of the plot due to there being no timeline that even the continuity bomb could find where he was anything but "fantastic". As the groups departed, the Twelfth Doctor noted to Clara that she and himself would slowly forget the event as well, as they had both learned about their own futures. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Four Doctors (comic story)}}) | |||
Following Clara's request to meet the Greek storyteller [[Homer]], the Doctor found himself drugged by an innkeeper and bound to a post with Homer and Clara to be fed to a bunch of [[Cyclops|Cyclopes]]. Before he could be eaten, however, the Doctor managed to convince the Cyclopes to listen to Homer's harp, and the young man's music soothed the hungry Cyclopes to sleep. Using a [[sub-conscience reading reality device]], the Doctor discovered that the beasts were refugees from a war that had destroyed their world and, after using his device to convert them to a vegetarian diet, the Doctor let Clara convince them to live in peace in the hills. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Doctor on the Menu (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara travelled to a galactic [[auction]] in Earth's orbit, where unclaimed storage was being bid on, with the storage pod belonging to [[Hyphen T Hyphen]], a reclusive collector, containing a mother [[Rigellan Hyper-Kraken]], which began killing everyone when the pod was opened. Before the mother Hyper-Kraken's eggs could hatch, the Doctor widened the [[dimensional shunt]]'s focus on the Hyper-Kraken, her eggs and the storage pods and safely transported them elsewhere. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Space Invaders! (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara travelled to the [[Sands Hotel]] in [[1964]] [[Las Vegas]] after the Doctor found some tickets to see [[Frankie Seneca]] in a drawer. After proving to be a good gambler, he caught the attention of [[Johnny Dragotta]], who accused him of cheating. However, they were distracted when [[Mikey Nero]], who was thought to have been killed, arrived, demanding control of the hotel. The Doctor unmasked Mikey as a disguised agent of the [[Cybock Imperium]], who began attacking the hotel. While trying to immobilise it, the Doctor was grabbed and throttled by the Imperium, but was saved by [[Sonny Lawson]]. | |||
The Doctor and Sonny discovered the Imperium's ships, and rescued Clara from their captivity. Clara gave the Doctor a [[Time-Gun of Rassilon]], which had been in the alien's possession. As the Imperiums attacked the hotel, the Doctor intervened and offered the aliens a game of [[Rassilon's roulette]] with the gun. Although they agreed, the Doctor knew the gun would not work on a Time Lord, and it would also self-destruct if one attempted to use it on a Time Lord. When the aliens' leader, Kronos, attempted to shoot the Doctor with the gun, it accordingly wiped away his timeline, and the other Cybocks with him. The Doctor, Clara and Sonny then went to see Seneca perform. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Gangland (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara visited the liberation of Paris in [[1944]], where they thwarted a plan by the [[Darapok Empire]] to brainwash humanity into destroying itself by destroying their transmitter on the [[Eiffel Tower]], and then frightening them off. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Trust (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor landed in London, only to find it and the rest of the world overrun by trees after [[Maebh Arden]], a student of [[Coal Hill Year 8 Gifted and Talented Group]] under Clara and Danny's care, found the TARDIS. With his theories constantly being proven wrong, the Doctor came to the conclusion that the trees' sudden overgrowth was an act of aggression, while also dealing with Clara's students in his TARDIS after Clara and Danny arrived to collect Maebh, only for Maebh to slip away in the commotion, just as the Doctor noticed her homework had predicted the events of that day. Following Maebh deeper into the forest, the Doctor discovered that a sentience identifying itself as "the life that prevail[ed]" had caused the overgrowth, in preparation for a devastating [[solar flare]] about to hit the Earth. Believing Earth doomed, Clara inquired him to use the TARDIS as a lifeboat, only to inform him that she had said that to get him back to his TARDIS so he could survive the catastrophe alone. Despite some reluctance, Clara eventually convinced him to leave. | |||
Immediately afterwards, having discovered upon further reflection that the trees were going to absorb the harmful solar flares by pumping the [[atmosphere]] with excess [[oxygen]], the Doctor returned to Clara and explained his discovery to the Gifted and Talented Group. When he was informed of a government operation aiming to destroy the trees, the Doctor opened every mobile network on the planet to allow Maebh the opportunity to deliver a speech written by the Gifted and Talented Group to leave the trees alone. With Danny taking the children to their homes, the Doctor and Clara watched the trees that had grown around the world harvesting and extinguishing the solar fire in the TARDIS, and then returned to watch the trees disappear on Clara's balcony. ([[TV]]: {{cs|In the Forest of the Night (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor attempted to take Clara to [[Blackpool]], but they ended up arriving in [[2089]], by which point the pleasure beach had become an overgrown jungle. The Doctor befriended a wounded donkey he named [[Meghan (All the Empty Towers)|Meghan]], Who had been shot by a man called [[Triss (All the Empty Towers)|Triss]], who was planning a hunting trip in hover pods powered by [[Blackpool Tower]]. The Doctor shut down the power, ending Triss' hunting plans. The Doctor and Clara had a dance in the Blackpool Tower ballroom, and then he enjoyed a play in the water with Meghan. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|All the Empty Towers (short story)}}) | |||
While taking a [[helicopter]] ride for a tour of [[Snowcap University]] in [[2048]] [[Antarctica]], the Doctor and Clara learnt that one of the students, [[Polly Evans]], had stayed behind at the end of term to join the classified [[Project Sub-Zero]]. When another student, [[Quinn Norton]], who also a part of Project Sub-Zero, was killed in a helicopter crash the Doctor and Clara narrowly avoided being on along with Polly's father [[George Evans|George]], they returned to Snowcap U to investigate. With the help of the [[spy]] [[Paul South]], the Doctor found an ice cavern where the missing students had been experimented on, engineered by Dr. [[Patricia Audley]] to survive in extreme cold. To their shock, the Doctor and Clara also met [[Winnie Clarence]], one of Clara's splinters, who refused to accept her only purpose was to die saving the Doctor. Paul and Winnie released most of the imprisoned humans from captivity. | |||
Using his sonic screwdriver, the Doctor transmitted a signal that caused Dr. Audley's animals to go wild. After feigning betrayal of the two, Winnie threw the Doctor the key to free the hybrid subjects from their cells, and saved the Doctor's life by pulling Dr. Audley into a vat of liquid [[ice]] after Audley pulled a gun on him. Dr. Audley was killed, but Winnie survived when she unwittingly had a syringe of Dr. Audley's experimental [[blue blood]] serum injected into her, allowing her to live inside the ice. Clara realised that this meant that not all of the splinters died saving the Doctor, and several of them had lives of their own. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Blood and Ice (comic story)}}) | |||
[[File: | === The darkest hour === | ||
{{section stub|Info from ''[[Fear Is a Superpower (webcast)|Fear Is a Superpower]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
[[File:TwelveShockedDW.jpg|thumb|The Doctor is horrified to realise that his oldest enemy has returned. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}})]] | |||
After Clara suggested going to a [[volcano]] when the Doctor collected her from her flat, she attempted to put a [[Mood drug|mood patch]] on his neck, but the Doctor realised what she was doing and turned it on her. Not realising she was the one drugged, Clara imagined being at the volcano and throwing all the Doctor's TARDIS keys into lava, to blackmail him to save Danny, who had been killed in a road accident. The Doctor refused, and Clara came out of her dream state after destroying all the TARDIS keys. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}) Due to lingering memories of becoming a recluse after a betrayal from Clara, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Four Doctors (comic story)}}) the Doctor forgave Clara, and they duo went to find a way for her to see Danny again. Arriving at [[3W]] due to the telepathic circuits, the Doctor and Clara were greeted by [[Missy]], who identified herself as a greeting droid and summoned [[Chang (Dark Water)|Dr. Chang]], who showed them the use of [[dark water]] in the mausoleum. Clara received a call from Danny, who was in the [[Nethersphere]], and the Doctor and Chang left her to take it. | |||
The Doctor and Chang discovered that the water tanks that held the bodies were being drained by Missy, who killed Chang and revealed that all the tanks held [[Cyberman|Cybermen]], who were preparing to invade Earth. Escaping the building, which he discovered was [[St Paul's Cathedral]], the Doctor tried to warn away nearby people, but Missy called out his warnings as insanity, and told him it was too late. The Doctor asked for her identity, and Missy revealed she was [[the Master]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}) before she and the Doctor were apprehended by [[UNIT]] and brought aboard the plane [[Boat One]], where the Doctor was made President of Earth to battle the Cybermen. Missy overpowered UNIT, killed [[Zygon Osgood|Osgood]], and attempted to kill the Doctor by blowing up the plane, but the Doctor survived his fall to Earth by skydiving into the TARDIS. | |||
He travelled to a cemetery and reunited with Clara, who was comforting a converted Danny. Missy arrived and, as a "birthday present", gave the Doctor control of all the Cybermen. Missy planned to turn the Doctor into the leader of the new army, intending to prove that the two of them were not that different after all, believing that she had put him in the impossible position of either accepting control of the army and using it to "save" the universe or letting humanity die and conquer the universe as the Cybermen. However, reflecting on his past, the Doctor realised that he was just a man in a box who travelled around to help where he could, and then turned command of the army over to Danny, who led the Cybermen into the clouds, where they self-destructed and stopped the rainfall from converting the living. A devastated Missy told the Doctor he could find [[Gallifrey]] in its original location with coordinates she provided, but Clara threatened to kill Missy for what she had done, until the Doctor prepared to do it himself in order to "save [Clara's] soul". However, a rogue Cyberman disintegrated Missy instead, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) though the Doctor knew she had found a way to survive. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) The Doctor realised that the Cyberman was his old friend [[the Brigadier]] and saluted him, fulfilling a lifelong wish of his old friend, who then flew away. | |||
The Doctor | The Doctor later entered the coordinates Missy gave him into the TARDIS, but found out the coordinates were false and led to nowhere. With his only way to find Gallifrey gone, the Doctor attacked the TARDIS console in a furious rage, before breaking down emotionally. Meeting up with Clara in a café, and believing that she was back with Danny, who had the power to leave the Nethersphere when given control of the Cybermen, the Doctor lied to her that he had found Gallifrey so as to allow her to continue with her life. Upon hearing this, Clara told him that she was happy and ready to settle down with Danny, and they both bid farewell and parted ways. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) | ||
=== Dreaming of Santa === | |||
[[File:Twelve Pulling Santa's Sleigh.jpg|thumb|left|Fleeing a dream world, an ecstatic Doctor gets to drive Santa's [[sleigh]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}})]] | |||
Sometime later, the Doctor was attacked by a [[dream crab]], which put him into a scenario where he was brooding alone in his drifting TARDIS, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) and was snapped out of his funk when he heard [[Santa Claus]] knocking on the TARDIS door, asking the Doctor what he wanted for Christmas. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) The Doctor immediately travelled to Clara's home and collected her from her rooftop, where she had also encountered Santa. Urging her to believe in him, they arrived at a North Pole base, which they found was under attack from dream crabs. Santa arrived to help with the problem, but Clara was attacked by a crab and fell into a dream state. As no one could find a way to remove the crab from her face, the Doctor let himself be attacked by one to get her out of her dream before the crab could kill her. | |||
Entering Clara's dream, the Doctor found she was dreaming of spending Christmas with Danny, and learned that Danny was dead. The Doctor urged her to break out of the dream, after Danny bid her farewell. Waking up in the base, the Doctor came to the realisation that everyone in the base was dreaming, having been attacked by crabs after they arrived. They woke up from the dream and the Doctor and Clara prepared to leave, but Clara reminded the Doctor of Santa having been on her roof, and he realised they were still dreaming from different places and times. The infected personnel in the base began to attack the survivors, but everyone managed to escape by dreaming Santa was flying them home. The Doctor, Clara and the base scientists flew over London as they each woke up back in their own times. | |||
Waking up where he had been, the Doctor travelled to Clara's home and removed the dream crab attached to her, only to find it had been sixty-two years since he left her and she was now an old woman. Clara filled him in on the many things she had done in her years, but the Doctor felt remorseful of leaving her when he did. Santa suddenly appeared and asked the Doctor what he'd do if he had another chance, and the Doctor woke up from his dream, this time for real. He saved the younger Clara from the crab. Spurred on by what could have happened to her, the Doctor invited her to resume her travels with him, and she accepted. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) | |||
=== Second chance with Clara === | |||
{{Section stub|Info from ''[[The Gods of Winter (audio story)|The Gods of Winter]]'', ''[[Selfie (comic story)|Selfie]]'', ''[[The House of Winter (audio story)|The House of Winter]]'', ''[[Zorgo the Terrible (comic story)|Zorgo the Terrible]]'', ''[[Super Gran (comic story)|Super Gran]]'', ''[[The Sins of Winter (audio story)|The Sins of Winter]]'', ''[[The Memory of Winter (audio story)|The Memory of Winter]]'', ''[[Royal Blood (novel)|Royal Blood]]'', ''[[Big Bang Generation (novel)|Big Bang Generation]]'', & ''[[Deep Time (novel)|Deep Time]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
[[File:Clara Birthday Comic Back Up Story.jpg|thumb|The Doctor reveals the alien duplicates of Clara. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Partying of the Ways (comic story)}})]] | |||
The Doctor tried to throw Clara a surprise birthday party with varying incarnations and forms of herself, but after Clara noted the rules of time preventing one from meeting themselves, he admitted they were just disguised aliens. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Partying of the Ways (comic story)}}) They next went to [[Cinema Paradoxo]], which had every movie ever playing infinitely. The Doctor chose to see a silent film, which turned out to star actual [[Silent]]s, resulting in them forgetting the film. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Silver Screenesis (comic story)}}) The Doctor and Clara admired some dogs, not realising that they were almost trapped in a [[time eddy]] by [[Zorgo]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Zorgo the Terrible (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara attended an auction of the works of Lady Josephine and purchased a living [[animae particle]] portrait of her. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Briarwood (comic story)}}) Knowing that the portrait would eventually become [[Josie Day]], a companion of his [[eighth incarnation]], the Doctor left her in [[21st century]] [[Wales]] in [[The Doctor's cottage (The Celluloid Midas)|an old cottage of his]], telling her the Eighth Doctor would show her the things she needed to see. The Doctor also left a to-do list in his copy of ''[[Jane Eyre]]'' for his eighth incarnation to find, knowing that the adventures would help Josie build her self-confidence and see herself as far more than a painting. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|A Matter of Life and Death (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara | The Doctor and Clara watched the [[Eighth Doctor]] and Josie as they acknowledged the events that had brought them together. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|A Matter of Life and Death (comic story)}}) | ||
The Doctor | The Doctor learnt that an invasion fleet of [[Megrati]] were planning to attack the planet of [[Lemaria]], a plan he had previously stopped in his [[first incarnation]], and sent them an invitation to give them some time to talk. While waiting for them to arrive, he took part in a Freedom Day celebratory play about the original defeat of the Lemaria, playing the role of the First Doctor. The Doctor realised his [[fifth incarnation]], [[Adric]], [[Nyssa]] and [[Tegan Jovanka]] were in the audience before the real Megrati arrived. As his past self and companions watched, the Doctor convinced the Megrati to leave the planet by threatening to destroy their ships, though revealed to the play's audience as the Megrati left that he was bluffing. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Constant Doctor (short story)}}) | ||
The Doctor learnt from [[Hitch (Spirits of the Jungle)|Hitch]] that a sentient super-weapon called the [[Hadax Ura]] had gone missing, with Hitch putting together a recovery team and needing the Doctor's technical expertise. The Doctor agreed to join the team, dragging Clara away from her class to assist. As the ship carrying the team headed for the planet carrying the weapon, [[Unnamed BX-4]], the Hadax Ura shot the ship down, revealing the weapon's location, but everyone on board was able to escape with [[jetpack]]s. Clara was attacked by [[pterosaur]]s and dropped into [[the Jungle]]. | |||
The Doctor and Clara | The Doctor went off on his own to look for Clara, and found Clara with an [[organic avatar]] who had taken on the appearance of Danny. The avatar told them that the Hadax Ura had been "devouring" the Jungle, and turning its indigenous life into an army, and asked them to either destroy the weapon or take it elsewhere. The Doctor realised that it intended to end the war between the [[Hub Alliance]] and the [[Axis Worlds]], and the Hadax Ura began augmenting the crew to become its foot soldiers. Believing it had augmented Clara as well, the Hadax Ura had actually linked the Jungle's computer systems to its own after augmenting the avatar. The avatar appeared to shut down the Hadax Ura and its augmented soldiers, but the Hadax Ura had tricked Hitch's team to bring it on board the lander as a means of escape for the Hadax Ura. The Doctor took his jet pack to infiltrate the lander, and found the Hadax Ura had taken over Hitch's body. Realising that Hitch's mind had been completely overwritten by the Hadax Ura, the Doctor ejected the Hitch's body out of the lander's airlock, burning the Hadax Ura up on re-entry unprotected. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Spirits of the Jungle (comic story)}}) | ||
The Doctor and Clara arrived inside the observation capsule ''[[Genetrix]]'' above [[Venus]], but the capsule separated from the Lovell Platform when the tether connecting them broke. The Doctor discovered that the gas samples taken by the crew were actually the indigenous life form on Venus, and that the separation was a result of a liberation attempt, and ordered the samples to be released. Grateful for their freedom, the Venusians lifted the pod to safety. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Sunset Over Venus (short story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara arrived in [[2015]] London to find it as a burnt wasteland with traces of human DNA amongst the ashes. While Clara went exploring, the Doctor was attacked by a man, who warned him "the scorched" were rising after the Doctor subdued him with [[Venusian karate]], only for him to be possessed by [[Hyperion (species)|Hyperions]]. The Doctor then found himself facing many Hyperion-possessed humans, but was able to defeat them with the help of Clara and [[Sam (The Hyperion Empire)|Sam]], a [[firefighter]]. Sam brought the Doctor and Clara to the [[London Underground]], where people had taken refuge from the Hyperion invasion. The Doctor, reappointed by UNIT as President of Earth, learnt that the Hyperions had divided England up with firewalls, particularly operating machinery in [[Sussex]]. | |||
The Doctor, Clara and Sam bypassed the Sussex firewall with the TARDIS and found that captured humans were being enslaved by the Hyperions to build a fusion web. Clara tried to intervene, but in doing so caused Hyperion "angels" to appear. Fleeing back to the TARDIS, an angel got on board, but Sam knocked her out by spraying her with a fire extinguisher. Deducing that the angel had been transmogrified by the Hyperions, the Doctor bio-linked her to the TARDIS telepathic circuits to restore her human consciousness. The TARDIS materialised by the sun, where the Hyperions were building the fusion web to consume its energy. Although the Doctor believed they were out of range, the web was already powerful enough to attack the TARDIS. | |||
[[ | [[Dra-Khan]], a Hyperion warlord, stormed the TARDIS and revealed the Hyperions survived the destruction of Hyperios by hiding on [[Neptune (planet)|Neptune]]. The angel, in actuality the reanimated human [[Weir (The Hyperion Empire)|Weir]], regained her consciousness and attacked Dra-Khan and the other Hyperions, driving them away. The Doctor persuaded Weir to join their side, and after defeating an onslaught of Scorched in London, revealed he had weaponised a cold bomb to defeat the Hyperions. Back at the Sussex firewall, the Doctor released the human slaves from captivity as Clara and Sam attacked the base. Sam attempted to detonate the cold bomb, but it failed and he was killed. The Doctor conceded that the Hyperions had won, as the fusion web was completed. But when it was activated, he revealed that the bomb had merely been a distraction so that he could hack the TARDIS into the web and pull the Hyperions five billion years into the future, where the sun died. As the web began collapsing, the Doctor and Clara escaped to the TARDIS as Weir held off the Hyperions. However, unwilling to let anyone else die after Sam's death, the Doctor pulled Weir's psychic essence from the TARDIS's telepathic circuits, allowing her presence to be with her family. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Hyperion Empire (comic story)}}) | ||
Arriving on the ''[[SS Berry Gordy]]'' in the [[53rd century]], the Doctor and Clara saved pop-star [[India Summer]] from being kidnaped by a band of [[Skink]]s hired by her manager, [[Gavor Vek-Haart]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Hyperballad (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara responded to a party invitation from [[Susan Foreman (toy)|Susan]], only to discover they had been lured into a trap by [[the Toymaker]], who explained that [[the Toyroom|his Toyroom]] was breaking down from old age, and that he had entrapped the Doctor for help. The Toymaker believed he tricked the Doctor into relinquishing his TARDIS in a game of [[Truth or Dare]], but the Doctor was aware of how the Toymaker only wanted his help if he could win against him and willingly let him do so, empathising with him. The TARDIS materialised around the Toyroom and the Doctor rebuilt it with the [[Zero Room]] after escaping to the control room with Clara, allowing the Toymaker to have "his magical toy box". ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}}) | |||
A force brought the TARDIS off course, where it was forced to land on a place the Doctor nicknamed "[[Planet Wet]]". When the Doctor exited the TARDIS, the hillock swallowed the TARDIS whole, and the Doctor was forced to find his way to a building, where he found the TARDIS was being held in an online auction by [[GalMart]] when it was claimed as salvage. During the bid, the Doctor pointed out that he still had the key on him, leaving the winner [[WinnerBoi]] with a ship he couldn't access. While pretending to hand over the deed of ownership to GalMart, he instead wrote a Trojan virus in [[Ancient High Gallifreyan]] to infest the GalMart systems. He compelled the GalMart computer to purchase the anti-Trojan, and to declare the TARDIS as a bootleg or counterfeit item, but to transfer the money to WinnerBoi for the amount he had paid to buy the TARDIS. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Buyer's Remorse (short story)}}) | |||
Coming to pick up Clara, the Doctor was persuaded to play boards games instead. Losing, the Doctor repeatedly went back in time to the moment he arrived so he could win a game before Clara; this desire consumed him, resulting in the Doctor making over eighty-seven attempts and becoming heavily ragged before he finally won a match. Unaware of the Doctor's actions, Clara headed for the TARDIS. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Board Games (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor arrived on the hospital planet [[Gehenna]] while it was under siege from the [[Weeping Angel]]s in the form of a marble dust storm that spread a plague that turned others into Weeping Angels, and discovered that Chief Medical Officer [[Perinne]] had been keeping an Angel prisoner for experiments, with the networked Salus masks the medics wore creating a Weeping Angel virus. Unable to salvage the situation, Perinne forced the Doctor to leave as he succumbed to the Angels' virus. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Grey Matter (short story)}}) | |||
=== Abandoning Davros === | |||
[[File:Doctor entrusts Ohila.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor entrusts Ohila with his confession dial. ([[WC]]: {{cs|Prologue (webcast)}})]] | |||
While looking for a bookshop, the Doctor found himself on a battlefield during the [[Thousand Year War]] on [[Skaro]], and encountered a young boy trapped in a field of [[Handmine]]s, and, during the rescue attempt, learned that the boy was [[Davros]]. When he "should have been brave enough, [and] strong enough to do something better", the Doctor fled the battlefield, unwilling to save or kill the boy who would create the Daleks. Afterwards, an older Davros, having become "very sick", asked to see the Doctor "while there [was] still time", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) and sent [[Colony Sarff]] to search for him. The Doctor prepared a [[confession dial]] to be delivered to [[Missy]], and went to the planet [[Karn]] to meet with [[Ohila]] and the [[Sisterhood of Karn]]. After hiding from Colony Sarff behind a rock, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) the Doctor was told by Ohila that he owed Davros nothing by partaking in a confrontation, warning him his actions would spell his end. Giving Ohila his confession dial before departing, the Doctor proclaimed that he would find a rock to meditate on in preparation for his possible destruction. ([[WC]]: {{cs|Prologue (webcast)}}) | |||
Travelling to [[Essex]] in [[1138]] A.D., ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) the Doctor gained a servant in [[Bors (The Doctor's Meditation)|Bors]] when he removed a splinter from him. After three hours of meditation in a castle, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) during which he thought back to his previous incarnations, ([[POEM]]: {{cs|Full Stop (poem)}}) the Doctor decided he needed better drinking water, and gathered the locals to dig a [[well]]. After eleven days of finding a supply of water, and another day to construct the well, the Doctor, rather than resume his meditation, decided to make improvements to the castle, such as adding a sunroof to the throne room, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (TV story)}}) building a first-class, child-friendly visitor centre, teaching the locals mathematics and introducing the word "[[Dude]]" to the [[12th century]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) While additions to the throne room went underway, the Doctor had a conversation with Bors about him avoiding his meditation. Four days afterwards, the Doctor finally decided to begin mediating again before leaving the next day, and also divulged to Bors the reasons he had for being reclusive. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (TV story)}}) | |||
For his last day at the castle, the Doctor decided to have an axe fight with Bors, and arrived on a [[tank]] playing an [[electric guitar]]. While trying to get the crowd to understand his jokes, he realised Clara and Missy had tracked him down, whereupon Bors was attacked by Colony Sarff, who demanded that the Doctor attend to Davros. Reminded of his shame at leaving the young Davros behind, the Doctor reluctantly agreed to go as a prisoner, with Clara insisting she and Missy be taken prisoner too. Sarff brought the trio to Davros' infirmary, where he was dying. While Clara and Missy were left in a cell block, the Doctor went to see Davros, who revealed to the Doctor that they were on [[Skaro]]. On a monitor, the Doctor saw that Clara and Missy had escaped their cell and been captured by the Daleks, who had also procured the TARDIS. Missy was seemingly exterminated as she tried to convince the Daleks to work with her, with Clara quickly being exterminated as well and the TARDIS was seemingly destroyed. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) | |||
As the TARDIS was redistributed, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}) Davros mocked the Doctor for his compassion towards others resulting in his victory against him, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) but the Doctor, wielding a Dalek [[gunstick]], ignored Davros and forcibly removed him from his chair so he could ride in it and be safe from the Daleks' firepower. He then headed to the congregation of Daleks, and mocked them for being unable to shoot him when they tried. After his demand to know what happened to Clara was answered by the [[Supreme Dalek (The Magician's Apprentice)|Supreme Dalek]] in confirmation of her demise, the Doctor was restrained by Colony Sarff and brought back to Davros's infirmary, where Davros revealed that he was able to sustain his life by siphoning off the Daleks' heartbeats through his life support system, and offered to give the Doctor control of this to commit unprovoked [[genocide]] upon the Daleks. Though tempted, the Doctor chose to be compassioned and refused to act, taking the opportunity retrieve his [[sonic sunglasses]] when Davros presented him with his confessional dial. | |||
Fully convinced that Davros was truly dying when the Kaled scientist looked upon him with his real eyes, the Doctor decided to give Davros his last wish of seeing the sunlight with his true eyes one last time. When Davros could no long keep his eyes open by the time the sun rose, the Doctor proceeded to give Davros a bit of regenerative energy, but was seized by Colony Sarff and drained to regenerate Davros and all the Daleks on Skaro. He was saved when Missy killed Sarff, and revealed to Davros that he had guessed his plan all along and had tricked Davros; the regenerative energy Davros had used to renew himself and his creations had also been distributed through the sewers beneath the city, and the decaying remains of the ancient Daleks they contained had awoken and begun to emerge. While fleeing the city, the Doctor and Missy came across a Dalek that Missy claimed had killed Clara. The Doctor demanded the Dalek tell him if this was true, but the Dalek kept babbling incoherently. When it began to beg for mercy, the Doctor, suspicious, demanded it open its casing, and found that Clara had been trapped inside the Dalek by Missy, and the Doctor told her to run as he freed Clara. | |||
The Doctor and Clara then entered the room housing the congregation of Daleks, and the Doctor used his sonic sunglasses to rematerialise the redistributed TARDIS and flee. As he and Clara watched the [[Dalek City]] crumble, the Doctor realised that he could teach mercy to the young Davros. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}) Armed with the Dalek gunstick, the Doctor returned to the misty battlefield as the young Davros cried for help, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) and saved him by firing on the [[Handmine]]s. When questioned whether he was the enemy, the Doctor told Davros that friends and enemies didn't matter "so long as [there was] mercy," and then led the boy to his home. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}) | |||
[[ | === Continued adventures with Clara === | ||
While Clara was still wearing the same clothes she had during the adventure on Skaro, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}) the two found the TARDIS drawn off-course and its power supply depleted, coming to an [[emergency landing]] in a [[Nevada]] desert. The Doctor stayed inside the TARDIS while Clara wandered out and met an older version of the Twelfth Doctor, from a point in his timeline where she was dead, as well as her own future self. This was all part of a temporal crisis affecting all of the Doctor's incarnations, and, indeed, all TARDISes in the universe, which the [[Thirteenth Doctor]] and [[K9 Mark IV]] were working to resolve, as well as the [[#Temporal crisis|future version of the Twelfth Doctor]] encountered by Clara. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|Lost in Time (video game)}}) | |||
Returning to [[Coal Hill School]] to pick up Clara, the Doctor found the world had been gassed into a deep sleep by the [[Somnosian]] Empire. Using an antidote to awaken the populace, the Doctor allowed the Somnosians to retreat when the armed forces arrived. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Beauty Sleep (comic story)}}) The Doctor and Clara then continued their travels together, encountering "monsters, [and] things blowing up," and also visiting a place where people with long necks had celebrated New Year's Day for two centuries. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) Following the events involving Missy and deciding he was an idiot instead of a good or bad man, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) the Doctor also began to make an effort to act nicer, with Clara giving him a selection of cue cards to read from in case he got frustrated. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, et. al) | |||
While in an empty room, the Doctor also took a moment to warn an audience about the [[Easter Bunny]] ahead of the [[Easter]] holiday, warning that "free [[egg]]s" were inherently suspicious. ([[WC]]: {{cs|Happy Easter from the Doctor! (webcast)}}) | |||
=== | === Ghosts on the Drum === | ||
[[File:Capaldi Surprised.jpg|thumb|The Doctor realises that he has encountered ghosts. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}})]] | |||
Arriving in an underwater base called [[the Drum]] in [[2119]], the Doctor found that the TARDIS was "unhappy" with her surroundings, and he and Clara then wandered around the base to find it empty with signs of a struggle. Seeing two apparitions of a [[Tivolian]] and [[human]] male, they stumbled upon a spaceship marked with foreign wording, which the Doctor found untranslatable. The apparitions then chased the Doctor and Clara to a Faraday cage, containing the base's crew; [[Cass (Under the Lake)|Cass]], [[Tim Lunn]], [[Alice O'Donnell]], [[Mason Bennett]] and [[Richard Pritchard]]. Using his UNIT credentials to gain their trust, the crew explained to the Doctor that the man, [[Jonathan Moran]], had been their captain before his death, and that they had been menaced by the apparitions only at the night since discovering the ship, which led them to believe that they were ghosts, which the Doctor debunked. | |||
As the Drum entered day mode, the Doctor learned more about the base from the crew, and further investigated the spaceship, discovering that one of the power cells was missing and a [[suspended animation chamber]] was unaccountable. After re-evaluating the situation caused the Doctor to conclude that the ghosts were genuine, the Drum's night mode was activated by the ghosts, and the [[Cloister Bell]] began to ring. With Prichard killed by Moran, and the ghosts trying to lure a medical team to the Drum, the Doctor ordered the base be locked under quarantine and encouraged the surviving crew to help him capture the ghosts. | |||
Trapping the ghosts in the Faraday cage, the Doctor found they were repeating coordinates to the flooded town's church, and that the ghosts had been artificially created to act as a homing beacon. After Bennett retrieved the ship's suspended animation chamber, the Doctor found that the coordinates had been the symbols within the spaceship, and decided to go back in time to before the town's flooding to find the truth of the matter. As the Doctor, Clara and the crew made their way to the TARDIS, the ghosts began flooding water into the Drum, resulting in emergency doors coming down and splitting the group in half. Clara was trapped in the base with Cass and Lunn, while the Doctor set off in the TARDIS with O'Donnell and Bennett. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) | |||
[[ | Arriving in [[1980]], the Doctor, O'Donnell and Bennett encountered the [[Tivolian]], [[Albar Prentis]], while he was alive, using the spaceship, which had yet to have the wording inscribed, as a hearse to transport a dead warlord known as the [[Fisher King]]. Wanting to destroy the signal, the Doctor demanded Prentis hand over the device broadcasting, but Prentis was oblivious to what the Doctor was talking about. Contacting Clara, the Doctor found that a ghost of himself had appeared in 2119, mouthing the names of the dead and those yet to die, with Clara second after O'Donnell. The Doctor was shaken at the prospect of him dying, but, despite Clara's urging to change time, he insisted he had to die. The Doctor's ghost then entered the Drum and released the other ghosts, forcing Clara, Cass and Lunn back to the Faraday Cage, where the phone signal was cut off. Before they left, however, the Doctor was able to get a look at his ghost and see him change his message. | ||
Realising O'Donnell was going to die, the Doctor and Bennett tried to persuade her to stay in the TARDIS, but she refused. Returning to the ship, the trio found Prentis dead, the writing written and themselves being hunted by the Fisher King. Pursued into a building, O'Donnell was separated from the group and killed by the Fisher King, fulfilling the Ghost Doctor's prophecy. The Doctor and Bennett then tried to go back to the future to save Clara from being killed, but the TARDIS instead sent them back in time by thirty minutes, where the Doctor had to force Bennett from interfering in Prentis and O'Donnell's deaths. Sending Bennett back to the TARDIS, the Doctor set one of the ship's power cells to destroy the dam above the town. Confronting the Fisher King, the Doctor was informed that the ghosts were signalling to the Fisher King's armada to rescue him and enslave the Earth. Just as he was about to be shot, the Doctor lied about erasing the writing from the ship, provoking the Fisher King to return to the ship, just as the power cell exploded, wrecking the dam wall and flooding the town. Before the flood hit the church, the Doctor got into the Fisher King's stasis chamber, protecting him as the Fisher King drowned in the flood. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}) | |||
In 2119, the pod was recovered by Bennett and brought upon the Drum to be examined by the past Doctor. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) Using his sonic sunglasses to connect with the Drum's [[Wi-Fi]], the Doctor created a hologram of himself as a ghost "with a soupçon of artificial intelligence, and a few pre-recorded phrases thrown in," ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}) which appeared before Clara, Lunn and Cass almost immediately after the past Doctor left the Drum with Bennett and O'Donnell. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) Using the hologram as an avatar, the Doctor gave Clara the list he had heard her give him from the ghost, and released the other ghosts from the Faraday cage, telling his past self via Clara's phone that "the chamber will open tonight." Conversing with other ghosts, the Doctor set them on Lunn, knowing they wouldn't kill him, to set a trap for Clara and Cass in the cantina. | |||
When the chamber opened, the Doctor used his ghost hologram to lure the other ghosts to the Faraday cage with the "call of the Fisher King." Erasing the writing from their minds, the Doctor revealed to Clara, Cass and Lunn that his ghost was just a projection, and told them and Bennett that UNIT would dispose of the ghosts by removing the Faraday cage from Earth's orbit. As he and Clara set off in the TARDIS, the Doctor told her he only knew what to make the fake ghost say because she told him what it was saying, calling it a [[bootstrap paradox]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}) | |||
=== Events on Karaoke === | |||
[[File:One two three four to Doomsday I play guitar.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor realises his drums skills are gone. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|One! Two! Three! Four! To Doomsday (comic story)}})]] | |||
The Doctor dropped Clara off on [[Planet Karaoke]] while he stayed inside to do repairs on the TARDIS, but Clara exited the ship before he could warn her that he would be momentarily shutting the TARDIS down, leaving the [[translation circuit]]s off. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Day of the Tune (comic story)}}) As Clara did not hear his warning, she began singing on the stage, where the TARDIS translation began to fail as she could no longer read the lyrics on screen. She tried singing anyway and accidentally insulted the planet's monarch in [[Karaeokean]], and she and the Doctor were arrested. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Meddling of Clara's Song (comic story)}}) | |||
The two were given a chance of survival by forced entry into ''[[Battle of the Bands Beyond the Stars]]'', a musical competition. If their performance was deemed poor, they would be killed. As the two nervously prepared for this competition, they were passed by a band formed of what appeared to be [[Headless Monks]]. However, these robed figures soon removed their hoods, revealing themselves to be various incarnations of [[the Master]] led by [[Missy]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Abominable Showmen (comic story)}}) Correctly deducing that Missy planned to use hypnosis to take over the minds of the viewers watching the program, the Doctor chose not to intervene, knowing that it was impossible for the many egos of the Master to work together as a team. Sure enough the four Masters began to fight Missy for [[Missy's device|her device]], and were disqualified for failing to do their performance. | |||
The Doctor and Clara then prepared for their performance, the Doctor confident that he could pull it off. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Five Masters (comic story)}}) As the Doctor was about to perform, Clara disconnected some power cables, allowing them to escape the stage and get back to the TARDIS. Clara wondered how they would be able to stop the show, but the Doctor told her that after the instalment they had just ruined, the show was cancelled due to all-time lowest viewing figures. They then set off to get chips together. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|One! Two! Three! Four! To Doomsday (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor | The Doctor and Clara ate the chips sitting on the TARDIS, which was parked in the [[Blue Lagoon Nebula]]. When Clara asked if their adventures would ever stop, the Doctor explained that adventure was just life without the boring bits, which he always tried to avoid whenever possible. They were both unaware that they were about to be eaten by a giant space turtle... ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Epilogopolis (comic story)}}) | ||
=== Final adventures with Clara === | |||
{{Section stub|Info from ''[[Helana and the Beast (short story)|Helana and the Beast]]'', ''[[Distant Voices (audio story)|Distant Voices]]'', ''[[Entry 15234/C-4 (short story)|Entry 15234/C-4]]'', ''[[The Day at the Doctors (comic story)|The Day at the Doctors]]'', ''[[The Faceless Two (comic story)|The Faceless Two]]'', ''[[Surfshock (comic story)|Surfshock]]'', & ''[[Planet of the Rude (comic story)|Planet of the Rude]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
The Doctor and Clara arrived in [[Highgate Cemetery]] in [[1972]], where, intruding upon a cult meeting, they were attacked by vampire-like creatures called the [[Corvid]]s, which petrified the TARDIS and fed on people's psychic essence, but were trapped inside the cemetery. The Doctor discovered that Clara's exposure to his time stream had rendered her toxic to the Corvids' powers, and that exposing themselves to her left a psychic corridor open. Using the psychic signature of the dead amplified by the ley line the cemetery was built on, the Doctor banished the Corvids back to the Time Vortex with the aid of [[Jess Collins]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Highgate Horror (comic story)}}) | |||
After saving [[Zeltran Beta]] from an invader with a [[Chaos ray]], the Doctor was informed that his activities had been advertised. Tracking the advert to [[Sterlana]], the Doctor was greeted by [[Zip Betterblast]], who introduced himself as the Doctor's self-appointed agent and had his robots give the Doctor a costume change for an interview. Cutting the interview short to deal with a [[Andromedan Feline Gigantoform]], the Doctor used his sonic sunglasses to stun the beast, and then discovered that Betterblast had used cybernetic implants to control the Feline Gigantoform. Exposing Betterblast to the public for the [[Shadow Proclamation]] to arrest him, the Doctor reclaimed his clothes and left with Clara to get [[coffee]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Time and PR in Space (comic story)}}) | |||
[[File:TwelvesFace.jpg|thumb|The Doctor remembers where he has seen his face before. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}})]] | |||
After saving the [[Velosian]]s from being attacked by "four and a bit battle fleets" and rescuing Clara from being killed by a [[Love Sprite]] from the [[Spider Mines]], the Doctor and Clara landed on Earth, where they were promptly captured by [[Viking]]s and taken to their village on a two days' [[longboat]] journey from the TARDIS. When a race called the [[Mire]] attacked the village, killing all of the warriors, a girl named [[Ashildr]] declared war between the village and the Mire. After failing to train the farmers in the village to fight, the Doctor realised the village farmed [[electric eel]]s, enabling him to formulate a plan to defeat the Mire. | |||
When the Mire arrived, the Doctor and the farmers distracted them with a party in a barn, while the other villagers used the eels to electrocute four of the Mire and remove their armour and weapons. Seizing the opportunity, the Doctor gave one of the helmets to Ashildr, who used it to feed the image of a dragon into the technology of the Mire's helmets, scaring them off, when the dragon was actually nothing more than a puppet. The Doctor revealed to [[Odin (The Girl Who Died)|the Mire leader]] that Clara had filmed them being scared away by the villagers and threatened him and to leave lest the video be released to the [[Galactic Hub]] and ruin the Mire's reputation. The Mire promptly left, but the celebrations ended when it was discovered that Ashildr had died of [[heart failure]] as a result of using the Mire helmet. | |||
The Doctor moped in a barn, regretting being unable to save Ashildr. However, after voicing his pain to Clara, he realised that he shared the face of [[Lobus Caecilius]], whom he had saved from a fixed point in time during his [[tenth incarnation]], and concluded that his face was a reminder to himself that he should always save people. Using a Mire [[repair kit]] from the Mire helmet, the Doctor revived Ashildr, and left her a second kit for whoever she wanted. Heading back to the TARDIS, the Doctor, now reflecting poorly on his actions, told Clara that the kit would have given Ashildr immortality, and then realised that he had also made her a hybrid. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) | |||
Sometime after leaving Scandinavia, Clara asked the Doctor to help her student [[Evie Hubbard]] with an assignment of an imaginary interview with [[Winston Churchill]]. Not realising Clara simply wanted him to tell Evie about him, the Doctor took Evie back in time to talk with Churchill in-person. Later, while Clara was taking her Year Seven class to their [[tae kwon do]] lessons, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) the Doctor conducted the [[Last Night of the Proms]], where he ended up playing the [[Sex Pistols]] version of "[[God Save the Queen]]", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Clara Oswald and the School of Death (comic story)}}) and also decided to check on Ashildr's immortal life. One of the acts he observed was Ashildr founding a colony of [[leper]]s. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) | |||
Getting trapped in a room of metal on fire, the Doctor sent his sonic sunglasses down to Earth, where they were found by a father out walking with his son. When the father put them on, they activated the [[Telepathic Emergency Beacon]], allowing the Doctor to take control of his body and pilot the TARDIS to free himself. As a reward, the Doctor allowed the father and son a free trip, which the father used to pick up his wife, who had apparently disappeared months earlier. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|My Dad, The Doctor (short story)}}) | |||
After spending weeks following exoplanetary energy on his [[curioscanner]] across the galaxy, the Doctor traced the [[Eyes of Hades]] to [[1651]] [[England]], where he found a highwayman called "the Knightmare" robbing the carriage holding the artefact. The Doctor's intervention resulted in the carriage escaping before either of them could get the Eyes, and the Knightmare revealed herself to be Ashildr, who was now addressing herself as "Me" after losing most of her childhood memories due to her long lifespan. At "Lady Me's" mansion, Ashildr told the Doctor of her exploits, and begged him to take her with him in the TARDIS, but he refused. Instead, the two teamed up to steal the Eyes of Hades from [[Lucie Fanshawe]] by breaking into her mansion. | |||
The Doctor and | The Doctor then found that Ashildr had an ally in [[Leandro]], who owned the Eyes of Hades and needed a death to activate it to open a portal for him and Ashildr to escape Earth in. Upon learning the highwayman [[Sam Swift]] was to be executed, Ashildr and Leandro set off to use his death to activate the artefact. While the Doctor tried to call off Swift's execution, Ashildr forcibly attached the Eyes of Hades to Swift, opening the portal. Leandro then revealed that he had only used Ashildr to get the portal open and allow his people to invade, and the [[Leonian]] ships began attacking the peasants. Realising her mistake, Ashildr used the second Mire kit to revive Swift, closing the portal and ending the attack. For his failure, Leandro was incinerated by his people. In the aftermath, Ashildr accepted her inability to travel with the Doctor and told him she would look out for other people he left behind, and they parted on relatively good terms | ||
When the Doctor picked up Clara for more adventures, she presented him with a [[selfie]] from [[Evie Hubbard]], and the Doctor noticed Ashildr in the background of the photo. Shaking it off, he and Clara took off for "somewhere magical." ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) The Doctor continued to keep surveillance on Ashildr, but lost track of her in the early [[1800s]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}) | |||
Receiving a call from Osgood about the "Nightmare Scenario", the Doctor discovered that the ceasefire between the [[human]]s and [[Zygon]]s had been breaking down since Missy murdered one of the Osgoods, and tried to confront the [[Zygon High Command]] about it, only for them to be kidnapped by Zygon rebels, just as [[Kate Stewart]] phoned him to inform the Doctor of Osgood's kidnapping. Meeting up with Clara and Kate at Zygon High Command base at [[Drakeman Junior School]], the Doctor communicated with the [[control polyp]] and witnessed the rebels execute the Zygon High Command. Sharing thoughts with Kate, Clara and [[Jac (The Magician's Apprentice)|Jac]], the Doctor sent Kate to investigate Zygon activity in the [[New Mexico]] town [[Truth or Consequences (town)|Truth or Consequences]], and left Clara and Jac in charge of defending [[England]] while he took [[Boat One]] to the Zygon settlement in [[Turmezistan]] to rescue Osgood. | |||
The Doctor | The Doctor and [[Colonel]] [[Walsh (The Zygon Invasion)|Walsh]] led a platoon of UNIT soldiers to retrieve Osgood from the Zygon base before it was destroyed in an air strike, but [[Johnny Hitchley|the leading soldier]] fell for the Zygons' deceptions and led the platoon to their deaths in an ambush. As Walsh left to observe the settlement get destroyed, the Doctor found Osgood and managed to capture [[Zygon (The Zygon Invasion)|a Zygon]]. Aboard Boat One, the Zygon informed the Doctor that the Zygon invasion of Earth had already taken place. As the plane returned to the United Kingdom, "[[Bonnie (The Zygon Invasion)|Clara]]" phoned the Doctor, and, claiming that the real Clara and Kate had been killed and replaced, fired a [[rocket launcher]] from the ground at Boat One. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Zygon Invasion (TV story)}}) The Zygon missed her first shot, which gave the Doctor and Osgood enough time to parachute out of the plane before she fired a successful shot. They landed safety and received a text from Clara's phone, confirming that she was alive and fighting the Zygon in her form. Calling the Zygon, who had named herself "[[Bonnie (The Zygon Invasion)|Bonnie]]", the Doctor retrieved a message from Bonnie's winking eye, controlled by Clara inside the pod, that confirmed her location, and, pursued by policeman he thought were Zygons, commandeered a van to get him and Osgood back to London. | ||
They drove to a south London shopping centre where a Zygon had been forced to normalise himself by Bonnie and, despite the Doctor pleading him not too, committed [[suicide]] because he didn't want to be a part of the Zygon rebellion. Kate and two UNIT soldiers then turned up, and told the Doctor where to find Clara and the Zygon rebel base. Arriving at the Zygon stronghold, the UNIT soldiers revealed themselves to be Zygons and Kate contacted Bonnie, who had taken Clara with her to the [[Black Archive]] to activate the [[Osgood Box]]. However, Bonnie then revealed that the Doctor had put two Osgood Boxes in place with safeguards in order to keep the human-Zygon ceasefire, and demanded the Doctor be brought to her. Kate, however, revealed herself to be the genuine Kate, killed the Zygon soldiers and destroyed the communicator. | |||
Arriving at the Black Archive, Bonnie and Kate both threatened to use the Osgood boxes, but the Doctor used his memories and feelings of the [[Last Great Time War|Time War]] to persuade them that they could end the conflict in a more humane way. Moved by his speech, Kate decided not to use the boxes, and Bonnie realised they were empty. To keep the boxes' secret safe, the Doctor erased the memories of Kate and Bonnie's Zygon guards, but allowed Bonnie to keep her memory of the event. As the Doctor and Clara prepared to leave, the Doctor invited Osgood to join him in his travels, but she denied as she had the boxes to look after. Both she and Bonnie, who was now using Osgood's form, continued the task of protecting the Osgood Boxes and maintaining the human-Zygon relations together. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}) | |||
[[ | As "Basil Disco", the Doctor boarded a plane carrying an [[Politician (Abducted)|MP]] due to meet the [[American President]], aware that a [[Dalek mother ship]] was coming with the intent to abduct and [[robotisation|robotise]] the MP in order to cause [[World War III]] and thus pave the way for a [[Dalek]] invasion, a plot which the Doctor opposed. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Abduction (short story)}}) | ||
After thwarting a run-in with the warlord [[Lucifer van Volk]], who accused him of magnetising his mercenary army at some point in his future, the Doctor returned to [[2015]] to find that Clara had taken a leave of absence from Coal Hill and travelled to [[Ravenscaur School]] in [[Scotland]] to investigate the disappearance of her friend [[Christel Dean|Christel]]. While Clara took over Christel's vacated job as an English teacher, the Doctor went undercover in the local town, where he found the townspeople were a disguised race of aliens plotting against humanity. Deducing that Ravenscaur was the centre of the plan, he instructed Clara to remain undercover at the school while he worked out what they were dealing with. | |||
[[ | Believing that the [[Sea Devil]]s were behind the plan, the Doctor explored the catacombs of Ravenscaur to confirm his suspicions and ended up rescuing Clara and two students, [[Lucy Walker]] and [[Jack Irvine]], from the Sea Devils. The group returned to the school only to be captured by the headmaster, Mrs. [[Mariner]], who revealed she and many of the school's students and facility were disguised Sea Devils, as well as the visiting Prime Minister, [[Daniel Claremont]]. They were plotting to use humanity's global warming against them to create a perfect environment for their race. While Claremont was giving a televised press conference at the school, the Doctor set off the school's sprinklers, causing the disguised Sea Devils to revert to their normal forms. Mariner, however, commanded all Sea Devil bases to rise, revealing they had the machinery ready to wipe out humanity. | ||
The Doctor equipped Clara, Jack and Lucy with neural enhancers, allowing them to use their telekinetic power to combat and escape the Sea Devils. Ordering Clara to evacuate the school, he navigated to the rooftops to confront Mariner, but was too late to prevent her from ordering the troops to rise. The Doctor altered the trajectory of their devastation pulse so that their weapons would attack [[Raven's Isle]] rather than the mainland. As the school and Sea Devils were destroyed, Clara, still equipped with her neural enhancer, flew in and rescued the Doctor from the destruction. As the two left in the TARDIS, the Doctor asked Clara if she wanted to go home, but she replied that being with him was home. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Clara Oswald and the School of Death (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara arrived in a forest on a [[Planet (The Dragon Lord)|planet]], where the TARDIS was stolen by [[dragon]]s. Navigating to a nearby village, they learned from the Lord [[Mortigan]] that they were on a planet designed to resemble medieval times, with the dragons being the planet's natural inhabitants, which had been [[Genetic engineering|genetically modified]]. The dragons had been freed from being inhibited by [[inhibitor chip]]s by a person known as the [[Dragon Lord (The Dragon Lord)|Dragon Lord]], who aimed to wipe out the townspeople, having already killed the royalty. The Doctor, Clara and the town's remaining lords set off to reason with the Dragon Lord. Along the way, they ran into a baby hatchling, but Lord Mortigan killed it, causing its parents to attack the party. The Doctor was separated from Clara in the chaos, and found a dragon which had been injured by a booby trap. | |||
The Doctor found that the dragon did not possess a chip, casting doubt over his belief that the Dragon Lord was controlling them. Reuniting with Clara at the [[Red Castle]], they found that the Dragon Lord had been killed, believing they would have been grateful to him for liberating them. The Doctor and Clara retrieved the TARDIS from the dragons' treasure hoard and left, calling rescue ships to evacuate the planet of humans to allow the dragons to live in peace. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Dragon Lord (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara were summoned by [[Harry Houdini]], and found themselves in a crystalline [[computer program]] inside a [[crystal ball]] which fed on their despair. The program set up theatrical death traps with no way out so their minds could be ripened for it, but the Doctor, Clara and Houdini escaped, and the Doctor revealed the virtual environment with his [[the Doctor's sonic screwdriver|sonic screwdriver]]. The Doctor, Clara and Houdini then fought back by imagining what made them feel the most free, which shattered the prison and returned them to the real world. They found the owner of the crystal ball prison, [[Diamanda]], had been completely consumed by the crystal ball's power and killed. When Houdini regretted his inability to commune with the dead, the Doctor and Clara reassured him that his legacy would be remembered forever. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Theatre of the Mind (comic story)}}) | |||
[[ | While preparing for a holiday, the Doctor and Clara found themselves having to travel down the Doctor's timeline to prevent [[Time fly|time flies]] sent by the [[Time Weaver]] [[Ethel (A Stitch in Time)|Ethel]] from unravelling the Doctor's life in retaliation for him landing his TARDIS on her sister. After saving his [[Eleventh Doctor|eleventh]] and [[first incarnation]]s, the Doctor was assisted in defeating Ethel by her other sister, [[Gretel (A Stitch in Time)|Gretel]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|A Stitch in Time (CC comic story)}}) | ||
In a frontier town in [[1849]] [[California]], the Doctor prevented an alien criminal from using prospector [[Josh Langham]] to construct a body from scrap metal to house its displaced mind. When the criminal refused his offer to return it home due to being in exile, the Doctor lured it over the edge of a precipice, where the creature's mind dissipated into the air after its body was destroyed. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|All That Glitters (short story)}}) | |||
[[ | Unable to go to the [[Castles of Trutalia]] due to his TARDIS being clamped by an out-of-date [[Ministry of Time robot]], the Doctor went to [[Garage 10]] to get the parts needed to fix the robot. En route, he befriended a mechanic enthusiast named [[Athena (The Ministry of Time)|Athena]], and, working together, the pair learned that the owner of Garage 10 was stripping his customers of their identity to recruit them and sell their memories. Undoing the owner's actions, and getting him arrested by the [[Judoon]], the Doctor parted ways with Athena to update the Ministry of Time robot into having its own sense of adventure. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Ministry of Time (comic story)}}) | ||
The Doctor | The Doctor found a giant robot and [[kaiju]] fighting in a [[Japan]]ese city, and that [[UNIT]] soldiers, led by [[Colonel]] [[Ishiguro]], were preparing to attack them. Persuading Ishiguro to halt the attack, the Doctor discovered that they were the result of a stolen [[Kaznak Simu-system]] being used by [[Professor]] [[Nakatomi]] for his video game company. Overriding the data core with his own mind, the Doctor ended the fighting before UNIT needed the intervene, and went with Ishiguro for some [[noodle]]s. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Big in Japan (comic story)}}) | ||
The Doctor liberated the Seymour family from the [[Belamine]] while they were being assessed in preparation for an invasion of Earth, and erased his presence from the Belamine ship's systems, tricking the Belamine into thinking the human race was too formidable to attack and cancel their invasion. Before the Belamine retreated, the Doctor used their teleportation system to take the Seymour family back to the [[Oregon Trail]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Off the Trail (short story)}}) | |||
The Doctor | |||
While visiting [[1902]] [[New York City]], the Doctor learnt of ghost sights in a new subway tunnel, and, convincing the subway boss that he was a renowned psychic investigator, led a team of men to uncover the mystery. While many of his team fled at the sight of the ghosts, the Doctor and his only remaining help, [[Tom (Ghosts of New York)|Tom]], found an alien tourist ship that was projecting ghosts to protect itself, its occupants having long died in malfunctioning sleep pods. The Doctor managed to fix the ship's systems and set it on a course back to its home planet. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Ghosts of New York (short story)}}) | |||
While preparing his entry for ''[[The Great Martian Bake-Off]]'' during a phone call with Clara, the Doctor went to the [[Halloween]] Fayre at Coal Hill School after Clara had gone missing. Finding superstitions coming true, the Doctor followed clues to find what happened to Clara, and found a mischievous time traveller named [[Miss Chief]] , who told the Doctor that she sent Clara back in time to the Witchfinder General [[Matthew Hopkins]], who threw Clara into the water to see if she was a witch. After Miss Chief saved Clara's life, she and the Doctor played a space-time scavenger hunt game that the Doctor won, with his prize being told Clara's whereabouts. | |||
When the Doctor came to rescue Clara, she accidentally named him as a witch, and both of them were to be executed, but Miss Chief brought them back to the 21st century before they could be hanged. The Doctor and Clara convinced Miss Chief to bring them back to retrieve the TARDIS and save a falsely accused woman named [[Agnes Leech]] from the dungeons, and unwittingly brought the missing cat, [[Smudge]], with them. Clara convinced the mob that Hopkins was a witch and Smudge was his familiar, but the Doctor prevented them from murdering Hopkins by sneakily putting Miss Chief's time travelling marotte in his belt, forcing Miss Chief to save his life. The Doctor and Clara escaped, and returned to Coal Hill, where, due to the Doctor and Miss Chief bringing extinct animals and rare artefacts as part of the scavenger hunt, the Halloween Fayre made the the school enough money to fund the [[Danny Pink IT Suite]], which was opened by Clara and the Doctor a few months later. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Witch Hunt (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara landed on the space station ''[[Le Verrier]]'' in the [[38th century]], and joined a rescue crew that were looking for the station's crew. Attacked by [[Sandman (Sleep No More)|Sandmen]], the group ran into a laboratory housing [[Morpheus pod]]s and, after rescuing Clara from one, found Professor [[Gagan Rassmussen]] hiding in a pod. After questioning Rassmussen on his pods, the Doctor concluded that the Sandmen were made up of [[sleep dust]], and a direct result from use of the pods. As they made their way to destroy the pods, the station's [[gravity shield]]s failed, Rassmussen was killed by a Sandman, and the Doctor, Clara and Chief [[Jagganth Daiki-Nagata|Nagata]] became separated from the group after the Doctor rebooted the gravity shield. Re-evaluating the situation, the Doctor hacked into what he believed to be the rescue crew's helmet cams to review the footage, only for Nagata to reveal that none of them were wearing cameras. The Doctor then realised that the sleep dust in the air was being used as cameras to store images of the rescue mission, and that Rassmussen was behind the entire thing. Going to the crew's rescue ship, the Doctor, Clara and Nagata found Rassmussen had plans to spread the Sandmen to other planets. Surviving Rassmussen's attempt to kill them with his [[Patient Zero (Sleep No More)|Patient Zero]], Nagata killed Rassmussen, and the trio fled the station in the TARDIS, intending to destroy all Morpheus machines to prevent any more Sandman conversions. The Doctor, however, was confounded by the loose ends and how choreographed the event had been. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Sleep No More (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Clara tracked mysterious energy fluctuations and disappearances to a comic store in London, where the Doctor was sucked into a comic book. Clara found that the missing people had also been pulled into comic books, and that the Boneless were the culprits. From within the comic, the Doctor told Clara to use the TARDIS's telepathic circuits to create a spatial and temporal flux. Teaming up with [[Natalie (The Fourth Wall)|Natalie]], a girl who was also trapped in his comic, the Doctor encouraged all the trapped people to use their love of comics to telepathically break free, imploding the Boneless back to their dimension and returning the victims to the real world. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Fourth Wall (comic story)}}) | |||
While Clara attended an end-of-term Christmas party, the Doctor met a young [[Clive Finch]] on [[24 December|Christmas Eve]] [[1979]], and took him to see the [[Loch Ness Monster]], during which the Doctor encountered [[the Monk]] and thwarted his latest scheme. The Doctor partially wiped Clive's memory of the event, but left just enough of a recollection that would kick-start the boy's life of trying to find the Doctor again. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Persistence of Memory (short story)}}) | |||
[[ | While visiting [[Florida's Adventure World]] [[theme park]] in [[2017]], the Doctor discovered that a businessman from the planet [[Bellcazario]] named [[Tunbridge]] was siphoning human life essence in the [[Space Plunge]] ride to sell to his people as a revitaliser. However, the Doctor had reversed the machine to reroute the stolen energies back to their original hosts before confronting Tunbridge, who made to flee in his ship, not realising that the Doctor had sabotaged it to drain his energies while he rode in it. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Taking the Plunge (short story)}}) | ||
Aided by twins [[Amber (Baby Sleepy Face)|Amber]] and [[Ross (Baby Sleepy Face)|Ross]], the Doctor foiled a plan by the [[Nestene Consciousness]] to have its [[Auton]]s imbued with the essence of [[Sontaran]]s. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Baby Sleepy Face (short story)}}) | |||
When the TARDIS landed during the [[Battle of New Orleans]] due to a malfunction, the Doctor was mistakenly taken by Guide [[Mellors]] to her ship to watch the battle between the American and English forces behind a [[shimmer]] screen. While he disagreed with Mellors's business, the Doctor still assisted her in preventing a robot murdering the [[Throne Lord of Cassakna]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Spectator Sport (short story)}}) | |||
The Doctor arrived in an empty school during [[2115]] Christmas time and met [[Ross McNamara]], who was supposedly being chased by a ghost. Investigating, the Doctor found that a [[Helestican]] spaceship was hidden in the cellars, and that it had sent Ross forward in time from [[2015]] and that the ghost was an echo of Ross created by the time travel. After blowing up the school to free the spaceship, the Doctor returned Ross home. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Haunted (short story)}}) | |||
[[File:12 & Dogbolter.jpg|thumb|right|[[Josiah W. Dogbolter]] orders [[Gol Clutha]] to kill the Doctor and [[Maxwell Edison]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Stockbridge Showdown (comic story)}})]] | |||
Setting up the downfall of [[Josiah W. Dogbolter]], the Doctor froze the villagers of [[Stockbridge]] in [[2016]] "between nanoseconds" to keep them safe, and called for his friends to help him. He had the shape-shifting [[Whifferdill]] [[Frobisher]] take the form of one the Doctor's old opponents, [[Chiyoko]], to lure Dogbolter into Stockbridge, had [[Majenta Pryce]] blackmail the major shareholders of Dogbolter's company, [[Intra-Venus, Inc.]], into giving her their shares for a low price, and had Lady [[Destrii]] of the [[Oblivion Empire]] brought along to defend Majenta against Josiah's daughter, [[Berakka Dogbolter]]. Landing in Stockbridge, the Doctor found [[Maxwell Edison]], who was unaffected by the time freeze because of his TARDIS travels. | |||
The Doctor pretended to surrender himself to Dogbolter inside [[St Justinian's Church]], and, revealing his identity, Frobisher incapacitated Dogbolter's henchmen. [[Izzy Sinclair]] arrived at the church to knock Dogbolter out, and [[Sharon Davies|Sharon Allen]] broadcast Dogbolter's confession to murdering thousands on the [[Galactic Broadcasting Corporation]]. This led to Dogbolter's arrest, the seizing on his assets and Majenta becoming the new CEO of Intra-Venus. The Doctor subsequently returned the villagers to normal. After defeating Dogbolter, the Doctor brought Max and the rest of his friends to the city of [[Cornucopia]] to celebrate Max's 60th birthday. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Stockbridge Showdown (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and | |||
[[ | Following an anachronistic transmat signal to an army base in [[1944]] [[America]], the Doctor found that the base had been infiltrated by the [[Valbrect]], who were planning to invade Earth after replacing all the personnel at the base. While the human soldiers still at the base dealt with Valbrect soldiers, the Doctor saved the kidnapped personnel and threatened the Valbrect into leaving by placing a bridge-buster bomb on the Valbrect mothership. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Base of Operations (short story)}}) The Doctor then attended Clara's opening of the [[Danny Pink IT Suite]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Witch Hunt (comic story)}}) | ||
The Doctor | === The coming of the Hybrid === | ||
[[File:Twelve kisses Clara goodbye.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor kisses Clara's hand as she prepares to head to her death. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}})]] | |||
After the Doctor escaped a marriage to a sentient plant on the "second most beautiful garden in all of time and space", Clara was phoned by [[Rigsy]], who had lost his memory of the previous day and woken up with a [[chronolock]] that was counting down to his death. Investigating, the Doctor, Clara and Rigsy found themselves in [[Trap Street, London|the Trap Street]], where a society of aliens were seeking asylum under the government of Ashildr, known in the street as "[[Mayor]] Me". Rigsy had apparently murdered one of the residents, a [[Janus (species)|Janus]] named [[Anah]], and had been given [[retcon]] and returned home to allow him to spend time with his loved ones before the [[Quantum Shade]] came to kill him for the crime. When Ashildr informed the Doctor that she could remove the chronolock if he convinced the Trap Street residence of Rigsy's innocence, the Doctor learned from [[Kabel]] that Rigsy had asked Ashildr to call the Doctor when he was found with the body, revealing that Ashildr knew of the Doctor and Risgy's acquaintanceship. | |||
Going to see the victim's daughter, [[Anahson]], the Doctor realised that the entire thing had been a trap to lure him to the Trap Street. Running to see the body, the Doctor discovered that Anah was alive in a [[stasis pod]], and the only way to release her was to unlock the pod with his [[TARDIS key]]. Unlocking the stasis pod, the Doctor had his arm clamped with a [[teleport bracelet]], just as Ashildr arrived to retrieve the Doctor's [[confession dial]]. Just as the chronolock countdown ended, Clara revealed that she had taken Rigsy's death sentence, and Ashildr explained that the entire thing had been a hoax to entice the Doctor, as she had been threatened to entrap the Doctor to ensure the street's safety. Rigsy would have had the chronolock removed before its countdown ended, but since Clara took it, Ashildr fell out of the contract she had established, sealing Clara's fate. In anger, the Doctor threatened to end the asylum unless Ashildr saved Clara, but Clara made the Doctor promise not to seek revenge before she faced her death, with the Doctor watching her die from afar. Ashildr apologised for the harm she had done, but the Doctor, honouring his promise to Clara, warned her to keep out of his way. The teleport bracelet then activated, teleporting the Doctor away to its destination. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}) | |||
In a cycle that went on for 4.5 billion years, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) the Doctor arrived in a teleporter at the top of a tower inside his [[confession dial]], and was pursued by [[the Veil]], a clockwork creatue whose form was taken from his childhood nightmares, until he fed it confessions. At the end of each cycle, the Doctor reached a wall of solid [[azbantium]] and, inspired by the [[Brothers Grimm]] story of the shepherd's boy, punched at the wall until the Veil fatally burned him. Too badly injured to regenerate, the Doctor dragged himself back to the top of the tower and burned up his body to provide the energy needed to load a copy of himself at the moment of his arrival from the teleporter's hard drive, continuing the cycle until he finally broke through the wall. With the Veil collapsing in on itself, the Doctor arrived on [[Gallifrey]] and told [[Boy (Heaven Sent)|a nearby boy]] to inform "someone important" in the [[Capitol]] of his arrival. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor made his way to the [[Drylands]], where he silently waited in [[Barn (The Day of the Doctor)|his old barn hideaway]] for [[Rassilon]] to face him, turning away the military and [[High Council]] members sent to speak to him, until Rassilon finally came to explain himself, to which the Doctor told him to "get off [his] planet." Deeming any witness in the Drylands to be unimportant, Rassilon ordered the Doctor's execution, but the firing squad, having served with the [[War Doctor]] during the [[Last Great Time War]], sided against him. When [[the General]] defected, Rassilon surrendered and the Doctor, assuming Rassilon's title of [[Lord President]], banished Rassilon from Gallifrey, which had been moved to the [[end of the universe]] for protection, blaming him for the horrors of the Time War, to be followed by the High Council. | |||
Going down to the [[Cloisters]], the Doctor met with [[Ohila]], who explained that Rassilon was searching for information on [[the Hybrid]]. Meeting with the General and the [[Sisterhood of Karn]] in the council chamber, the Doctor informed them that he could protect them from the Hybrid, but he needed Clara Oswald's help to do so. The Doctor and the General went to [[Extraction chamber 7]] to use an [[extraction chamber]] to retrieve Clara from before her death in the Trap Street, in doing so freezing her bodily functions in time. Under pressure to explain himself, the Doctor swiped the General's [[Lord President's personal security sidearm|sidearm]] and, holding the unarmed chamber staff at gunpoint, took a [[neural block]] calibrated for humans and shot the General to cause a distraction and escape with Clara. | |||
Making their way through the Cloisters, the Doctor and Clara encountered the [[Cloister Wraith]]s, and an imprisoned [[Dalek (Hell Bent)|Dalek]], [[Cyberman (Hell Bent)|Cyberman]] and [[Weeping Angel (Hell Bent)|flock of Weeping Angels]], until the Doctor found a secret passage near lift shaft 7, and told Clara how he had originally found the passage in his [[first incarnation]], and also tried to avoid talking about his imprisonment in his confession dial, but had got around to telling Clara by the time the newly regenerated General and Ohila arrived. As Clara distracted them, the Doctor escaped through the secret passage into the workshop below the Cloisters, and stole [[Clara's TARDIS|a TARDIS]] to retrieve Clara and flee from Gallifrey after a final talk with Ohila. | |||
With Clara still frozen, the Doctor took her to the last minutes of the universe, believing that her time would reset and she would become alive again. With Clara still frozen, a knock sounded on the TARDIS doors and the Doctor found it was Ashildr, still alive at the end of the universe. The Doctor and Ashildr shared theories on the Hybrid; the Doctor believing it to be Ashildr, while she believed the Hybrid to be either the Doctor himself, or the combined forces of the Doctor and Clara. The Doctor, denying Ashildr's claims, told her that he planned to erase Clara's memory of him to protect her from the Time Lords, but Clara had spied on their conversation and reversed the polarity of the neural block with the sonic sunglasses. After learning of what Clara did, the Doctor still decided to use the device, only for it to backfire on him, causing him to lose his memories of who Clara was and collapse. | |||
The Doctor eventually awoke in the [[Nevada]] desert, where [[Man (Hell Bent)|a man]] told him that Clara had asked him to look after the Doctor. Having forgotten Clara's face, but still having impressions of his time with her, the Doctor made his way to a diner in the desert, where he encountered a waitress. The Doctor told the waitress his story while playing [[Clara (song)|a song he composed for Clara]]. After his story ended, the waitress exited through a door, and the diner dematerialised, revealing to the Doctor that it had been the stolen TARDIS. Now outside, the Doctor found his own TARDIS, with a mural dedicated to Clara on it, whom the Doctor recognised as the waitress. Receiving a new sonic screwdriver from the TARDIS, and a final message of encouragement from Clara scrawled on one of the TARDIS's blackboards, the Doctor took off for new adventures on his own, with the mural unravelling as he dematerialised. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) | |||
=== Moving on === | |||
{{Section stub|Info from ''[[The Astrea Conspiracy (audio story)|The Astrea Conspiracy]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
While thinking of Clara as a "friend [he'd] lost", the Doctor also reminded himself of what it meant to be a good man. ([[POEM]]: {{cs|A Good Man (poem)}}) He was able to specifically remember his adventures with her, but he could not remember Clara herself. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) In the case of his memories of his [[Good Dalek Incident|adventure inside]] the [[Casing|Dalek casing]] of "[[Rusty (Into the Dalek)|Rusty]]", he knew for certain there had been other people with him, but he could not recall their names. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)}}) | |||
The Doctor | The Doctor received a call from Osgood, asking for his assistance in dealing with the [[Experimental Prototype Robot]] [[K2]] that was running amok in [[2016]] London. The Doctor was able to dismantle K2 with his sonic screwdriver, ending the threat. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Robo Rampage (comic story)}}) | ||
The Doctor | The Doctor detected [[temporal tsunami]]s in the [[Time Vortex]], and realised something was wrong with time and that he needed to get to [[Gallifrey]]. As Gallifrey was blocked by a transduction barrier and he was unable to contact the [[High Council]], he travelled to [[Karn]] to persuade [[Ohila]] to let him use the [[Sisterhood of Karn]]'s door to the [[Capitol]]. Ohila was reluctant, but when Karn was suddenly attacked by [[Cybermen]], she let him through. The Doctor rushed into the Capitol only to find [[Rassilon]], who, after his exile, had met with a league of Cybermen and decided to work with them to create a new Time Lord-Cyberman empire. The Doctor was then rescued by a group of Time Lord soldiers led by [[the General]], who requested the Doctor's assistance in helping them combat the threat. When he experienced pain spasms, the Doctor realised that Rassilon's corruption of the [[Eye of Harmony]] was rewriting the Doctor's own history to ensure his previous incarnations were defeated by the Cybermen on their adventures. The Doctor then surrendered to Rassilon to learn more of his plan, which was to siphon the [[regenerative energy]] of the Time Lords with [[Loom]]s to restart the universe in Rassilon's image. | ||
However, the Cybermen betrayed Rassilon and began harvesting his and the Doctor's regeneration energy to fuel the reworking of history, allowing the rise of the "Age of Cyberiad". Having realised his mistake, Rassilon [[telepathic contact|telepathically contacted]] the Doctor inside the [[Cyberiad]], and the two teamed up to send their regeneration energy backwards through the Eye of Harmony, repairing the alterations made to the Doctor's [[timeline]] and the universe and destroying the Cyberiad. The Doctor's previous incarnations and everybody else lost their memories of the incident, with only the Twelfth Doctor [[history-proofing|remembering]]. Back in his TARDIS alone, he openly wondered if Rassilon remembered, something the Doctor felt Rassilon deserved. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Supremacy of the Cybermen (comic story)}}) | |||
=== Rescuing Gabby === | |||
Summoning his [[Tenth Doctor|tenth incarnation]] to [[Planet (Vortex Butterflies)|an uninhabited planet]], the Twelfth Doctor, having taken precautions to ensure that his predecessor would remember the important parts of their meeting, informed the Tenth Doctor of [[Gabby Gonzalez]]'s importance and wrote out the answers in [[Gallifreyan (language)|Gallifreyan]] before sending him on his way, gifting him a piece of [[chalk]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Vortex Butterflies (comic story)}}) | |||
Guided by [[the Moment]], the Doctor rescued Gabby from the [[Time Vortex]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Good Companion (comic story)}}) Though Gabby protested about the violation of the [[Laws of Time]], something the Doctor freely admitted, he reiterated his earlier promise to always catch Gabby if she ever fell before the two shared a [[hug]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Catch a Falling Star (comic story)}}) | |||
=== Travelling alone === | |||
{{Section stub|Info from ''[[The Long Con (comic story)|The Long Con]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
The Doctor visited [[Shivani Bajwa]] at her flower garden at [[Coal Hill School]], and learnt that [[Missy]] had secretly assisted him when his [[first incarnation]] fought off the [[Space Wolf|Space wolves]] with Shivani in [[1963]]. When he saw Missy across the street from him, the Doctor bade his farewells to Shivani has he ran after her. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Doctor Who and the Horror of Coal Hill (short story)}}) | |||
The Doctor answered a call for help from [[Harry Houdini]] after his old friend had been implicated in a series of deaths. Searching the warehouse of a rival magician named [[Gladstone (Who-Dini?)|Gladstone]], they found find an empty prison pod, but [[Billy (Who-Dini?)|the escaped alien prisoner]] killed Gladstone and flew away. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Who-Dini? (short story)}}) | |||
[[ | When the [[Fourth Doctor]] used his [[TARDIS tuner]] to begin a [[temporal meta-collision]] with his other incarnations, the Twelfth Doctor learnt that Earth was under threat from a [[Pandimensional entity (Doctors Assemble!)|pandimensional entity]] that had trapped his fourth incarnation in his TARDIS. While the Twelfth Doctor argued with his other incarnations, the [[War Doctor]] used encoded messages from the [[Sixth Doctor]] to stop the invasion before it began, and the Sixth Doctor installed a way to expel the entity from the Fourth Doctor's TARDIS, ending the crisis. ([[WC]]: {{cs|Doctors Assemble! (webcast)}}) | ||
[[File:Doctor | [[File:Doctor, Doctor, Doctor.jpg|thumb|The Twelfth Doctor, [[Peter Venkman]], and [[Doc Brown]] after [[Car crash|crashing]] into each other in the [[Brick Boulevard]]. ([[WC]]: {{cs|Doctor, Doctor, Doctor (webcast)}})]] | ||
The Twelfth Doctor once got into an altercation with 2 other doctors - [[Doc Brown]] and [[Peter Venkman]] - on the [[Brick Boulevard]], as they each wanted to allow one another past. This ultimately resulted in the 3 ramming their vehicles into each other, resulting in a [[Car crash|crash]]. ([[WC]]: {{cs|Doctor, Doctor, Doctor (webcast)}}) | |||
The Twelfth Doctor once materialised [[the TARDIS]] on a [[hill]] in the [[Land of Ooo]]. After a brief look outside, he jumped out of the [[doors]], and onto a spring pad, which launched him into the sky in the view of [[B.A. Baracus]], who remarked "[[game]] over, [[fool]]!". The Doctor, along with several other individuals, later ran into battle in Ooo and wound up in a mosh pit. ([[WC]]: {{cs|New Adventures Await! (webcast)}}) | |||
[[File: | [[File:Supergirl Meets E.T. (webcast).jpg|thumb|The Twelfth Doctor joins a proposed "[[alien club]]". ([[WC]]: {{cs|Supergirl Meets E.T. (webcast)}})|left]] | ||
While [[Supergirl]] was hosting a broadcast entitled "''[[Meet That Hero!]]''" about a fellow [[extraterrestrial]] [[hero]], [[E.T.]], she voiced her newfound wish to created an "[[alien club]]". The Twelfth Doctor interrupted her with enthusiastic support for the idea and waved at [[The Doctor's TARDIS|his TARDIS]], with E.T. letting out an appreciative "[[Telephone|Phooooone]]...". ([[WC]]: {{cs|Supergirl Meets E.T. (webcast)}}) | |||
=== Brief travels with Hattie === | |||
Catching up on his favourite music, the Doctor visited the [[Twist]], a colony in the [[40th century]], to attend a punk concert. Meeting with the band's bassist, [[Hattie Munroe]], the Doctor observed a man called [[Jakob (The Twist)|Jakob]] being chased by police, and found out he had been accused of the murder of councillor [[Idra Panatar]] after he rescued him, though Jakob insisted his innocence, claiming [[fox]]-like creatures on the colony had done the deed, and that the authorities were attempting to cover up other attacks. While investigating Idra's house, the Doctor discovered a secret room in the house containing proof of the creatures, leading him to deduce Idra was killed to keep them from being revealed. They went to the [[Central Power Park]] to investigate, and, after avoiding a police chase and an attack by one of the creatures, they escaped into an underground tunnel, which led them to the vessel that first brought humans to the Twist. The area was populated by the creatures, who revealed themselves to be called the [[Foxkin]]. | |||
Escaping into a nearby statis farm, the Doctor found pods that contained human remains. Accessing the records, he found that none of the human colonists travelling to the Twist had survived the journey, despite the population apparently having been descended from them. Analyzing the footage more closely, he deduced that Foxkin were evolution of the foxes that had been aboard the colony ship and, taking sympathy on their deceased precursors, had cloned them back to life before he, Hattie and Jakob were imprisoned by the Foxkin to be kept from revealing the truth. Escaping imprisonment, the group returned to the surface, where Jakob declared that the Foxkin had to be destroyed, but the Doctor revealed he had worked out that Jakob had purposefully killed Idra to stop her from revealing the Foxkin, due to his hatred of the creatures and Idra's desire to broker peace. Jakob fled, and was eventually arrested by the authorities. The Doctor and Hattie held a concert to encourage the humans of the Twist to accept and welcome the Foxkin into their society. In the aftermath, the Doctor invited Hattie for a trip in the TARDIS. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Twist (comic story)}}) | |||
While the Doctor and Hattie were having a jamming session, the TARDIS made an emergency landing to a house on windswept moors, attracted by dangerous radiation levels. As the Doctor and Hattie investigated the house, Hattie caught a glimpse of a holographic young girl. Following the hologram through a door, the Doctor and Hattie entered a forest, where they found a mother, [[Holly (Playing House)|Holly]], searching for her family. Holly told them that the house, which was her own, had grown new rooms since she purchased furniture at an antique fair. The Doctor discovered that void creatures known as the [[Spyrillite]]s were being attracted to the house as it had a great source of [[arton energy]]. Letting the Spyrillites guide him, he found a room containing an architectural reconfiguration system, and he realised the house was actually a TARDIS. | |||
The Doctor determined that an item Holly brought at the antiques fair was a TARDIS shell, which was dying and leaking arton energy, causing its dimensions to spill into the house and potentially across the whole universe. After finding Holly's family, they were directed to the control room of the TARDIS. Hattie and her family fought off an attack from the Spyrillites as the Doctor programmed the TARDIS to send it to die in the heart of a star, restoring the house to normal. After another jamming session aboard his TARDIS, the Doctor returned Hattie back to her home on the Twist. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Playing House (comic story)}}) | |||
=== Living with the Collins family === | |||
Wanting to visit a music performance in [[1972]] [[London]], the Doctor was playing his [[guitar]] on the streets when he was sighted by [[Jess Collins]], who followed him to the TARDIS, despite his attempts to avoid her. When the TARDIS picked up an alien distress signal in the [[London Underground]], where Jess' father, [[Lloyd Collins|Lloyd]], worked, Jess followed him to investigate the signal. In the tunnels, they were caught by Lloyd and then attacked by a skeletal [[Hakuai|bird creature]], but the Doctor disabled the creature with [[electricity]] from the Underground, noting it was an animated cadaver. Lloyd, injured by the creature, was taken to hospital, where the Doctor scanned him and realised he had an unidentifiable bacterial infection. Returning to the Underground with Jess, the Doctor found a telepathic node on the creature's body, which explained that the creature was an alien called [[Moan'na]], who had fled his kind and disguised himself as a human in [[17th century]] London. The Doctor determined that Moan'na had died of the [[bubonic plague]] as a human in [[1665]], but his alien body had enhanced the illness and caused Lloyd to fall under it. | |||
The Doctor and Jess returned to the hospital and found Lloyd had mutated into a creature like Moan'na, who knocked the Doctor out and took Jess away. Upon awakening, the Doctor and Jess' mother, [[Devina Collins|Devina]], pursued them to [[Brixton]], as the infection began mutating more people. The Doctor used the telepathic node to allow Jess and Devina to communicate with Lloyd and break the infection's control over his mind, which, in conjunction with the TARDIS's telepathic circuits, rewrote the [[DNA]] infections to change Lloyd and the infected back to normal. However, the the TARDIS's systems overloaded and caused it to retreat within itself. The Collins family invited the Doctor to stay with them while the TARDIS recovered. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Pestilent Heart (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor dismantled the TARDIS's [[outer plasmic shell]] and put it back together in the Collins' back garden, where he left it to heal. While explaining to Lloyd what had happened when he was infected, the Doctor was caught off guard by the housecat [[Tibbsy]], and warned Tibbsy that he would be watching him. The next day, the Doctor ruined Devina's fish stew when he used his sonic screwdriver on it, but prepared his own stew for the family himself, and cleaned up the kitchen, with the Collins family impressed with his cooking. | |||
[[ | Two days later, while trying to encourage the reweaving of the TARDIS's shell, the Doctor debated with Jess' bother, [[Maxwell Collins|Maxwell]], over who would win in a fight between [[Batman]] and [[Captain America]], with the Doctor choosing Captain America and debating his choice with Maxwell afterwards. Later, while Jess was reading [[M. C. Escher]] for her art history class, the Doctor recounted the times he met [[Claude Monet]], [[Pierre-Auguste Renoir]], and [[François Boucher]], and when he had his portrait done by the cubist artist [[Pablo Picasso]]. While trying to lighten Jess' book with his sonic screwdriver, but it ran out of power, and the Doctor was unable to use the TARDIS to recharge it. With no TARDIS to leave 1972 in, the Doctor instead offered to show Jess the universe through the art she was studying. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Moving In (comic story)}}) | ||
The Doctor took Jess and Maxwell to the [[National Gallery]] to show them a [[John Constable]] painting, when an alien creature was released by hunters from [[Kolothos]], where hunting was outlawed, who sent [[Hound (Bloodsport)|hounds]] to chase it into the gallery. The Doctor, Jess and Maxwell followed the creature outside into [[Trafalgar Square]], and witnessed the hunter [[Skadi]] murder a policeman. The Doctor used a dog whistle to incapacitate the hounds, and when Skadi's husband, [[Broteas]], killed another policeman, the Doctor knocked him out by pulling his electric whip into a fountain. Skadi murdered the small creature she was hunting, and she and her son, [[Tarquel]], took Jess and Maxwell aboard their spaceship. | |||
Left behind on Earth, Broteas was taken to [[Scotland Yard]] by DCI [[Jack Hayes]] on a murder charge, and the Doctor gave him food in exchange for Skadi's comms frequency. He offered himself and Broteas to Skadi in exchange for her releasing Jess, Maxwell, and the spaceship's menagerie, which Skadi was using to release rare and exotic creatures onto alien worlds so they could be hunted for fun, and then leaving Earth. Skadi sent her hounds after the Doctor in [[Epping Forest]], but the Doctor used a reprogrammed metal horse belonging to Broteas to knock the hounds over. Maxwell tricked Skadi into dropping her sword and having Hayes arrest her when she threatened Tarquel. However, this was part of a ruse to have Tarquel take his parents home to face justice for all of the killing they had done. The Doctor convinced Hayes that Skadi and Broteas facing their own people's justice would be worse off than being tried on Earth, and he let them leave Earth with Tarquel. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Bloodsport (comic story)}}) | |||
While Jess and the Doctor were delivering [[Christmas card]]s on [[23 December]], they saw [[Walter (Be Forgot)|Walter]] from across the street behaving oddly and then slamming the door. The Doctor kept an eye on Walter's house all night. The [[Christmas Eve|following day]], the Doctor saw Walter throw a Snowglobe through his window, and went with Jess and Devina help him. The Doctor defeated the fictional character [[Obadiah Grimm]] that had been created from Walter being left alone for too long with the guilt of losing his mother, [[Carmen (Be Forgot)|Carmen]], in [[1971]], and Walter was taken away in an ambulance to treat his mental illness. On [[Christmas]] morning, Devina invited the whole street for breakfast as a reminder that the street was a community and to remember Carmen. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Be Forgot (comic story)}}) | |||
[[ | During a game of [[chess]] with [[Gabriel Gayle]], the Doctor was invited by DCI Hayes to [[Scotland Yard]] to help with a case involving a man who had been turned into [[glass]]. Hayes and [[Perkins (Doorway to Hell)|Officer Perkins]] took the Doctor to the warehouse in [[Barking]] where the man had been found, where a giant mosquito attacked and turned Perkins into glass. Though the Doctor and Hayes managed to electrocute the mosquito with a generator, more mosquitoes attacked the warehouse, but the Doctor drew the mosquitoes towards Hayes' car, where they trapped their stingers in the car roof and the Doctor rigged the car to explode, killing the mosquitoes. | ||
Returning to Brixton, the Doctor realised that the events in Barking were a distraction for someone to steal the TARDIS, and also discovered the shrunken body of Gabriel Gayle in the Collins family garden, alerting the Doctor to the presence of {{Delgado}}, just as he and Hayes were escorted to meet him by [[Katya Dabrowski]]. The Master murdered Hayes when he tried to arrest him, and told the Doctor the Collins family were running errands for him when he used the artron energy in their bodies to open a portal to a [[time lock]]ed dimension. The Master linked the Doctor's TARDIS to [[the Master's TARDIS|his TARDIS]] to aid the Doctor through the time lock so he could be reunited with the Collins family, Katya accompanying the Doctor in his mission. | |||
Followed by the Master into the Time Locked dimension, the Doctor met [[Kiadine]], a being the Time Lords imprisoned for ravaging his world by splitting the [[chronon]]. Kiadine gave his life and his temporal powers to the Master to gain his vengeance on the Time Lords. After the Master aged Katya to death, the Doctor and the Master fought with each other over the power of the chronon storm, when the Collins family pulled the Doctor back, standing together against the Master. The Master attacked them, but his blast was repelled with the same artron energy in the bodies of the Collins family that had brought the Master to the dimension. The Master, heavily wounded by the attack, retreated, and, with no-one left to keep time in check, the Doctor and the Collins family evacuated. After Gabriel's funeral, the Doctor said goodbye to the Collins family and left, believing he had outstayed his welcome. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Doorway to Hell (comic story)}}) | |||
=== A return to travelling === | |||
{{Section stub|Info from ''[[A Song For Running (audio story)|A Song For Running]]'' & ''[[Elephant in the Room (comic story)|Elephant in the Room]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
The Doctor visited the planet [[Lahn]] to travel the Spice Route of Shalabar Stone. However, his party was ambushed by alien scavengers led by the Lord [[Boabdil]], who kidnapped the Doctor's fellow traveller, [[Estrella]], sentencing her to be executed the following day by a monster. The Doctor gatecrashed the execution and disorientated the monster, freeing Estrella. Chased into the city, Estrella bought a flying carpet, allowing her and the Doctor to escape their pursuers. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Spice Route (comic story)}}) | |||
[[File: | [[File:Ghosts of the Seas cliffhanger.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor is threatened by [[Hendrick Vanderdecken (robot)|Hendrick Vanderdecken]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Ghosts of the Seas (comic story)}})]] | ||
The Doctor found that the ''[[Flying Dutchman]]'' was making appearances throughout history, and tracked it through time. On a sighting on the seas in [[1881]] [[Australia]], he was joined by [[George (Ghosts of the Seas)|Prince George]] and [[Thorpe (Ghosts of the Seas)|Captain Thorpe]] after they wandered into the TARDIS. The Doctor deduced mathematically that the ship would appear during the [[Battle of Trafalgar]], and he, George and Thorpe managed to board it, only to be confronted by robots claiming to be the ship's crew. After George meddled with the ship's machinery, the robots lost their memory. The Doctor found that the robots had crashed their time ship into the ''Flying Dutchman'' and that had caused them to believe they were the crew. The Doctor repaired the ship to send the robots home, and also prepared to return George and Thorpe to their own time as well. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Ghosts of the Seas (comic story)}}) | |||
[[ | Surrounded by robots in the [[Forbidden Zone (The Promise)|Forbidden Zone]], the Doctor had his life saved by [[Lambert]]. Lambert and his son, [[Kiron]], declined to travel with the Doctor as the Forbidden Zone was still their home, so the Doctor instead promised to help Kiron every time he was in danger by installing a low-level telepathic link to his wrist device. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Promise (DWAN comic story)}}) He then went and possessed for ''[[The Hay Wain]]'' painting. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Doorway to Hell (comic story)}}) | ||
Attending [[UK Book Festival|a book festival]], the Doctor learnt of a book series called ''[[Fearsome Frights]]'' by an author named [[Charles Abbott]]. After a girl named [[Eliza Jones|Eliza]] told him that the protagonist of the book shared the name of her brother [[Sammy Jones|Sammy]], who had disappeared after meeting Abbott at a signing, the Doctor and Eliza tracked the book in the TARDIS, and the Doctor deduced that Abbott was a disguised alien who used a pen made of [[Incredulitas 4]] that could transport matter. They arrived on the planet [[Antagonista]], the setting of the book, and rescued Sammy from [[zombie]]s. Abbott arrived and tried to attack the group with his pen, but the Doctor used his sonic screwdriver to counter the attack and trap Abbott in [[The writer's block|a stasis jail cell in space]]. Dubbing the cell the "writer's block", the Doctor returned Eliza and Sammy home. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Shock Horror (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor then visited what he thought was the English countryside for a breath of fresh air, but after almost walking off the side of a floating island, he discovered that he was on [[New Belgravia]]. He met the owner of the island, [[Lord]] [[Eskdale]], who asked the Doctor to help him find his missing daughter, [[Charlotte Eskdale|Charlotte]]. Shortly after the Doctor accepted the offer, the floating island began to fall towards the ground. In the engine room of the island, the Doctor found Charlotte, who had hid there after seeing her father discriminate against the [[New Belgravian|planet's natives]]. Eskdale apologised to his daughter, leading to her letting the Doctor into the engine room. He moved the island back into the sky, saving countless lives. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Sky Manor (comic story)}}) | |||
[[ | After he rescued [[Kiron]] from a [[Howler]], ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Promise (DWAN comic story)}}) and needing some time to relax alone, the Doctor visited [[Eed'n]] to take photos of the native flora and fauna. After taking a few pictures, he disappointingly discovered that [[Jain Relph]], a [[professor]] from the [[Mega Galactic University]], was also on the uninhabited planet cataloguing plant life. As the Doctor began to tell Relph to go away, the two were attacked by spores from Eed'n's plant life and were possessed by an entity called [[the Plant]]. The Plant realised that it could go to the beginning of the Universe with the Doctor's TARDIS and seed itself into all lifeforms. However, due to the Doctor having multiple personalities, the Plant had difficulty in completely absorbing him. The Doctor used the little control he had not to pilot the TARDIS to the beginning of time, but to the end, where the Plant died due to lack of sunlight. The Doctor then dropped off Relph at a nearby human colony. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Petals (comic story)}}) | ||
The Doctor then went to [[1909]] [[Paris]], where he attended the grand reopening of the [[Galerie d'Art de Parisiennes]], and discovered [[Alien (Gallery)|an alien]] which was taking people into paintings and attempting to drain their lives. The alien attacked the Doctor and pulled him into ''[[Bridge over a Pond of Water Lilies]]'', and chased him through multiple paintings until he discovered over victims of the alien. Using a pen, the Doctor drew a door out of the painting world and back into reality and threw a can of white paint at the painting which the alien was hiding in, trapping it in the canvas. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Gallery (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor learned that the [[Earth Empire]] trading planet [[Vourakis 3]] was being blockaded and travelled to the planet to stop the blockade before it caused an inter-planetary war. He encountered reporter [[Heddy Garber]] and took her onto the ship responsible for the blockade in his TARDIS. They discovered that colony governor [[Ron Cordell]] hired a group of [[Skink]]s to blockade the planet and were taken prisoner by the [[Skink]]s, who tried to drop the Doctor and Garber into their ship's [[black hole drive]], but the Doctor used his sonic sunglasses to sabotage the drive, and it began to destroy the Skink ship. The Doctor and Garber ran back to the TARDIS and escaped just before the entire ship was sucked into a black hole. With Vourakis 3 saved, the Doctor dropped Garber off in [[Piccadilly Circus]] before heading off into another adventure. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Pirates of Vourakis (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor visited the planet [[Rhodia]], whose population of three billion was being wiped out by the [[Shadow Kin]], who had emerged during the [[civil war]] that was being waged between Rhodia's two factions. He was only able to rescue the [[Rhodian]] [[Charlie Smith|prince]], and the [[Quill (species)|Quill]] [[Andrea Quill|terrorist]] who was forced to protect him as punishment for her crimes. For their protection, the Doctor relocated the pair to [[Shoreditch]] on [[Earth]], where the Quill would serve as a teacher at [[Coal Hill Academy]], with the prince attending her classes as a sixth form student named "Charlie Smith". ([[TV]]: {{cs|For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor saved [[Human (Don't Blink)|a person]] from the [[Weeping Angel]]s in [[House (Don't Blink)|a house]]. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|Don't Blink (video game)}}) | |||
The Doctor was invited to Kiron's chambers when he became President. He discovered that every time Kiron was saved, videos of him being protected went viral and he grew in power. Kiron amplified the link to control the population of the entire planet to rebuild the city and enslave their enemies. When the Doctor withdrew his protection of Kiron, the spell was broken. Realising he had done wrong, Kiron asked the Doctor to help set things right. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Promise (DWAN comic story)}}) | |||
When the Shadow Kin caught up with Charlie and Quill at the Coal Hill Academy autumn prom night, Quill called the Doctor for help, and he returned to Coal Hill. Confronting the king of the Shadow Kin, [[Corakinus]], the Doctor used their aversion towards [[light]] to repel them, forcing them back through the tear in [[space]] [[time]] from which they came before sealing it. Knowing that such tears would continue to threaten the school as a result of the excess [[artron energy]] in the area, the Doctor entrusted Quill and Charlie to defend against whatever would come through alongside [[Coal Hill defenders|Charlie's fellow students]] who had faced the [[Shadow King]] alongside him. Before leaving, the Doctor took [[Ram Singh]], a student who had been maimed by Corakinus, aboard the TARDIS to fit him with a [[Lothan]] prosthetic limb to replace his severed leg. ([[TV]]: {{cs|For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)}}) | |||
=== Returning Jata home === | |||
{{Section stub|Info from ''[[Royal Wedding (comic story)|Royal Wedding]]'', ''[[Night of the Worms (comic story)|Night of the Worms]]'', ''[[Wings of the Predator (comic story)|Wings of the Predator]]'', & ''[[Killer App (comic story)|Killer App]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
[[File: | [[File:Jata meets Doctor.jpg|thumb|right|The Doctor takes [[Jata]] as a reward for capturing Clint Currie. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|From the Horse's Mouth (comic story)}})]] | ||
The Doctor tracked a crashed [[Q7 starship]] to the [[Wyoming]] desert in [[1899]] and encountered the bounty hunter [[Molly Zook]], who was tracking the big-time criminal [[Clint Currie]]. She showed the Doctor wanted posters of Currie and his horse, [[Jata]], who the Doctor recognised as an [[Osumaran]] masquerading as a horse. After buying a horse and painting a star on its forehead so it resembled an Osumaran, the Doctor went to where Currie's gang had tied up their horses and replaced the Osumaran with the real horse. Without the Osumaran to guide him, Currie was caught and arrested by [[Sheriff (From the Horse's Mouth)|the town's sheriff]]. The Doctor asked to keep Currie's horse as a reward for helping with the capture. The Osumaran introduced himself as Jata and thanked the Doctor for rescuing him, but the Doctor told Jata that his starship was too broken to work again and decided to take Jata back to [[Osumare]] in the TARDIS. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|From the Horse's Mouth (comic story)}}) | |||
During the trip to Osumare, Jata mentioned he was interested in educational systems, which prompted the Doctor to show him an [[England|English]] school in the [[21st century]]. Much to the Doctor's surprise, the school they landed in was filled with students put into a violent trance by their [[ear bud]]s. The Doctor and Jata hid in the school's chapel with three teachers and [[Ralph (Fear Buds)|a student]]. The Doctor knew about a secret room in the chapel and guided the student, Jata, and [[Swain|one of the teachers]] to it when the mind-controlled students broke through the chapel's doors. In the hidden room, the Doctor realised that the student was a [[Mkali]]. He confronted the Mkali and asked him to reverse what he had done to the other students. When that didn't work, the Doctor called the Mkali's mother, who became very angry at her son and fixed everything he did. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Fear Buds (comic story)}}) | |||
=== | === Temporary companions === | ||
{{Section stub|Info from ''[[Invasion of the Mindmorphs (comic story)|Invasion of the Mindmorphs]]'', ''[[A Cold Snap (comic story)|A Cold Snap]]'', ''[[The Lost Planet (audio story)|The Lost Planet]]'', ''[[The Lost Magic (audio story)|The Lost Magic]]'', ''[[The Lost Flame (audio story)|The Lost Flame]]'', & ''[[Field Trip (audio story)|Field Trip]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
[[ | After seeing an [[opera]] in [[1695]] [[Paris]], the Doctor was confronted by [[Julie d'Aubigny]] after the show when he refused to take part in the standing ovation, with the Doctor escalating the situation by insulting her singing and having Julie challenge him to a sword duel. The duel was interrupted by [[Lord Cardinal|Cardinal]] [[Richelieu]], who wanted to question the Doctor, but was stabbed by Julie and exposed as being possessed by dark forces. The Doctor fled to the TARDIS and took Julie with him, knowing that there were mysterious forces at work. The Doctor and Julie went to the Bibliotheque Mazarine library to find information on the forces, with the Doctor using his psychic paper to get the library's curator, Bishop Mazarin, to tell him that Richelieu had created an intelligence network called the Cabinet Noir to intercept the mail of Paris and instructed Mazarin to build a secret library to store confiscated mail, and that Richelieu had experimented with magic and opened a realm of beings, which granted him the ability to not age. Mazarin gave the Doctor the keys to the secret library and told him that Richelieu was plotting to create another portal to plunge the entire world into darkness, but he was suddenly killed by gargoyles before he could say anymore. The gargoyles attacked the Doctor, but Julie managed to destroy the head of one, revealing them to be robots, as the Doctor looked at a chart in the secret library and found an astrological prediction that predicted an eclipse, which the darkness planned to use for their invasion. | ||
The Doctor and Julie escaped the library as the gargoyles burnt it and went to warn King [[Louis XIV]] of the plan, only to find he was already possessed by Richelieu and the darkness. Julie was separated from the Doctor and imprisoned to be executed during the king's festival, but the Doctor freed Julie by posing as her executioner. The eclipse began, and the darkness started to emerge and attack. The Doctor used the sonic screwdriver and TARDIS to open a portal into the Ssabrehagen Quaser to spread light across the land, destroying Richelieu and the darkness. Julie asked the Doctor if she could join him in the TARDIS, but he declined. The two instead decided to finish their sword duel. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Terror of the Cabinet Noir (comic story)}}) | |||
[[File: | [[File:Strax in TARDIS wardrobe.jpg|thumb|right|The Doctor finds [[Strax]] in the [[TARDIS wardrobe]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Adventures of Strax & the Time Shark (comic story)}})]] | ||
After picking up [[Dorium Maldovar]] to use as a ball, the Doctor went to a forested planet to play a game of [[bowling]] with [[Strax]], using robotic dinosaurs as pins. Strax arrived on the [[Time Shark]] and used himself as a bowling ball. He broke all of the dinosaurs, making it impossible for the game to continue. Afterwards, the Doctor took Strax and the Time Shark with him in the TARDIS to help save the universe. However, instead of helping him, Strax and the Time Shark explored the TARDIS and tried on clothing in the [[TARDIS wardrobe]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Adventures of Strax & the Time Shark (comic story)}}) | |||
On [[Rickman]], the Twelfth Doctor met [[Alex Yow|Alex]] and [[Brandon Yow]]. With the help of the two siblings, the Doctor was able to defeat a [[Weeping Angel (The Lost Angel)|Weeping Angel]]. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Lost Angel (audio story)}}) | |||
The Doctor arrived on board a high-paying [[Ship (Beneath the Waves)|ship]], stuffed with [[aristocrat]]s from various species, which attempted to discover and excavate a lost city hidden below the waves of [[New Oceana]]. The team eventually arrived to the doors of the [[Saffshran Ziggurat]], which had been sealed for almost a thousand years, and was greeted by an awoken army of [[Quark]]s, who swiftly attacked the group. Realising that the Ziggurat was a Quark [[Manufactorum]], the Doctor flooded the city as the team escaped using their [[Rebreather|breathing devices]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Beneath the Waves (comic story)}}) | |||
=== Solo adventures === | |||
{{Section stub|Info from ''[[Death Among the Stars (audio story)|Death Among the Stars]]'', ''[[Rhythm of Destruction (audio story)|Rhythm of Destruction]]'', & ''[[The Boy With the Displaced Smile (comic story)|The Boy With the Displaced Smile]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
The Doctor chased Missy across Earth in different times and places as she stole numerous valuables, from the [[British Crown Jewels]] to [[diamond]] rings. The Doctor retraced his steps and discovered Missy had left [[Cybermat]]s as she went. Missy was disappointed that the Doctor had foiled her plan despite not even knowing what the plan was. The Doctor then went off in his TARDIS to have lunch, not even bothering to let Missy explain her plan to him. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Dr. Twelfth (novel)}}) | |||
The Doctor went to [[New York City]] in the [[1990s]] to undo the damage from the temporal paradoxes he had played a hand in. While setting up a trap to prevent anyone from interfering with his work, he fell victim to it himself and had to be rescued by [[Grant (The Return of Doctor Mysterio)|Grant]], a child obsessed with comics who nicknamed him "Doctor Mysterio", a name the Doctor immediately took a liking to. The Doctor decided to have Grant help him, handing him the [[Hazandra]] needed to power his device. However, Grant mistook it for cold medicine he needed and swallowed the gem. As the Hazandra granted wishes, it gave Grant superpowers, as he wanted to help people. The Doctor made Grant promise to never use his powers, so he wouldn't become corrupted by them. He kept an eye on Grant during his later years. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor | The Doctor ventured to [[Catrigan Nova]] to warn Queen [[Lydia (The Mondas Touch)|Lydia]] that her prized gauntlet was part of a Cyberman, but arrived too late to prevent her upgrading her guards and castle, linking her kingdom to the [[Cyberiad]] hive mind. Lydia initially imprisoned the Doctor for trying to take the gauntlet from her, but eventually came to listen to him after her daughter, [[Mida]], was unintentionally upgraded by her touch. The Doctor instructed Lydia to lead her fully-converted citizens to the gilded whirlpools of Catrigan Nova, with the nuggets of [[gold]] within the pools wearing away the Cybermen into nothingness. Lydia then destroyed the gauntlet, freeing Mida from the Cyberiad. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Mondas Touch (short story)}}) | ||
The Doctor | The Doctor foiled a plot by [[the Master]]. ([[POEM]]: {{cs|Winning (poem)}}) | ||
[[File: | === Reunion with River === | ||
[[File:River and Twelve Happy.jpg|thumb|The Doctor and River during their final night together. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}})]] | |||
Relaxing in his TARDIS after a "long day" that had involved "everybody turn[ing] into [[lizard]]s" and a [[piano]] falling on him, the Doctor was mistakenly summoned by [[Nardole]] for a "medical emergency" on [[Mendorax Dellora]] and brought to [[River Song]], who failed to recognise the Doctor due to not knowing about his new regeneration cycle, as her "husband", King [[Hydroflax]], needed a lifesaving operation to remove the [[Halassi Androvar]] diamond from his head. However, River intended to remove Hydroflax's head, and managed to steal it when Hydroflax, whose head was dispensable, discovered the ruse and tried to kill her and the Doctor, until the Doctor took his head hostage and, with the robotic body unwilling to potentially harm Hydroflax's head, the Doctor and River managed to get teleported out by [[Ramone]], another of River's "husbands". | |||
Arriving back at the TARDIS, the Doctor and River, still not knowing his identity, "stole" the TARDIS to get away from Hydroflax's body, but the TARDIS could not dematerialise with the head inside and the body outside, and River was tricked into letting the body in after it stole Nardole and Ramone's heads. Escaping the body on the ''[[Harmony and Redemption]]'', River tried to sell the diamond to [[Scratch (The Husbands of River Song)|Scratch]] of the [[Shoal of the Winter Harmony]], only to learn that he was a follower of Hydroflax, and the two attempted to leave with Hydroflax's head. However, Hydroflax's robotic body arrived and killed the head, having been promised the Doctor's head as a replacement. To the Doctor's sorrow, he listened to River as she showed a lack of belief in his love for her, saying that while she loved him, he didn't fall in love with people. As the Doctor revealed who he was to River, River told the Doctor she was "just keeping them talking". As a [[meteor storm]] hit the ship, the Doctor defeated Hydroflax's body by tricking it into using the [[universal banking device]] and he River attempted to stop the ''Harmony and Redemption'' from crashing on [[Darillium]]. They ultimately failed, barely shielding themselves in the TARDIS instead during the impact. | |||
Regaining consciousness first, the Doctor emerged from the TARDIS on Darillium, and, using the diamond, inspired a man named [[Alphonse]] to start a restaurant, so he could travel into the future and book a reservation for a balcony view of the [[Singing Towers]]. Dressing formally for River when she awakened, the Doctor gifted her with a sonic screwdriver of her own, and, telling her that nights on Darillium lasted twenty-four years, the two enjoyed the view. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}) True to his word, the Doctor stayed with River on Darillium for twenty-four years. During this time, the Doctor, worried he would be lonely when the night was over, recovered Nardole from Hydroflax's body ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) and rebuilt him, using human parts in some places. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}) | |||
[[ | === Guarding the Vault === | ||
After leaving [[Darillium]], the Doctor was summoned by an [[Species (Extremis)|unnamed species]] to an [[Planet (Extremis)|unnamed planet]] to act as [[Missy]]'s executioner. However, after [[Nardole]] arrived to deliver a message from [[River Song]], the Doctor decided to spare Missy, but still made an oath to watch over her while she was locked up in a [[The Vault (The Pilot)|Quantum Fold Chamber]] for a thousand years. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Extremis (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Nardole learned that [[Shoal of the Winter Harmony]] had invaded the [[capital city|capital cities]] of [[Earth]]. Inside their company's building in [[New York City]], the Doctor began working to stop their plan of implanting themselves in the heads of the world leaders, which led him to meet up with [[Grant (The Return of Doctor Mysterio)|Grant]], who was now the heroic vigilante known as "the Ghost". Together, along with [[Lucy Fletcher]], they stopped Harmony Shoal by destroying [[shoal spaceship|their nuclear spaceship]] before it could be dropped on New York City and decimate Earth. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) | |||
==== Settling at St. Luke's University ==== | |||
The Doctor and Nardole eventually took the vault to [[St Luke's University]] ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) during the [[1940s]]. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Regeneration Impossible (audio story)}}) As a result of his promise, the Doctor was prevented from "going off-world unless it [was] an emergency", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) and became a [[lecturer]] at the university, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) being labelled a "Lecturer in Almost Everything", ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Girl Power! (short story)}}) and given a professoriate. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Regeneration Impossible (audio story)}}) Nardole remained with him to ensure he stuck to his "oath", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) as the Doctor had instructed him to. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) Missy would occasionally ask Nardole to order items for her, and the Doctor would have to approve her requests. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Girl Power! (short story)}}) | |||
In [[1997]], the Doctor gave a lecture explaining why time travel would be impossible, using the example of a theoretical time traveller going back and giving [[Adolf Hitler]] the necessary means to win World War II, stealing a toothbrush from the new timeline and then negating that timeline. He ended the lecture by brushing his teeth. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Emancipation of the Daleks (audio story)}}) | |||
==== Adventures from St Luke's University ==== | |||
After the Ghost accidentally wore the [[Amulet of Xanadu]], his Hazandra changed its power for the wearer to fall in love against their will. As such he fell in love with Missy who had initially stolen it and in his love-trance moved the [[Eiffel Tower]] to New York to impress her. This got the Doctor's attention and took the amulet from Missy who had worn it by accident afterwards. Despite dealing with the amulet, Missy escaped. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Missy Loves Ghostie (comic story)}}) | |||
Eight years after the Doctor and Grant parted ways from the Harmony Shoal incident, he asked for his help to retrieve the other gemstones, which he agreed to on the condition he could take his now wife Lucy and stepdaughter Jennifer. This took them to a future New York City ravaged by [[Ethan Hall]] who possessed the [[Arquess]], [[Nixtus III]] which was overtaken by the Harmony Shoal who had the [[Alcyone]] and a [[Sycorax spaceship]] and leader [[Kraxnor]] who possessed the [[Sanguinare]]. With the gemstones retrieved, he took Grant's gemstone from him to save the universe from [[dark energy]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Ghost Stories (comic story)}}) | |||
[[ | When Missy created a [[Spacebook]] group chat with some of history's most famous women, particularly from [[Tudor]] England, the Doctor thought that Missy was trying to influence history to prevent [[St Luke's University]] from being constructed, allowing her to escape the Vault. However, after the Doctor had disbanded the group by infiltrating the chat and deconstructing Missy's leadership, Missy claimed she had only wanted to help the women fight male oppression, leading the Doctor to believe that her rehabilitation was beginning to take effect. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Girl Power! (short story)}}) | ||
Following a clue of a missing student to a morgue in [[1892]] [[London]], the Doctor was trapped in an [[Assassination Box]] and forced to undergo multiple false regenerations. When the [[regeneration energy]] alerted the [[Eleventh Doctor]] to his presence, they discovered that a [[regeneration vampire]] had trapped the Twelfth Doctor to drain his regenerations. The Eleventh Doctor was able to return the Twelfth Doctor's regenerations by overloading the Assassination Box, killing the vampire. As his past incarnation was knocked unconscious with his memories of the night erased, the Twelfth Doctor returned him to his TARDIS before taking his own leave. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Regeneration Impossible (audio story)}}) | |||
While in his office, a [[Time Agent]], [[Keira Sanstrom]] entered and demanded the Doctor take her to [[Calandra]] at gunpoint. Reluctantly the Doctor agreed only to find that the planet had gone wrong due to attempts Keira made to advance it by using her [[vortex manipulator]]. The ended up fixing it but the damage done to time was too great and arriving back at St Luke's they found it, along with the rest of Bristol, in ruins. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Flight to Calandra (audio story)}}) As such they jumped through to several points in time and space to close the fractures in time caused by Keira's meddling. However it seemed that things hadn't come to an end when another Keira appeared in the TARDIS claiming to be from the future. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Split Second (audio story)}}) The other Keira was actually one of the confused from Calandra who arrived to stop [[Havilland (Split Second)|Havilland]] exploiting the weaknesses in time. Once she was defeated, the Doctor allowed Keira to take all the credit for stopping one of the agencies most wanted criminals. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Weight of History (audio story)}}) | |||
The Doctor | === Meeting Bill === | ||
[[File:The Pilot Doctor Do You Know Sci Fi.jpg|left|thumb|The Doctor is asked by Bill if he knows anything about [[sci-fi]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}})]] | |||
By [[2016]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Knock Knock (TV story)}}) the Doctor recognised that a [[canteen]] worker named [[Bill Potts]] was attending his [[lecture]]s and, admiring her fascination in the unknown, enrolled her in the school as her personal tutor. Bill would meet with the Doctor every day at 6pm for private lessons and kept up a continuously solid grade rate throughout the academic year. As a show of gratitude, Bill gave the Doctor a rug for [[Christmas]], and he returned the gesture by travelling back in time to take photos of [[Bill Potts's mother|her deceased mother]]. | |||
[[ | Sometime into the second term, Bill told the Doctor about [[sentient oil|a puddle]] that one of her new acquaintances, [[Heather (The Pilot)|Heather]], had showed her before she disappeared. Examining the puddle, the Doctor and Bill discovered that the puddle was imitating their movements instead of reflecting their image. Later that night, the Heather-imitating-puddle followed Bill to the Doctor's office and the Doctor, after ensuring the puddle was not after the contents of the Vault, took Bill and Nardole into the TARDIS and led the puddle to [[Australia]], a [[Planet (The Pilot)|planet at the other end of the universe in the future]], and then a [[War zone (The Pilot)|war zone]] in the [[Dalek-Movellan War]]. While Nardole quarantined the area off, the Doctor discovered that the puddle didn't mean them harm, but was following Bill because Heather had promised not to leave without her before the puddle had absorbed her. Bill released Heather from her promise and the puddle departed. The Doctor and Nardole then took Bill back to the University, with the Doctor planning to "mindwipe" her, but he relented when she asked him how he would feel if it was done to him, and he instead told her to leave. After arguing with himself, the Doctor decided to ask Bill to travel with him and took the TARDIS outside the university to welcome her aboard. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) | ||
After fending off Nardole, the Doctor took Bill to visit a [[Planet (Smile)|human colony]] in the [[far future]], but grew suspicious when he found no humans in the facility, only the [[Vardy]] microbots that had constructed the colony and the their interface, the [[Emojibot]]s. When the Doctor discovered the Vardy had killed the set-up team, he and Bill escaped the colony, but then ran back in to attempt to destroy the base for the safety of the coming settlers. As soon as the Doctor had wired [[Erehwon|the ship]] the city had been built around to explode, Bill showed him that the colonists had already arrived in hibernation waiting for the ship to wake them up, and entering the ship had awakened them prematurely. The Doctor stopped the bomb, and the pair deduced that the Vardy had been built to sustain happiness and had come to view grief as a plague. | |||
The | The colonists, seeking revenge for their deceased relatives, opened fire on the Emojibots, which prompted the Vardy to attack. Realising that the Vardy had gained sentience, the Doctor rebooted the Vardy, erasing their memories of the humans, before beginning diplomatic negotiations between the humans and Vardy for a peaceful co-existence. Having achieved peace, the Doctor tried to return the TARDIS to the university just after they left, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) but instead landed during the [[frost fair]] of [[1814]]. | ||
Deciding to explore the fair, the Doctor and Bill noticed green glowing lights under the ice, but were approached by a street urchin named [[Kitty (Thin Ice)|Kitty]] before they could investigate. However, Kitty was distracting them from [[Spider (Thin Ice)|another urchin]], who stole [[the Doctor's sonic screwdriver]], but was sucked under the ice in the resulting chase. Unable to save the boy, the Doctor and Bill convinced Kitty to take them to her gang of urchins, and learned that they were getting paid to lead people onto the ice. The Doctor decided to venture under the ice with Bill to see what was in the [[Thames]], and found a [[sea creature (Thin Ice)|large fish-like creature]] chained down to the riverbed. Investigating the nearby river dredgers, the Doctor learned that the creature's waste was being dug up as a supplement for coal on Lord [[Sutcliffe (Thin Ice)|Sutcliffe]]'s orders. | |||
Captured by Sutcliffe's men after the Doctor assaulted him for his [[racism]] towards Bill, Sutcliffe revealed that his family had known about the sea creature for years and the fuel it provided was accelerating industrialism. Sutcliffe had the Doctor and Bill tied up near a dynamite-laced-tent, but they were able to escape. Leaving Bill and the urchins to clear the River of people, the Doctor moved the explosives towards the creature's chains, freeing it when Sutcliffe activated the dynamite. As the ice shattered from the creature's escape, killing Sutcliffe, the Doctor rescued Bill by pulling her off of the ice before they got soaked as the sea creature passed them by. After amending Sutcliffe's will to name [[Perry (Thin Ice)|one of the urchins]] as his heir, the Doctor and Bill returned to the university, where the Doctor used a coin trick he had learned to convince Nardole to let him continue travelling with Bill. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) The Doctor and Bill would meet up for adventures on Saturdays. ([[TV]]: {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}) | |||
=== Early adventures with Bill === | |||
{{Section stub|Info from ''[[Diamond Dogs (novel)|Diamond Dogs]]'', ''[[The Shining Man (novel)|The Shining Man]]'', ''[[The Last Action Figure (comic story)|The Last Action Figure]]'', & ''[[I Am the Doctor (short story)|I Am the Doctor]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
After Bill asked him to help her move into a student house, the Doctor grew suspicious of the fact that an old, large house was being rented to Bill and five other students for so little. Bill and the Doctor discovered that [[John (Knock Knock)|the Landlord]] was using [[Dryad|strange insects]] to keep his mother alive in a wooden form by feeding people to them every twenty years; convincing the mother that her son was wrong to keep her alive this way, the Doctor was able to free the house's recent victims, while the Landlord and his mother were consumed by the insects and the house collapsed. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Knock Knock (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor continued adventuring on his own on occasion, notably evading a ring of [[tank]]s and a murderous [[Black Dalek (A Hero like the Doctor)|Black Dalek]] through cleverness; he also travelled to a city that was about to be destroyed by an exploding [[volcano]], all to rescue a single [[Bird (A Hero like the Doctor)|bird]] left behind in its [[cage]], whom he then released from a mountain's peak in the presence of Bill. ([[WC]]: {{cs|A Hero like the Doctor (webcast)}}) | |||
[[File: | === Threats from the Dreamspace === | ||
[[File:DWM 512 The Soul Garden Bill and the Doctor learn to fly 1.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor and Bill "swim" on the low-gravity atmospheres of [[Titan]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Soul Garden (comic story)}})]] | |||
Landing on [[Titan]] to get a good view of Bill's favourite planet, [[Saturn]], the Doctor and Bill were swept up in the trail of [[Beagle (ship)|a land-cruiser]] studying the surrounding continent of [[Xanadu]]. Discovering that the vessel was being funded by [[Rudy Zoom]] and was inspired by a vision held by the psychic Lady [[Takashi]], the Doctor and Bill joined the crew in exploring Titan. After several hours, they found a dome hiding a [[The Garden (The Soul Garden)|garden]] inside a cavern, perfectly supported with no animal life. Travelling to the centre of the ecosystem, the Doctor discovered two dead trees. When they were attacked by a [[Keeper (The Soul Garden)|robot]] which saw them as weeds, the group scattered and Bill and the Doctor were separated. Just as soon as the Doctor had deactivated the robot, the plants around them came alive and formed their own bodies, interested in consuming the flesh-based beings around them. | |||
The [[Haluu]] plants wrapped themselves around the humans, but the Doctor was able to free himself and Lady Takashi by reactivating the robot and using it against them. The Haluu progenitor [[Sythorr]] raised itself out of the ground and ate most of the human expedition. Sythorr intended to wipe Rudy and Bill's memories and use them to take his seeds with them so he can spread his influence across Earth and take it over. The Doctor explained to Sythorr's lover, [[Oksanna]], that Sythorr had placed the minds of dead humans he claimed in the [[Dreamspace]] inside the garden's Haluu. Oksanna remembered her life as a human and sacrificed herself to destroy Sythorr along with the domed garden. As the Doctor, Bill, Rudy and Lady Takashi escaped to the ship, the last piece of Sythorr warned the Doctor before dying that "the unknown soldier [was] stirring." ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Soul Garden (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Bill landed in the [[Indian Territory]] of [[1880]], where the outlaw [[Seth Shelton]] tried to hold Bill hostage, but she was saved by United States Deputy Marshal [[Bass Reeves]] and the scout [[Joey Two Trees]], who had Shelton arrested and intended to take him back to [[Arkansas]] to stand trial. Joey showed the Doctor and Reeves that a [[stag]] had had its heart ripped out of its body, and they then saw a group of [[Stikini]] carry Bill away to a ceremony being performed by the [[Seminole]] [[medicine woman]] [[Totika]]. The Doctor and Reeves freed Bill from her capture, but the ceremony caused her to swap her body with the Stikini [[Cocheta]] in the [[Red Skies]], another area in the Dreamspace which the Stikini were native to. The Doctor incapacitated Cocheta using the noise of his sonic screwdriver, and contacted Bill in the Dreamspace. Bill and the Seminole banished there by Totika willed themselves out of the Red Skies, forcing the Stikini back there, and Reeves and Joey destroyed the totem used in Totika's ceremonies. Afterwards, the sky opened up, and the group saw the Stikini get burnt by an unknown force in the Red Skies. Returning to the TARDIS, the Doctor and Bill saw the TARDIS had impossible carvings on its exterior. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Parliament of Fear (comic story)}}) | |||
Searching for answers, the Doctor and Bill went to the [[Renath Archive]] library on [[Cornucopia]] to try to identify it, but the Doctor failed to identity any relevant symbol after going through all of the books in the archive. When the head librarian, [[Matildus Galathea]], showed signs of a weakening mind, she asked her granddaughter, [[Sashana]], to be handed custody of the archive, with the Doctor as witness. Before custody could be handed over, Bill, joined by the [[Kaballus Kids]], told them to stop. Bill took a photograph on her phone which revealed Sashana's true form, and Sashana revealed that Matildus had no granddaughter, that she was psychically sowing doubt in Matildus' mind and was blocking her memories so she could sell off the library's collection. Sashana began to fry the group's brains with her mind, but was stopped after Bill summoned the [[Ristallian crater-hound]] [[Archie (Matildus)|Archie]], whose simple brain couldn't be kept back. After Sashana was arrested, the Doctor realised the carving wasn't a symbol, but a coded message, and decided to visit [[Alan Turing]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Matildus (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor | The Doctor and Bill went to visit the [[Galatean]] duplicate of Alan Turing on the [[The Moon|lunar]] colony [[Athenia]] to decipher the markings on the TARDIS, only to learn that Alan had been missing for two years. When [[Chiyoko]] told the Doctor where to find Alan, they found him inside a replica of [[King's College]], [[University of Cambridge|Cambridge]] on the Moon's surface, and learned that the code on the TARDIS was part of the Dreamspace-residing [[Phantom Piper]], who tricked the Doctor into coming to Alan so that Alan's [[Block Transfer Computation]] could make the Piper take physical form. At the Doctor's suggestion, Alan defeated the Piper and prevented the Piper's plot to start war between humans and Galateans by tricking him into shooting a bullet at a mathematical construct of Alan, which allowed Alan to break down the code of the bullet, which was part of the Piper. Afterwards, [[Fey Truscott-Sade]] arrived to warn the Doctor about "the Absence" and told him to assemble his forces. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Phantom Piper (comic story)}}) | ||
Following Fey, the Doctor and Bill ended up in an entropy bubble that began draining the power from the TARDIS. Exploring where they landed, they found that many other time travellers, such as Count [[Jodafra]] and [[Gol Clutha]] and her mercenaries, were also trapped. During an attack by the Clockwise Men, the Doctor used Jodafra's time machine, the ''Salvation'', to power up the TARDIS and escape, but only after Fey reappeared, leading Jodafra to his death at the hands of the Clockwise Men. Returning to Cornucopia, the Doctor met back up with [[Annabel Lake]] to enlist help from Wonderland to find out more about Fey's change in behaviour. After escaping a mid-air attack by Fey, they made it to Wonderland HQ, where the Doctor explained to everyone how Fey had apparently died attempting to rescue a [[Loshann]] child during the [[Last Great Time War]]. | |||
Returning to Matildus, the Doctor used a copy of ''Peter Pan'' to access Fey in the Dreamspace, where she explained about her survival and her plans to attack the Time Lords, with the help of an entire map of the space/time vortex gained by the Absence, who appeared as the fully matured Loshann child. Learning Fey's only surviving relative, [[Alexander Truscott]], was involved, the Doctor and Bill went to 2018 London to find him. Upon locating him, Truscott explained his history of altering Fey's mind to make her hate the Time Lords, but was interrupted by the Doctor's "cavalry" of the [[Twelfth General]], Marshal Reeves, and Totika. They fled as Fey and the Clockwise Men prepared their attack, only to discover that [[Shayde]] was reforming himself as a black sphere around Fey. | |||
Entering the sphere, the group entered the Dreamspace, where the Doctor showed Fey that she had never saved the Loshann child and the Absence had never existed. With her illusion broken, the area of the Dreamspace shattered and Shayde wiped Fey’s mind of her time with him at the cost of his own life. The Doctor dropped Fey off at Wonderland in London and left, neglecting to say goodbye due to his intention to one day see her again. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Clockwise War (comic story)}}) | |||
=== More adventures with Bill === | |||
While he was "correcting" the history books in the [[Terrance Dicks Library]], the Doctor received a phone call from [[Jenny (The Doctor's Daughter)|Jenny]] before her bowship crashed into the library. Happily greeting his daughter, the Doctor brought her to [[The Doctor's office (The Pilot)|his office]], where she told him that she had been trying to save [[Jack Harkness]] and [[Tara Mishra]] from a white hole on [[Sultath]], only for herself to be saved by the [[Fifth Doctor]], and him, Jack and Tara being swallowed by the singularity. When the same white energy that Jenny had described attacked St Luke's University, the Doctor realised that time travellers were not affected by the energy and tried to enter the TARDIS, only to find that it had merged with that of his [[tenth incarnation]]. Strategising with his predecessor, the Doctors and Jenny ejected themselves from the TARDIS, only to be surrounded by a mob of possessed students, but they were saved by the [[Ninth Doctor]] as a massive white hole opened in the sky. | |||
[[ | Joined by Bill, Nardole, [[Gabby Gonzalez]] and [[Cindy Wu]], the three Doctors ran into the Ninth Doctor's TARDIS, but found that all three of their ships had merged before the craft began being consumed by the white energy that the Doctors had now traced to [[the Void]]. When the [[Eighth Doctor]] arrived, he revealed that all of his past incarnations were also trapped in the Void. Leaving their eighth incarnation to safeguard Earth, the other Doctors flew into the Void in Jenny's bowship and discovered that the universe was being caused by a [[Type 1]] TARDIS that their [[eleventh incarnation]] had failed to correctly pilot. After being updated by the Eleventh Doctor to his situation, the other Doctors realised that the Type 1 could be made to listen to another TARDIS, linking it to the prior versions of their ship and having it jettison all that it had consumed. With the crisis over, the Twelfth Doctor returned to St Luke's University with his ninth, tenth and eleventh incarnations, and bade his past incarnations and their companions farewell, with Jenny opting to leave with the Ninth Doctor. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Lost Dimension (comic story)}}) | ||
The Doctor | The Doctor was summoned by Bill to her home due to a future version of her turning up. This led to them colliding with a [[Dalek War Saucer]] in the time vortex and thus landed in an alternate 2017 where the human race enslaved the Dalek populace due to the saucer crashing on St Luke's university in an alternate 1997, killing the Doctor and Nardole. There they met that timeline's Bill Potts and with the three Bills prevented that timeline from happening crashing two versions of the Dalek ship together in the vortex, the older Bill sacrificing herself for that to happen. He then dropped off the alternate timeline Bill in 1997 to give her 20 years away from a timeline with totalitarian rule, and sealing the loop that started the adventure off in the first place. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Emancipation of the Daleks (audio story)}}) | ||
The Doctor took Bill to [[Plex]]'s [[Planet (The Promise)|adopted home planet]] to see the first generation born independently, only to find them to be hostile. With the [[Chameleon Arch]] [[biodata module]] having broken since he last used it, the Doctor instead brought the planet to peace by telling the clones a glamourised version of their history. As they flew away in the TARDIS, the Doctor told Bill about his history with Plex. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Promise (FCBD comic story)}}) The Doctor then took Bill to see the [[coronation]] of Queen [[Elizabeth II]] in [[1953]]. When he asked her what she thought, Bill stated that she preferred [[Victoria]]'s coronation. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Where's the Doctor? (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor and Bill tracked what appeared to be a shooting [[star]] to the village of [[Little Smallington]]. Arriving at the village hall, they learned the star was actually a hog-shaped multi-function [[recycling drone]] on a rampage because of its overheated nuclear reactor. With the aid of the young [[Smallington Secret Squad]], they lured "[[Hangry (Loose in the Lane)|Hangry]] the hog" into a trap using all the [[metal]] they could find that resulted in the mechanical hog landing in a river. After the Doctor retrieved him from the river and fixed his reactor, the Secret Squad decided to keep the now-friendly Hangry as a mascot. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Loose in the Lane (comic story)}}) | |||
=== Temporal crisis === | |||
[[File:Twelfth Doctor and Clara under Stonehenge.jpg|thumb|left|Due to a temporal crisis, the Doctor has one last adventure with [[Clara Oswald|Clara]] in the tunnels beneath [[Stonehenge]]. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|Lost in Time (video game)}})]] | |||
While travelling in [[the Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]] with [[Bill Potts|Bill]], the Doctor was affected by a temporal crisis affecting all his other incarnations, rendering TARDIS travel all but impossible except from one [[vortex energy]]-charged space-time [[Waypoint]] to the next. His initial [[emergency landing]] was on [[Gallifrey]], where he was contacted by the time-hopping [[K9 Mark IV]] on behalf of the [[Thirteenth Doctor]] and informed about the basic situation. At K9's advice, he stole a stash of [[Kyfred Gem]]s from the [[Panopticon]], and headed to the [[Untempered Schism]] with Bill to try and use them to stabilise the [[temporal energy]] by hurling them into the [[Time Vortex]] "like skipping stones". | |||
After completing this, he returned to his TARDIS, which had charged up with vortex energy, only to be chased through time by a [[Dalek]] and forced into another emergency landing, in the [[Nevada]] desert where he'd parted with Clara. There, he was met with the immortal version of Clara postdating their break-up. In these aberrant temporal circumstances, he was able to recognise her, but did not understand how she was alive, which Clara refused to elaborate about. Things got more confusing when another Clara, from an earlier point in her and the Doctor's time-streams, also made her presence known. After the younger Clara disposed of the Dalek, talking it into [[self-destruct]]ing, the older Clara and the Doctor travelled onwards to another Waypoint, the [[Underhenge]] housing the [[Pandorica]]. After escaping from the [[Cyberman|Cybermen]], they parted ways again with Clara returning to [[Clara's TARDIS|her and Me's TARDIS]]. The time-hopping K9 tried to recruit the Twelfth Doctor's help for [[UNIT]], who had detected [[Sea Devil]] activity, but in the end it was the [[Thirteenth Doctor]] who intervened. | |||
Still under Stonehenge, the Twelfth Doctor was met with [[the Lone Centurion]], [[Rory Williams]], and then with a version of [[River Song]]. Experiencing severe [[time echo]]es that made him flash back to his [[Second Doctor|second]] and [[Third Doctor|third]] incarnations, he finally realised that he was losing his [[Time Sense]], shedding [[symbiotic nucleus|symbiotic nuclei]] at every Waypoint, even as some of his other selves came to "parallel" conclusions. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|Lost in Time (video game)}}) | |||
=== | === Blindness === | ||
The Doctor | [[File:United Nations base (Turmezistan).jpg|thumb|right|The Doctor strategises with the army officials. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}})]] | ||
Urging to see the universe again, the Doctor answered a distress beacon from [[Chasm Forge]], bringing Nardole with him and Bill when he tried to stop the Doctor leaving. Finding the station overrun with dead bodies reanimated by their [[smartsuit]]s, and the oxygen limited to those suits, the TARDIS crew put themselves into the suits and were updated on the situation by the survivors, [[Tasker]], [[Ivan (Oxygen)|Ivan]], [[Abby (Oxygen)|Abby]] and [[Dahh-Ren]]. When the survivors needed to escape the deceased crew by walking outside the station, Bill's smartsuit malfunctioned and removed her helmet, leaving her exposed to the vacuum of space. After she lost consciousness, the Doctor gave her his helmet, causing him to lose his [[vision]] as a consequence of being exposed to the [[vacuum]]. Realising that the smartsuits were killing people because they were designed to by the company who created them, [[Ganymede Systems]], to remove the expensive workers, the Doctor linked the survivors' with the power system of the station, leaving it so that the whole station would explode if the smartsuits killed any of them. Telling the spacesuits A.I. his actions and that it would result in Ganymede Systems losing a lot of money, the suits became non-hostile and let the Doctor and the survivors leave. | |||
Having his eyes' appearance restored, but secretly still leaving him [[blind]], the Doctor dropped Ivan and Abby off at [[Ganymede Systems Head Office]] to make a complaint, and returned Bill back to [[The Doctor's office (The Pilot)|his office]] at [[St Luke's University]], where he revealed to Nardole that he was unable to restore his vision. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) Using his [[sonic sunglasses]] to see, the Doctor was outside the Vault when he recovered an [[email]] titled ''[[Extremis]]''. It came from his [[Twelfth Doctor (Shadow World)|"Shadow World" counterpart]], warning him of an impending attack by [[Monk (species)|the Monks]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Extremis (TV story)}}) | |||
After a pyramid appeared in [[Turmezistan]], the Doctor, as the [[President of Earth]], was called upon to deal with the situation by the [[Secretary General (The Pyramid at the End of the World)|Secretary General of the United Nations]]. At the pyramid, the Doctor, Bill, Nardole, the Secretary General, [[US]] [[Colonel]] [[Don Brabbit]], [[Russia]]n official [[Ilya Svyatoslavovich]] and [[China]] official [[Xiaolian]] were shown a vision of an apocalyptic Earth by the [[Monk (species)|Monks]], who demanded the Earth surrender to them out of love so they could prevent that future from happening. The Doctor refused to, but the Secretary General took the offer out of fear, and was killed for giving the wrong consent. | |||
Setting out to determine the cause of the world ending threat, the Doctor came to the conclusion that they were dealing with a [[bacteria]] that would be accidentally released soon. Hacking the CCTV cameras of all the labs on the world to see which one the Monks would reactivate, the Doctor and Nardole went to [[Agrofuel Research Operations]] to prevent the catastrophe, while Bill, Brabbit, Svyatoslavovich and Xiaolian went to negotiate with the Monks. At the lab, after ordering Nardole to move the TARDIS and get himself to safety from the bacteria, the Doctor learned from [[Erica (The Pyramid at the End of the World)|Erica]] that a misplaced decimal point had resulted in the creation of the deadly bacteria. With the lab's automatic vent systems primed to send the bacteria into the atmosphere in a short time, the Doctor rigged an explosion to sterilise the lab and destroy the bacteria before it could be released. | |||
However, the Doctor became trapped in the part of the lab about to be destroyed when his [[sonic sunglasses]] couldn't read the combination lock to the lab door. With Nardole not responding, the Doctor admitted he was blind to Bill and, though he was prepared to die for his mistake, Bill, as the last remaining representative, surrendered Earth to the Monks in exchange for them restoring the Doctor's vision, telling the Doctor the Earth needed him too much. With his vision returned, the Doctor escaped the lab, but was telepathically told by the Monks that he would only "see [their] world." ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}) As Earth [[Monk invasion|fell to the Monks]], the Doctor pretended to be loyal to them to lure them into a sense of security as he planned a revolution. As part of his deception, the Doctor wrote and produced propaganda for the Monks aboard a [[prison boat]] off the coast of [[Scotland]], slowly freeing the minds of his guards from the Monk's control. Once Nardole had recovered from the bacteria, the Doctor updated him on the situation. | |||
After six months of the Monks' rule, and on Nardole's suggestion, the Doctor had him bring Bill to him, but not without making sure the Monks weren't affecting her. Once Nardole had brought Bill to the prison boat, the Doctor acted as if he was truly working with the Monks, and sent in his guards to hold Bill at gunpoint, having already told his guards to use [[Bullet|blanks]] to avoid a fatality. When his manipulations caused Bill to grab a pistol and shoot him, the Doctor faked a regeneration to completely fool Bill, admitting to the test after he ended the regeneration effect. Knowing that [[Missy]] would have information on the Monks, the Doctor and his companions stole the prison boat to sail to [[Bristol]]. | |||
Arriving back at [[St Luke's University]], the Doctor and Bill entered [[The Vault (The Pilot)|the Vault]] to converse with Missy, who revealed that the only known way to stop the Monks was to kill their "lynchpin", not knowing that this was Bill. The Doctor refused to sacrifice Bill and instead set out to the Monks' headquarters in [[London]], where the [[Giant Monk]] was transmitting the Monks' signals from strategically placed statues, with the Doctor planning to sacrifice himself by destroying the Giant Monk. After they managed to breach [[the Cathedral]], the Doctor was unable to overpower the Giant Monk, and was restrained by Bill and Nardole to prevent him stopping Bill sacrificing herself, but she was able to survive by thinking of her mother, with a memory "so pristine" that it managed to break the Monks' conditioning. With humanity starting to realise the false history of the Monks, the Monks chose to flee the planet, erasing all memory of themselves as they did so. With everything returning to normal, the Doctor returned to the Vault, where he listened as Missy revealed she was starting to feel guilt for the lives she had taken in the past. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}) | |||
=== Final adventures === | |||
{{Section stub|Info from ''[[Plague City (novel)|Plague City]]'', ''[[Dead Media (audio story)|Dead Media]]'', ''[[The Great Shopping Bill (comic story)|The Great Shopping Bill]]'', ''[[A Confusion of Angels (comic story)|A Confusion of Angels]]'', & ''[[Pain Management (short story)|Pain Management]]'' needs to be added}} | |||
The Doctor was tricked by [[Ziggy (Bill and the Three Jackets)|Ziggy]] when she swapped bodies with Bill, but her plan was foiled by Bill and [[Lou (Bill and the Three Jackets)|Lou]], who were able to reverse the body swap. Ziggy then explained that she had wanted them return her to her home planet, [[Onhwhie]], as she had been exiled for speaking up against the unjust government. After some persuading from Bill and Lou, the Doctor agreed to return Ziggy to Onhwhie. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Bill and the Three Jackets (short story)}}) | |||
While taking Bill and Nardole to NASA, the Doctor witnessed the discovery of a message reading ""GOD SAVE THE QUEEN"" on the surface of [[Mars]], and went to investigate in [[1881]]. After sending Nardole to get supplies from the TARDIS, it dematerialised due to a glitch, trapping the Doctor and Bill on Mars. As they continued to investigate, they discovered that an [[Ice Warrior]] named [["Friday" (Empress of Mars)|Friday]] had brought a platoon of British soldiers, led by Colonel [[Godsacre]], with him to Mars to reward them with Martian treasures for assisting him in his return. When the [[Ice Queen]] [[Iraxxa]] reawakened upon the discovery of her tomb, the human soldiers opened fire on fire in a panic, and she declared war on them. As Godscare was overthrown in a mutiny led by [[Neville Catchlove]], the Doctor and Bill were imprisoned with him as the humans fought the reawakened Ice Warrior army. | |||
With the aid of Friday, they escaped. After Godscare executed Catchlove when he took Iraxxa hostage, the Doctor helped the Victorians and the Ice Warriors form a truce, subsequently helping them make contact with [[Alpha Centauri (The Curse of Peladon)|Alpha Centauri]], with the Doctor helping Godscare to leave the ""GOD SAVE THE QUEEN"" message to help the [[Galactic Federation]] find the Ice Warriors. As the two armies departed, the Doctor and Bill were rescued by Nardole and Missy, Nardole having let her out of the Vault to assist him. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Empress of Mars (TV story)}}) | |||
While the Doctor was trying to take Bill to see a polar bear, the TARDIS was diverted to an island in the North Atlantic in the [[9th century]], where they discovered Ice Warriors led by [[Grand Marshall]] [[Sskoll]] and Vikings. To the Doctor's horror, he discovered that the Ice Warriors were in pursuit of a strain of [[The Flood (The Waters of Mars)|the Flood]], and that his old enemy, [[Fenric]], was plotting to use the Flood to contaminate the Earth's water supply so that he could take over. The Doctor convinced a [[Haemovore]] to destroy the Flood on Earth for mutual benefit by detonating a nearby [[volcano]], because if Fenric's plot succeeded, it would erase the Haemovores from existence and replace them with the Flood. As the surviving Ice Warriors, Haemovores and Vikings left, the Doctor and Bill got to see a polar bear. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Wolves of Winter (comic story)}}) | |||
Still seeing potential for Missy, the Doctor bio-locked her in the TARDIS for her to do "basic maintenance". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}) | |||
Answering a summons from Kate, the Doctor and Bill arrived in [[Piccadilly Circus]] to find everyone caught in a [[phase-shift]] into another plane. Upon entering the plane, the Doctor and Bill learnt that the [[Kar-yn]]s were using the [[Memetic Achieve]] to manipulate [[Man (Tulpa)|their host]] into reviving them. While the Doctor distracted them, Bill convinced the host to reject the Kar-yn, and they were destroyed, reverting everything to normal. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Tulpa (comic story)}}) | |||
Wanting to prove his superior knowledge of the [[Ninth Legion]], the Doctor took Bill and Nardole to [[2nd century]] [[Aberdeen]] to solve the mystery of their disappearance. Separating from Bill, the Doctor and Nardole found corpse drained of the absorbed sunlight in their body, and were taken prisoner by the [[Pict]]s. After learning that their leader, a young girl named [[Kar]], made claim to destroying the Ninth Legion in her role as "the Gatekeeper", the Doctor and Nardole escaped to a [[Cairn]], where the Doctor found a rift leading to a dimension of [[Light-eating locust]]s. Though he only stood in the dimension for a few seconds, when he returned to Aberdeen, he found that two days had passed, with Nardole having joined the Picts and been unable to find Bill. | |||
After Kar confessed to releasing the "Eater of Light" to destroy the Ninth Legion, Bill appeared with the remaining Roman soldiers, and the Doctor was able to broker a peace between the Pict and Roman children. With the two armies working together, the Doctor had them draw the Light-eating locust to the Cairn and force it back through the rift. While the Doctor intended for himself to enter the other dimension to fight off the horde of locusts, he was overpowered by Bill and the Picts, and had his place voluntarily taken by Kar and the Ninth Legion, who entered the rift as the Cairn collapsed. Returning to the TARDIS, the Doctor told Bill and Nardole of Missy being locked in the TARDIS, and allowed her to hear the music of the Picts as they talked about their old friendship. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}) | |||
Tracking an old [[Dalek harvest ship]] to [[Gosligi's Branch]], the Doctor tricked the ship into beaming him and Bill aboard, and he was able to override it back into a "basic function", rendering the ship harmless. He then gave the ship to the people of Gosligi's Branch. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Harvest of the Daleks (comic story)}}) | |||
=== Last stand === | |||
==== The Mondasian colony ship ==== | |||
[[File:CyberBill carries Doctor (TDF).jpg|thumb|The Doctor in Bill's arms. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}})]] | |||
Deciding to give Missy a proper test of character, the Doctor convinced Bill and Nardole to let her lead a rescue mission with them by responding to a [[distress call]]. Finding a colony ship heading towards a black hole, the Doctor's test ended when Bill was shot by [[Jorj]] and taken away by the ship's crew. After spending a time with Jorj, the Doctor, Missy, and Nardole took the elevator to the bottom of the ship in pursuit. ([[TV]]: {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}) As they descended, a time portal with a [[Leon Perkins|humanoid hand]] reaching out, but the Doctor was unable to properly examine the anomaly before it disappeared. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Road To... (comic story)}}) The Doctor, Nardole and Missy eventually arrived on the [[Floor 1056|one-thousand-and-fifty-sixth floor]] to find Bill converted into a Mondasian Cyberman, as Missy teamed up with {{Simm|n=her previous incarnation}}, who gloated that they were witnessing the "[[Genesis of the Cybermen]]". ([[TV]]: {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}) Despite being attacked and subsequently overpowered by the pair as Nardole fled, the Doctor was able to update the computer algorithm to include two heart species in the Cybermen's hunt before he lost consciousness. | |||
After he woke up on the roof to hear the Master and Missy gloating about their victory and Cyber-converted Bill posed behind, the other Cybermen received the update, leading to the army to lay siege to the hospital. However, the Doctor signalled Nardole to collect him in a stolen shuttlecraft. As the two Masters climbed aboard, the Doctor was grabbed by a Cyberman and electrocuted severely. Heavily wounded, the Doctor collapsed, slowly losing consciousness as he saw Bill come to his rescue and transported him to the shuttlecraft, carrying him out when they crash landed on [[Floor 0507]]. The Doctor spent the next two weeks recovering on the floor's [[solar farm]] under [[Hazran]]'s care, as his body prepared to [[regenerate]], despite the Doctor's efforts to resist it. After helping Bill come to terms with her situation, the Master and Missy revealed they had found the floor's lift. Once they reached Missy, she unwittingly called upon the Cybermen by activating the floor's lift. After fighting off a lone Cyberman, which was of a more advanced model due to the time that had passed for the Cyberman-controlled city below, the Doctor began to prepare defences and make an evacuation plan for the farm. When the Master and Missy made to leave, the Doctor confronted them, begging them to stay and help, to no avail, aside from Missy briefly considering it. Realising that the Cybermen would eventually [[Battle of Floor 0507|attack]], the Doctor forced Nardole to lead the evacuation to [[Floor 0502]], with only Bill staying with him to face the Cybermen. After they separated to their posts, the Doctor faced the army of Cybermen by blasting as many as he could with Nardole's software hacking of the ship's systems, but was eventually surrounded and struck down by multiple shots. Holding back his [[regeneration energy]] as it overcame him, the Doctor detonated the entire deck, killing all the Cybermen in the area, as well as fatally injuring himself. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) | |||
==== Refusing to change ==== | |||
[[File:12th 1st Bill Captain in TARDIS Glass on Scanner.jpg|thumb|The Twelfth Doctor pilots his younger self's TARDIS. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}})]] | |||
Sometime later, the Doctor awoke in the TARDIS with no clue as to how he got there, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) believing he had staggered into the console room after the explosion and simply collapsed. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)}}) Entering a "state of grace", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) the Doctor declared he would not go on living if it meant becoming someone else, and consciously halted the regeneration process. In response, the TARDIS took him to a snowy landscape, where the Doctor, still refusing to change, found himself face to face with his [[first incarnation]] ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) just before his regeneration at the [[South Pole]] in [[December]] [[1986]]. The First Doctor, not realising that he had returned to the wrong TARDIS, mistook the Twelfth Doctor for another [[Time Lord]] who had come to take his TARDIS back, just as time suddenly froze around them and a [[World War I]] [[Archibald Hamish Lethbridge-Stewart|Captain]] appeared out of the snow. As a bright light shined upon them, the Doctors and the Captain retreated into the TARDIS where the Twelfth Doctor convinced the First Doctor of his identity as the TARDIS was pulled into inside a hovering spaceship. | |||
As the First Doctor was sent out as a distraction, the Twelfth Doctor worked on getting the TARDIS working, until he overheard a [[Glass avatar|Glass Woman]] offer [[Bill Potts]] in exchange for the Captain, and went to embrace her, though expressed disbelief at Bill's seemingly miraculous return. The Doctor examined the Glass Woman with the First Doctor, who realised that the Glass Woman was based on a real person and, at the prompting of Bill, the Twelfth Doctor chose to flee. Lowering the winch holding the TARDIS, the Doctor was able to escape the spaceship with Bill, the Captain and his first incarnation, who led everyone to his TARDIS. The Twelfth Doctor, knowing that their best chance of stopping Glass Woman was to discover who she was, and that the First Doctor's TARDIS databanks were incomplete, decided to visit his "old friend" [[Rusty (Into the Dalek)|Rusty]] the "good [[Dalek]]" for the information and piloted the First Doctor's TARDIS to [[Villengard]]. | |||
Upon arrival, the Captain was attacked by a [[Kaled mutant]], and the Twelfth Doctor, still not entirely trusting her, ordered Bill to stay in the TARDIS to help him recover. Walking with the First Doctor, the Twelfth Doctor was forced to rest when his state of grace weakened him, and took the time to discuss regeneration with his first incarnation until they came under attack from Rusty in a tower. After getting Rusty to scan him and see that he was already dying, Rusty stopped and allowed the Twelfth Doctor to enter his tower. Leaving the First Doctor behind for his own protection, the Doctor greeted Rusty in the tower, and negotiated with him for access to the Daleks' [[Pathweb]] by reasoning that helping him would "hurt the Daleks". From the Pathweb, the Doctor learned of the [[Testimony]]'s benevolent agenda ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) but immediately realised the real Bill Potts was not with him on the planet. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)}}) | |||
As time froze again, the First Doctor arrived with Bill, who officially revealed herself to be a [[glass avatar]] and reminded the Doctors that the Captain had to die at his allotted point in time to correct the timeline error caused by the two Doctors "trying to die twice in the same lifetime". Knowing they were to blame, the Twelfth Doctor requested for him and the First Doctor to be the ones to return the Captain to [[1914]], which was agreed to. On the return flight to 1914, the Twelfth Doctor did his best to comfort the Captain, who commented on how he had promised [[Archibald Hamish Lethbridge-Stewart's wife|his wife]] that he would be home for Christmas, giving the Twelfth Doctor the idea to adjust the time period for the Captain by a couple of hours and make it so that time resumed for him at the beginning of the [[Christmas truce|Christmas Armistice]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) He made a quick visit to [[Gladys Presley]] to reclaim two alien communicators, but decided not to when he saw her using them to speak with her son, [[Elvis Presley|Elvis]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|That's All Right, Mama (short story)}}) | |||
As the Doctors and the Glass Woman returned the Captain to the crater where he was supposed to die, with a [[perception filter]] rendering them invisible, the First Doctor agreed to the Captain's request for the Doctors to look in on his family, the [[Lethbridge-Stewart family|Lethbridge-Stewarts]], from time to time. Once time resumed, the Glass Woman departed and the Doctors watched as the Captain and [[German soldier (Twice Upon a Time)|his German opponent]] prepared to kill each other before both sides of the battlefield began singing Christmas carols, signalling that the Twelfth Doctor's plan had worked, as he explained the [[Christmas Armistice]] to his first incarnation. After watching the Armistice for a few hours, the Doctors shook hands as they started glowing with [[regeneration energy]]. Bidding farewell to each other after the First Doctor decided that he was ready to regenerate, the Twelfth Doctor told him to go "the long way round" to see if he was ready to face his own. As his first incarnation departed, the Doctor, briefly rendered visible, saluted the Captain, a salute he returned with confusion. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
==== Death ==== | |||
[[File: | {{Main|Twelfth Doctor's regeneration}} | ||
[[File:12 regenerates.jpg|thumb|The Twelfth Doctor regenerates. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}})|left]] | |||
Wrapping himself in his Crombie coat as he sat alone on the battlefield, the Doctor was joined by Bill's glass avatar, who he decided to take "one last stroll" with as she assisted him back to his TARDIS. After the Testimony restored the Doctor's memories of [[Clara Oswald]], a glass avatar of [[Nardole]] arrived to convince the Doctor not to die as "everybody in the universe might just go cold" if he did. The Doctor expressed a desire to have peace and rest which his friends agreed that he could as it was his choice and expressed understanding as they shared a final "cuddle" before the glass avatars teleported away. | |||
Deciding that it was "time to leave the battlefield", the Doctor returned to his TARDIS, where he looked at the universe through the [[TARDIS scanner|scanner]] and declared that "they [would] get it all wrong without [him]" and contented that "one more lifetime [wouldn't] kill anyone", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) as he finally understood that it was he himself who kept evil from winning over good in the universe. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)}}) Holding back the regeneration for a few more moments, the Doctor gave an advisory speech to his successor. Having said his peace, the Doctor underwent an explosive [[regeneration]] into a [[Thirteenth Doctor|female incarnation]], which caused the control room to sustain extensive damage. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
=== | === Post-mortem === | ||
{{ | As the Thirteenth Doctor continued to recover from the immediate after effects of the regeneration, she heard the voice of the Twelfth Doctor continue to speak to her, helping her to remember instances from their previous incarnations that related to the new sensations she was feeling and what she would face, and gave her some final advice. As the Twelfth Doctor finally began to let go, ready for his time as the Doctor to fully end, the TARDIS began experiencing "multiple operation failures". ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Many Lives of Doctor Who (comic story)}}) As his new incarnation crashed through the night sky above [[Sheffield]], the Twelfth Doctor tried to argue with her to distract her from her imminent plummeting to the ground. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Things She Thought While Falling (short story)}}) | ||
During the [[restoration of the Cyber-Empire]], the [[Thirteenth Doctor]] used the memory of all her previous incarnations to escape [[the Matrix]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Timeless Children (TV story)}}) | |||
{{ | |||
=== Undated events === | === Undated events === | ||
* Speaking to an unseen audience, the Twelfth Doctor explained the workings of the [[bootstrap paradox]] by using a hypothetical situation of a man with a time machine using his [[knowledge]] of [[Ludwig van Beethoven]] to travel back in time and inadvertently became Beethoven as a result. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}) | |||
* During the time when he had grown out his hair, the Twelfth Doctor visited [[Daughter of Mine]] during her imprisonment in the [[mirror]]s to ask her whether she was sorry. She never did apologise to him and in fact considered him "the worst." ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Shadow of a Doubt (audio story)}}) | |||
* | * At one point, the Twelfth Doctor left the [[Pandora Bolt]] with [[Jim (Lost Property)|Jim]] and [[Midge (Lost Property)|Midge]] in [[2020]] [[London]], along with specific instructions to leave the two [[puzzle box]]es a distance of one [[mile]] apart, in each of their shops. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Lost Property (audio story)}}) | ||
* | * The Twelfth Doctor visited the [[Chibolg Mega-Stamps Convention]] on [[Ghent]], and prevented a massacre that would have resulted in a war. He then paid the staff to cater to the [[Ninth Doctor]], who arrived soon after, and give him a room to relax in. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|A Day to Yourselves (short story)}}) | ||
* The Doctor | == Legacy == | ||
Upon meeting her, the newly-regenerated [[Thirteenth Doctor]] told [[Yasmin Khan]] that "half an hour ago, [she] was a white-haired Scotsman". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Fell to Earth (TV story)}}) | |||
The Thirteenth Doctor was still in possession of the Twelfth Doctor's [[ID card]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|A Little Help from My Friends (comic story)}}) | |||
When the Thirteenth Doctor tried to release her voice activated [[handcuffs]] that had been used to bind her and Yaz, with no effect, she stopped to wonder if they were not responding to her voice because she might have been Scottish when she set them up, leading her to try speaking to them in a Scottish accent, mimicking her Twelfth, as well as her [[Seventh Doctor|Seventh incarnation]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Halloween Apocalypse (TV story)}}) | |||
The Thirteenth Doctor included excerpts written by her predecessor in her book, ''[[A Short History of Everyone (in-universe)|A Short History of Everyone]]''. She also wrote about him in the book. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|A Short History of Everyone (novel)}}) | |||
When the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] first met [[Shirley Anne Bingham]], who assumed him to be the [[Tenth Doctor]] due to his physical resemblance to him, she was confused to hear that he was aware that his Tenth incarnation would go on to be, among other incarnations, a Scotsman. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Star Beast (TV story)}}) | |||
When the world was swept up in the [[The Giggle (event)|chaos]] caused by [[Stooky Bill]] and [[the Giggle]], [[Kate Lethbridge-Stewart]] told the Doctor that she required the authority of a [[world leader]] to give [[UNIT]] permission to shoot down the [[KOSAT 5]] satellite to avoid the international consequences of shooting down the [[South Korea]]n satellite, to which the Doctor, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) having retained his past self's authority as [[President of the Earth]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Giggle (novelisation)}}) invoked the [[Gold Protocol]] to order a [[galvanic beam]] to take down the satellite. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) | |||
[[ | When [[Rogue (Rogue)|Rogue]] used his [[deep scanner]] on the [[Fifteenth Doctor]], the images of seventeen earlier incarnations were projected, including that of the Twelfth Doctor. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Rogue (TV story)}}) | ||
== Alternate timelines == | |||
[[File:Four Doctors Ten and Twelve argue.jpg|thumb|The Tenth and Twelfth Doctors argue. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Four Doctors (comic story)}})]] | |||
The Doctor and Clara became involved in a "[[Multi-Doctor event]]" with the [[Tenth Doctor]], [[Gabby Gonzalez]], the [[Eleventh Doctor]] and [[Alice Obiefune]] due to the machinations of [[Twelfth Doctor (Four Doctors)|an alternate timeline version of the Twelfth Doctor]] who had joined with the [[Voord]] after being "betrayed" by Clara, and was manoeuvring events to ensure his existence. However, though he was able to set his younger counterpart on the path to joining with the Voord, his plot was undone by Gabby being sent back in time by [[Weeping Angel (Four Doctors)|a Weeping Angel]] and giving her younger self a warning. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Four Doctors (comic story)}}) | |||
In an alternate [[1997]], a [[Dalek War Saucer]] crashed into St Luke's University, killing the Doctor and Nardole. This timeline was negated when the original timeline's Doctor and Bill, as well as two Bills from the new timeline were able to stop the initial crash from happening in the first place. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Emancipation of the Daleks (audio story)}}) | |||
== Other references == | |||
The [[Twelfth Doctor (fictional character)|Twelfth Doctor]] was portrayed by actor [[Peter Capaldi (in-universe)|Peter Capaldi]] in the [[BBC (in-universe)|BBC]] [[science fiction]] series ''[[Doctor Who (in-universe)|Doctor Who]]'', who was cast in [[2013]]; ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|A Letter from the Doctor (DWM 464 short story)}}) [[:file:Doctor Who bus.jpg|an advert]] which had an obscured image of Capaldi in his role was applied to the side of a bus ([[TV]]: {{cs|In the Forest of the Night (TV story)}}) in [[November]] [[2014]]; ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Time Lord Letters (novel)|namedpart=Assessing the Risk}}) in [[October]] [[2015]], Capaldi was in the [[Doctor Who Series 9|ninth series]] of ''Doctor Who''; ([[WC]]: {{cs|The Zygon Isolation (webcast)}}) and on [[29 April]] [[2016]], Capaldi wrote [[Letter (A Letter from the Doctor)|a letter]] to be printed in the [[Doctor Who Magazine Issue 500|500th issue]] of ''[[Doctor Who Magazine (in-universe)|Doctor Who Magazine]]''. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|A Letter from the Doctor (DWM 500 short story)|A Letter from the Doctor 500}}) The [[Eleventh Doctor]] also saved Capaldi from a [[Mandrel]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Loved Doctor Who (comic story)}}) | |||
== Psychological profile == | == Psychological profile == | ||
=== Personality === | === Personality === | ||
[[ | <!--Examples following this point focus on a general character study of the Twelfth Doctor--> | ||
Burdened with an unending anger, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Doorway to Hell (comic story)}}) and a fear of what his rage was capable of, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) the Twelfth Doctor started his journey as a gruff yet compassionate man, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}) ho struggled with the inner turmoil of his questionable morality ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) and how his action could lead to devastating consequences ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) even as he embraced a goofier side of himself. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Invasion (TV story)}}) He eventually made peace with himself, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}) embracing his role as both warrior and protector ([[TV]]: {{cs|[Empress of Mars (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}) to become a true paragon of kindness and hope. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) Though he grew lax enough to use the contemporary slang ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) he had previously looked down upon, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Terrorformer (comic story)}}) the Doctor never softened from his harsh attitude to those he saw as impulsive and reckless due to their short-sightedness, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}) but would try to inspire his foes to better themselves when he could. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) | |||
With his main impetus for many adventures being to stimulate his scientific curiosity, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) the Doctor would be forever enthralled by the strange beauties he found in a universe that birthed grand creations. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) However, beneath the fierce determination and adventurous persona, the Twelfth Doctor was a weary man who would succumb to despair when pushed to the brink, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}, {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}, {{cs|Extremis (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) feeling ostracised from a universe that didn't "see" him. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) | |||
Blunt to the point of insensitiveness, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) and reluctant to lie to alleviate a situation, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) the Doctor would allow actions to prove a point instead of false praise, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}) though he knew the importance of giving people the hope they needed to ensure their survival, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}) and would have them focus on their chances of survival, however slim, to encourage them to prevail. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}, {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}) Though he tried to avoid pessimism, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) the Doctor would not give his sympathies lightly. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}) He could also be oblivious to his faults, while criticising the same faults he saw elsewhere. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}) | |||
He struggled to disguise himself in the mundane world, failing to hide his alien nature by openly calling people "humans", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Empress of Mars (TV story)}}) and had a tendency to resolve his problems with explosions, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}, {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) which he chalked up as a "childish impulse". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) While he would not run from danger, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) he would hide from his shame, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) and shirk his responsibilities to indulge in more excitable activities, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}) having trouble ignoring the call for adventure. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}) | |||
After struggling with the inner turmoil of his questionable morality ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) and how his action could lead to devastating consequences, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) the Doctor made peace with himself, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}) embracing his role as both warrior and protector, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Empress of Mars (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}) even growing lax enough to use the contemporary slang ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) he had previously looked down upon. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Terrorformer (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor also | The Doctor also hoped to one day find [[Gallifrey]] and reacted with devastation when his hope of finding it turned out to be a false lead. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) When he finally did manage to find his way to Gallifrey after enduring "4.5 billion years" of torture within his [[confession dial]], he first returned to his [[Barn (The Day of the Doctor)|old barn hideaway]] in the [[Drylands]] and then led a [[coup against Rassilon]] to banish him and the [[High Council]] for their part in escalating the Time War. After using the Time Lords' technology to save Clara from the [[Quantum Shade]], the Doctor fled from Gallifrey once again. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) | ||
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[[File:Twelfth Doctor in light Mummy on the Orient Express.jpg|thumb|left|Unfazed by [[Gus (Mummy on the Orient Express)|Gus]]'s threats, the Doctor ponders the [[Foretold]]'s modus operandi. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}})]] | |||
Starting his life as a cynical man with a dry, acerbic wit, brutal honesty and fierce internalised anger, the Twelfth Doctor adopted a less caring attitude and a more practical nature, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}) even claiming that he brought Clara with him to care for others for him ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) and to nod along with his ideas. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) Despite coming across as uncaring, with a complete disregard for social niceties, he would fight to protect those in his care and would react with devastation if harm befell them ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}, {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}) or if he caused them emotional grief due to overestimating how they could handle a situation. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}) He would also regret the deaths of good people, especially if the survivors displayed an unpleasant attitude. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}) | |||
Preferring to keep his softer side hidden under a "reputation [of] grumpiness", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Hyperion Empire (comic story)}}) the Doctor would make people keep their emotions in check while they were distressed, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}) making him come across as callous and dismissive, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|In the Forest of the Night (TV story)}}) which he refused to be apologetic for. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}) He himself tried to avoid his own emotions by preferring to talk about subjects he enjoyed during emotional moments. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}) However, behind his cold exterior, he was extremely self-reflective, to the point where he even questioned whether he was a good man, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) knowing that he often found himself in situations that forced him to make terrible decisions. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}) Clara felt that "there were several layers to the Doctor's emotions." ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}) | |||
[[File:Awkward Hug.jpg|thumb|right|The Doctor decides hugging isn't for him. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}})]] | |||
Unlike his immediate predecessor, the Twelfth Doctor was not an affectionate individual, failing to return [[hug]]s, or protesting against them, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) believing they were just another way to hide one's face. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) He also expressed a dislike of holding hands with others, though made an exception for Clara and [[Shona McCullough]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) but he drew the line at performing a [[high five]] with Clara. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) He was also uncomfortable with [[kiss]]ing, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}) with even a peck on the check stunning him. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}) However, he pecked Missy on the lips in gratitude for forcing him into self-reflection, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) kissed Clara's forehead while complimenting her brilliance in a moment of excitement, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Big Hush (comic story)}}) and gave [[Meghan (All the Empty Towers)|Meghan]], a donkey he had befriended, a kiss on the head when he thought no one was looking. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|All the Empty Towers (short story)}}) | |||
While he identified himself as a civilian, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) the Doctor did not hide how superior he felt with his intelligence, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) unafraid to put people down with harsh comments upon meeting them, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) even claiming to have laughed at [[Orson Pink]]'s name. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) While his personal views caused him to make unfavourable judgments of people upon meeting them, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}) the Doctor knew not to be judgmental of alien behaviour, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}) and was quick to bond with fellow rebels. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) However, he was not above saying how funny he found humans' "small brain[s]" ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) and telling them to panic over their "short lifespan", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) though he was quick to call out his own idiocy when he realised he had made a mistake. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|In the Forest of the Night (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) | |||
Because names were "not [his] area", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) the Doctor could neglect to ask for names when he met someone, ([[TV]]: {{cs|In the Forest of the Night (TV story)}}) as he often chose to forget people, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) or didn't have time to remember individual names. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) As such, the Doctor made a habit of assigning nicknames to others based on their appearance, an accessory they carried or their profession, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) and would insist on addressing them as their nickname, such as calling Maths teacher [[Danny Pink]] "P.E." due to him being a former soldier, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|In the Forest of the Night (TV story)}}) though he dropped the nickname after Danny died. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) He also continued to address [[Rigsy]] as "Local Knowledge" when he was standing in front of him, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}) and when they reunited years later, only dropping the nickname when he learned Rigsy's life was in danger. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}) He would also start addressing people by their real names instead of nicknaming them when they earned his respect. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Eye of Torment (comic story)}}) | |||
However, after embracing the idea of being "just a bloke in a box", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}) the Doctor employed a wackier demeanour, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Invasion (TV story)}}) wearing more casual clothing, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}) and relaxing by playing his guitar in the TARDIS. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Invasion (TV story)}}) He made a better effort to be nicer through the use of [[apology cue cards]] ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}) in order to live up to the idea of who he thought "the Doctor" should be. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}, {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) He also began to accept Clara's attempts to hug him, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) and even started hugging her on the odd occasion, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) as well as asking if he could hold her hand in frightful moments. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Sleep No More (TV story)}}) However, he did not entirely abandon his pragmatic ideology, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) and would resume being hostile when angered. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}, {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) | |||
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After having his mind wiped by a [[neural block]] ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) caused him to decide to simply be "an old man messing about in time and space", ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Haunted (short story)}}) the Doctor adopted a kinder approach to how he handled situations, though he did not wish to be seen as "sentimentalise[d]" ([[TV]]: {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) and was still cynical on the never changing aspects of the universe. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}) While he retained his crossness, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) being against "cheerful[ness]" and "charm", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Knock Knock (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}) he was more willing to laugh at the silliness he found in his travels ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}) and would be deliberately pedantic in the face of danger. ([[TV]]: {{cs|For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
Though he was against vengeance, ([[TV]]: {{cs|For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)}}) the Doctor still stood in defiance of those "who contribute[d] nothing of worth to the world and crush[ed] the hopes and dreams of working people". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}) Now content that "only idiots [had] the answers", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) he was more comfortable with being open about his ignorance, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) and agreed that he was "completely out of [his] mind". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) While he "never notice[d] the tears", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) he was better at making friends, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Knock Knock (TV story)}}) even playing the part a playful jokester with Bill, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) as he tried to avoid being serious. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) | |||
Though he remained reluctant to initiate a hug at first, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Good Companion (comic story)}}) the Doctor accepted being a hugger by the time he reunited with [[Maxwell Edison]], giving an affectionate one to Max, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Stockbridge Showdown (comic story)}}) and also embraced the chance to hug Bill after losing her in [[Battle of Floor 0507|a conflict with the Cybermen]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
Having accepted that "times end", the Doctor found the courage in himself to finally face his night on [[Darillium]] with [[River Song]], embracing the bittersweet "happy ever after" for them that had previously been too hard to bear. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}) After he left Darillium, the Doctor allowed Nardole to accompany him to avoid being lonely. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) While normally in control of himself and disciplined in his actions, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) the Doctor's longing to travel again while guarding [[The Vault (The Pilot)|the Vault]] at [[St Luke's University]] led him to indulge in more impulsive and reckless actions that left his guard down. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}, {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}) | |||
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Viewed as an egotist by [[Clara Oswald]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}) the Doctor had a consistently anti-authoritarian attitude, only ever asking who was in charge so he would "know who to ignore", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) seeing it as his place to give the explanations, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) and also did not like it when somebody else tried to "do the naming." ([[TV]]: {{cs|Sleep No More (TV story)}}) As he "hardly ever listen[ed] when other people [were] talking", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) the Doctor tended to stop listening to ongoing conversations when he lost interest, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) as he saw only himself as being "someone worth talking to". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}) He enjoyed his privacy, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}) and preferred to be left alone when on a mission. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor | The Doctor also showed a strong compassionate streak, willing to put himself in a dangerous situation in the place of stranger as equally as a dear friend, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) and make enormous personal sacrifices simply to liberate others from suffering. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) He would also try to avoid harming those who were not in control of their actions, as well as defend them from their captors or those who would cause them further harm. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}, {{cs|The Crawling Terror (novel)}}) He was just as quick to forgive those that had wronged him, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}) and try to make peace with even his oldest enemies, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}, {{cs|Extremis (TV story)}}) believing that while "passion [fought], [it was] reason [that won]." ([[TV]]: {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) | ||
[[File: | [[File:TITAN 12th 1 TheDoctor.jpg|thumb|The Doctor compares himself to his predecessor. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Terrorformer (comic story)}})]] | ||
While he | While he described himself as having had "sophistication and timeless sartorial elegance" restored, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Terrorformer (comic story)}}) the Twelfth Doctor was not above acting childish by competing with others, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) or deliberately annoying someone. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) He also let down his gruff guard to do a victory dance after moving the shrunken TARDIS off a train line with his hand, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}) and ecstatically steer [[Santa Claus]]'s sleigh. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) [[Kevin Alperton]] noted that, while the Doctor looked old, he had an energy to him that made him seem younger and different. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Crawling Terror (novel)}}) | ||
While he | While he made it his mission to always stay with those he could help to be "kind", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) the Twelfth Doctor was willing to leave a situation altogether if he believed he had nothing to contribute, justifying himself by pointing out the dangers of everyday life and how he was not an authority figure, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) though he would justify his actions with the phrase "daddy knows best". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}) | ||
The Doctor | <!--Examples following this point focus on traits that highlight this particular incarnation of the Doctor being self-defensive or insecure--> | ||
The Twelfth Doctor did not see himself as a "hero", merely someone who was "just passing the time" by passing by, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) but would answer distress signals, believing that he only saw "the true face of the universe when it [was] asking for [his] help", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) and deemed the Earth as his protectorate. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
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Enjoying the "deep and lovely dark", the Doctor enthusiastically tried to find out the cause of his childhood nightmares, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) was delighted when he finally saw the [[Foretold]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}) got giddy over possibly finding out the existence of ghosts, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) was very eager to explore a mysterious house ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Playing House (comic story)}}) and gleefully laughed as he sped a ship into British waters. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}) Hoping to find danger wherever he went, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}) he branded solutions that he found easy to be "boring", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) though he did appreciate how the occasional anti-climax was good for his health. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) | |||
Though he did not know the reason, believing it to simply be his old age, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) the Twelfth Doctor expressed a strong disgust for soldiers and military figures; ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) being "decidedly prickly in his dealing with anything remotely military", ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Crawling Terror (novel)}}) though claimed his disdain was flexible in a crisis, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) and he eventually lost his bitterness over time as he grew kinder. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}) He was also easily annoyed by swashbucklers who did not take things seriously and insisted on fighting pointless battles, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) and was disgusted by businesspeople who valued profit above anything else, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|Sleep No More (TV story)}}) including politicians ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor was also "against" bantering. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) didn't like being saluted, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) wasn't "a fan" of the [[Tivolian]]s, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}) and disliked losing, even in a friendly game of [[chess]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Doorway to Hell (comic story)}}) He claimed to dislike the colour of his [[kidney]]s, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Time of the Doctor (TV story)}}) [[karaoke]], [[mime]]s, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) [[tank]]s, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) songs that got stuck in his head, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) [[racism]] and talking in the [[cinema]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}) He voiced a hatred for being wrong in public, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) [[babysitter]]s, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) ''[[Candy Crush]]'', ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) [[money]], ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Terrorformer (comic story)}}) missing the obvious, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) [[pantomime]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Behind You (short story)}}) [[cyclops|cyclopes]], ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Doctor on the Menu (comic story)}}) [[viking]]s, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) [[gardening]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}) [[Christmas]], ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}}) being sure of something, "lying-down people", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}) "themed planets", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Dragon Lord (comic story)}}) and "brave people". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}) | |||
While he claimed to hate not knowing about something when faced with [[The Teller (Time Heist)|the Teller]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) he was known to admire the unexplainable. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) He also told [[Ohila]] that, while he trusted her, he didn't necessary like her, ([[WC]]: {{cs|Prologue (webcast)}}) and confessed to [[Petronella Osgood]] that he considered [[London]] to be a "dump". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}) However, just before his regeneration, the Doctor denounced hate as "always foolish", and proclaimed that "love [was] always wise." ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
The Twelfth Doctor liked [[roundel]]s, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) working under pressure, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) "a show-stopping entrance", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Terrorformer (comic story)}}) a "good locked-room mystery", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}) being challenged, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Spirits of the Jungle (comic story)}}) [[puppet]]s, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) the title "Doctor Mysterio", "pressing buttons and switches", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) and [[rivet]]s. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) His "lucky number" was [[12 (number)|12]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)}}) and he considered "maths and alcoholic beverages" to be the "best way to spend the morning". ([[TV]]: {{cs|For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)}}) | |||
He was interested in [[Maths]] ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) and [[insect]]s, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Knock Knock (TV story)}}) and had a liking for books, particularly ones about ''[[Garfield]]'', reacting with anger towards those he believed burned books, and also believed that women who liked books to be the best kind. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) When he redecorated the TARDIS control room, he included numerous shelves full of a variety of books, and a recliner to enjoy reading them in, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) sometimes even leaving his books scattered around the console room. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}) | |||
Not only did he want a [[Ferrari]] car, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) he also jumped at the chance to fly with a [[jetpack]] ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Spirits of the Jungle (comic story)}}) and enjoyed "poncing about in [[Boat One|a big plane]]". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Zygon Invasion (TV story)}}) He also enjoyed [[bicycle]]s because they reminded him of ''[[Call the Midwife]]''. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) While he thought [[football]] was a "boring sport", he considered [[darts]] to be "something worth practicing". ([[TV]]: {{cs|For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)}}) | |||
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While he didn't like to eat [[liver]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) [[pear]]s, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) and [[fish]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) he did have an enjoyment for [[sausage]]s, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) [[candy floss]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|All the Empty Towers (short story)}}) [[porridge]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Deep Time (novel)}}) [[Sherbet|sherbet lemons]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) and [[Chinese food]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Knock Knock (TV story)}}) | |||
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The Twelfth Doctor preferred to live in the moment, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}) where "everything is huge, everything is so important, every detail, every moment, every life clung to[gether]." He claimed to the [[Half-Face Man]] that the people of [[Earth]] "[were] never small to [him]". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) By his own testament, he did not suffer fools gladly, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) nor did he tolerate poor manners, even when held at gunpoint, and believed that one should make requests politely, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) as well as avoid bad language, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) and gloating. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|The Doctor and the Dalek (video game)}}) He "[found] it best to keep an open mind, unclouded by the opinions of others", favoured the direct approach when he encountered an obstacle, and believed it was always best to assume and plan for the worst-case scenario. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}) | |||
He also viewed pain as a gift, believing that "without the capacity for pain, [one] can't feel the hurt [they] inflict," ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) and also thought that "a bit of shame never hurt anyone," ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}) and that true [[immortality]] was "everybody else dying". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) Indeed, the Doctor held a veneration of the dead, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}) ceasing all insults towards [[Danny Pink]] after being told of his passing, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}) was morally outraged with the [[Fisher King]] for using the souls of the dead as transmitters for his armada, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}) and become hurt when he thought the [[Testimony Foundation]] had duplicated Bill after she "gave her life so that people she barely knew could live". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
Stubborn in his beliefs to the point that he would deny any evidence that contradicted his statements in the face of proof confirming otherwise, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}) the Doctor also believed that one could always find something to be distracted by, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) felt invasions of Earth were justified after hearing about the horror film ''[[Alien (film)|Alien]]'', ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) and expressed the opinion that an enemy was "just a friend [one] didn't really know yet". ([[WC]]: {{cs|Prologue (webcast)}}) He thought that "hardly anything [was] evil, but [that] most things [were] hungry", and that "hunger look[ed] very [much] like evil from the wrong end of the cutlery". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) He also didn't believe in [[dragon]]s. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Dragon Lord (comic story)}}) | |||
Having a liking for "quick learners", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Spirits of the Jungle (comic story)}}) the Doctor believed that education came fastest in life threatening situations, and claimed that begging "wasn't [his] style", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Terrorformer (comic story)}}) unless his friends were threatened. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) While he believed that "a good death [was] the best anyone [could] hope for", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) he didn't think it was possible to "die well". ([[TV]]: {{cs|For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)}}) When giving life advice, the Doctor would say to laugh hard because everything was "always funny", to run fast "like hell" because people always needed to, to never fail at being kind, and to always make amends if they acted cruel and cowardly. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
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[[File:Deep Breath story image.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor's piercing glare. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}})]] | |||
Even though he identified himself as a pacifist ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Terrorformer (comic story)}}) and believed necessary evils to be a last resort, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Fractures (comic story)}}) the Twelfth Doctor was unafraid to trade blows with others. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}, {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}) Though he initially stated that murder was against his "programming", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) the Doctor knew there were "situations when the options available [were] limited" and death was unavoidable, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) and was willing to allow a few inevitable deaths if it meant saving the majority, acting like a pragmatist that would not hesitate to abandon someone whose fate was already sealed, nor mourn for an ally until his objective had been reached. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Sleep No More (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) However, the Doctor was still willing to go out of his way to try and save people if their deaths were not an immediate inevitability, even if it was the life of [[Bird (A Hero like the Doctor)|a caged bird]]. ([[WC]]: {{cs|A Hero like the Doctor (webcast)}}) | |||
The Doctor was practical regarding [[death]], being quick to recover what he could when there was nothing he could do to save someone, instead focusing on what he could control when all [[hope]] seemed lost, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) even being willing to sacrifice others when he had broader goals in mind, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}) sometimes even devising a plan in which others' [[skill]]s would prove useful. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) | |||
While he was adamant not to kill out of hatred, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) especially when conflicts could be resolved diplomatically, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}) the Doctor was willing to kill to spare others from the burden of taking a life, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) or when acting in extreme selfishness and being assured they could recover with a [[regeneration]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) He once gave permission for UNIT to engage [[Zygon]]s with lethal force, so long as they kept fatalities to a minimum, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Zygon Invasion (TV story)}}) and left [[Ron Cordell]] and some [[Skink]]s to be devoured by a [[black hole]] after tampering with the [[black hole drive]]'s containment field. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Pirates of Vourakis (comic story)}}) He also viewed certain creatures as expendable, as he wanted to kill a [[Kantrofarri]] to save Clara from slowly being devoured by it, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) and crushed a [[Love Sprite]] under his heel to prevent it attacking him. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) | |||
The | [[File:Doctordalekgun.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor readies a [[gunstick]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}})]] | ||
While he did not dwell on the subject much, the Twelfth Doctor was still haunted by the [[War Doctor]]'s actions in the [[Last Great Time War]], and claimed to hear "more screams than anyone could ever be able to count" whenever he closed his eyes. When he learned that all [[Bonnie (The Zygon Invasion)|Bonnie]] truly wanted was a pointless war between humanity and the Zygons, he went into a furious and grief-stricken tirade by telling her that he knew what war was really like and that he would not allow her to lead others to their deaths. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}) While he disliked guns, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) he noted that it was foolish to disregard them when they were useful, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Crawling Terror (novel)}}) and was willing to utilise them when he felt the need to, but would immediately discard them once they was no longer needed. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}, {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) | |||
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While he could forget the consequences of time travelling when carried away, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) the Twelfth Doctor was unwilling to alter the [[Web of Time]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}) fearing that the ramifications from the tiniest changes could be catastrophic, spreading "carnage and chaos across the universe like ripples on a pond," ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}) though he preferred to create "ripples" instead of "tidal waves." ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) | |||
[[ | He believed it was okay to send people to their deaths if history recorded them as deceased, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Crawling Terror (novel)}}) and told [[Mason Bennett]] that he "[couldn't] just go back and cut off tragedy at the root because [then] [he'd] find [him]self talking to someone [he'd] just saw dead on a slab, [and] then [he] really [would] see ghosts". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}) However, he knew "to hold [himself] to the mark" on how to save a single soul despite the Web of Time due to [[Donna Noble]]'s words to his [[tenth incarnation]] at [[Pompeii]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) and was willing to change certain points he encountered if "even a ghastly future [proved] better than no future at all". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}) Emotionally broken after the death of Clara, the Doctor used an [[extraction chamber]] on [[Gallifrey]] to save her from the [[Quantum Shade]], and also attempted to prevent her from returning to her death, despite it being a [[fixed point in time]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) and engineered events to prevent [[Archibald Hamish Lethbridge-Stewart]] and [[German soldier (Twice Upon a Time)|a German soldier]] from killing each other, claiming that "a couple fewer dead people on the battlefield" would not "hurt". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | ||
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Diagnosed with "Attention Deficit [Disorder]" by Clara, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)}}) the Doctor would include mundane outcomes in his summarisation when explaining the consequences of actions taken, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Invasion (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}) had trouble recognising people's age group, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) forgot people he had only recently met, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|In the Forest of the Night (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) and was also shown to have a poor concept on the passage of time. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)}}, {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}) | |||
He claimed that taking charge was his "superpower", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) and listed "investigating", "playing with time" and "resistance" among his specialities, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Terrorformer (comic story)}}, {{cs|The Swords of Kali (comic story)}}, {{cs|The Fractures (comic story)}}) with Clara also adding "interfering and infuriating" to the list. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Terrorformer (comic story)}}) | |||
[[ | Feeling it was his house, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}) and method of escaping his troubles, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Theatre of the Mind (comic story)}}) the Doctor redecorated his console room to have bookshelves, chairs and workbenches. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) He told [[Bill Potts]] that the TARDIS was a "technological marvel", "science beyond magic", and "the gateway to everything that ever was, or ever can be." ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) He did, however, occasionally enact violence against his TARDIS out of frustration, striking its column with his fists hard enough to damage it after discovering Missy's coordinates to Gallifrey had been a lie, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) and later struck the console with enough force to believe he had broken a finger. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Deep Time (novel)}}) | ||
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Initially thinking he was "overbearing, manipulative and consciously aware of his own intelligence", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) the Twelfth Doctor came to see himself a "scary, handsome genius from space" ([[TV]]: {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) who was "adorable, hugely intelligent, but still approachable". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}) | |||
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[[File:Four Doctors The Photo.jpg|thumb|The Doctor argues with his past selves. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Four Doctors (comic story)}})]] | |||
According to [[Affinity]], the Doctor kept his predecessors "lodged in his head", and held a low opinion of them and himself, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}) even comparing a [[Multi-Doctor event]] to ''[[The Krankies]]''. ([[WC]]: {{cs|Doctors Assemble! (webcast)}}) While he reflected that the [[First Doctor]] was "not much fun", ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Full Stop (short story)}}) the Twelfth Doctor was delighted by some of his habits when he encountered him at the [[South Pole]], such as still calling the TARDIS "the ship". However, he was embarrassed by the First Doctor's habit of making comments that were inappropriate in the Twelfth Doctor's eyes, especially when he threatened to give Bill a "jolly good smacked bottom" if she kept on swearing. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) Additionally, he was, at times, critical of his previous incarnations' clothing, thinking that his [[fourth incarnation]]'s [[The Doctor's scarf|scarf]] "looked stupid", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) and regarded the Eleventh Doctor's fondness for [[bow tie]]s as "a bit embarrassing", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) though complimented the [[Zygon Osgood]]'s bow tie as "nice". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) | |||
When faced with the prospect of dying without regenerating while facing the [[Fisher King]], the Doctor, though initially appearing distraught, quickly dismissed any concern, saying that he "had a good innings", and | While he held the [[Ninth Doctor]] in high regards, saying the [[Continuity bomb]] could not find a timeline where he wasn't "fantastic", the Twelfth Doctor had a frosty accord with the [[Tenth Doctor]], who refused to consider the twelfth incarnation as a future incarnation until the [[Blinovitch Limitation Effect]] confirmed he was, when he met his two previous incarnations. Conversely, the Eleventh Doctor was willing to accept him as his next incarnation and was happy to know he had more life in the future. While he degraded them as "manic pixie dream Doctors", the Twelfth Doctor expressed concern that the two would come to know him as the "scary Doctor". He held the [[Ninth Doctor]] in higher regards, saying the Continuity bomb could not find a timeline where he wasn't "fantastic". ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Four Doctors (comic story)}}) In a later encounter with his tenth incarnation, the Twelfth Doctor referred to him as "Bambi", being dismissive of how overtly emotional he had been and having some embarrassment for his obsession with [[Rose Tyler]], but seemed to retain a fondness for the Tenth Doctor's life. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Vortex Butterflies (comic story)}}) Even after undergoing a more positive outlook, the Twelfth Doctor still disliked the Tenth Doctor for his "excited puppy routine". ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Lost Dimension (comic story)}}) | ||
Though he preferred him to other incarnations, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Four Doctors (comic story)}}) the Twelfth Doctor disliked his [[Eleventh Doctor|immediate predecessor]] for his enjoyment of bow ties and [[fez]]zes, and overuse of the word "cool". ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Terrorformer (comic story)}}) However, upon seeing [[Adrian Davies]], a teacher at [[Coal Hill School]] with a resemblance to his eleventh incarnation, the Doctor, mistaking Adrian as Clara's boyfriend, arrogantly assumed that Clara was dating Adrian because of his uncanny resemblance to "a certain dashing young time traveller", reflecting more favourably on his predecessor. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) | |||
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As with his previous incarnations, the Twelfth Doctor relied on his companions to keep him from succumbing to his darker nature, and actively praised them for it, even claiming that [[Clara Oswald]] needed a "raise" for dealing with him, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) and telling [[Bill Potts]] that people like her encouraged him to put up with the rest of humanity. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}) He also enjoyed it when his companions asked him obvious questions, claiming that it helped him think, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) but disliked it when they pointed out mistakes he made, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) and identified them as his "social interface with the human race", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Fractures (comic story)}}) and the main reason he didn't need an army. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) However, he was willing to place his companions in danger if it meant appeasing his curiosity, often leaving them out of the details in his plans, or using them to distract attention away from himself. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}) However, if he believed the situation was too dangerous for them, the Doctor would send his companions to the safety of the TARDIS while staring down the threat alone. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
He held deep affection for [[Clara Oswald]], considering her to be his [[best friend]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}) and cared for her to the point that her betraying him couldn't make a difference to how he felt about her. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}) His connection with her was so deep that, after her death by [[Quantum Shade]], he respected her wishes to not target [[Ashildr]] for her role in Clara's death. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}) However, after spending four billion years in a temporal loop mourning losing her, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}, {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) he became unhinged, deciding no one would stop him bringing Clara back, threatening all who tried to prevent him restoring her to life, even forcing the [[Eleventh General]] to regenerate, until events forced him to lose his memories of Clara. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) When his memories of her were restored, he was delighted, thankful he could finally remember her face. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
Although he tended to be dismissive of [[Nardole]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Knock Knock (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) the Doctor still took his advice in stock ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) and chose to sacrifice his own life so Nardole could escape certain death. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor also grew close with [[Bill Potts]], making her his personal student while at [[St Luke's University]], even going back in time to obtain pictures of her mother as a Christmas gift in gratitude for her gifting him a [[carpet]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) even though he did not like the carpet. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) He confided in Bill about his concerns over Missy and made it his personal mission to save Bill from death at the hands of the Cybermen. ([[TV]]: {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}) He also didn't like Bill seeing him physically vulnerable, going as far as not telling her about his blindness, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}) or his impending regeneration. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) | |||
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Seeing them as "stupid, brilliant, [and] brave semi-sentient monkeys", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Eye of Torment (comic story)}}) the Twelfth Doctor claimed to the [[Half-Face Man]] that the people of [[Earth]] "[were] never small to [him]," and, unlike his [[tenth incarnation]], he didn't think he deserved [[Final reward|a reward]] or a "promised land" because he had "already [gone] a very long way" to protect the people ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) becoming a lost soul beyond redemption. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}) Though he liked them for their optimism, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) the Doctor would insult humans when he saw them being slow-minded, greedy and violent, dubbing [[Earth]] the "planet of the pudding-brains." ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) Nonetheless, he tolerated the company of those who could engage with him intellectually, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}) unless they got on his bad side first, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Fractures (comic story)}}) and claimed to respect humanity enough to allow it to determine its own future without any interference from him, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}) giving insight and knowledge to those who would listen, while still leaving the decision up to them. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) As with his previous incarnation, the Twelfth Doctor also liked people who got straight to the point. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) He though that someone who wasn't scared in a life-threatening situation was "an idiot", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) though was aware that giving in to fear "[did]n't help". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Knock Knock (TV story)}}) He also cared for mortal lives, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) however brief they seemed to him. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) | |||
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Because of his more celibate nature, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}) the Doctor failed to notice when someone was asking him if they looked attractive, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) but did call a female [[Tyrannosaurus rex]] a "big sexy woman" while in a post-regenerative state. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) He also considered [[Rona Bellows]] to be "sexy", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) and shared a mutual attraction with [[River Song]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}) He didn't care about [[sexuality]], instead being bothered by people hating each other, and didn't approve of revenge either. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Swords of Kali (comic story)}}) | |||
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Despite his grumpy nature, the Twelfth Doctor had a soft spot for children, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) trying to help them to overcome their fears, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) build them up when they thought little of themselves, ([[TV]]: {{cs|In the Forest of the Night (TV story)}}) and help their education. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) He would stop to help them when he saw them in need, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}) and would feel regretful if he felt he had let them down, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) as well as great fury when finding babies unattended. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) | |||
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The Twelfth Doctor's hatred toward the [[Dalek]] species was rigid, with Clara describing it as "prejudice", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) though he did stop to mourn [[Lumpy]], a Dalek that had deceived him into friendship. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|The Doctor and the Dalek (video game)}}) He believed Daleks were incapable of change and was closed-minded as he dealt with their presence, and would refuse to help a Dalek unless his interests were peaked. After his act of fixing a [[Rusty (Into the Dalek)|malfunctioning "good" Dalek]] caused it to revert to "bad", the Doctor was almost pleased that his belief of there being "no such thing as a good Dalek" was vindicated. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) Despite his hatred of them, the Doctor admitted to [[Governor (The Blood Cell)|the Governor]] that the [[Dalek Emperor]] "[was] nothing compared to your average mobile phone sales assistant". ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) | |||
He also held a disregard for the [[Cybermen]], unceremoniously flattening two with his TARDIS. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|The Doctor and the Dalek (video game)}}) He knew to be cautious around them, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}) though he would try to reason with the ones that were "fresh out the factory". ([[TV]]: {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}) | |||
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When [[Rusty (Into the Dalek)|Rusty]] the [[Dalek]] looked into the Twelfth Doctor's mind, he saw hatred and noted that the Doctor was "a good Dalek", while Clara believed the Doctor was trying to be a good man, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) and claimed that he "always care[d]" by the time of her death. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}) When questioned by [[Lisa Foster]], Clara reluctantly admitted she thought the Doctor was "kind of [cool], in a strange sort of way", which Lisa interpreted as meaning "an uncool sort of way". ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Fractures (comic story)}}) [[Bill Potts]] once described the Twelfth Doctor as "part-cool professor, [and] part-cat chasing [a] laser pointer", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Promise (FCBD comic story)}}) while [[Keira Sanstrom]] felt he was "all [[showmanship]]". ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Never the End Is (audio story)}}) | |||
While [[Ashildr]] considered the Doctor to be a "passionate and powerful Time Lord", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) [[Perkins (Mummy on the Orient Express)|Perkins]] noted his inability to decide whether the Doctor was a genius "or just incredibly arrogant", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}) with [[Danny Pink]], in complete bitterness for his need to feel the pain he inflicted, compared the Doctor to a "blood-soaked old general". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) | |||
[[The Oracle (The Blood Cell)|The Oracle]] described the Twelfth Doctor as "a man of taste and discrimination," ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) while [[Orestes Milton]] believed the Doctor "affect[ed] an air of ignorance and indifference, but beneath it [were] undercurrents of knowledge and curiosity". ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}) [[Aphasia|Daughter of Mine]] considered him "the worst". ([[WC]]: {{cs|Shadow of a Doubt (audio story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's attitude towards regeneration--> | |||
Much as his [[tenth incarnation]] expressed, the Twelfth Doctor associated [[regeneration]] with death, recalling [[Snowcap]] as "the place where [he] died". He viewed the process as "huge, [and] terrible", with his self-preservation keeping his memories of the experience from consuming him. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Blood and Ice (comic story)}}) He also believed that regeneration was to be used only when completely necessary, and to use it to fix a broken toe was "a waste of a life". ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) Despite his beliefs, when pushed to extremes, the Doctor was willing to force a fellow Time Lord to regenerate if it benefited him. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) | |||
When faced with the prospect of dying without regenerating while facing the [[Fisher King]], the Doctor, though initially appearing distraught, quickly dismissed any concern, saying that he "had a good innings", and calling himself a mere "clerical error" of a regeneration. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}) When cornered by [[the Veil]], the Doctor admitted that he was afraid of dying, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}) but was unafraid to sacrifice himself for the greater good. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) | |||
After the regeneration progress was triggered by an attack from a [[Mondasian Cyberman]], the Doctor, angry at the idea of constantly "being other people", refused to change into his [[Thirteenth Doctor|next body]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) When confronting the [[glass avatar]]s of [[Bill Potts]] and [[Nardole]], the Doctor confessed he was "tired of losing people" and, feeling "there [had] to be an end", seeing his long life as "[an] [empty] battlefield, because everyone else [had] fallen". After a final cuddle with the glass avatars, the Doctor decided it was "time to leave the battlefield", and entered the TARDIS alone. Upon looking at the "silly old universe" on the [[TARDIS scanner]], the Doctor, realising that the "more [he] save[d] it, the more it need[ed] saving", decided that "one more lifetime wouldn't kill anyone". Giving instructions to his successor to "never be cruel, [and] never be cowardly", that "hate [was] always foolish, and [that] love [was] always wise", to "never fail to be kind", and to never reveal their name, the Doctor "let [himself] go" and regenerated into a female body. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
=== Habits and quirks === | === Habits and quirks === | ||
Much like his [[ | <!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's accent--> | ||
Much like his [[seventh incarnation]], the Twelfth Doctor spoke with a [[Scottish]] accent, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) which was noted to be [[Glaswegian]] in contrast to the Seventh Doctor's [[Highlands]] one by [[Bernice Summerfield]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Big Bang Generation (novel)}}) Fully embracing his [[Scottish]] accent as an entitlement to complain about things, the Doctor would put down the English, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) and was known to "go all Scottish" when annoyed. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) | |||
With his accent, he was prone to boasting about himself, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) making intimidating threats, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}, {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}, {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}, {{cs|Extremis (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) or just stating the apparent ineffectiveness of others' actions in a subtle tone. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}) However, when truly angered, the Doctor would quietly hiss with a rage hidden behind unnerving tranquillity. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}, {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}, {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) | |||
When | <!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's catchphrases and recurring wording--> | ||
When proposing a theory or plan, the Doctor would use words such as "question", "proposition" or "proposal", and would begin his conclusion with "answer", "conjecture", "conclusion" or "plan". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) After working out the important questions and the answers in his head, he waited for others to come to the same conclusion, only to give out the answer after they proposed the wrong reactions. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|In the Forest of the Night (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|Sleep No More (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) | |||
During his early life, the Twelfth Doctor would often accuse things, even other people, of developing faults, errors and malfunctions when he didn't think they were working the way he though they were meant to, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}) and would call people "[[pudding-brain]]s", or "pudding headed", when he found them slow-minded or stupid. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}) | |||
When in a moment of realisation or thinking intensely, the Doctor would often tell people to "shut up/it", regardless of if they were speaking or not. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) He would also issue the instruction to those who had earned his ire, regardless of their status, occupation or how petty the ire was, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) and when he wished to avoid a subject of conversation. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}, {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}, {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}) | |||
When instructing someone to pay attention, the Doctor would command them to "listen". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Invasion (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, {{cs|Knock Knock (TV story)}}, {{cs|Extremis (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}, {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) He also made a habit of saying, ''"Well..."'', to start his sentences. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)}}, {{cs|Sleep No More (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) | |||
He frequently called those who annoyed him with their apparent unintelligence and poorly thought out actions an "idiot", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}, {{cs|Empress of Mars (TV story)}}) and even used the term to describe himself. ([[TV]]: {{cs|In the Forest of the Night (TV story)}}, {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
Wanting to avoid using foul language, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}) the Twelfth Doctor often used "hell" as an intensive, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}, {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Extremis (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}, {{cs|Empress of Mars (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}) and spoke the name of God in vain. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor often made puns, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) though hypocritically would complain about others making them. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) Never one to miss the chance for a quotation, the Doctor often reciting quotes and scriptures that matched his current predicament, be they from media, music or literature. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, {{cs|Sleep No More (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}) | |||
Like his [[fourth incarnation]], the Twelfth Doctor would talk directly to himself, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) and act like his was [[Fourth wall|being watched by someone]] when there was no evidence of him having company. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}) He was also known for giving soliloquies. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's physical habits and quirks--> | |||
[[File:Time and PR in Space.jpg|thumb|The Doctor sees himself in an advert. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Time and PR in Space (comic story)}})]] | |||
Much like his predecessor, the Twelfth Doctor used hand gestures to extenuate a point, but applied more dedication to his movements as he stood firm, spoke with conviction, and punctuated his points across with a pointed index finger, though he would become more spontaneous when thinking intensely. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) He typically stood with one leg stretched forward and his hands rested together in front of him. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}, {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Sleep No More (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}) Commonly, he would stick out his index and baby fingers with his thumb and lower his middle and ring fingers, with the gesture being so associated with him that it was depicted as his stance on a wanted poster drawing ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) and an advertisement poster designed by [[Zip Betterblast]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Time and PR in Space (comic story)}}) | |||
In a deviation from his stagnant posture, he would wring his hands together in a fidgety manner, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)}}, {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}) but also kept his fingers interlocked together when explaining or contemplating something. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}, {{cs|Empress of Mars (TV story)}}) | |||
When in thought, he was also known to tap his teeth with his finger, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}, {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) cradle his face in his hand, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) or twiddle his thumb on his hand. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}, {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}, {{cs|For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) He would also gesture by turning his hand with his fingers together and thumb stuck out, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}, {{cs|Empress of Mars (TV story)}}) | |||
Much like previous incarnations, the Twelfth Doctor would often flick back his coat and rest his hands in his pockets. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}, {{cs|Sleep No More (TV story)}}, {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|Knock Knock (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}, {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}) | |||
He was also known to cross his arms together, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}, {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}},{{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|Empress of Mars (TV story)}}) rest one hand or both on his hips, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}},{{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}, {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}, {{cs|Empress of Mars (TV story)}}) and stand with his hands crossed behind his back. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Invasion (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, {{cs|For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
Upon seeing a vase of picked flowers, the Doctor would grab a few and smell them, holding them right up to his nose. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}, {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}) When brooding, would lean his face into his right hand as he looked downwards while pulling at his face. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|In the Forest of the Night (TV story)}}, {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) | |||
Much like his fourth and ninth incarnations, the Twelfth Doctor would grin when he was pleased or amused, flashing his upper teeth widely as he smiled in his giddiness. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}, {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}, {{cs|For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}, {{cs|Empress of Mars (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's food related quirks--> | |||
[[File:Twelve Drink.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor offers [[Half-Face Man]] a drink of whisky. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}})]] | |||
Something of a foodie, the Twelfth Doctor would stop to help himself to food and drinks during his adventures, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}, {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) sometimes carrying food on his person to eat at a moment's notice ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) or indulging in a takeaway meal. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|Knock Knock (TV story)}}) Unlike his previous incarnation, he had a tolerance for alcoholic beverages, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) and took his tea with extra sugar, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) due to his high blood pressure, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) once having seven sugars in his tea. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Shining Man (novel)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's miscellaneous habits and quirks--> | |||
He would absentmindedly scratch at his right cheek,{{source}} and snap his fingers.{{source}} He tended to say, "basically", when giving a quick summation.{{source}} | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's use of technology--> | |||
When not out adventuring, the Doctor could be found jotting down equations and theories on various [[chalkboard]]s in the [[TARDIS console room]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) or on hard surfaces that could bear markings. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}) He also employed chalkboards as a form of non-verbal communication within a mind, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}) and in his lectures at [[St Luke's University]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) He also utilised a [[yo-yo]] on occasion. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor kept a spare [[sonic screwdriver]] in case something happened to his first. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Big Bang Generation (novel)}}) Even after he discarded his old screwdriver for a pair of [[sonic sunglasses]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}) he still carried a model of his screwdriver to use on the odd occasion, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Ministry of Time (comic story)}}, {{cs|The Dragon Lord (comic story)}}) after Clara returned one of his old spares to him. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Clara Oswald and the School of Death (comic story)}}) After receiving a new sonic screwdriver, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) he began to use it in conjunction with the sonic sunglasses. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
In his later life, the Doctor spent time using [[Wi-Fi]] to pass the time, but didn't want anyone seeing his [[browser history]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) as it contained a series of cat photos that he and [[River Song]] had used to communicate, which he found somewhat embarrassing. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)}}) | |||
=== Skills === | === Skills === | ||
Highly observant, the Doctor was able to | [[File:Foretold Approaches Twelve.jpg|thumb|The Doctor faces the Foretold's riddle. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}})]] | ||
Highly observant, the Twelfth Doctor was able to notice certain individuals in a crowd, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) realise suspicious activity ahead of others, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) and pick up on details that helped him unearth others' deceptions and plans. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) Being a [[Time Lord]], the Doctor could also detect when a light shield aura was near him, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) and was also able to fiddle with equipment and pilot the TARDIS while completely blind. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) However, when his attention was focused elsewhere, or he relied too much on his own brilliance or his technology, certain things around him would go amiss. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}, {{cs|Sleep No More (TV story)}}, {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}, {{cs|Knock Knock (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
He was also able to make accurate [[deduction]]s from keenly observing his surroundings, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}, {{cs|Sleep No More (TV story)}}) and could also correctly [[deduce]] others' histories and how they felt in their environments from sheer observation. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}) He noticed that [[Orestes Milton]] was a time traveller due to his choice of words, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}) and solved the riddle of the [[Foretold]] within sixty-six seconds. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}) | |||
He was also able to make accurate [[deduction]]s from observing his surroundings | |||
As "sneaky" as ever, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Stockbridge Showdown (comic story)}}) the Doctor was able to spin an apparent fatal outcome into an advantage, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}) He was also able to organise a bank heist to save [[The Teller (Time Heist)|the Teller]] and its mate, even erasing his planning of the heist to guarantee success. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's skills in combat and similar physical prowess--> | |||
The Twelfth Doctor was a capable fighter, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) being skilled in [[Venusian aikido]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}) and able to stun people with a single punch to their face, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) with the [[Half-Face Man]] and [[Kali]] both to remarking that the Doctor was "stronger than [he] look[ed]." ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}; [[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Swords of Kali (comic story)}}) He was also a highly proficient swordsman, able to best [[Robin Hood]] in a duel using a [[spoon]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}) take on Kali's three swords with a single blade, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Swords of Kali (comic story)}}) and reportedly bested [[Bors (The Doctor's Meditation)|Bors]]' broadsword with a [[daffodil]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) He was also skilled with a [[Gunstick]], shooting several [[Handmine]]s from a distance while also avoiding hitting [[Davros]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}) | |||
Strong and durable, the Doctor was able to briefly support his own weight singlehandedly, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) withstand several blows from [[Abesse]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) upstage [[Michael Smith]] by easily holding two baskets of rocks, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}) smash up the [[TARDIS console]] with his bare hands in a grief-stricken rage, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) and slam a door shut in a struggle with [[Veil (Heaven Sent)|the Veil]]. He was also capable of repeatedly striking a wall of [[Azbantium]] with his fists after breaking every bone in his hand, and was still able to use his hands to pull a lever afterwards. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}) However, his durability was not absolute, with the Doctor being easily knocked to the ground when taken by surprise from behind, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) and unable to escape the grip of a [[CyberMondan]] without assistance. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) | |||
He also possessed lightning-fast reflexes, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Crawling Terror (novel)}}) notably being able to snatch the sonic screwdriver back from [[Spider (Thin Ice)|Spider's]] hand seconds before he was devoured by [[sea creature (Thin Ice)|a sea creature]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) and discreetly change the codes on the [[Saxon Master]]'s computer in a matter of seconds without either the Master or Missy noticing. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) After being thrown out of [[Boat One]] in an explosion, the Doctor was able to skydive towards his descending TARDIS, even fighting against the wind currents to place the [[TARDIS key]] in the lock. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Death in Heaven (TV story)}}) | |||
Believing himself to be a good magician, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)}}) the Doctor could disappear when people were looking away, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) swipe things without detection, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) hide objects in others' pockets, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}) and carry beverages in his pockets that seemed to appear out of thin air. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) He practised traditional coin magic ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)}}) and could perform hat tricks. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) He was also able to swipe the General's sidearm before the General could regain his senses from being punched in the face. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's telepathy, hypnotism and similar mental prowess--> | |||
Like his previous incarnations, the Twelfth Doctor also displayed telepathic abilities, being able to link his mind with [[Rusty (Into the Dalek)|Rusty]] to show him the beauty of the universe, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}) put Clara through a telepathic scenario with the aid of a [[Mood drug|sleep patch]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}}) send a sedated Clara messages on blackboards by holding her hand, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) hijack a [[mind scythe]] to work for him, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Instruments of War (comic story)}}) establish a [[psychic link]] with a door to unlock it, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}) and leave a message in [[Bill Potts]]'s subconscious from a small distance. ([[TV]]: {{cs|World Enough and Time (TV story)}}) With a quick touch to the head, the Doctor could render someone unconscious, and also leave their memories "scrambled" ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) to induce a [[mind wipe]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) Not only could he perform eye-fixation hypnotism with verbal commands, but also claimed that he could perform hypnosis that affected all the senses due to his Time Lord abilities. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Trust (comic story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's mechanical prowess and similar technological repertoires--> | |||
The Twelfth Doctor was a skilled inventor, able to quickly build and assemble what he needed to achieve his goals, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}) even rebuilding the TARDIS's radio into a clockwork squirrel after it annoyed him too much. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's medical skill set--> | |||
Despite denying being a Doctor of Medicine, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}) the Twelfth Doctor possessed at least a limited medical knowledge, being able to resuscitate [[Lafcardio]] with [[CPR|artificial resuscitation]] after Lafcardio's lungs were filled up with soot, with the Governor noting that the Doctor worked on Lafcardio like an expert. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) He was also able to perform accurate post-mortems, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}, {{cs|The Crawling Terror (novel)}}) and attach a [[Lothan]] [[prosthetic leg]] to [[Ram Singh]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)}}) | |||
The Doctor | <!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's enchanted senses, such as smell and taste--> | ||
The Doctor also had a good sense of smell, which he used to assess his surroundings to [[deduce]] the time period he was in, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Swords of Kali (comic story)}}) which he could also do by putting his finger in the wind. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}, {{cs|Sleep No More (TV story)}}) He could detect a [[plasmic discharge field]] on scent alone. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Doorway to Hell (comic story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's musical and instrument based skill set--> | |||
[[File:Doctor playing electric guitar in the TARDIS.jpg|thumb|The Doctor plays [[The Doctor's guitar|his electric guitar]] in the TARDIS. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}})]] | |||
Though he had forgotten how to play the [[drum]]s, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|One! Two! Three! Four! To Doomsday (comic story)}}) the Twelfth Doctor could play the [[electric guitar]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}, {{cs|Before the Flood (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Zygon Invasion (TV story)}}, {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) even being able to play while blind. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}) He was proficient enough with his guitar to join the ''[[Space Pirates (band)|Space Pirates]]'' on stage, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Twist (comic story)}}) and keep up with [[Hattie Munroe]] when playing alongside her in the TARDIS. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Playing House (comic story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's piloting--> | |||
Despite initially forgetting how to pilot his TARDIS due to post-regenerative trauma, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Time of the Doctor (TV story)}}) the Doctor soon mastered his way around the [[TARDIS console]], though admitted to [[Bill Potts]] that he mostly negotiated with the TARDIS when it came to "steer[ing]". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Smile (TV story)}}) Not only could he save people by piloting the TARDIS around them ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) and deposit them from the TARDIS during dematerialisation, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}) he was successfully able to return Clara home in time for her dates, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Into the Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}, {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) though he had noticeable difficulty slowly fly the TARDIS above [[London]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}) | |||
He could also ride a [[horse]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) and drive a car, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}) being able to identify a vehicle by type and maker, and also summarise its capabilities. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Doorway to Hell (comic story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's cookery--> | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's omnilingualism--> | |||
The Twelfth Doctor retained his predecessor's ability to converse in multiple languages, such as [[Dinosaur (language)|dinosaur]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) [[Donkey (language)|donkey]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|All the Empty Towers (short story)}}) and [[Baby (language)|baby]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) He also claimed that he knew [[semaphore]], which had left [[British Sign Language]] "erased" from his mind, though he could still sign, just without the knowledge of what he had signed. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) He eventually learnt how to sign properly again. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Merry Christmas from See Hear (TV story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's miscellaneous skills--> | |||
A credited escapologist, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) the Doctor boasted at teaching [[Harry Houdini]] "everything he [knew]", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Swords of Kali (comic story)}}) and was repeatedly able to escape from his cell at [[the Prison]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) He was also a talented gambler, being able to win $800,000 in less than an hour using "simple mathematics", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Gangland (comic story)}}) and dancer, with Clara noting that he could apply for ''[[Strictly Come Dancing]]''. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Trust (comic story)}}) His performing abilities extended into acting, notably in how he fooled the [[Monk (species)|Monks]] into believing that he wanted to assist them as a figurehead for their propaganda, even fooling Bill. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}) | |||
Despite believing himself not to be suited for the task, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}) the Doctor had a talent for holding a crowds' attention, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}, {{cs|Oxygen (TV story)}}) having a strong sense of showmanship, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}) and quick comedic timing. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) | |||
Similar to his [[ninth incarnation]], the Twelfth Doctor could slow down his perception of time by locking himself in a secure location in his mind, embodied as his [[TARDIS control room]] with his companion present, where he could take the time to re-evaluate the predicament he was in to his companion and find a way out of it. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}) | |||
[[ | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's regenerative abilities--> | |||
[[File:The Twelfth Doctor starts to regenerate.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor resisting the regenerative process. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}})]] | |||
Similar to his [[tenth incarnation]], the Twelfth Doctor had a measure of control over his [[regeneration energy]], being able to summon a small amount for [[Davros]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Witch's Familiar (TV story)}}) and fake a regeneration to fool Bill. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}) After being electrocuted by a [[CyberMondan]], the Doctor managed to resist regenerating for two weeks, though was unable to walk properly without assistance for periods of time. Even as his regenerative process instinctively triggered itself after he was further damaged by another Mondasian Cyberman's [[energy blaster]] and the destruction of [[Floor 0507]], the Doctor forced it back further despite the strain it placed on him, almost regenerating completely. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}) He managed to hold it back for several more hours until he decided to regenerate. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | |||
== Appearance == | |||
[[File:Twelfth Doctor in Black Archive The Zygon Inversion.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor defends peace in the [[Black Archive]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}})]] | |||
Being of a light build, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Chime Time (comic story)}}) the Twelfth Doctor was a tall, thin-faced man with a tousled mop of [[silver]]-[[grey]] [[hair]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Crawling Terror (novel)}}) and intense [[blue]] [[eye]]s framed by unruly, expressive [[eyebrow]]s, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Day of the Doctor (TV story)}}) which he called "attack eyebrows" that could "take bottle tops off" and were "ready to secede and set up their own independent state of eyebrows". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) He also had a hooked [[nose]], with big [[ear]]s. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Time of the Doctor (TV story)}}) Recognising that he had "seen [his] face somewhere before", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) the Doctor eventually realised that he had the face of an older looking [[Lobus Caecilius]], a man whose family his [[Tenth Doctor|tenth incarnation]] had saved from the destruction of [[Pompeii]] on [[Donna Noble]]'s insistence, and concluded that he had subconsciously chose Caecilius' face to remind himself that he always "save[d] people". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) At some point, the Doctor appeared to have had his left earlobe pierced, as he had visible scarring on his ear by the time he extracted Clara from her timeline. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) | |||
[[ | The Twelfth Doctor's hair was a silvery shade of grey, kept short and combed down, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Time of the Doctor (TV story)}}, {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) though occasionally styled into a coif. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) However, he later let his hair grow out, and become curlier, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)}}, {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}, {{cs|For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)}}) but had it cut down by the time he met River on [[Mendorax Dellora]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}) After he left Darillium, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Extremis (TV story)}}) his hair had grown back to its old length. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) When his body began to [[Regeneration|regenerate]], his [[regeneration energy]] caused his hair length to grow out immensely. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor Falls (TV story)}}, {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}}) | ||
Upon first seeing his reflection | <!--Examples following this point focus on how the Twelfth Doctor described his own appearance--> | ||
Upon first seeing his reflection, the Twelfth Doctor described his face as being "absolutely furious", though he later admitted that it was "all right up until the eyebrows". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) He also described himself as a "distinguished gentleman with [a] twinkle in his eye", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Swords of Kali (comic story)}}) and considered his intimidating eyebrows as both a major contributor to his gravitas, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) and the reason many viewed him as a hostile. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Swords of Kali (comic story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on how others described the Twelfth Doctor's appearance--> | |||
The Twelfth Doctor was called a "boney [[rascal]]" and a "desiccated man-crone" by [[Robin Hood]], who also described him as being "pale as [[milk]]", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}) with [[Shona McCullough]] calling him a "[[skeleton]] man". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) | |||
While she once noted that the Doctor's face "always looked serious", ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}) [[Clara Oswald]] described him as looking like a "grey-haired [[stick insect]]", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) and even used such an image for him on her caller ID, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}) with [[Sontaran]] [[commander]] [[Kygon Brox]] also comparing the Doctor to a stick insect. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Instruments of War (comic story)}}) | |||
[[Governor (The Blood Cell)|The Governor]] believed the Doctor had "a face for [[fury]]", and that it was "made up of storms" and "[boiled] away like a dying [[star]]". ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) [[Ross McNamara]] compared the Doctor's "craggy" face to "the surface of [[the Moon]]." ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Haunted (short story)}}) | |||
The | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on how the other incarnations of the Doctor described the Twelfth Doctor's appearance--> | |||
Shortly after their regeneration, the [[Thirteenth Doctor]] described her predecessor as "a white-haired [[Scotsman]]". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Fell to Earth (TV story)}}) | |||
=== Clothing === | === Clothing === | ||
==== Main attires ==== | ==== Main attires ==== | ||
<!--Examples following this point focus on the Twelfth Doctor's first outfit--> | |||
[[File:The Doctor's New Look.jpg|thumb|The Doctor shows off his new look inside his refurbished TARDIS. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}})]] | |||
Aiming for "minimalism", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) the Twelfth Doctor initially donned a [[Navy (colour)|navy]] [[blue]] [[covert coat]] with shawl [[lapel|lapels]] and a [[crimson]] lining over a matching [[cardigan]] with a [[white]] collared [[shirt]], [[midnight blue]] [[trousers]], and [[black]] [[brogue]] [[Shoe|shoes]]. On his left hand ring finger, he had a pair of [[gold]] [[Ring|rings]], a normal gold band and a second ring with a greenish amber setting that rested atop the first band, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) which the Doctor considered to be [[The Doctor's wedding ring|a wedding ring]] that symbolised his marriage to [[River Song]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)}}) Occasionally, the Doctor would replace his cardigan with a single-breasted [[waistcoat]], with colours ranging in dark blue and plain black, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|Flatline (TV story)}}) and change his dark blue trousers to black. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) His socks were either decorated with cartoon animals ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) or plain black, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}) and his underpants reportedly had question marks. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Zygon Invasion (TV story)}}) While Clara noted his clothes made him look Victorian, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Silhouette (novel)}}) the Doctor believed he looked like a [[magician]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) | |||
Though his Crombie coat remained a constant staple of his appearance, he would wear them in a variety of colours and materials, with colours coming in navy blue, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) black, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Eye of Torment (comic story)}}) [[blue]], ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Hyperion Empire (comic story)}}) [[maroon]], ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Highgate Horror (comic story)}}) black [[velvet]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) and worn-out grey. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Extremis (TV story)}}) To go with his maroon Crombie coat, the Doctor also owned a [[scarlet]] waistcoat with matching trousers and shoes. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Highgate Horror (comic story)}}) | |||
The Doctor would also wear variations of his attire, switching from vested garments with a snowy shirt for a simple dress shirt on its own, coloured in [[Burgundy (colour)|burgundy]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Robot of Sherwood (TV story)}}) dark navy blue, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Time Heist (TV story)}}) or black with a white polka dot pattern. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Kill the Moon (TV story)}}) Other times, he would dispense with the shirts as well and don a black crew neck [[jumper]] ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) with small star-shaped sparkles on the front that helped him see in the dark, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Royal Blood (novel)}}) and later began wearing a zip up [[hoodie]] under his coat, with colours ranging in plain black, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last Christmas (TV story)}}) [[green]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|Under the Lake (TV story)}}) and [[blue]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) Under his jumper, he wore a white, ([[TV]]: {{cs|Listen (TV story)}}) red, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) or grey [[T-shirt]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Time and PR in Space (comic story)}}) On one occasion, he wore a burgundy ladder jumper. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on the Twelfth Doctor's second outfit--> | |||
Around the time he began to regularly play his electric guitar, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)}}) the Doctor, though he continued to wear his hoodie under his Crombie coat, replaced his jumper with an [[Ivory (colour)|ivory]] T-shirt and a pair of baggy plaid trousers similar in style to those of his [[second incarnation]], either in a [[Gunmetal (colour)|gunmetal]] grey design, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)}}) a [[Prussian blue]] design with a white plaid pattern, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}} a navy blue tartan pattern with crimson stripes, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Woman Who Lived (TV story)}}) or a [[Bottle (colour)|bottle]] green colour. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Ministry of Time (comic story)}}) His vest wear included a dusty pink Henley top underneath a Misty Mountain T-shirt, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)}}) a Negative Flower T-shirt, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Girl Who Died (TV story)}}) a plain white T-shirt, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Ministry of Time (comic story)}}) and a black T-shirt with a shark on it. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Face the Raven (TV story)}}) | |||
<!--Examples following this point focus on the Twelfth Doctor's third outfit--> | |||
During his time at [[St Luke's University]], the Doctor began wearing a single-breasted black [[velvet]] [[frock coat]] with a cornflower blue lining, while the rest of the his outfit came with many variations. Accompanying the frock coat would be a puce, dark green or black hoodie, a green ladder, black distressed or blue paint splatter jumper, a white shirt or longline burgundy, blue or black t-shirt, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Eaters of Light (TV story)}}) and a blue or black waistcoat with notched lapels and brown buttons. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pilot (TV story)}}) On one occasion, he dispensed with the waistcoat and wore a simple [[scarlet]] dress shirt. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)}}) He also began keeping the cuffs of his sleeves unrolled. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Lie of the Land (TV story)}}) | |||
==== Other costumes ==== | |||
Following his regeneration, the Doctor was placed into a Victorian nightshirt and [[slipper]]s by the [[Paternoster Gang]] to help him rest. While investigating reports of [[spontaneous human combustion]], the Doctor exchanged his old watch for a coat from [[Barney (Deep Breath)|a vagabond]], which he wore over his nightshirt. After infiltrating [[Mancini's Family Restaurant]], the Doctor stole a [[Clockwork Droid]]'s suit in order to masquerade as one to get close to the [[Half-Face Man]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Deep Breath (TV story)}}) | |||
[[File:Orient dress.jpg|left|thumb|The Doctor and Clara dress formally for a journey aboard the ''[[Orient Express (spacecraft)|Orient Express]]''. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}})]] | |||
For formal wear, the Twelfth Doctor would don a black double-breasted suit jacket, black trousers and low-rising waistcoat, his black brogue boots, a white dress shirt and an ebony black cravat tie. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Husbands of River Song (TV story)}}) When he took [[Bill Potts]] to the [[1814 frost fair|frost fair of 1814]], the Doctor wore his velvet frockcoat, but favoured more [[Regency era]] clothing in the form of navy trousers, an [[Azure (colour)|azure]] blue [[brocade]] waistcoat, a [[Sapphire (colour)|sapphire]] blue cravat, a white shirt, black gloves and a navy [[top hat]] that he later swapped for a black one. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Thin Ice (TV story)}}) | |||
When going into "deep cover" as [[Coal Hill School]]'s temporary caretaker, the Doctor donned an ocher brown warehouse coat over his black crew neck jumper | When going into "deep cover" as [[Coal Hill School]]'s temporary [[caretaker]], the Doctor donned an ocher brown warehouse coat over his black crew neck jumper, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Caretaker (TV story)}}) and was photographed wearing the same coat while brandishing a [[mop]] at some point before [[5 March]] [[2005]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Rose (novelisation)}}) | ||
[[ | After returning to [[Gallifrey]], the Doctor discarded his waistcoat and velvet Crombie coat in favour of a black overcoat, which he found in [[Barn (The Day of the Doctor)|his old barn]]. When he returned to his TARDIS, he resumed wearing a new Crombie coat what had been left for him by Clara as a parting gift. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}) | ||
While visiting [[1963]] [[Las Vegas]], the Doctor donned a blue [[ | While imprisoned in [[the Prison]], the Doctor was fitted with a standard orange uniform. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Blood Cell (novel)}}) While visiting [[1963]] [[Las Vegas]], the Doctor donned a blue [[fedora]] at Clara's urging. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Gangland (comic story)}}) When [[Zip Betterblast]] gave him a "re-design" for his TV appearance, the Doctor received blue jeans, a cap with a "DW" logo, and yellow sleeveless V-neck top with a palm tree island image on it. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Time and PR in Space (comic story)}}) | ||
== Behind the scenes == | |||
=== Information from invalid sources === | |||
* Promotional material for ''[[Doctor Who Experience (London/Cardiff)|Doctor Who Experience]]'' mentions that the green amber stone on the Twelfth Doctor's ring was "allegedly" collected on the [[planet]] [[Raxacoricofallapatorius]]. | |||
* In [[DWM 477]], showrunner [[Steven Moffat]] jokingly answered one fan's question on what colour the Doctor's kidneys now were, after he had complained about their colour, as "Froon", a colour which only the Doctor could see. | |||
* Writing in [[DWM 495]], Moffat confirmed that the photo-realistic painting of Clara seen during {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}} was painted by the Doctor himself. Capaldi himself is a trained artist, although his style is more on the caricature side. | |||
* According to the ''[[Doctor Who The Official Annual 2018]]'', which is not accepted as a [[Tardis:Valid sources|valid source for in-universe articles on this wiki]], the Doctor and River had a home on [[Darillium]] during their final night; their address was "Flat 40, Singing Towers View, Darillium". | |||
* In the twentieth anniversary edition of ''[[Who Killed Kennedy (novel)|Who Killed Kennedy]]'' by [[David Bishop]], an epilogue was added in which [[James Stevens]] contacts the Twelfth Doctor and convinces him to alter the coordinates of {{Delgado}}'s [[Time Ring]] so that he can travel to [[11 August]] [[1971]] and prevent [[Francis Cleary]] from killing his former [[companion]] [[Dodo Chaplet]]. | |||
=== Casting === | |||
* Capaldi was the second actor, after [[Sixth Doctor]] actor [[Colin Baker]], to have played an on-screen character in ''Doctor Who'' before being cast as the Doctor, having played [[Lobus Caecilius]] in {{cs|The Fires of Pompeii (TV story)}} and [[John Frobisher]] in ''[[Torchwood (TV series)|Torchwood]]: [[Series 3 (Torchwood)|Children of Earth]]''. However, if one counts [[David Tennant]]'s appearances in various Big Finish audios and ''[[Scream of the Shalka (webcast)|Scream of the Shalka]]'' prior to his casting as the [[Tenth Doctor]], Capaldi is actually the third actor to have appeared in ''Who''-media prior to taking on the role. | |||
=== Peter Capaldi's age === | |||
* Cast at 55 years old, Peter Capaldi was the oldest actor to regularly portray the Doctor since [[First Doctor]] actor [[William Hartnell]], who was a few months Capaldi's junior. [[War Doctor]] actor [[John Hurt]], however, remains the oldest actor to portray a new incarnation of the Doctor upon debuting, at 73 years old. | |||
== | === Costume influences === | ||
* Peter Capaldi wanted to wear his wedding ring as part of the Doctor's attire, and requested a prop to disguise it. He was given an amber ring with a gemstone that fitted over the top of his original band. It was revealed in the {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)}} novelisation that the ring was the Doctor's wedding ring from his marriage to [[River Song]]. | |||
* As part of his discussions with the costume designers, Peter Capaldi asked for his original costume to be closer to how fashion was in the 1960s so as to better reflect the origins of the show. In addition, he asked for the coat to be black, since he always remembered the [[First Doctor]]'s coat as black as a child - being as the show was in black in white. | |||
* His costume was revealed in [[DWM 470]] and online earlier than planned to preempt a tabloid scoop.{{source}} | |||
* Peter Capaldi wanted to wear his wedding ring as part of | |||
* | |||
* | |||
== | === Other matters === | ||
{{ | * Like the [[War Doctor]] and the [[Ninth Doctor]] before him, the Twelfth Doctor debuted in a television story before his [[regeneration]] from his predecessor was screened. | ||
* Peter Capaldi pierced his left ear earlier in life and the scar from his piecing was visible during close-ups of his face in {{cs|Hell Bent (TV story)}}. This is the second time the Doctor has sported noticeable body modification from the previous life of his actor; [[Jon Pertwee]]'s arm tattoo from his [[Royal Navy]] days was visible in a scene in {{cs|Spearhead from Space (TV story)}}. | |||
* In several series 9 episodes, most notably {{cs|Heaven Sent (TV story)}}, the Doctor displays a slight limp, because Capaldi had injured his knee early in filming of the season, and underwent surgery to repair the knee late in 2015. As Capaldi later explained, ''"We realised what it is: you run down these corridors and you reach the end and then you spin to make sure you get a nice close-up. You spin on that leg and you put tension on that knee."''<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.express.co.uk/showbiz/tv-radio/746046/Doctor-Who-Christmas-2016-The-Return-of-Doctor-Mysterio-Peter-Capaldi-Steven-Moffat|title=Doctor Who star Peter Capaldi reveals 'dangerous and troubling' moment during filming|author=Debnath, Neela|date of source=21 December 2016|website name=Express|accessdate=23 December 2016}}</ref> | |||
* The Twelfth Doctor's tenure was the last to be completed during the reign of [[Queen]] [[Elizabeth II]]. | |||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
{{Dwlx|The Twelfth Doctor|{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Dwlx|The Twelfth Doctor|{{PAGENAME}}}} | ||
{{Ldx}} | |||
== Footnotes == | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
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[[Category:War veterans]] | [[Category:War veterans]] | ||
[[Category:Individuals with psychic powers]] | [[Category:Individuals with psychic powers]] | ||
[[Category:Coal Hill maintenance staff]] | [[Category:Coal Hill maintenance staff]] | ||
[[Category:Earth | [[Category:Presidents of Earth]] | ||
[[Category:Individual hosts]] | [[Category:Individual hosts]] | ||
[[Category:UNIT personnel]] | [[Category:UNIT Time Lord personnel]] | ||
[[Category:Musicians]] | [[Category:Musicians]] | ||
[[Category:Murderers]] | [[Category:Murderers]] | ||
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[[Category: | [[Category:Time Lords caught in a time loop]] | ||
[[Category:Individuals whose minds have been wiped]] | [[Category:Individuals whose minds have been wiped]] | ||
[[Category:Victims of the Boneless]] | [[Category:Victims of the Boneless]] | ||
[[Category:Thieves]] | [[Category:Thieves]] | ||
[[Category:Partially cyberconverted | [[Category:Partially cyberconverted Time Lords]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Time Lord teachers]] | ||
[[Category:Science teachers]] | [[Category:Science teachers]] | ||
[[Category:St Luke's University staff]] | |||
[[Category:Blind individuals]] | |||
[[Category:Professors]] | |||
[[Category:20th century individuals]] | |||
[[Category:21st century individuals]] | |||
[[Category:Time Lord lecturers]] | |||
[[Category:Combatants in the Last Great Time War]] | |||
[[Category:Survivors of the Last Great Time War]] | |||
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[[Category:Pacifists]] | |||
[[Category:MADAM members]] | |||
[[Category:Podcasters]] | |||
[[Category:Bristol residents]] | |||
[[Category:Kantrofarri hosts]] | |||
[[Category:Prophecy of the Hybrid]] | |||
[[Category:Language teachers]] | |||
[[Category:Time Agents]] | |||
[[Category:Doctors who regenerated without companions]] | |||
[[Category:Individuals who have been inside a Dalek]] | |||
[[Category:Individuals who have been to the Land of Ooo]] | |||
[[Category:People on Santa Claus' naughty list]] | |||
[[cs:Dvanáctý Doktor]] | |||
[[cy:Deuddegfed Doctor]] | |||
[[de:Zwölfter Doctor]] | |||
[[es:Duodécimo Doctor]] | |||
[[fr:Douzième Docteur]] | |||
[[it:Dodicesimo Dottore]] | |||
[[pl:Dwunasty Doktor]] | |||
[[pt:Décimo Segundo Doctor]] | |||
[[ru:Двенадцатый Доктор]] |
Latest revision as of 05:01, 18 November 2024
The first incarnation of the regeneration cycle bestowed upon him by the Time Lords at Clara Oswald's urging at the end of the Siege of Trenzalore, the Twelfth Doctor valued a pragmatic approach with an acerbic and blunt insensitivity, often dispensing with niceties in a tense situation, becoming cold and calculative when needed. However, despite his ruthless exterior, the Doctor was actually deeply caring and empathetic, always striving to help others for the sake of being kind. Exploiting his vast intelligence and experiences without a fear of hiding his age, he could be difficult to deal with when there was work to be done, but remained capable of incredible compassion towards even the least likely of folk, determined the save anyone he could if it was an option, while not wasting time trying to save someone who was doomed beyond salvation.
Unique amongst his incarnations, the Twelfth Doctor would not travel full time with the large majority of his companions, with some like Clara Oswald and Bill Potts taking breaks from the TARDIS between travels, some like Hattie Munroe taking the occasional trip, and some like Jata being involved in various side quests during a longer trip. He was also known to go long periods of time in one location, such as the town of Краснодар, his confession dial, 1970s Brixton, Darillium and St Luke's University.
Assured of the survival of Gallifrey, the Doctor was no longer chained down by guilt, becoming a less amiable character, as he no longer needed to cover the pain of what he thought was the extinction of the Time Lords, which left him to wonder if he was still a "good man", a question left more uncertain by his failure to reform a Dalek, and when compared to the more idealistically heroic characters like Robin Hood and Danny Pink. As he continued to drive people away with his apparent callousness, even Clara found herself wanting to leave the Doctor when he took his disinterest too far, until he proved his worth to her by defeating the Foretold, although this left Clara trying to emulate him in their battles with the Boneless and the Umbra, further confusing the Doctor on his moral standings, which was not resolved until his first confrontation with Missy, where she tried to corrupt him by handing him an army of Cybermen to force his ideas of peace of the universe, and he realised that he was simply "an idiot with a box and screwdriver" who went around helping where he could. However, the fallout of Missy's plan left the Doctor and Clara deciding to part ways.
After they were reunited in an attack by the Dream crabs, the Doctor and Clara experienced dreams of what their lives would be like without the other and decided to take a second chance with adventuring together, with the Doctor showing his goofier side more clearly and forging a closer bond with Clara as they faced machinations from the likes of Davros, Missy and the Fisher King.
However, the threat of a mythical creature called the Hybrid would haunt their travels, as the Doctor combined Mire technology to render a Viking girl named Ashildr immortal, and she would continue to watch him and Clara from the shadows of history, as they stopped a Zygon rebellion and saved Jess Collins from the Corvids at Highgate Cemetery. Eventually, Ashildr would make her move against the Doctor at the behest of Rassilon, and Clara was killed as the Doctor was trapped in a Confession Dial and forced to endure four-and-a-half billion years of torture to get him to confess what he knew of the Hybrid. After he manged to escape, the Doctor ousted Rassilon from Gallifrey and tried to resurrected Clara with an extraction chamber, but only succeeded in retrieving her from the seconds before her death. Fleeing Gallifrey to the end of the universe, the Doctor retrieved Ashildr to help him erase Clara's memories of him to hide her from the Time Lords, but ultimately had his memories of her erased with the neural block, leaving Clara and Ashildr to travel the universe while he continued his solitary exploits.
Now content with being "an old man messing about in time and space", the Doctor was reunited with Gabby Gonzalez by the Moment, and joined forces with his previous companions to take down Josiah W. Dogbolter. He also enjoyed some adventures with guitarist Hattie Munroe, and spend some time living with Jess's family when his TARDIS was left recovering from an implosion. After seeing to the formation of the Coal Hill defenders at Coal Hill Academy, the Doctor helped the Osumaran Jata return to Osumare, and was helped in solving a mystery with Alex and Brandon Yow. Following his accidental gifting of superpowers to Grant Gordon with the Hazandra gemstone, the Doctor was reunited with River Song and had their fated final night on Darillium, which lasted for twenty-four years.
Once his night on Darillium ended, the Doctor was joined by River's assistant, Nardole, when he was charged with guarding Missy in a vault at St Luke's University, with the Doctor working to rehabilitate her so they could mend their old friendship. However, despite Nardole trying to keep him grounded, the Doctor would find reasons to sneak away from the Vault to adventure in his TARDIS, which happened even more frequently when he began tutoring Bill Potts by Christmas 2016. Once he decided to make her an official companion after saving her from some sentient oil, the Doctor and Bill fought Emojibots at Gliese 581d, saved a sea serpent during the 1814 Frost fair and faced off threats from the Dreamspace being sent by Fey Truscott-Sade.
After a rescue mission on Chasm Forge left him blinded from exposure to vacuum of space, the Doctor was unable to stop an invasion by the Monks when Bill brokered a deal with them to restore his sight, and had to endure six months of undercover work to exile them from the Earth, though found that his absence had caused Missy to undergo self-reflection. When she later saved him from Mars, the Doctor granted her access to the TARDIS so that she could watch him, Bill and Nardole adventure against light-eating locusts and show her a better way of living. However, a final test on Missy's rehabilitation on a Mondasian colony ship resulted in Bill becoming a Cyberman, Missy leaving with the Saxon Master and Nardole having to be left behind. As he was left mortally wounded in the battle against the Cybermen, the Doctor resisted the regenerative process, having grown weary of constantly changing personas and losing companions, but was encouraged to regenerate by glass avatars of Bill and Nardole after he crossed paths with his first incarnation and the Testimony. Accepting his impending regeneration and his responsibility to life itself, the Doctor used his last moments to give his successor some words of advice before finishing his regeneration into a female body.
Biography[[edit] | [edit source]]
A day to come[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from Lost Property, A Matter of Life and Death, & How to be a Time Lord needs to be added
After sealing Gallifrey away in a pocket dimension, (TV: The Day of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Day of the Doctor (TV story)"]) the Seventh Doctor was able to recall teaming up with his other twelve incarnations to save Gallifrey. (AUDIO: Cold Fusion [+]Loading...["Cold Fusion (audio story)"])
During the Last Great Time War, the War Doctor began degenerating through his past incarnations after being struck by a degeneration weapon. (AUDIO: Past Lives [+]Loading...["Past Lives (audio story)"]) While trying to restore himself, the Doctor ended up Planetoid 50, where an encounter with the Master enabled him to degenerate into future incarnations. (AUDIO: The Martian Invasion of Planetoid 50 [+]Loading...["The Martian Invasion of Planetoid 50 (audio story)"]) After ending up at the Diamond Array, the Doctor was captured, but pushed himself forward into the Twelfth Doctor in order to escape. After briefly taking on the forms of the Tenth Doctor and the Eleventh Doctor, he took on the form of the Twelfth Doctor again. He talked briefly with Susan Foreman and River Song, with both the Doctor and River noting they were able to briefly access future memories, seeing their night on Darillium. Degeneration took hold again, and he shifted back to the Eighth Doctor. (AUDIO: The Union [+]Loading...["The Union (audio story)"])
When the Tenth Doctor met River Song, she told him about his future self giving her a sonic screwdriver (TV: Silence in the Library [+]Loading...["Silence in the Library (TV story)"]) and about her last meeting with "the future [him]" at Darillium. (TV: Forest of the Dead [+]Loading...["Forest of the Dead (TV story)"]) Due to being on his last regeneration, (TV: The Time of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Time of the Doctor (TV story)"]) the Eleventh Doctor believed River had been talking about him. (HOMEVID: Last Night [+]Loading...["Last Night (home video)"]) Upon meeting Jackson Lake, a man who believed himself to be the Doctor due to tampering with an infostamp to protect himself from the Cybusmen, the Tenth Doctor believed Lake to be "the next Doctor" or "the next but one", with Lake telling him that he "regenerated" when the Cybermen "made [him] change". However, the Doctor eventually figured out Lake was not a future incarnation after finding many inaccuracies about him, finally confirming Lake's true identity with his initialised fob watch. (TV: The Next Doctor [+]Loading...["The Next Doctor (TV story)"])
When encountering the "Vortex Butterfly", the Tenth Doctor was cryptically told that he would not be "limited" to "thirteen lives". (COMIC: Vortex Butterflies [+]Loading...["Vortex Butterflies (comic story)"]) When the Eleventh Doctor was attacked by the Then and the Now on Lujhimene, the Twelfth Doctor was among the faces seen as the Doctor's timeline was almost destroyed. (COMIC: Running to Stay Still [+]Loading...["Running to Stay Still (comic story)"]) When the Eleventh Doctor and River were invited to a party held by the fish people, River told the Doctor that, if the party went badly, she would "tell the next version of [him], [she had] told [him] so". (COMIC: An Adventure in Brine and Plaice [+]Loading...["An Adventure in Brine and Plaice (comic story)"]) During a visit to a parallel universe where he was a fictional character in a television series, the Eleventh Doctor told the actor Matt Smith that Peter Capaldi would be a good choice to play him on the show, as the Doctor had previously saved his universe's Peter Capaldi from a Mandrel. (COMIC: The Girl Who Loved Doctor Who [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Loved Doctor Who (comic story)"])
Despite all of this, the existence of the Twelfth Doctor was not always assured. At one point, the Eleventh Doctor was forced to visit Trenzalore, the place where he was said to be buried, in its future. (TV: The Name of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Name of the Doctor (TV story)"]) Sometime later, upon discovering Gallifrey was hidden away via the crack in time on the planet, the Eleventh Doctor did choose to defend the planet and accept his fate. Due to the War Doctor and the Human-Time Lord Meta-Crisis, the Doctor was on the final of his original thirteen lives by this incarnation. (TV: The Time of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Time of the Doctor (TV story)"]) In the original timeline, the Eleventh Doctor died on Trenzalore without regenerating, the TARDIS becoming his grave. (TV: The Name of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Name of the Doctor (TV story)"]) However, Clara Oswald prevented this by convincing the Time Lords to give him a new set of regenerations. (TV: The Time of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Time of the Doctor (TV story)"])
Post-regeneration[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Main article: Fall of the Eleventh
After fighting in the Siege of Trenzalore for nine hundred years, (PROSE: Tales of Trenzalore [+]Loading...["Tales of Trenzalore (short story)"]) the Eleventh Doctor was granted a new regeneration cycle by the Time Lords after an appeal by Clara Oswald. After using the energy from the explosive reset that followed to destroy the Dalek forces, the Doctor returned to his TARDIS to complete his regeneration, (TV: The Time of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Time of the Doctor (TV story)"]) making a quick phone call to Clara, during which he learned his next incarnation would be old and grey-haired. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) Later in the TARDIS, the Doctor spoke with a sorrowful Clara who begged him not to change. The Doctor reassured Clara before suddenly changing in a flash before Clara's eyes, the new Doctor voicing his surprise at having new kidneys as the TARDIS began crash landing. (TV: The Time of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Time of the Doctor (TV story)"]) Crashing in pre-historic Earth, the TARDIS was chased and subsequently swallowed by a female tyrannosaur; when the Doctor brought the TARDIS to 1890s London, the dinosaur was accidentally brought along with it.
After the TARDIS was spat out, the Doctor, in a severe bout of post-regenerative trauma, acted wild and irrationally, until he passed out in front of the Paternoster Gang. Though put to bed to stabilise, the Doctor soon awoke and, hearing the dinosaur in pain, climbed out onto the rooftop and left on horseback when he saw the T-Rex was being burned to ashes. Deciding to investigate, but still suffering a degree of post-regenerative stress, the Doctor wandered the streets of London. Talking to a passing tramp, the Doctor examined his new facial features, noticing that he had seen it before, before trading in his previous incarnation's favourite watch for the tramp's coat. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"])
Seeing an ad in a newspaper placed by Missy, (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) which seemed to be a message from Clara, the Doctor infiltrated a suspicious restaurant, where he and Clara learned that time travelling Clockwork Droids, under the leadership of the Half-Face Man, had been harvesting humans to repair themselves and reach the Promised Land. Trying to speak on peaceful terms, the Doctor snapped the Control Node out of his illusion of the Promised Land by revealing the true state of his existence. Conflicted and unsure, the Half-Face Man fell out of his escape pod, either jumping or having been pushed by the Doctor.
Returning to his TARDIS, the Doctor briefly left Clara behind (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) due to the calculations he had been working on through all his prior incarnations finally being completed, and he went to help his previous twelve incarnations place Gallifrey in a pocket universe at the end of the Last Great Time War, (TV: The Day of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Day of the Doctor (TV story)"]) joining the General in the War Room to coordinate disaster relief. With Gallifrey saved, the Twelfth Doctor went to a tea party in the Under Gallery to celebrate with his other incarnations. (PROSE: The Day of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Day of the Doctor (novelisation)"]) The Doctor then redecorated the TARDIS console room and settled on a new outfit, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) creating his new control console in a bathroom. (COMIC: The Body Electric [+]Loading...["The Body Electric (comic story)"])
Returning for Clara, the Doctor spoke of the suspicious way Clara had met him in his previous incarnation, only for Clara to likewise voice her uncertainty of the Doctor's identity and asked to be returned home. Attempting to return Clara home, the Doctor ended up in Glasgow by mistake. However, Clara decided to go out for coffee with the Doctor after the Eleventh Doctor called her and encouraged her to help the Doctor through his regeneration. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"])
Early experiences[[edit] | [edit source]]
Wanting to investigate a series of murders, the Doctor went to get Clara some coffee from the Intergalactic Coffee Roasting Station, where he bumped into an old acquaintance, 78351, and witnessed the murder of a female customer. Deciding to take 78351 on as a companion, the Doctor examined the dead body and determined that all the caffeine in her system had been drained from two bite marks on her neck, just as a Blowfish was also murdered. Using his sonic screwdriver, the Doctor found that 78351's adrenaline levels had increased, and, fearful that he would be the next victim, took him to the master control centre to draw out the killer. Finding the technicians murdered, and that they had been killed fourteen hours before the first victim, the Doctor realised that 78351 was the killer.
Wanting to take him off the station, the Doctor had 78351 take him to his ship and they fled the ICRS. Turning out the ship's lights to see 78351's true form, the Doctor likened 78351's transformation to puberty, and told him he had to decide if he wanted to control his adult body. When he also told him that he might not have the energy to stabilise himself, 78351 set his ship to collide with a nearby sun to get the energy burst. Promising to buy 78351's friend a coffee from him, the Doctor left the ship in an escape pod, and returned to the ICRS. (PROSE: Lights Out [+]Loading...["Lights Out (short story)"])
Intending to return to Clara with some coffee, the Doctor saved a Combined Galactic Resistance fighter pilot named Journey Blue from a Dalek saucer attack (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) in the Ryzak solar system, (PROSE: The Secret Lives of Monsters [+]Loading...["The Secret Lives of Monsters (short story)"]) though left her deceased brother behind in the explosion. After prompting her into asking nicely, the Doctor returned Journey to her command ship, the Aristotle, where Colonel Morgan Blue introduced him to a Dalek that had developed a fault and turned good. Returning for Clara, three weeks later from her perspective, the Doctor asked her if she thought he was a good man, a question that Clara found herself unable to answer, and returned to base to help the Dalek.
Joined by Journey and two other soldiers named Gretchen Carlisle and Ross, the Doctor and Clara used a moleculon nanoscaler to miniaturise themselves and enter the Dalek, whom the Doctor nicknamed "Rusty". After losing Ross to the Rusty's antibodies, the Doctor discovered a radiation leak from within Rusty and learned that he had turned good after seeing a star being born. Following the radiation, the Doctor discovered damage to Rusty's power source was slowly killing him, and repaired the damage with his sonic screwdriver. However, fixing Rusty's power core resulted in the malfunction that turned Rusty good to be reversed, with Rusty's destructive nature returning, and causing Rusty to go on a killing spree, as well as send a distress beacon to summon the Daleks to the rebels' base.
After getting slapped and lectured by Clara for his apathy, the Doctor realised he could turn Rusty good again by reawakening his memory of the star being born. Instructing Clara to find a way to restore Rusty's memories of the star, the Doctor made his way to the Kaled mutant within Rusty to mind link with him, causing Rusty to see the Doctor's hatred of the Daleks and destroy the Daleks that had responded to his distress beacon. Leaving to continue his crusade against the Daleks, Rusty commented that Doctor would have made a good Dalek before both of them left. After declining Journey's request to travel with him and Clara, the Doctor returned Clara home, both still unsure if the Doctor was a good man, but with Clara convinced he was at least trying to be one. (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) The Doctor then thought about what kind of Dalek he would be. (POEM: Dalek [+]Loading...["Dalek (poem)"])
The Doctor joined a crew of six travellers, including a young Geoffrey Chaucer, on a journey to the church at Santiago de Compostela to avoid the plague. At the church, one of the travellers gave birth, and then the group was attacked by life-feeding aliens disguised as wooden skeletons. However, the aliens recoiled in horror upon seeing the new baby. The Doctor realised the church was actually the aliens' disguised spaceship, and he and the crew escaped as the ship took off. The Doctor explained to Chaucer that the baby, representing new life, was enough to frighten away the death-conquering aliens. (PROSE: The Mercy Seats [+]Loading...["The Mercy Seats (short story)"])
New adventures with Clara[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from The Blood Cell, & The Charge of the Night Brigade needs to be added
After he was forced to disguise himself as a nun to escape the Church of Vindication's Inquisitors, (COMIC: The Swords of Kali [+]Loading...["The Swords of Kali (comic story)"]) the Doctor became alerted to a creature that disguised itself as a motorway to consume planets into other dimensions. Summoning Clara to assist him, the Doctor was surprised when the creature disappeared, unaware that Clara had tricked the creature into consuming itself. (COMIC: Road Rage [+]Loading...["Road Rage (Twelfth Doctor comic story)"])
The Doctor was given some chips by Clara, and then rambled about how great they tasted. (COMIC: Untitled [+]Loading...["Untitled (12D comic story)"]) Attempting to get a reservation at a restaurant on Calbaron III, the Doctor and Clara found there was a three-year wait for a table. They booked and went three years to the future, only to learn the restaurant was closed to celebrate the third anniversary of the overthrowing of a tyrannical emperor. They finally made their booking six years prior for three years later. When the Doctor found that the tyrannical emperor had scratched his TARDIS, he decided to overthrow him, resulting in the anniversary. (COMIC: Planet of the Diners [+]Loading...["Planet of the Diners (comic story)"]) The Doctor repaired the scratch on the TARDIS, but found that the damage had caused time within the TARDIS to temporarily run backwards, much to Clara's annoyance when she tried to converse with him. (COMIC: The Inversion of Time [+]Loading...["The Inversion of Time (comic story)"])
When the TARDIS was swarmed with Adipose, the Doctor claimed he was "not an Adipose person." He then had Clara take out the rubbish, as he claimed he wasn't a "taking-the-bin-out" person, with Clara declaring his attitude had to stop. (COMIC: The Bin Dilemma [+]Loading...["The Bin Dilemma (comic story)"])
Deciding to return to Victorian London, the Doctor and Clara reunited with the Paternoster Gang to investigate a carnival at the Frost Fairs, where some performers had gained powers, in connection with a death that had occurred. They discovered these events were linked to weapon-creator Orestes Milton, who was hiding from the Shadow Proclamation. The Doctor stopped Milton's anger-inducing machine, but was unable to prevent his escape. However, Affinity, a shape-shifter created by Milton, tricked him into thinking the Shadow Proclamation wanted his help, and the real Shadow Proclamation destroyed Milton's ship when it attempted to leave Earth. The humans altered by Milton retained their powers, and decided to resume their work at the fair. (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"])
Deciding to give Clara the choice of their next destination, the Doctor took her to Sherwood Forest to meet Robin Hood, though he was sceptical of Robin's actual existence. He was proven wrong when Robin shot his TARDIS with an arrow seconds after they arrived; however, he refused to believe Robin and his Merry Men were real upon visiting their camp. After participating in an archery contest for a golden arrow, the Doctor got himself, Clara and Robin captured by the Sheriff of Nottingham, who had allied with alien robots disguised as his knights.
Escaping, the Doctor and Robin found out the robots were trying to reach the Promised Land, but lacked sufficient gold to repair their engine. Believing Robin was also a robot, the Doctor was re-captured by the Sheriff as Robin took Clara and escaped through a window. Leading a revolution in the Sheriff's dungeon, the Doctor was informed by the Sheriff that Robin Hood was not a robot, just as Robin came to his rescue and defeated the Sheriff. Assisting Robin with Clara's help, the Doctor helped launch the golden arrow into the ship to allow it to escape velocity and explode harmlessly in space. As he departed, the Doctor left Maid Marian, whom he had met in the Sheriff's dungeon, behind to be reunited with Robin. (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"])
The Doctor and Clara used a goo bomb to foil the Sibro's attempt to weaponise a Conlanian clock tower, (COMIC: Chime Time [+]Loading...["Chime Time (comic story)"]) orchestrated a ceasefire in a war between anthropomorphic cats and dogs by allying them against an army of alien fleas that planned to attack every planet in the universe, (COMIC: Once Bitten [+]Loading...["Once Bitten (comic story)"]) and helped the World Brain find a new way of life after crash landing on its factory planet. (COMIC: Crash Landing [+]Loading...["Crash Landing (comic story)"])
On Hoopoe, the Doctor acted as Clara's lawyer when she was arrested for walking on the ground by the Court of Birds. His attempt to convince them she and him weren't cats backfired when the owls accused them of being mice, but the Doctor had foreseen this and had recruited the native cats to attack the owls with makeshift wings, but ensured that the wings were too difficult to use properly, rendering them useless in the cats' pursuit of the owls. As he left with Clara in the TARDIS, the Doctor rewarded the cats with a box of canned tuna. (COMIC: The Court of Birds [+]Loading...["The Court of Birds (comic story)"])
Becoming obsessed with the idea that a creature designed to hide was following him around, and that everyone was similarly being followed, the Doctor began searching for such a creature. (TV: 'Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) In his pursuit, the Doctor encountered an individual who also feared such an entity, and told them that the fear they felt was something he had lived with all his life while travelling in his TARDIS. (WC: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (webcast)"]) Still unable to find the creature, the Doctor recruited Clara's help in finding the creature by using the TARDIS telepathic circuits to find it in her past. However, Clara got distracted by a phone call from Danny Pink, and piloted them into his past instead, back when Danny was a child called "Rupert" and living in a care home. Finding a figure under Rupert's bed sheet, the Doctor had Clara and Rupert turn their backs to allow the being to walk out the room unobserved, leaving them unsure if it really was the creature or just another child playing a trick on Rupert.
Returning Clara to her date, the Doctor continued to follow his theory by trying to use a trace of Clara left in the telepathic circuits, ending up at the end of the universe where a time traveller named Colonel Orson Pink had been trapped for six months. Intrigued by how following Clara's timeline led him to Orson, the Doctor returned for Clara and had them wait at the end of the universe for the night, believing it to be the perfect time to find out if the creatures were real. Finding a chance to confront the creature outside the ship, the Doctor sent Clara into the TARDIS and seemed to get a look at what he'd been chasing before the atmospheric shell broke and Orson had to rescue him. As the Doctor was knocked out, and the TARDIS seemed to be under attack, Clara used the telepathic circuits to fly the TARDIS away. The Doctor woke up to find Clara gone, but, before he could investigate, Clara re-entered the TARDIS and made him promise to leave and not find out where they had landed. Afterwards, the Doctor returned Orson and Clara to their own times and, satisfied by what he had learned, underlined the "LISTEN" that had been written on his chalkboard. (TV: 'Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"])
The Doctor planned to rendezvous with Clara at Coal Hill School, but instead arrived at a replica of the school on an unnamed planet, where Clara and Jeff Delobel, a French teacher, had been abducted by primitive aliens planning to infiltrate Earth via Coal Hill School. In order to thwart the invasion, the Doctor told the aliens a tale of Earth's Guardian, informing them that he was the guardian, scaring the aliens off. (COMIC: The Monsters of Coal Hill School [+]Loading...["The Monsters of Coal Hill School (comic story)"])
Returning to pick up Clara, and persuade her to away from a date with Danny in favour of other travel destinations, the Doctor received a call from Madame Karabraxos, who requested he free the Teller and its mate from the Bank of Karabraxos, as he had done on the day she met him. Realising the ramifications of this request, the Doctor built up the identity of "the Architect", using this identity to stage a bank heist for him to commit, with the assistance of Clara, an augmented human named Psi, and a shape shifting mutant human named Saibra. Using memory worms to erase the plan from their minds and prevent the Teller from alerting the young Karabraxos, the Doctor and Clara found themselves already in the Bank with their accomplices, their last memory being the TARDIS phone ringing.
Receiving instructions from the Architect on their location, objective, and the Bank's security system, the team infiltrated the Bank. Entering a safety deposit box, the team set of a dimensional shift bomb into a service corridor, where the team found a briefcase containing six teleporters disguised as atomic shredders. Seemingly losing Saibra and Psi to the shredders when the Teller locked onto them, the Doctor figured out that time travel was involved with the heist plan when a perfectly-timed solar storm unlocked the Bank's vault. Retrieving what the Architect had promised Psi and Saibra as payment, the Doctor and Clara were caught by the Teller and delivered to the bank manager, Ms. Delphox. After Delphox left them to be executed, the Doctor and Clara were saved by Psi and Saibra, who revealed the true nature of the "shredders".
Venturing into the Bank's private vault to find his and Clara's reward, the Doctor instead found Director Karabraxos, and discovered that Delphox, as well as a majority of the bank's staff, was an exact clone of Karabraxos. Seeing Karabraxos' hatred of her own clones caused the Doctor to have an epiphany on the identity of the Architect, and he gave his phone number to Karabraxos as she fled from the solar storm about to hit the Bank. Subjecting himself to the Teller's powers, the Doctor regained his lost memories and realised the true objective of the bank heist. Freeing the Teller and its mate to a place to live in solitude, the Doctor then parted ways with Psi and Saibra, giving them their rewards, and returned Clara home for her date. (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"])
The Doctor and Clara were left to the mercy of sand piranhas while chained to posts on a desert planet, (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) helped stranded Seevith launch their ship, (COMIC: More Than Meets the Eye [+]Loading...["More Than Meets the Eye (comic story)"]) and helped Professor Faster end the 17th century witch trials. (COMIC: Witch Work [+]Loading...["Witch Work (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Clara rendezvoused with fish people, (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) were saved from being "turned into toast by an Aaraanandal slime beast" by Simon, (PROSE: When the Wolves Came [+]Loading...["When the Wolves Came (short story)"]) had a dinner date in 1937 Berlin, (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"]) outran soldiers to escape in the TARDIS, (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) and saved a small village from a Cephla at Christmas. (COMIC: Gift Snatched! [+]Loading...["Gift Snatched! (comic story)"])
Planning to visit Eden 2, the Doctor was joined by a reluctant Clara, after she phoned him to drop her off at work after she overslept. When the duo arrived, they found the planet under assimilation by the Vladlack, but it turned out that the planet was a trap to lure in and arrest invaders of planets. Fearing that innocents could be inappropriately punished, the Doctor set up a warning beacon around the planet, then dropped Clara off at Coal Hill School. (COMIC: Freeze [+]Loading...["Freeze (comic story)"])
Meeting Danny and Courtney[[edit] | [edit source]]
During one of his visits to Clara, the Doctor discovered a Skovox Blitzer near Coal Hill School, and went in "deep cover" as the school's temporary caretaker to dispatch of the killer robot. To keep Clara from interfering, the Doctor revealed his plan was to use chronodyne generators to send the Blitzer thousands of years into the future.
However, the Doctor's plan was accidentally foiled by Danny Pink; Danny had seen the Doctor act suspiciously and believed the devices were of malicious intent, deactivating some. As a result, the Blitzer was sent a short time into the future, rather than centuries. After Clara introduced Danny as her boyfriend, the Doctor took a dislike to him as he was a former soldier and feared he wasn't good enough for Clara. He changed his plan to using a communication device to make the Blitzer think the Doctor was its superior.
When the Blitzer returned during the next evening, Danny used his military training to help keep the Blitzer occupied, allowing the Doctor to repair the malfunctioning device. After successfully commanding the Blitzer to deactivate, the Doctor took it into space and ejected it from the TARDIS, taking Clara's troublesome pupil Courtney Woods with him after she discovered his identity, deciding that there was no harm in having Courtney tag along as a travelling companion, (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) but didn't see anything special in her. (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"])
Further adventures with Clara[[edit] | [edit source]]
Discovering that a group of aliens were going to turn a planet of anthropomorphic pink hippopotami into stone, the Doctor intercepted the aliens at the early stages of their invasion and led them to ancient Egypt, where they petrified a large cat-like alien, creating the Sphinx and getting crushed in the process. He and Clara then returned to the planet of the anthropomorphic pink hippopotamuses to reverse the petrified effect. (COMIC: Petrified [+]Loading...["Petrified (DWA comic story)"])
The Doctor and Clara turned Captain Ratlett's crew against him and showed them a better life, (COMIC: The Wheelers [+]Loading...["The Wheelers (comic story)"]) were almost consumed by robotic bananas for stealing food from the moon Luna Schlosser, (COMIC: Five a Day [+]Loading...["Five a Day (comic story)"]) and saved the Cloud City of Mirmi 24 from being eaten by an alien snake. (COMIC: The Very Hungry Snake [+]Loading...["The Very Hungry Snake (comic story)"])
The Doctor sought out Dracksil Forg and foiled the plans of his customers who bought his evil ideas. (AUDIO: The Best-Laid Plans [+]Loading...["The Best-Laid Plans (audio story)"])
While attempting to hang flowers on the exterior of the TARDIS, the Doctor was spooked by a future Clara and fell out of the TARDIS into the orbit of an asteroid. When Clara's attempt to avert the crisis ended up causing it, the TARDIS was able to save the Doctor by creating a time field around him. (PROSE: A Long Way Down [+]Loading...["A Long Way Down (short story)"])
Heading for Rome, the Doctor and Clara wound up in a German forest, where they were apprehended and taken into a nearby encampment, where they learnt that robotic mosquitoes were spreading disease and killing off the soldiers. Tracking the energy fields of the mosquitoes to a tower in the woods, the Doctor discovered the occupants were using the mosquitoes to search for a cure to a plague infecting their own world. The Doctor convinced them to leave. (PROSE: Silver Mosquitoes [+]Loading...["Silver Mosquitoes (short story)"])
Fallout with Clara[[edit] | [edit source]]
At Clara's urging, the Doctor took her and Courtney to the Moon in 2049, so that Courtney could be the first girl on the Moon to bolster her confidence. Landing instead in a recycled space shuttle heading for the moon, the Doctor was informed by Captain Lundvik that the moon had inexplicably gained mass, and that she and her crew were going to use nuclear bombs to dispose of the additional mass. Investigating a disused mining base from a previous mission, the Doctor, his companions and the astronauts found corpses preserved in webs and research that suggested that the moon was disintegrating. Soon after, the group was attacked by a spider creature, which Courtney killed with washing up equipment, but not before Lundvik's whole crew was killed.
Taking a scared Courtney back to the TARDIS, the Doctor voiced his uncertainty of the Moon's fate to Clara, calling it a "grey area" in time. Exploring the moon's surface for the reason behind the deterioration, the Doctor, Clara and Lundvik discovered a horde of spider germs beneath the Moon's surface, as well as amniotic fluid, prompting the Doctor to investigate beneath the Moon for answers. Scanning the Moon's core, the Doctor discovered that the Moon was, in fact, an egg for an ancient creature that was hatching. Reuniting with Clara and Lundvik after the shuttle and the TARDIS fell into a canyon, the Doctor informed them of his discovery after establishing contact with Courtney's phone. While Clara and Lundvik argued about killing the creature for the sake of the Earth, the Doctor had Courtney bring the TARDIS to him via a DVD, deciding that it was not his place to decide the Moon's future, and left in his TARDIS for Clara, Lundvik and Courtney to decide on behalf of humankind.
After Clara chose to spare the creature, despite humanity voting for its death, the Doctor returned for the three women, taking them to a beach on Earth to see the creature hatch and the Moon harmlessly disintegrate in Earth's atmosphere. Confirming that the sight of the moon hatching kick started the humans pioneering into space, and seeing the creature hatch a new egg with same mass as the old Moon, the Doctor returned Courtney and Clara to Coal Hill School. However, Clara, angered by the position the Doctor had put her in, asked the Doctor if he had known the egg was harmless, which the Doctor confirmed as true. Tired of the Doctor's apathy, Clara argued with the Doctor about how he had almost caused her to kill an unborn creature, and, deeply hurt by the Doctor's constantly patronising attitude toward humanity in general, she told him to leave and not return for her. The Doctor was left stunned by her reaction and immediately took off. (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"])
Time away from Clara[[edit] | [edit source]]
Responding to a distress call from a Dalek prisoner aboard a Cyber-ship, the Doctor discovered that the Daleks, Cybermen and Sontarans were searching for the Orb of Fates to gain control of a powerful Time Lord weapon called the Starbane. The Doctor joined forces with the Dalek prisoner, who had been altered by the Cybermen and had "seen the light", and nicknamed it "Lumpy". Following the Orbs' artron energy to the Cyber-tombs of Telos, the Doctor restored a minimum of Lumpy's power, not trusting the Dalek to allow full use of its power, and sent him to retrieve the second Orb while he studied the first in the TARDIS.
As Lumpy descended into the depths of Telos, the Doctor discovered that the Orbs were powered by temporal energy, and the only way to destroy them was to create a temporal implosion. Leaving Telos for Sontar, the Doctor and Lumpy were trapped in a stasis field by Major Skar, but the Doctor was able to open the field and allow Lumpy to escape undetected while he stayed behind as a diversion. After Lumpy acquired the last Orb and deactivated the stasis field, the Doctor escaped with Lumpy. They next travelled to the Starbane, which was already occupied by Daleks. When the Doctor learned that Lumpy had not turned to good, he found a way to access Lumpy's controls remotely and used this ability to destroy the Starbane, while he piloted the TARDIS away. (GAME: The Doctor and the Dalek [+]Loading...["The Doctor and the Dalek (video game)"])
On Christmas Eve 2014, the Doctor teamed up with Ceri, an understudy, to stop an Addos attempt to recreate a Mummers play by genetically altering actors from the Palace Theatre. (PROSE: Behind You [+]Loading...["Behind You (short story)"])
The Doctor had several adventures with Gertie. These included exploring Mars before it became a dead planet, stopping a Gestalt Creature from superheating the planet's surface and being chased by a mummy. The Doctor eventually dropped her off in 1986 and promised to return. (COMIC: Super Gran [+]Loading...["Super Gran (comic story)"])
Clara re-joins[[edit] | [edit source]]
When Clara decided she and the Doctor should have "one last hurrah" before parting ways for good, the Doctor took her to the space-bound Orient Express, choosing the destination with an inkling that something exciting would happen after having been lured with phone calls, mysterious summons and free train tickets in the past. After discovering the death of an elderly passenger, and urging himself to investigate, the Doctor went to the engine room to examine the dead passenger's Excelsior Life Extender, meeting Chief Engineer Perkins in the process, and learned the legend of the Foretold. Seeking advice from Emile Moorhouse, a fellow passenger who was a Professor of Alien Mythology, the Doctor soon discovered a second death had occurred in the kitchen.
Confronting Captain Hector Quell with his theory, but getting ignored, the Doctor joined Perkins and Moorhouse in the engine room to research the deaths. Calling Clara to update her, the Doctor discovered that she and Maisie Pitt were trapped in a storage cart with a sarcophagus. Fearing that Clara was trapped with the Foretold, the Doctor tried to rewire the door open, only to find the sarcophagus empty, and himself under arrest by Quell for being a stowaway. However, after witnessing a third death first hand, Quell realised that the Doctor was right and allied with him, just as the Doctor deduced the true nature of the Orient Express; the passengers were all experts and scientists in specific fields of study, gathered there to study the Foretold. With a lab revealed and the hologram passengers disappearing, the train's computer, Gus, gave the scientists the necessary instructions and equipment. Losing Moorhouse to the Foretold, the Doctor and Perkins figured out that the Foretold was targeting the weaker passengers after looking at the medical history of the previous victims, just as Quell was killed by the creature, as he had post-traumatic stress, but not before he gave the Doctor the necessary description to defeat the Foretold.
Realising that Maisie was next due to her breakdowns, the Doctor told a reluctant Clara to bring Maisie to the lab, where the Foretold appeared to Maisie, but the Doctor saved her by implanting a replica of her grief into his head, confusing the Foretold into thinking the Doctor was Maisie. Deducing that the Foretold was an ancient soldier augmented with technology, the Doctor surrendered, and, after a final salute, the ancient soldier crumpled to dust, with only the technology that kept him alive remaining. With the objective completed, Gus released the air out of the cabin, but the Doctor beamed all the dying passengers into the TARDIS, and tried to hack Gus to find out who had created him, but this trigged a security measure, causing the train to self-destruct. Dropping everyone but Clara and Perkins off at the nearest civilised planet, the Doctor waited for Clara to awaken on a beach before explaining everything.
Back in the TARDIS, the Doctor invited Perkins to travel with him, but Perkins politely declined and he and the Doctor bade each other goodbye. Reflecting on a conversation she had with Maisie, Clara, having forgiven the Doctor, decided to continue travelling with him, telling the Doctor that her leaving was all Danny's idea. (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"])
Resumed travels with Clara[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from Unearthly Things & War Wounds needs to be added
Picking up a signal, the TARDIS arrived on the Quartz Wastes of Asmoray. Although the Doctor believed it was an uninhabited wasteland, Clara pointed out there was a harvester nearby extracting electricity from the quartz. The Doctor and Clara were brought aboard the harvester by two workers, where beings within the electricity had broken through and killed four workers. Their leader, Luther, was insistent on continuing their work regardless. Investigating, the Doctor and Clara found the creatures were only attacking because they were being sucked into the harvester's storage batteries. With Clara's help, the Doctor was able to free the electricity beings back into the quartz. (COMIC: The Body Electric [+]Loading...["The Body Electric (comic story)"])
Taking Clara to the Taj Mahal in India for a holiday, the Doctor was chosen to act as a hostage by Stellar Nexus while Nexus tried to get payment for Earth's supposed tax bills. When the Doctor challenged Nexus's claim by pointing out the illogic in his statement, and then insulted him by asking why he had never heard of Nexus's Empire, the Doctor was locked in a cell while an illusion of him was set against a dragon in a gladiator battle. When Clara managed to pilot the TARDIS into the Doctor's cell, the Doctor used his sonic screwdriver to deactivate Nexus's illusions, exposing that Stellar Nexus was a child-sized con artist whose entire Empire was an illusion. Sending the defeated Nexus away, the Doctor decided to treat Clara to a curry. (COMIC: Empire's Fall [+]Loading...["Empire's Fall (comic story)"])
The Doctor took Clara to see the Lights of Tanzarr, but instead found that the Nameless Mist had entered N-Space and was threatening to devour the cosmos. Originally wanting to flee, the Doctor was convinced by Clara to save the inhabitants of Ferrous-Ferra, and was inspired to recruit Cold Steel to headline the "loudest rock show in history of sound". While Clara triangulated the transmissions to cover the local galaxy, the Doctor used the loud music to thwart off the Nameless Mist. With the day saved, the Doctor returned to the concert to celebrate with crowd surfing. (COMIC: The Big Hush [+]Loading...["The Big Hush (comic story)"])
Trying to return Clara home, the Doctor instead landed in Bristol when the Boneless began draining power from the TARDIS, drawing it off course and causing the exterior to shrink. Sending Clara to find the cause, the Doctor re-entered the TARDIS to study the shrinking effect, only for the TARDIS to shrink further, trapping him inside. Equipping Clara with his psychic paper and sonic screwdriver, the Doctor used nanotechnology to hack into Clara's optic nerve and establish a visual contact with the outer world. After Clara recruited the aid of a local named Rigsy, pretending to be the Doctor while doing so, the duo discovered that creatures from a two-dimensional universe were killing and dissecting missing locals to understand their three-dimensional bodies.
After discovering that Clara had lied to him about Danny's approval, the Doctor realised that a mural dedicated to local missing people was the missing people, killed and worn by the creatures as camouflage. With Clara leading a gang of surviving community servers, the Doctor theorised that the creatures were trying to communicate, and that the deaths were but a mere misunderstanding. When the theory was proved wrong, the Doctor invented a device that could reverse the creatures' flattening abilities, which he called a 2Dis, as Clara and her gang retreated to an underground tunnel.
After Clara accidentally dropped the TARDIS onto a train line, the Doctor activated the TARDIS's siege mode to protect it from an oncoming train. Now unable to even open the doors, which had been removed by the activation of siege mode, and with the life support systems failing as the power drain continued, the Doctor congratulated Clara for being worthy of the title "Doctor", unsure if she could hear him or even if she was still alive. Clara and Rigsy were able to trick the creatures into supplying the TARDIS with the necessary power to restore it to full working conditions. Naming his adversaries "the Boneless", the Doctor banished them back to their home universe. (TV: Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"])
The Doctor landed on the Pollyanna, the first of the Ninth Era sunships, which had been on an expedition to circumnavigate the Sun. Seeing one of the Umbra come out of the Sun and enter a plasma intake, the Doctor rushed to the plasma lab and carried the injured Professor Alice Dubrovnik to safety. The Umbra, who had been trapped in the chromosphere for millions of years, began swarming the Pollyanna, anchoring the ship to the Sun to try and hijack it and use it as a way of reaching Earth. As the Umbra on board took on more humans as vehicles, the Doctor was ejected out of a plasma intake to attract the Umbra to his regret. He set up the final link to Alice's graviton inverter on the hull of the ship, allowing Alice to briefly boost the inverter and create a secondary gravity envelope, which inverted the gravity and the heat, freezing the Umbra on the ship to death. (COMIC: The Eye of Torment [+]Loading...["The Eye of Torment (comic story)"])
The Doctor brought Clara to the planet Isen VI to check on a faint warning signal of Gallifreian origin. They found the planet being terraformed by Kano Dollar and his company, Dollar Intergalactic, which woke up a Hyperion named Rann-Korr, who was hiding in hibernation since the alliance of races led by Rassilon defeated Hyperios. The Doctor managed to freeze Rann-Korr by reversing the terraforming process while using himself as a bait. (COMIC: Terrorformer [+]Loading...["Terrorformer (comic story)"])
The Doctor tried taking Clara to the 1641 frost fair, but was instead drawn off course and landed in the Sahara Desert in 1941, where they were captured by Nazis. While negotiating with Field Marshall Erwin Rommel, the Doctor learnt that the Tuareg tribesmen had made allies of "men from the stars", which he learned were the Sontarans, under the command of Commander Kygon Brox. Brox, believing the Doctor was looking for the Warsong, tried interrogating the Doctor with a mind scythe, but the Doctor instead used the link to gather information of the weapon, such as how the Warsong was taken to Earth, and that the Sontarans were seeking the weapon after signals from it began increasing exponentially.
After Nazi officer Heinz Bruckner was exposed as a Rutan spy, the Doctor witnessed the Warsong being triggered, just as he realised that Bruckner had taken Clara with him to the Warsong's activation. While having the Allied, Axis and Sontaran forces distract Bruckner by converging towards the Warsong, the Doctor and Rommel broke through its defences. Rommel threw Bruckner into the Warsong, killing him, while the Doctor destroyed the "orchestra" of the Warsong by using his sonic screwdriver to blow it up. Afterwards, he brought Clara to the frost fair. (COMIC: The Instruments of War [+]Loading...["The Instruments of War (comic story)"])
Answering a summons from Tiger Maratha to 2315 India, the Doctor and Clara found that he had been drained of life, and were told by his daughter, Priyanka, that Tiger had worked for a group known as the Family Scindia. While searching the Scindia's ancestral home to find information, the Doctor stumbled through a dimensional door into 1825 India, where he was attacked by a demon, but rescued by renegade Amazon Rani Jhulka. The Doctor and Rani found a necro-cloud harvesting the spirits of the dead, and then were attacked by more of the demons. Before they could be overpowered by the demons, the TARDIS arrived due to Priyanka having unintentionally activated the telepathic circuits, and the Doctor was informed of Clara being taken by the demons.
Returning to 2315, the Doctor, Priyanka and Rani found a final recorded message from Tiger made before his death, in which he explained he had collected three of the four mythic swords of the goddess Kali for the Family Scindia and had a premonition of evil over the swords. The Doctor was then summoned to see the patriarch of the Scindia family, Chandra Scindia, and deduced that they were beings known as the Kaliratha, putting themselves throughout time and space and Hindu mythology. Chandra revealed he had Clara hostage, forcing the Doctor to agree to find the fourth sword of Kali for them. The Doctor, Priyanka and Rani collected the fourth sword and returned to Chandra, who revealed he had used Clara as a host for the resurrection of Kali. As the Doctor battled with Kali, he revealed he had hid his sonic screwdriver in the fourth sword, so that Kali unwittingly freed the evil spirits from her and released Clara's body, while Rani killed Chandra. The Doctor, Clara, Rani and Priyanka then attended a festival in Mumbai. (COMIC: The Swords of Kali [+]Loading...["The Swords of Kali (comic story)"])
After Clara accidentally freed the Djinx from his imprisonment, the Doctor was trapped in his TARDIS by the vengeful entity. Sending Clara instructions on her phone, the Doctor was able to instruct Clara on how to defeat the Djinx and free himself. (COMIC: Doctor in a Bottle [+]Loading...["Doctor in a Bottle (comic story)"]) The Doctor and Clara then foiled a plot by Zorgo the Terrible, (COMIC: Zorgo the Terrible [+]Loading...["Zorgo the Terrible (comic story)"]) and eventually reunited with Gertie in 2016 atop of the Time dragon he acquired from him, (COMIC: Super Gran [+]Loading...["Super Gran (comic story)"]) as well as meet Diana Winter. (AUDIO: The Gods of Winter [+]Loading...["The Gods of Winter (audio story)"])
After stopping a hostile invasion in the future, the Doctor travelled to UNIT HQ, where he shut down a Void portal. The Doctor came into conflict with the Fractures, natives of the Void that possessed humans, who believed they had to drag anyone marked with Void stuff into the Void to protect reality from unravelling. The chaos was started by a UNIT scientist from an alternate Earth, Paul Foster, who wished to be with a version of his family. Recruiting UNIT, Kate Stewart and the Fosters' help, the Doctor and Clara opened the Void, drawing the Fractures back inside and freeing their victims. At Clara's insistence, the Doctor allowed the alternate Paul to join his family in N-Space, knowing the Fractures were entirely out for him now. (COMIC: The Fractures [+]Loading...["The Fractures (comic story)"])
After visiting an uninhabited world, Clara asked the Doctor about Marinus, but he did not remember the planet. That night, as he slept, the Doctor worked out that Clara was up to something, and woke up to find Clara missing and the TARDIS in 1923 Paris. Looking for Clara in a café, the Doctor ran into his two previous incarnations, who were also heading to meet their respective companions.
When the three Doctors barged into the café to confront each other, Clara, Alice Obiefune and Gabby Gonzalez explained that an alternative Gabby from a bad future had warned them of the plan devised by a future "alternate" version of the Twelfth Doctor, which involved using a continuity bomb to make his timeline concrete, and had then planned to rise the Voord on Marinus to be a new race of Time Lords and to conquer the universe. Realising that the picture still existed of the three Doctors arguing, they decided that going to Marinus was still part of the new timeline, and the three left Paris calmly, avoiding the Blinovitch Limitation Effect that summoned the Reapers and destroyed the café.
On Marinus, the Doctors posed for the picture and purposefully fell into the continuity bomb, entering the Eleventh Doctor's alternate timeline and used the TARDIS to go to the Voord's pocket universe. Met with Voord soldiers, the Twelfth Doctor pretended to be his alternate self to gain authority, but a Voord soldier, believing the deception, connected the Twelfth Doctor to the Voord's group mind, where he encountered his alternate self, and the two fought within the mindscape. Realising that his alternate self was too powerful to take on alone, the Doctor brought his other selves and their companions into the hive mind. Inside the group mind, the Tenth Doctor turned off the city's force field, threatening to wipe them out with acid lest he change the timeline, and the Eleventh Doctor reprogrammed the dimensional controls to return the Voord to the main universe. Convinced by Clara, the alternate Twelfth Doctor agreed and let history take its normal course, regressing the Voord and Marinus back to their primitive evolution.
Seeing the new Marinus, populated by large cities and primitive Voord, the six returned to Paris, and considered eating at the café, until they saw the Ninth Doctor and Rose Tyler seated inside, with the Twelfth Doctor saying that the Ninth Doctor had been left out of the plot due to there being no timeline that even the continuity bomb could find where he was anything but "fantastic". As the groups departed, the Twelfth Doctor noted to Clara that she and himself would slowly forget the event as well, as they had both learned about their own futures. (COMIC: Four Doctors [+]Loading...["Four Doctors (comic story)"])
Following Clara's request to meet the Greek storyteller Homer, the Doctor found himself drugged by an innkeeper and bound to a post with Homer and Clara to be fed to a bunch of Cyclopes. Before he could be eaten, however, the Doctor managed to convince the Cyclopes to listen to Homer's harp, and the young man's music soothed the hungry Cyclopes to sleep. Using a sub-conscience reading reality device, the Doctor discovered that the beasts were refugees from a war that had destroyed their world and, after using his device to convert them to a vegetarian diet, the Doctor let Clara convince them to live in peace in the hills. (COMIC: Doctor on the Menu [+]Loading...["Doctor on the Menu (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Clara travelled to a galactic auction in Earth's orbit, where unclaimed storage was being bid on, with the storage pod belonging to Hyphen T Hyphen, a reclusive collector, containing a mother Rigellan Hyper-Kraken, which began killing everyone when the pod was opened. Before the mother Hyper-Kraken's eggs could hatch, the Doctor widened the dimensional shunt's focus on the Hyper-Kraken, her eggs and the storage pods and safely transported them elsewhere. (COMIC: Space Invaders! [+]Loading...["Space Invaders! (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Clara travelled to the Sands Hotel in 1964 Las Vegas after the Doctor found some tickets to see Frankie Seneca in a drawer. After proving to be a good gambler, he caught the attention of Johnny Dragotta, who accused him of cheating. However, they were distracted when Mikey Nero, who was thought to have been killed, arrived, demanding control of the hotel. The Doctor unmasked Mikey as a disguised agent of the Cybock Imperium, who began attacking the hotel. While trying to immobilise it, the Doctor was grabbed and throttled by the Imperium, but was saved by Sonny Lawson.
The Doctor and Sonny discovered the Imperium's ships, and rescued Clara from their captivity. Clara gave the Doctor a Time-Gun of Rassilon, which had been in the alien's possession. As the Imperiums attacked the hotel, the Doctor intervened and offered the aliens a game of Rassilon's roulette with the gun. Although they agreed, the Doctor knew the gun would not work on a Time Lord, and it would also self-destruct if one attempted to use it on a Time Lord. When the aliens' leader, Kronos, attempted to shoot the Doctor with the gun, it accordingly wiped away his timeline, and the other Cybocks with him. The Doctor, Clara and Sonny then went to see Seneca perform. (COMIC: Gangland [+]Loading...["Gangland (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Clara visited the liberation of Paris in 1944, where they thwarted a plan by the Darapok Empire to brainwash humanity into destroying itself by destroying their transmitter on the Eiffel Tower, and then frightening them off. (COMIC: Trust [+]Loading...["Trust (comic story)"])
The Doctor landed in London, only to find it and the rest of the world overrun by trees after Maebh Arden, a student of Coal Hill Year 8 Gifted and Talented Group under Clara and Danny's care, found the TARDIS. With his theories constantly being proven wrong, the Doctor came to the conclusion that the trees' sudden overgrowth was an act of aggression, while also dealing with Clara's students in his TARDIS after Clara and Danny arrived to collect Maebh, only for Maebh to slip away in the commotion, just as the Doctor noticed her homework had predicted the events of that day. Following Maebh deeper into the forest, the Doctor discovered that a sentience identifying itself as "the life that prevail[ed]" had caused the overgrowth, in preparation for a devastating solar flare about to hit the Earth. Believing Earth doomed, Clara inquired him to use the TARDIS as a lifeboat, only to inform him that she had said that to get him back to his TARDIS so he could survive the catastrophe alone. Despite some reluctance, Clara eventually convinced him to leave.
Immediately afterwards, having discovered upon further reflection that the trees were going to absorb the harmful solar flares by pumping the atmosphere with excess oxygen, the Doctor returned to Clara and explained his discovery to the Gifted and Talented Group. When he was informed of a government operation aiming to destroy the trees, the Doctor opened every mobile network on the planet to allow Maebh the opportunity to deliver a speech written by the Gifted and Talented Group to leave the trees alone. With Danny taking the children to their homes, the Doctor and Clara watched the trees that had grown around the world harvesting and extinguishing the solar fire in the TARDIS, and then returned to watch the trees disappear on Clara's balcony. (TV: In the Forest of the Night [+]Loading...["In the Forest of the Night (TV story)"])
The Doctor attempted to take Clara to Blackpool, but they ended up arriving in 2089, by which point the pleasure beach had become an overgrown jungle. The Doctor befriended a wounded donkey he named Meghan, Who had been shot by a man called Triss, who was planning a hunting trip in hover pods powered by Blackpool Tower. The Doctor shut down the power, ending Triss' hunting plans. The Doctor and Clara had a dance in the Blackpool Tower ballroom, and then he enjoyed a play in the water with Meghan. (PROSE: All the Empty Towers [+]Loading...["All the Empty Towers (short story)"])
While taking a helicopter ride for a tour of Snowcap University in 2048 Antarctica, the Doctor and Clara learnt that one of the students, Polly Evans, had stayed behind at the end of term to join the classified Project Sub-Zero. When another student, Quinn Norton, who also a part of Project Sub-Zero, was killed in a helicopter crash the Doctor and Clara narrowly avoided being on along with Polly's father George, they returned to Snowcap U to investigate. With the help of the spy Paul South, the Doctor found an ice cavern where the missing students had been experimented on, engineered by Dr. Patricia Audley to survive in extreme cold. To their shock, the Doctor and Clara also met Winnie Clarence, one of Clara's splinters, who refused to accept her only purpose was to die saving the Doctor. Paul and Winnie released most of the imprisoned humans from captivity.
Using his sonic screwdriver, the Doctor transmitted a signal that caused Dr. Audley's animals to go wild. After feigning betrayal of the two, Winnie threw the Doctor the key to free the hybrid subjects from their cells, and saved the Doctor's life by pulling Dr. Audley into a vat of liquid ice after Audley pulled a gun on him. Dr. Audley was killed, but Winnie survived when she unwittingly had a syringe of Dr. Audley's experimental blue blood serum injected into her, allowing her to live inside the ice. Clara realised that this meant that not all of the splinters died saving the Doctor, and several of them had lives of their own. (COMIC: Blood and Ice [+]Loading...["Blood and Ice (comic story)"])
The darkest hour[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from Fear Is a Superpower needs to be added
After Clara suggested going to a volcano when the Doctor collected her from her flat, she attempted to put a mood patch on his neck, but the Doctor realised what she was doing and turned it on her. Not realising she was the one drugged, Clara imagined being at the volcano and throwing all the Doctor's TARDIS keys into lava, to blackmail him to save Danny, who had been killed in a road accident. The Doctor refused, and Clara came out of her dream state after destroying all the TARDIS keys. (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) Due to lingering memories of becoming a recluse after a betrayal from Clara, (COMIC: Four Doctors [+]Loading...["Four Doctors (comic story)"]) the Doctor forgave Clara, and they duo went to find a way for her to see Danny again. Arriving at 3W due to the telepathic circuits, the Doctor and Clara were greeted by Missy, who identified herself as a greeting droid and summoned Dr. Chang, who showed them the use of dark water in the mausoleum. Clara received a call from Danny, who was in the Nethersphere, and the Doctor and Chang left her to take it.
The Doctor and Chang discovered that the water tanks that held the bodies were being drained by Missy, who killed Chang and revealed that all the tanks held Cybermen, who were preparing to invade Earth. Escaping the building, which he discovered was St Paul's Cathedral, the Doctor tried to warn away nearby people, but Missy called out his warnings as insanity, and told him it was too late. The Doctor asked for her identity, and Missy revealed she was the Master, (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) before she and the Doctor were apprehended by UNIT and brought aboard the plane Boat One, where the Doctor was made President of Earth to battle the Cybermen. Missy overpowered UNIT, killed Osgood, and attempted to kill the Doctor by blowing up the plane, but the Doctor survived his fall to Earth by skydiving into the TARDIS.
He travelled to a cemetery and reunited with Clara, who was comforting a converted Danny. Missy arrived and, as a "birthday present", gave the Doctor control of all the Cybermen. Missy planned to turn the Doctor into the leader of the new army, intending to prove that the two of them were not that different after all, believing that she had put him in the impossible position of either accepting control of the army and using it to "save" the universe or letting humanity die and conquer the universe as the Cybermen. However, reflecting on his past, the Doctor realised that he was just a man in a box who travelled around to help where he could, and then turned command of the army over to Danny, who led the Cybermen into the clouds, where they self-destructed and stopped the rainfall from converting the living. A devastated Missy told the Doctor he could find Gallifrey in its original location with coordinates she provided, but Clara threatened to kill Missy for what she had done, until the Doctor prepared to do it himself in order to "save [Clara's] soul". However, a rogue Cyberman disintegrated Missy instead, (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) though the Doctor knew she had found a way to survive. (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) The Doctor realised that the Cyberman was his old friend the Brigadier and saluted him, fulfilling a lifelong wish of his old friend, who then flew away.
The Doctor later entered the coordinates Missy gave him into the TARDIS, but found out the coordinates were false and led to nowhere. With his only way to find Gallifrey gone, the Doctor attacked the TARDIS console in a furious rage, before breaking down emotionally. Meeting up with Clara in a café, and believing that she was back with Danny, who had the power to leave the Nethersphere when given control of the Cybermen, the Doctor lied to her that he had found Gallifrey so as to allow her to continue with her life. Upon hearing this, Clara told him that she was happy and ready to settle down with Danny, and they both bid farewell and parted ways. (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"])
Dreaming of Santa[[edit] | [edit source]]
Sometime later, the Doctor was attacked by a dream crab, which put him into a scenario where he was brooding alone in his drifting TARDIS, (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) and was snapped out of his funk when he heard Santa Claus knocking on the TARDIS door, asking the Doctor what he wanted for Christmas. (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) The Doctor immediately travelled to Clara's home and collected her from her rooftop, where she had also encountered Santa. Urging her to believe in him, they arrived at a North Pole base, which they found was under attack from dream crabs. Santa arrived to help with the problem, but Clara was attacked by a crab and fell into a dream state. As no one could find a way to remove the crab from her face, the Doctor let himself be attacked by one to get her out of her dream before the crab could kill her.
Entering Clara's dream, the Doctor found she was dreaming of spending Christmas with Danny, and learned that Danny was dead. The Doctor urged her to break out of the dream, after Danny bid her farewell. Waking up in the base, the Doctor came to the realisation that everyone in the base was dreaming, having been attacked by crabs after they arrived. They woke up from the dream and the Doctor and Clara prepared to leave, but Clara reminded the Doctor of Santa having been on her roof, and he realised they were still dreaming from different places and times. The infected personnel in the base began to attack the survivors, but everyone managed to escape by dreaming Santa was flying them home. The Doctor, Clara and the base scientists flew over London as they each woke up back in their own times.
Waking up where he had been, the Doctor travelled to Clara's home and removed the dream crab attached to her, only to find it had been sixty-two years since he left her and she was now an old woman. Clara filled him in on the many things she had done in her years, but the Doctor felt remorseful of leaving her when he did. Santa suddenly appeared and asked the Doctor what he'd do if he had another chance, and the Doctor woke up from his dream, this time for real. He saved the younger Clara from the crab. Spurred on by what could have happened to her, the Doctor invited her to resume her travels with him, and she accepted. (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"])
Second chance with Clara[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from The Gods of Winter, Selfie, The House of Winter, Zorgo the Terrible, Super Gran, The Sins of Winter, The Memory of Winter, Royal Blood, Big Bang Generation, & Deep Time needs to be added
The Doctor tried to throw Clara a surprise birthday party with varying incarnations and forms of herself, but after Clara noted the rules of time preventing one from meeting themselves, he admitted they were just disguised aliens. (COMIC: The Partying of the Ways [+]Loading...["The Partying of the Ways (comic story)"]) They next went to Cinema Paradoxo, which had every movie ever playing infinitely. The Doctor chose to see a silent film, which turned out to star actual Silents, resulting in them forgetting the film. (COMIC: Silver Screenesis [+]Loading...["Silver Screenesis (comic story)"]) The Doctor and Clara admired some dogs, not realising that they were almost trapped in a time eddy by Zorgo. (COMIC: Zorgo the Terrible [+]Loading...["Zorgo the Terrible (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Clara attended an auction of the works of Lady Josephine and purchased a living animae particle portrait of her. (COMIC: Briarwood [+]Loading...["Briarwood (comic story)"]) Knowing that the portrait would eventually become Josie Day, a companion of his eighth incarnation, the Doctor left her in 21st century Wales in an old cottage of his, telling her the Eighth Doctor would show her the things she needed to see. The Doctor also left a to-do list in his copy of Jane Eyre for his eighth incarnation to find, knowing that the adventures would help Josie build her self-confidence and see herself as far more than a painting. (COMIC: A Matter of Life and Death [+]Loading...["A Matter of Life and Death (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Clara watched the Eighth Doctor and Josie as they acknowledged the events that had brought them together. (COMIC: A Matter of Life and Death [+]Loading...["A Matter of Life and Death (comic story)"])
The Doctor learnt that an invasion fleet of Megrati were planning to attack the planet of Lemaria, a plan he had previously stopped in his first incarnation, and sent them an invitation to give them some time to talk. While waiting for them to arrive, he took part in a Freedom Day celebratory play about the original defeat of the Lemaria, playing the role of the First Doctor. The Doctor realised his fifth incarnation, Adric, Nyssa and Tegan Jovanka were in the audience before the real Megrati arrived. As his past self and companions watched, the Doctor convinced the Megrati to leave the planet by threatening to destroy their ships, though revealed to the play's audience as the Megrati left that he was bluffing. (PROSE: The Constant Doctor [+]Loading...["The Constant Doctor (short story)"])
The Doctor learnt from Hitch that a sentient super-weapon called the Hadax Ura had gone missing, with Hitch putting together a recovery team and needing the Doctor's technical expertise. The Doctor agreed to join the team, dragging Clara away from her class to assist. As the ship carrying the team headed for the planet carrying the weapon, Unnamed BX-4, the Hadax Ura shot the ship down, revealing the weapon's location, but everyone on board was able to escape with jetpacks. Clara was attacked by pterosaurs and dropped into the Jungle.
The Doctor went off on his own to look for Clara, and found Clara with an organic avatar who had taken on the appearance of Danny. The avatar told them that the Hadax Ura had been "devouring" the Jungle, and turning its indigenous life into an army, and asked them to either destroy the weapon or take it elsewhere. The Doctor realised that it intended to end the war between the Hub Alliance and the Axis Worlds, and the Hadax Ura began augmenting the crew to become its foot soldiers. Believing it had augmented Clara as well, the Hadax Ura had actually linked the Jungle's computer systems to its own after augmenting the avatar. The avatar appeared to shut down the Hadax Ura and its augmented soldiers, but the Hadax Ura had tricked Hitch's team to bring it on board the lander as a means of escape for the Hadax Ura. The Doctor took his jet pack to infiltrate the lander, and found the Hadax Ura had taken over Hitch's body. Realising that Hitch's mind had been completely overwritten by the Hadax Ura, the Doctor ejected the Hitch's body out of the lander's airlock, burning the Hadax Ura up on re-entry unprotected. (COMIC: Spirits of the Jungle [+]Loading...["Spirits of the Jungle (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Clara arrived inside the observation capsule Genetrix above Venus, but the capsule separated from the Lovell Platform when the tether connecting them broke. The Doctor discovered that the gas samples taken by the crew were actually the indigenous life form on Venus, and that the separation was a result of a liberation attempt, and ordered the samples to be released. Grateful for their freedom, the Venusians lifted the pod to safety. (PROSE: Sunset Over Venus [+]Loading...["Sunset Over Venus (short story)"])
The Doctor and Clara arrived in 2015 London to find it as a burnt wasteland with traces of human DNA amongst the ashes. While Clara went exploring, the Doctor was attacked by a man, who warned him "the scorched" were rising after the Doctor subdued him with Venusian karate, only for him to be possessed by Hyperions. The Doctor then found himself facing many Hyperion-possessed humans, but was able to defeat them with the help of Clara and Sam, a firefighter. Sam brought the Doctor and Clara to the London Underground, where people had taken refuge from the Hyperion invasion. The Doctor, reappointed by UNIT as President of Earth, learnt that the Hyperions had divided England up with firewalls, particularly operating machinery in Sussex.
The Doctor, Clara and Sam bypassed the Sussex firewall with the TARDIS and found that captured humans were being enslaved by the Hyperions to build a fusion web. Clara tried to intervene, but in doing so caused Hyperion "angels" to appear. Fleeing back to the TARDIS, an angel got on board, but Sam knocked her out by spraying her with a fire extinguisher. Deducing that the angel had been transmogrified by the Hyperions, the Doctor bio-linked her to the TARDIS telepathic circuits to restore her human consciousness. The TARDIS materialised by the sun, where the Hyperions were building the fusion web to consume its energy. Although the Doctor believed they were out of range, the web was already powerful enough to attack the TARDIS.
Dra-Khan, a Hyperion warlord, stormed the TARDIS and revealed the Hyperions survived the destruction of Hyperios by hiding on Neptune. The angel, in actuality the reanimated human Weir, regained her consciousness and attacked Dra-Khan and the other Hyperions, driving them away. The Doctor persuaded Weir to join their side, and after defeating an onslaught of Scorched in London, revealed he had weaponised a cold bomb to defeat the Hyperions. Back at the Sussex firewall, the Doctor released the human slaves from captivity as Clara and Sam attacked the base. Sam attempted to detonate the cold bomb, but it failed and he was killed. The Doctor conceded that the Hyperions had won, as the fusion web was completed. But when it was activated, he revealed that the bomb had merely been a distraction so that he could hack the TARDIS into the web and pull the Hyperions five billion years into the future, where the sun died. As the web began collapsing, the Doctor and Clara escaped to the TARDIS as Weir held off the Hyperions. However, unwilling to let anyone else die after Sam's death, the Doctor pulled Weir's psychic essence from the TARDIS's telepathic circuits, allowing her presence to be with her family. (COMIC: The Hyperion Empire [+]Loading...["The Hyperion Empire (comic story)"])
Arriving on the SS Berry Gordy in the 53rd century, the Doctor and Clara saved pop-star India Summer from being kidnaped by a band of Skinks hired by her manager, Gavor Vek-Haart. (COMIC: Hyperballad [+]Loading...["Hyperballad (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Clara responded to a party invitation from Susan, only to discover they had been lured into a trap by the Toymaker, who explained that his Toyroom was breaking down from old age, and that he had entrapped the Doctor for help. The Toymaker believed he tricked the Doctor into relinquishing his TARDIS in a game of Truth or Dare, but the Doctor was aware of how the Toymaker only wanted his help if he could win against him and willingly let him do so, empathising with him. The TARDIS materialised around the Toyroom and the Doctor rebuilt it with the Zero Room after escaping to the control room with Clara, allowing the Toymaker to have "his magical toy box". (COMIC: Relative Dimensions [+]Loading...["Relative Dimensions (comic story)"])
A force brought the TARDIS off course, where it was forced to land on a place the Doctor nicknamed "Planet Wet". When the Doctor exited the TARDIS, the hillock swallowed the TARDIS whole, and the Doctor was forced to find his way to a building, where he found the TARDIS was being held in an online auction by GalMart when it was claimed as salvage. During the bid, the Doctor pointed out that he still had the key on him, leaving the winner WinnerBoi with a ship he couldn't access. While pretending to hand over the deed of ownership to GalMart, he instead wrote a Trojan virus in Ancient High Gallifreyan to infest the GalMart systems. He compelled the GalMart computer to purchase the anti-Trojan, and to declare the TARDIS as a bootleg or counterfeit item, but to transfer the money to WinnerBoi for the amount he had paid to buy the TARDIS. (PROSE: Buyer's Remorse [+]Loading...["Buyer's Remorse (short story)"])
Coming to pick up Clara, the Doctor was persuaded to play boards games instead. Losing, the Doctor repeatedly went back in time to the moment he arrived so he could win a game before Clara; this desire consumed him, resulting in the Doctor making over eighty-seven attempts and becoming heavily ragged before he finally won a match. Unaware of the Doctor's actions, Clara headed for the TARDIS. (COMIC: The Board Games [+]Loading...["The Board Games (comic story)"])
The Doctor arrived on the hospital planet Gehenna while it was under siege from the Weeping Angels in the form of a marble dust storm that spread a plague that turned others into Weeping Angels, and discovered that Chief Medical Officer Perinne had been keeping an Angel prisoner for experiments, with the networked Salus masks the medics wore creating a Weeping Angel virus. Unable to salvage the situation, Perinne forced the Doctor to leave as he succumbed to the Angels' virus. (PROSE: Grey Matter [+]Loading...["Grey Matter (short story)"])
Abandoning Davros[[edit] | [edit source]]
While looking for a bookshop, the Doctor found himself on a battlefield during the Thousand Year War on Skaro, and encountered a young boy trapped in a field of Handmines, and, during the rescue attempt, learned that the boy was Davros. When he "should have been brave enough, [and] strong enough to do something better", the Doctor fled the battlefield, unwilling to save or kill the boy who would create the Daleks. Afterwards, an older Davros, having become "very sick", asked to see the Doctor "while there [was] still time", (TV: The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (TV story)"], The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) and sent Colony Sarff to search for him. The Doctor prepared a confession dial to be delivered to Missy, and went to the planet Karn to meet with Ohila and the Sisterhood of Karn. After hiding from Colony Sarff behind a rock, (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) the Doctor was told by Ohila that he owed Davros nothing by partaking in a confrontation, warning him his actions would spell his end. Giving Ohila his confession dial before departing, the Doctor proclaimed that he would find a rock to meditate on in preparation for his possible destruction. (WC: Prologue [+]Loading...["Prologue (webcast)"])
Travelling to Essex in 1138 A.D., (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) the Doctor gained a servant in Bors when he removed a splinter from him. After three hours of meditation in a castle, (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) during which he thought back to his previous incarnations, (POEM: Full Stop [+]Loading...["Full Stop (poem)"]) the Doctor decided he needed better drinking water, and gathered the locals to dig a well. After eleven days of finding a supply of water, and another day to construct the well, the Doctor, rather than resume his meditation, decided to make improvements to the castle, such as adding a sunroof to the throne room, (TV: The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (TV story)"]) building a first-class, child-friendly visitor centre, teaching the locals mathematics and introducing the word "Dude" to the 12th century. (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) While additions to the throne room went underway, the Doctor had a conversation with Bors about him avoiding his meditation. Four days afterwards, the Doctor finally decided to begin mediating again before leaving the next day, and also divulged to Bors the reasons he had for being reclusive. (TV: The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (TV story)"])
For his last day at the castle, the Doctor decided to have an axe fight with Bors, and arrived on a tank playing an electric guitar. While trying to get the crowd to understand his jokes, he realised Clara and Missy had tracked him down, whereupon Bors was attacked by Colony Sarff, who demanded that the Doctor attend to Davros. Reminded of his shame at leaving the young Davros behind, the Doctor reluctantly agreed to go as a prisoner, with Clara insisting she and Missy be taken prisoner too. Sarff brought the trio to Davros' infirmary, where he was dying. While Clara and Missy were left in a cell block, the Doctor went to see Davros, who revealed to the Doctor that they were on Skaro. On a monitor, the Doctor saw that Clara and Missy had escaped their cell and been captured by the Daleks, who had also procured the TARDIS. Missy was seemingly exterminated as she tried to convince the Daleks to work with her, with Clara quickly being exterminated as well and the TARDIS was seemingly destroyed. (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"])
As the TARDIS was redistributed, (TV: The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"]) Davros mocked the Doctor for his compassion towards others resulting in his victory against him, (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) but the Doctor, wielding a Dalek gunstick, ignored Davros and forcibly removed him from his chair so he could ride in it and be safe from the Daleks' firepower. He then headed to the congregation of Daleks, and mocked them for being unable to shoot him when they tried. After his demand to know what happened to Clara was answered by the Supreme Dalek in confirmation of her demise, the Doctor was restrained by Colony Sarff and brought back to Davros's infirmary, where Davros revealed that he was able to sustain his life by siphoning off the Daleks' heartbeats through his life support system, and offered to give the Doctor control of this to commit unprovoked genocide upon the Daleks. Though tempted, the Doctor chose to be compassioned and refused to act, taking the opportunity retrieve his sonic sunglasses when Davros presented him with his confessional dial.
Fully convinced that Davros was truly dying when the Kaled scientist looked upon him with his real eyes, the Doctor decided to give Davros his last wish of seeing the sunlight with his true eyes one last time. When Davros could no long keep his eyes open by the time the sun rose, the Doctor proceeded to give Davros a bit of regenerative energy, but was seized by Colony Sarff and drained to regenerate Davros and all the Daleks on Skaro. He was saved when Missy killed Sarff, and revealed to Davros that he had guessed his plan all along and had tricked Davros; the regenerative energy Davros had used to renew himself and his creations had also been distributed through the sewers beneath the city, and the decaying remains of the ancient Daleks they contained had awoken and begun to emerge. While fleeing the city, the Doctor and Missy came across a Dalek that Missy claimed had killed Clara. The Doctor demanded the Dalek tell him if this was true, but the Dalek kept babbling incoherently. When it began to beg for mercy, the Doctor, suspicious, demanded it open its casing, and found that Clara had been trapped inside the Dalek by Missy, and the Doctor told her to run as he freed Clara.
The Doctor and Clara then entered the room housing the congregation of Daleks, and the Doctor used his sonic sunglasses to rematerialise the redistributed TARDIS and flee. As he and Clara watched the Dalek City crumble, the Doctor realised that he could teach mercy to the young Davros. (TV: The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"]) Armed with the Dalek gunstick, the Doctor returned to the misty battlefield as the young Davros cried for help, (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) and saved him by firing on the Handmines. When questioned whether he was the enemy, the Doctor told Davros that friends and enemies didn't matter "so long as [there was] mercy," and then led the boy to his home. (TV: The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"])
Continued adventures with Clara[[edit] | [edit source]]
While Clara was still wearing the same clothes she had during the adventure on Skaro, (TV: The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"]) the two found the TARDIS drawn off-course and its power supply depleted, coming to an emergency landing in a Nevada desert. The Doctor stayed inside the TARDIS while Clara wandered out and met an older version of the Twelfth Doctor, from a point in his timeline where she was dead, as well as her own future self. This was all part of a temporal crisis affecting all of the Doctor's incarnations, and, indeed, all TARDISes in the universe, which the Thirteenth Doctor and K9 Mark IV were working to resolve, as well as the future version of the Twelfth Doctor encountered by Clara. (GAME: Lost in Time [+]Loading...["Lost in Time (video game)"])
Returning to Coal Hill School to pick up Clara, the Doctor found the world had been gassed into a deep sleep by the Somnosian Empire. Using an antidote to awaken the populace, the Doctor allowed the Somnosians to retreat when the armed forces arrived. (COMIC: Beauty Sleep [+]Loading...["Beauty Sleep (comic story)"]) The Doctor and Clara then continued their travels together, encountering "monsters, [and] things blowing up," and also visiting a place where people with long necks had celebrated New Year's Day for two centuries. (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) Following the events involving Missy and deciding he was an idiot instead of a good or bad man, (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) the Doctor also began to make an effort to act nicer, with Clara giving him a selection of cue cards to read from in case he got frustrated. (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], et. al)
While in an empty room, the Doctor also took a moment to warn an audience about the Easter Bunny ahead of the Easter holiday, warning that "free eggs" were inherently suspicious. (WC: Happy Easter from the Doctor! [+]Loading...["Happy Easter from the Doctor! (webcast)"])
Ghosts on the Drum[[edit] | [edit source]]
Arriving in an underwater base called the Drum in 2119, the Doctor found that the TARDIS was "unhappy" with her surroundings, and he and Clara then wandered around the base to find it empty with signs of a struggle. Seeing two apparitions of a Tivolian and human male, they stumbled upon a spaceship marked with foreign wording, which the Doctor found untranslatable. The apparitions then chased the Doctor and Clara to a Faraday cage, containing the base's crew; Cass, Tim Lunn, Alice O'Donnell, Mason Bennett and Richard Pritchard. Using his UNIT credentials to gain their trust, the crew explained to the Doctor that the man, Jonathan Moran, had been their captain before his death, and that they had been menaced by the apparitions only at the night since discovering the ship, which led them to believe that they were ghosts, which the Doctor debunked.
As the Drum entered day mode, the Doctor learned more about the base from the crew, and further investigated the spaceship, discovering that one of the power cells was missing and a suspended animation chamber was unaccountable. After re-evaluating the situation caused the Doctor to conclude that the ghosts were genuine, the Drum's night mode was activated by the ghosts, and the Cloister Bell began to ring. With Prichard killed by Moran, and the ghosts trying to lure a medical team to the Drum, the Doctor ordered the base be locked under quarantine and encouraged the surviving crew to help him capture the ghosts.
Trapping the ghosts in the Faraday cage, the Doctor found they were repeating coordinates to the flooded town's church, and that the ghosts had been artificially created to act as a homing beacon. After Bennett retrieved the ship's suspended animation chamber, the Doctor found that the coordinates had been the symbols within the spaceship, and decided to go back in time to before the town's flooding to find the truth of the matter. As the Doctor, Clara and the crew made their way to the TARDIS, the ghosts began flooding water into the Drum, resulting in emergency doors coming down and splitting the group in half. Clara was trapped in the base with Cass and Lunn, while the Doctor set off in the TARDIS with O'Donnell and Bennett. (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"])
Arriving in 1980, the Doctor, O'Donnell and Bennett encountered the Tivolian, Albar Prentis, while he was alive, using the spaceship, which had yet to have the wording inscribed, as a hearse to transport a dead warlord known as the Fisher King. Wanting to destroy the signal, the Doctor demanded Prentis hand over the device broadcasting, but Prentis was oblivious to what the Doctor was talking about. Contacting Clara, the Doctor found that a ghost of himself had appeared in 2119, mouthing the names of the dead and those yet to die, with Clara second after O'Donnell. The Doctor was shaken at the prospect of him dying, but, despite Clara's urging to change time, he insisted he had to die. The Doctor's ghost then entered the Drum and released the other ghosts, forcing Clara, Cass and Lunn back to the Faraday Cage, where the phone signal was cut off. Before they left, however, the Doctor was able to get a look at his ghost and see him change his message.
Realising O'Donnell was going to die, the Doctor and Bennett tried to persuade her to stay in the TARDIS, but she refused. Returning to the ship, the trio found Prentis dead, the writing written and themselves being hunted by the Fisher King. Pursued into a building, O'Donnell was separated from the group and killed by the Fisher King, fulfilling the Ghost Doctor's prophecy. The Doctor and Bennett then tried to go back to the future to save Clara from being killed, but the TARDIS instead sent them back in time by thirty minutes, where the Doctor had to force Bennett from interfering in Prentis and O'Donnell's deaths. Sending Bennett back to the TARDIS, the Doctor set one of the ship's power cells to destroy the dam above the town. Confronting the Fisher King, the Doctor was informed that the ghosts were signalling to the Fisher King's armada to rescue him and enslave the Earth. Just as he was about to be shot, the Doctor lied about erasing the writing from the ship, provoking the Fisher King to return to the ship, just as the power cell exploded, wrecking the dam wall and flooding the town. Before the flood hit the church, the Doctor got into the Fisher King's stasis chamber, protecting him as the Fisher King drowned in the flood. (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"])
In 2119, the pod was recovered by Bennett and brought upon the Drum to be examined by the past Doctor. (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) Using his sonic sunglasses to connect with the Drum's Wi-Fi, the Doctor created a hologram of himself as a ghost "with a soupçon of artificial intelligence, and a few pre-recorded phrases thrown in," (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"]) which appeared before Clara, Lunn and Cass almost immediately after the past Doctor left the Drum with Bennett and O'Donnell. (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) Using the hologram as an avatar, the Doctor gave Clara the list he had heard her give him from the ghost, and released the other ghosts from the Faraday cage, telling his past self via Clara's phone that "the chamber will open tonight." Conversing with other ghosts, the Doctor set them on Lunn, knowing they wouldn't kill him, to set a trap for Clara and Cass in the cantina.
When the chamber opened, the Doctor used his ghost hologram to lure the other ghosts to the Faraday cage with the "call of the Fisher King." Erasing the writing from their minds, the Doctor revealed to Clara, Cass and Lunn that his ghost was just a projection, and told them and Bennett that UNIT would dispose of the ghosts by removing the Faraday cage from Earth's orbit. As he and Clara set off in the TARDIS, the Doctor told her he only knew what to make the fake ghost say because she told him what it was saying, calling it a bootstrap paradox. (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"])
Events on Karaoke[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Doctor dropped Clara off on Planet Karaoke while he stayed inside to do repairs on the TARDIS, but Clara exited the ship before he could warn her that he would be momentarily shutting the TARDIS down, leaving the translation circuits off. (COMIC: Day of the Tune [+]Loading...["Day of the Tune (comic story)"]) As Clara did not hear his warning, she began singing on the stage, where the TARDIS translation began to fail as she could no longer read the lyrics on screen. She tried singing anyway and accidentally insulted the planet's monarch in Karaeokean, and she and the Doctor were arrested. (COMIC: The Meddling of Clara's Song [+]Loading...["The Meddling of Clara's Song (comic story)"])
The two were given a chance of survival by forced entry into Battle of the Bands Beyond the Stars, a musical competition. If their performance was deemed poor, they would be killed. As the two nervously prepared for this competition, they were passed by a band formed of what appeared to be Headless Monks. However, these robed figures soon removed their hoods, revealing themselves to be various incarnations of the Master led by Missy. (COMIC: The Abominable Showmen [+]Loading...["The Abominable Showmen (comic story)"]) Correctly deducing that Missy planned to use hypnosis to take over the minds of the viewers watching the program, the Doctor chose not to intervene, knowing that it was impossible for the many egos of the Master to work together as a team. Sure enough the four Masters began to fight Missy for her device, and were disqualified for failing to do their performance.
The Doctor and Clara then prepared for their performance, the Doctor confident that he could pull it off. (COMIC: The Five Masters [+]Loading...["The Five Masters (comic story)"]) As the Doctor was about to perform, Clara disconnected some power cables, allowing them to escape the stage and get back to the TARDIS. Clara wondered how they would be able to stop the show, but the Doctor told her that after the instalment they had just ruined, the show was cancelled due to all-time lowest viewing figures. They then set off to get chips together. (COMIC: One! Two! Three! Four! To Doomsday [+]Loading...["One! Two! Three! Four! To Doomsday (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Clara ate the chips sitting on the TARDIS, which was parked in the Blue Lagoon Nebula. When Clara asked if their adventures would ever stop, the Doctor explained that adventure was just life without the boring bits, which he always tried to avoid whenever possible. They were both unaware that they were about to be eaten by a giant space turtle... (COMIC: Epilogopolis [+]Loading...["Epilogopolis (comic story)"])
Final adventures with Clara[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from Helana and the Beast, Distant Voices, Entry 15234/C-4, The Day at the Doctors, The Faceless Two, Surfshock, & Planet of the Rude needs to be added
The Doctor and Clara arrived in Highgate Cemetery in 1972, where, intruding upon a cult meeting, they were attacked by vampire-like creatures called the Corvids, which petrified the TARDIS and fed on people's psychic essence, but were trapped inside the cemetery. The Doctor discovered that Clara's exposure to his time stream had rendered her toxic to the Corvids' powers, and that exposing themselves to her left a psychic corridor open. Using the psychic signature of the dead amplified by the ley line the cemetery was built on, the Doctor banished the Corvids back to the Time Vortex with the aid of Jess Collins. (COMIC: The Highgate Horror [+]Loading...["The Highgate Horror (comic story)"])
After saving Zeltran Beta from an invader with a Chaos ray, the Doctor was informed that his activities had been advertised. Tracking the advert to Sterlana, the Doctor was greeted by Zip Betterblast, who introduced himself as the Doctor's self-appointed agent and had his robots give the Doctor a costume change for an interview. Cutting the interview short to deal with a Andromedan Feline Gigantoform, the Doctor used his sonic sunglasses to stun the beast, and then discovered that Betterblast had used cybernetic implants to control the Feline Gigantoform. Exposing Betterblast to the public for the Shadow Proclamation to arrest him, the Doctor reclaimed his clothes and left with Clara to get coffee. (COMIC: Time and PR in Space [+]Loading...["Time and PR in Space (comic story)"])
After saving the Velosians from being attacked by "four and a bit battle fleets" and rescuing Clara from being killed by a Love Sprite from the Spider Mines, the Doctor and Clara landed on Earth, where they were promptly captured by Vikings and taken to their village on a two days' longboat journey from the TARDIS. When a race called the Mire attacked the village, killing all of the warriors, a girl named Ashildr declared war between the village and the Mire. After failing to train the farmers in the village to fight, the Doctor realised the village farmed electric eels, enabling him to formulate a plan to defeat the Mire.
When the Mire arrived, the Doctor and the farmers distracted them with a party in a barn, while the other villagers used the eels to electrocute four of the Mire and remove their armour and weapons. Seizing the opportunity, the Doctor gave one of the helmets to Ashildr, who used it to feed the image of a dragon into the technology of the Mire's helmets, scaring them off, when the dragon was actually nothing more than a puppet. The Doctor revealed to the Mire leader that Clara had filmed them being scared away by the villagers and threatened him and to leave lest the video be released to the Galactic Hub and ruin the Mire's reputation. The Mire promptly left, but the celebrations ended when it was discovered that Ashildr had died of heart failure as a result of using the Mire helmet.
The Doctor moped in a barn, regretting being unable to save Ashildr. However, after voicing his pain to Clara, he realised that he shared the face of Lobus Caecilius, whom he had saved from a fixed point in time during his tenth incarnation, and concluded that his face was a reminder to himself that he should always save people. Using a Mire repair kit from the Mire helmet, the Doctor revived Ashildr, and left her a second kit for whoever she wanted. Heading back to the TARDIS, the Doctor, now reflecting poorly on his actions, told Clara that the kit would have given Ashildr immortality, and then realised that he had also made her a hybrid. (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"])
Sometime after leaving Scandinavia, Clara asked the Doctor to help her student Evie Hubbard with an assignment of an imaginary interview with Winston Churchill. Not realising Clara simply wanted him to tell Evie about him, the Doctor took Evie back in time to talk with Churchill in-person. Later, while Clara was taking her Year Seven class to their tae kwon do lessons, (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) the Doctor conducted the Last Night of the Proms, where he ended up playing the Sex Pistols version of "God Save the Queen", (COMIC: Clara Oswald and the School of Death [+]Loading...["Clara Oswald and the School of Death (comic story)"]) and also decided to check on Ashildr's immortal life. One of the acts he observed was Ashildr founding a colony of lepers. (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"])
Getting trapped in a room of metal on fire, the Doctor sent his sonic sunglasses down to Earth, where they were found by a father out walking with his son. When the father put them on, they activated the Telepathic Emergency Beacon, allowing the Doctor to take control of his body and pilot the TARDIS to free himself. As a reward, the Doctor allowed the father and son a free trip, which the father used to pick up his wife, who had apparently disappeared months earlier. (PROSE: My Dad, The Doctor [+]Loading...["My Dad, The Doctor (short story)"])
After spending weeks following exoplanetary energy on his curioscanner across the galaxy, the Doctor traced the Eyes of Hades to 1651 England, where he found a highwayman called "the Knightmare" robbing the carriage holding the artefact. The Doctor's intervention resulted in the carriage escaping before either of them could get the Eyes, and the Knightmare revealed herself to be Ashildr, who was now addressing herself as "Me" after losing most of her childhood memories due to her long lifespan. At "Lady Me's" mansion, Ashildr told the Doctor of her exploits, and begged him to take her with him in the TARDIS, but he refused. Instead, the two teamed up to steal the Eyes of Hades from Lucie Fanshawe by breaking into her mansion.
The Doctor then found that Ashildr had an ally in Leandro, who owned the Eyes of Hades and needed a death to activate it to open a portal for him and Ashildr to escape Earth in. Upon learning the highwayman Sam Swift was to be executed, Ashildr and Leandro set off to use his death to activate the artefact. While the Doctor tried to call off Swift's execution, Ashildr forcibly attached the Eyes of Hades to Swift, opening the portal. Leandro then revealed that he had only used Ashildr to get the portal open and allow his people to invade, and the Leonian ships began attacking the peasants. Realising her mistake, Ashildr used the second Mire kit to revive Swift, closing the portal and ending the attack. For his failure, Leandro was incinerated by his people. In the aftermath, Ashildr accepted her inability to travel with the Doctor and told him she would look out for other people he left behind, and they parted on relatively good terms
When the Doctor picked up Clara for more adventures, she presented him with a selfie from Evie Hubbard, and the Doctor noticed Ashildr in the background of the photo. Shaking it off, he and Clara took off for "somewhere magical." (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) The Doctor continued to keep surveillance on Ashildr, but lost track of her in the early 1800s. (TV: Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"])
Receiving a call from Osgood about the "Nightmare Scenario", the Doctor discovered that the ceasefire between the humans and Zygons had been breaking down since Missy murdered one of the Osgoods, and tried to confront the Zygon High Command about it, only for them to be kidnapped by Zygon rebels, just as Kate Stewart phoned him to inform the Doctor of Osgood's kidnapping. Meeting up with Clara and Kate at Zygon High Command base at Drakeman Junior School, the Doctor communicated with the control polyp and witnessed the rebels execute the Zygon High Command. Sharing thoughts with Kate, Clara and Jac, the Doctor sent Kate to investigate Zygon activity in the New Mexico town Truth or Consequences, and left Clara and Jac in charge of defending England while he took Boat One to the Zygon settlement in Turmezistan to rescue Osgood.
The Doctor and Colonel Walsh led a platoon of UNIT soldiers to retrieve Osgood from the Zygon base before it was destroyed in an air strike, but the leading soldier fell for the Zygons' deceptions and led the platoon to their deaths in an ambush. As Walsh left to observe the settlement get destroyed, the Doctor found Osgood and managed to capture a Zygon. Aboard Boat One, the Zygon informed the Doctor that the Zygon invasion of Earth had already taken place. As the plane returned to the United Kingdom, "Clara" phoned the Doctor, and, claiming that the real Clara and Kate had been killed and replaced, fired a rocket launcher from the ground at Boat One. (TV: The Zygon Invasion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Invasion (TV story)"]) The Zygon missed her first shot, which gave the Doctor and Osgood enough time to parachute out of the plane before she fired a successful shot. They landed safety and received a text from Clara's phone, confirming that she was alive and fighting the Zygon in her form. Calling the Zygon, who had named herself "Bonnie", the Doctor retrieved a message from Bonnie's winking eye, controlled by Clara inside the pod, that confirmed her location, and, pursued by policeman he thought were Zygons, commandeered a van to get him and Osgood back to London.
They drove to a south London shopping centre where a Zygon had been forced to normalise himself by Bonnie and, despite the Doctor pleading him not too, committed suicide because he didn't want to be a part of the Zygon rebellion. Kate and two UNIT soldiers then turned up, and told the Doctor where to find Clara and the Zygon rebel base. Arriving at the Zygon stronghold, the UNIT soldiers revealed themselves to be Zygons and Kate contacted Bonnie, who had taken Clara with her to the Black Archive to activate the Osgood Box. However, Bonnie then revealed that the Doctor had put two Osgood Boxes in place with safeguards in order to keep the human-Zygon ceasefire, and demanded the Doctor be brought to her. Kate, however, revealed herself to be the genuine Kate, killed the Zygon soldiers and destroyed the communicator.
Arriving at the Black Archive, Bonnie and Kate both threatened to use the Osgood boxes, but the Doctor used his memories and feelings of the Time War to persuade them that they could end the conflict in a more humane way. Moved by his speech, Kate decided not to use the boxes, and Bonnie realised they were empty. To keep the boxes' secret safe, the Doctor erased the memories of Kate and Bonnie's Zygon guards, but allowed Bonnie to keep her memory of the event. As the Doctor and Clara prepared to leave, the Doctor invited Osgood to join him in his travels, but she denied as she had the boxes to look after. Both she and Bonnie, who was now using Osgood's form, continued the task of protecting the Osgood Boxes and maintaining the human-Zygon relations together. (TV: The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"])
As "Basil Disco", the Doctor boarded a plane carrying an MP due to meet the American President, aware that a Dalek mother ship was coming with the intent to abduct and robotise the MP in order to cause World War III and thus pave the way for a Dalek invasion, a plot which the Doctor opposed. (PROSE: Abduction [+]Loading...["Abduction (short story)"])
After thwarting a run-in with the warlord Lucifer van Volk, who accused him of magnetising his mercenary army at some point in his future, the Doctor returned to 2015 to find that Clara had taken a leave of absence from Coal Hill and travelled to Ravenscaur School in Scotland to investigate the disappearance of her friend Christel. While Clara took over Christel's vacated job as an English teacher, the Doctor went undercover in the local town, where he found the townspeople were a disguised race of aliens plotting against humanity. Deducing that Ravenscaur was the centre of the plan, he instructed Clara to remain undercover at the school while he worked out what they were dealing with.
Believing that the Sea Devils were behind the plan, the Doctor explored the catacombs of Ravenscaur to confirm his suspicions and ended up rescuing Clara and two students, Lucy Walker and Jack Irvine, from the Sea Devils. The group returned to the school only to be captured by the headmaster, Mrs. Mariner, who revealed she and many of the school's students and facility were disguised Sea Devils, as well as the visiting Prime Minister, Daniel Claremont. They were plotting to use humanity's global warming against them to create a perfect environment for their race. While Claremont was giving a televised press conference at the school, the Doctor set off the school's sprinklers, causing the disguised Sea Devils to revert to their normal forms. Mariner, however, commanded all Sea Devil bases to rise, revealing they had the machinery ready to wipe out humanity.
The Doctor equipped Clara, Jack and Lucy with neural enhancers, allowing them to use their telekinetic power to combat and escape the Sea Devils. Ordering Clara to evacuate the school, he navigated to the rooftops to confront Mariner, but was too late to prevent her from ordering the troops to rise. The Doctor altered the trajectory of their devastation pulse so that their weapons would attack Raven's Isle rather than the mainland. As the school and Sea Devils were destroyed, Clara, still equipped with her neural enhancer, flew in and rescued the Doctor from the destruction. As the two left in the TARDIS, the Doctor asked Clara if she wanted to go home, but she replied that being with him was home. (COMIC: Clara Oswald and the School of Death [+]Loading...["Clara Oswald and the School of Death (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Clara arrived in a forest on a planet, where the TARDIS was stolen by dragons. Navigating to a nearby village, they learned from the Lord Mortigan that they were on a planet designed to resemble medieval times, with the dragons being the planet's natural inhabitants, which had been genetically modified. The dragons had been freed from being inhibited by inhibitor chips by a person known as the Dragon Lord, who aimed to wipe out the townspeople, having already killed the royalty. The Doctor, Clara and the town's remaining lords set off to reason with the Dragon Lord. Along the way, they ran into a baby hatchling, but Lord Mortigan killed it, causing its parents to attack the party. The Doctor was separated from Clara in the chaos, and found a dragon which had been injured by a booby trap.
The Doctor found that the dragon did not possess a chip, casting doubt over his belief that the Dragon Lord was controlling them. Reuniting with Clara at the Red Castle, they found that the Dragon Lord had been killed, believing they would have been grateful to him for liberating them. The Doctor and Clara retrieved the TARDIS from the dragons' treasure hoard and left, calling rescue ships to evacuate the planet of humans to allow the dragons to live in peace. (COMIC: The Dragon Lord [+]Loading...["The Dragon Lord (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Clara were summoned by Harry Houdini, and found themselves in a crystalline computer program inside a crystal ball which fed on their despair. The program set up theatrical death traps with no way out so their minds could be ripened for it, but the Doctor, Clara and Houdini escaped, and the Doctor revealed the virtual environment with his sonic screwdriver. The Doctor, Clara and Houdini then fought back by imagining what made them feel the most free, which shattered the prison and returned them to the real world. They found the owner of the crystal ball prison, Diamanda, had been completely consumed by the crystal ball's power and killed. When Houdini regretted his inability to commune with the dead, the Doctor and Clara reassured him that his legacy would be remembered forever. (COMIC: Theatre of the Mind [+]Loading...["Theatre of the Mind (comic story)"])
While preparing for a holiday, the Doctor and Clara found themselves having to travel down the Doctor's timeline to prevent time flies sent by the Time Weaver Ethel from unravelling the Doctor's life in retaliation for him landing his TARDIS on her sister. After saving his eleventh and first incarnations, the Doctor was assisted in defeating Ethel by her other sister, Gretel. (COMIC: A Stitch in Time [+]Loading...["A Stitch in Time (CC comic story)"])
In a frontier town in 1849 California, the Doctor prevented an alien criminal from using prospector Josh Langham to construct a body from scrap metal to house its displaced mind. When the criminal refused his offer to return it home due to being in exile, the Doctor lured it over the edge of a precipice, where the creature's mind dissipated into the air after its body was destroyed. (PROSE: All That Glitters [+]Loading...["All That Glitters (short story)"])
Unable to go to the Castles of Trutalia due to his TARDIS being clamped by an out-of-date Ministry of Time robot, the Doctor went to Garage 10 to get the parts needed to fix the robot. En route, he befriended a mechanic enthusiast named Athena, and, working together, the pair learned that the owner of Garage 10 was stripping his customers of their identity to recruit them and sell their memories. Undoing the owner's actions, and getting him arrested by the Judoon, the Doctor parted ways with Athena to update the Ministry of Time robot into having its own sense of adventure. (COMIC: The Ministry of Time [+]Loading...["The Ministry of Time (comic story)"])
The Doctor found a giant robot and kaiju fighting in a Japanese city, and that UNIT soldiers, led by Colonel Ishiguro, were preparing to attack them. Persuading Ishiguro to halt the attack, the Doctor discovered that they were the result of a stolen Kaznak Simu-system being used by Professor Nakatomi for his video game company. Overriding the data core with his own mind, the Doctor ended the fighting before UNIT needed the intervene, and went with Ishiguro for some noodles. (COMIC: Big in Japan [+]Loading...["Big in Japan (comic story)"])
The Doctor liberated the Seymour family from the Belamine while they were being assessed in preparation for an invasion of Earth, and erased his presence from the Belamine ship's systems, tricking the Belamine into thinking the human race was too formidable to attack and cancel their invasion. Before the Belamine retreated, the Doctor used their teleportation system to take the Seymour family back to the Oregon Trail. (PROSE: Off the Trail [+]Loading...["Off the Trail (short story)"])
While visiting 1902 New York City, the Doctor learnt of ghost sights in a new subway tunnel, and, convincing the subway boss that he was a renowned psychic investigator, led a team of men to uncover the mystery. While many of his team fled at the sight of the ghosts, the Doctor and his only remaining help, Tom, found an alien tourist ship that was projecting ghosts to protect itself, its occupants having long died in malfunctioning sleep pods. The Doctor managed to fix the ship's systems and set it on a course back to its home planet. (PROSE: Ghosts of New York [+]Loading...["Ghosts of New York (short story)"])
While preparing his entry for The Great Martian Bake-Off during a phone call with Clara, the Doctor went to the Halloween Fayre at Coal Hill School after Clara had gone missing. Finding superstitions coming true, the Doctor followed clues to find what happened to Clara, and found a mischievous time traveller named Miss Chief , who told the Doctor that she sent Clara back in time to the Witchfinder General Matthew Hopkins, who threw Clara into the water to see if she was a witch. After Miss Chief saved Clara's life, she and the Doctor played a space-time scavenger hunt game that the Doctor won, with his prize being told Clara's whereabouts.
When the Doctor came to rescue Clara, she accidentally named him as a witch, and both of them were to be executed, but Miss Chief brought them back to the 21st century before they could be hanged. The Doctor and Clara convinced Miss Chief to bring them back to retrieve the TARDIS and save a falsely accused woman named Agnes Leech from the dungeons, and unwittingly brought the missing cat, Smudge, with them. Clara convinced the mob that Hopkins was a witch and Smudge was his familiar, but the Doctor prevented them from murdering Hopkins by sneakily putting Miss Chief's time travelling marotte in his belt, forcing Miss Chief to save his life. The Doctor and Clara escaped, and returned to Coal Hill, where, due to the Doctor and Miss Chief bringing extinct animals and rare artefacts as part of the scavenger hunt, the Halloween Fayre made the the school enough money to fund the Danny Pink IT Suite, which was opened by Clara and the Doctor a few months later. (COMIC: Witch Hunt [+]Loading...["Witch Hunt (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Clara landed on the space station Le Verrier in the 38th century, and joined a rescue crew that were looking for the station's crew. Attacked by Sandmen, the group ran into a laboratory housing Morpheus pods and, after rescuing Clara from one, found Professor Gagan Rassmussen hiding in a pod. After questioning Rassmussen on his pods, the Doctor concluded that the Sandmen were made up of sleep dust, and a direct result from use of the pods. As they made their way to destroy the pods, the station's gravity shields failed, Rassmussen was killed by a Sandman, and the Doctor, Clara and Chief Nagata became separated from the group after the Doctor rebooted the gravity shield. Re-evaluating the situation, the Doctor hacked into what he believed to be the rescue crew's helmet cams to review the footage, only for Nagata to reveal that none of them were wearing cameras. The Doctor then realised that the sleep dust in the air was being used as cameras to store images of the rescue mission, and that Rassmussen was behind the entire thing. Going to the crew's rescue ship, the Doctor, Clara and Nagata found Rassmussen had plans to spread the Sandmen to other planets. Surviving Rassmussen's attempt to kill them with his Patient Zero, Nagata killed Rassmussen, and the trio fled the station in the TARDIS, intending to destroy all Morpheus machines to prevent any more Sandman conversions. The Doctor, however, was confounded by the loose ends and how choreographed the event had been. (TV: Sleep No More [+]Loading...["Sleep No More (TV story)"])
The Doctor and Clara tracked mysterious energy fluctuations and disappearances to a comic store in London, where the Doctor was sucked into a comic book. Clara found that the missing people had also been pulled into comic books, and that the Boneless were the culprits. From within the comic, the Doctor told Clara to use the TARDIS's telepathic circuits to create a spatial and temporal flux. Teaming up with Natalie, a girl who was also trapped in his comic, the Doctor encouraged all the trapped people to use their love of comics to telepathically break free, imploding the Boneless back to their dimension and returning the victims to the real world. (COMIC: The Fourth Wall [+]Loading...["The Fourth Wall (comic story)"])
While Clara attended an end-of-term Christmas party, the Doctor met a young Clive Finch on Christmas Eve 1979, and took him to see the Loch Ness Monster, during which the Doctor encountered the Monk and thwarted his latest scheme. The Doctor partially wiped Clive's memory of the event, but left just enough of a recollection that would kick-start the boy's life of trying to find the Doctor again. (PROSE: The Persistence of Memory [+]Loading...["The Persistence of Memory (short story)"])
While visiting Florida's Adventure World theme park in 2017, the Doctor discovered that a businessman from the planet Bellcazario named Tunbridge was siphoning human life essence in the Space Plunge ride to sell to his people as a revitaliser. However, the Doctor had reversed the machine to reroute the stolen energies back to their original hosts before confronting Tunbridge, who made to flee in his ship, not realising that the Doctor had sabotaged it to drain his energies while he rode in it. (PROSE: Taking the Plunge [+]Loading...["Taking the Plunge (short story)"])
Aided by twins Amber and Ross, the Doctor foiled a plan by the Nestene Consciousness to have its Autons imbued with the essence of Sontarans. (PROSE: Baby Sleepy Face [+]Loading...["Baby Sleepy Face (short story)"])
When the TARDIS landed during the Battle of New Orleans due to a malfunction, the Doctor was mistakenly taken by Guide Mellors to her ship to watch the battle between the American and English forces behind a shimmer screen. While he disagreed with Mellors's business, the Doctor still assisted her in preventing a robot murdering the Throne Lord of Cassakna. (PROSE: Spectator Sport [+]Loading...["Spectator Sport (short story)"])
The Doctor arrived in an empty school during 2115 Christmas time and met Ross McNamara, who was supposedly being chased by a ghost. Investigating, the Doctor found that a Helestican spaceship was hidden in the cellars, and that it had sent Ross forward in time from 2015 and that the ghost was an echo of Ross created by the time travel. After blowing up the school to free the spaceship, the Doctor returned Ross home. (PROSE: Haunted [+]Loading...["Haunted (short story)"])
Setting up the downfall of Josiah W. Dogbolter, the Doctor froze the villagers of Stockbridge in 2016 "between nanoseconds" to keep them safe, and called for his friends to help him. He had the shape-shifting Whifferdill Frobisher take the form of one the Doctor's old opponents, Chiyoko, to lure Dogbolter into Stockbridge, had Majenta Pryce blackmail the major shareholders of Dogbolter's company, Intra-Venus, Inc., into giving her their shares for a low price, and had Lady Destrii of the Oblivion Empire brought along to defend Majenta against Josiah's daughter, Berakka Dogbolter. Landing in Stockbridge, the Doctor found Maxwell Edison, who was unaffected by the time freeze because of his TARDIS travels.
The Doctor pretended to surrender himself to Dogbolter inside St Justinian's Church, and, revealing his identity, Frobisher incapacitated Dogbolter's henchmen. Izzy Sinclair arrived at the church to knock Dogbolter out, and Sharon Allen broadcast Dogbolter's confession to murdering thousands on the Galactic Broadcasting Corporation. This led to Dogbolter's arrest, the seizing on his assets and Majenta becoming the new CEO of Intra-Venus. The Doctor subsequently returned the villagers to normal. After defeating Dogbolter, the Doctor brought Max and the rest of his friends to the city of Cornucopia to celebrate Max's 60th birthday. (COMIC: The Stockbridge Showdown [+]Loading...["The Stockbridge Showdown (comic story)"])
Following an anachronistic transmat signal to an army base in 1944 America, the Doctor found that the base had been infiltrated by the Valbrect, who were planning to invade Earth after replacing all the personnel at the base. While the human soldiers still at the base dealt with Valbrect soldiers, the Doctor saved the kidnapped personnel and threatened the Valbrect into leaving by placing a bridge-buster bomb on the Valbrect mothership. (PROSE: Base of Operations [+]Loading...["Base of Operations (short story)"]) The Doctor then attended Clara's opening of the Danny Pink IT Suite. (COMIC: Witch Hunt [+]Loading...["Witch Hunt (comic story)"])
The coming of the Hybrid[[edit] | [edit source]]
After the Doctor escaped a marriage to a sentient plant on the "second most beautiful garden in all of time and space", Clara was phoned by Rigsy, who had lost his memory of the previous day and woken up with a chronolock that was counting down to his death. Investigating, the Doctor, Clara and Rigsy found themselves in the Trap Street, where a society of aliens were seeking asylum under the government of Ashildr, known in the street as "Mayor Me". Rigsy had apparently murdered one of the residents, a Janus named Anah, and had been given retcon and returned home to allow him to spend time with his loved ones before the Quantum Shade came to kill him for the crime. When Ashildr informed the Doctor that she could remove the chronolock if he convinced the Trap Street residence of Rigsy's innocence, the Doctor learned from Kabel that Rigsy had asked Ashildr to call the Doctor when he was found with the body, revealing that Ashildr knew of the Doctor and Risgy's acquaintanceship.
Going to see the victim's daughter, Anahson, the Doctor realised that the entire thing had been a trap to lure him to the Trap Street. Running to see the body, the Doctor discovered that Anah was alive in a stasis pod, and the only way to release her was to unlock the pod with his TARDIS key. Unlocking the stasis pod, the Doctor had his arm clamped with a teleport bracelet, just as Ashildr arrived to retrieve the Doctor's confession dial. Just as the chronolock countdown ended, Clara revealed that she had taken Rigsy's death sentence, and Ashildr explained that the entire thing had been a hoax to entice the Doctor, as she had been threatened to entrap the Doctor to ensure the street's safety. Rigsy would have had the chronolock removed before its countdown ended, but since Clara took it, Ashildr fell out of the contract she had established, sealing Clara's fate. In anger, the Doctor threatened to end the asylum unless Ashildr saved Clara, but Clara made the Doctor promise not to seek revenge before she faced her death, with the Doctor watching her die from afar. Ashildr apologised for the harm she had done, but the Doctor, honouring his promise to Clara, warned her to keep out of his way. The teleport bracelet then activated, teleporting the Doctor away to its destination. (TV: Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"])
In a cycle that went on for 4.5 billion years, (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"]) the Doctor arrived in a teleporter at the top of a tower inside his confession dial, and was pursued by the Veil, a clockwork creatue whose form was taken from his childhood nightmares, until he fed it confessions. At the end of each cycle, the Doctor reached a wall of solid azbantium and, inspired by the Brothers Grimm story of the shepherd's boy, punched at the wall until the Veil fatally burned him. Too badly injured to regenerate, the Doctor dragged himself back to the top of the tower and burned up his body to provide the energy needed to load a copy of himself at the moment of his arrival from the teleporter's hard drive, continuing the cycle until he finally broke through the wall. With the Veil collapsing in on itself, the Doctor arrived on Gallifrey and told a nearby boy to inform "someone important" in the Capitol of his arrival. (TV: Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"])
The Doctor made his way to the Drylands, where he silently waited in his old barn hideaway for Rassilon to face him, turning away the military and High Council members sent to speak to him, until Rassilon finally came to explain himself, to which the Doctor told him to "get off [his] planet." Deeming any witness in the Drylands to be unimportant, Rassilon ordered the Doctor's execution, but the firing squad, having served with the War Doctor during the Last Great Time War, sided against him. When the General defected, Rassilon surrendered and the Doctor, assuming Rassilon's title of Lord President, banished Rassilon from Gallifrey, which had been moved to the end of the universe for protection, blaming him for the horrors of the Time War, to be followed by the High Council.
Going down to the Cloisters, the Doctor met with Ohila, who explained that Rassilon was searching for information on the Hybrid. Meeting with the General and the Sisterhood of Karn in the council chamber, the Doctor informed them that he could protect them from the Hybrid, but he needed Clara Oswald's help to do so. The Doctor and the General went to Extraction chamber 7 to use an extraction chamber to retrieve Clara from before her death in the Trap Street, in doing so freezing her bodily functions in time. Under pressure to explain himself, the Doctor swiped the General's sidearm and, holding the unarmed chamber staff at gunpoint, took a neural block calibrated for humans and shot the General to cause a distraction and escape with Clara.
Making their way through the Cloisters, the Doctor and Clara encountered the Cloister Wraiths, and an imprisoned Dalek, Cyberman and flock of Weeping Angels, until the Doctor found a secret passage near lift shaft 7, and told Clara how he had originally found the passage in his first incarnation, and also tried to avoid talking about his imprisonment in his confession dial, but had got around to telling Clara by the time the newly regenerated General and Ohila arrived. As Clara distracted them, the Doctor escaped through the secret passage into the workshop below the Cloisters, and stole a TARDIS to retrieve Clara and flee from Gallifrey after a final talk with Ohila.
With Clara still frozen, the Doctor took her to the last minutes of the universe, believing that her time would reset and she would become alive again. With Clara still frozen, a knock sounded on the TARDIS doors and the Doctor found it was Ashildr, still alive at the end of the universe. The Doctor and Ashildr shared theories on the Hybrid; the Doctor believing it to be Ashildr, while she believed the Hybrid to be either the Doctor himself, or the combined forces of the Doctor and Clara. The Doctor, denying Ashildr's claims, told her that he planned to erase Clara's memory of him to protect her from the Time Lords, but Clara had spied on their conversation and reversed the polarity of the neural block with the sonic sunglasses. After learning of what Clara did, the Doctor still decided to use the device, only for it to backfire on him, causing him to lose his memories of who Clara was and collapse.
The Doctor eventually awoke in the Nevada desert, where a man told him that Clara had asked him to look after the Doctor. Having forgotten Clara's face, but still having impressions of his time with her, the Doctor made his way to a diner in the desert, where he encountered a waitress. The Doctor told the waitress his story while playing a song he composed for Clara. After his story ended, the waitress exited through a door, and the diner dematerialised, revealing to the Doctor that it had been the stolen TARDIS. Now outside, the Doctor found his own TARDIS, with a mural dedicated to Clara on it, whom the Doctor recognised as the waitress. Receiving a new sonic screwdriver from the TARDIS, and a final message of encouragement from Clara scrawled on one of the TARDIS's blackboards, the Doctor took off for new adventures on his own, with the mural unravelling as he dematerialised. (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"])
Moving on[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from The Astrea Conspiracy needs to be added
While thinking of Clara as a "friend [he'd] lost", the Doctor also reminded himself of what it meant to be a good man. (POEM: A Good Man [+]Loading...["A Good Man (poem)"]) He was able to specifically remember his adventures with her, but he could not remember Clara herself. (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"]) In the case of his memories of his adventure inside the Dalek casing of "Rusty", he knew for certain there had been other people with him, but he could not recall their names. (PROSE: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)"])
The Doctor received a call from Osgood, asking for his assistance in dealing with the Experimental Prototype Robot K2 that was running amok in 2016 London. The Doctor was able to dismantle K2 with his sonic screwdriver, ending the threat. (COMIC: Robo Rampage [+]Loading...["Robo Rampage (comic story)"])
The Doctor detected temporal tsunamis in the Time Vortex, and realised something was wrong with time and that he needed to get to Gallifrey. As Gallifrey was blocked by a transduction barrier and he was unable to contact the High Council, he travelled to Karn to persuade Ohila to let him use the Sisterhood of Karn's door to the Capitol. Ohila was reluctant, but when Karn was suddenly attacked by Cybermen, she let him through. The Doctor rushed into the Capitol only to find Rassilon, who, after his exile, had met with a league of Cybermen and decided to work with them to create a new Time Lord-Cyberman empire. The Doctor was then rescued by a group of Time Lord soldiers led by the General, who requested the Doctor's assistance in helping them combat the threat. When he experienced pain spasms, the Doctor realised that Rassilon's corruption of the Eye of Harmony was rewriting the Doctor's own history to ensure his previous incarnations were defeated by the Cybermen on their adventures. The Doctor then surrendered to Rassilon to learn more of his plan, which was to siphon the regenerative energy of the Time Lords with Looms to restart the universe in Rassilon's image.
However, the Cybermen betrayed Rassilon and began harvesting his and the Doctor's regeneration energy to fuel the reworking of history, allowing the rise of the "Age of Cyberiad". Having realised his mistake, Rassilon telepathically contacted the Doctor inside the Cyberiad, and the two teamed up to send their regeneration energy backwards through the Eye of Harmony, repairing the alterations made to the Doctor's timeline and the universe and destroying the Cyberiad. The Doctor's previous incarnations and everybody else lost their memories of the incident, with only the Twelfth Doctor remembering. Back in his TARDIS alone, he openly wondered if Rassilon remembered, something the Doctor felt Rassilon deserved. (COMIC: Supremacy of the Cybermen [+]Loading...["Supremacy of the Cybermen (comic story)"])
Rescuing Gabby[[edit] | [edit source]]
Summoning his tenth incarnation to an uninhabited planet, the Twelfth Doctor, having taken precautions to ensure that his predecessor would remember the important parts of their meeting, informed the Tenth Doctor of Gabby Gonzalez's importance and wrote out the answers in Gallifreyan before sending him on his way, gifting him a piece of chalk. (COMIC: Vortex Butterflies [+]Loading...["Vortex Butterflies (comic story)"])
Guided by the Moment, the Doctor rescued Gabby from the Time Vortex. (COMIC: The Good Companion [+]Loading...["The Good Companion (comic story)"]) Though Gabby protested about the violation of the Laws of Time, something the Doctor freely admitted, he reiterated his earlier promise to always catch Gabby if she ever fell before the two shared a hug. (COMIC: Catch a Falling Star [+]Loading...["Catch a Falling Star (comic story)"])
Travelling alone[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from The Long Con needs to be added
The Doctor visited Shivani Bajwa at her flower garden at Coal Hill School, and learnt that Missy had secretly assisted him when his first incarnation fought off the Space wolves with Shivani in 1963. When he saw Missy across the street from him, the Doctor bade his farewells to Shivani has he ran after her. (PROSE: Doctor Who and the Horror of Coal Hill [+]Loading...["Doctor Who and the Horror of Coal Hill (short story)"])
The Doctor answered a call for help from Harry Houdini after his old friend had been implicated in a series of deaths. Searching the warehouse of a rival magician named Gladstone, they found find an empty prison pod, but the escaped alien prisoner killed Gladstone and flew away. (PROSE: Who-Dini? [+]Loading...["Who-Dini? (short story)"])
When the Fourth Doctor used his TARDIS tuner to begin a temporal meta-collision with his other incarnations, the Twelfth Doctor learnt that Earth was under threat from a pandimensional entity that had trapped his fourth incarnation in his TARDIS. While the Twelfth Doctor argued with his other incarnations, the War Doctor used encoded messages from the Sixth Doctor to stop the invasion before it began, and the Sixth Doctor installed a way to expel the entity from the Fourth Doctor's TARDIS, ending the crisis. (WC: Doctors Assemble! [+]Loading...["Doctors Assemble! (webcast)"])
The Twelfth Doctor once got into an altercation with 2 other doctors - Doc Brown and Peter Venkman - on the Brick Boulevard, as they each wanted to allow one another past. This ultimately resulted in the 3 ramming their vehicles into each other, resulting in a crash. (WC: Doctor, Doctor, Doctor [+]Loading...["Doctor, Doctor, Doctor (webcast)"])
The Twelfth Doctor once materialised the TARDIS on a hill in the Land of Ooo. After a brief look outside, he jumped out of the doors, and onto a spring pad, which launched him into the sky in the view of B.A. Baracus, who remarked "game over, fool!". The Doctor, along with several other individuals, later ran into battle in Ooo and wound up in a mosh pit. (WC: New Adventures Await! [+]Loading...["New Adventures Await! (webcast)"])
While Supergirl was hosting a broadcast entitled "Meet That Hero!" about a fellow extraterrestrial hero, E.T., she voiced her newfound wish to created an "alien club". The Twelfth Doctor interrupted her with enthusiastic support for the idea and waved at his TARDIS, with E.T. letting out an appreciative "Phooooone...". (WC: Supergirl Meets E.T. [+]Loading...["Supergirl Meets E.T. (webcast)"])
Brief travels with Hattie[[edit] | [edit source]]
Catching up on his favourite music, the Doctor visited the Twist, a colony in the 40th century, to attend a punk concert. Meeting with the band's bassist, Hattie Munroe, the Doctor observed a man called Jakob being chased by police, and found out he had been accused of the murder of councillor Idra Panatar after he rescued him, though Jakob insisted his innocence, claiming fox-like creatures on the colony had done the deed, and that the authorities were attempting to cover up other attacks. While investigating Idra's house, the Doctor discovered a secret room in the house containing proof of the creatures, leading him to deduce Idra was killed to keep them from being revealed. They went to the Central Power Park to investigate, and, after avoiding a police chase and an attack by one of the creatures, they escaped into an underground tunnel, which led them to the vessel that first brought humans to the Twist. The area was populated by the creatures, who revealed themselves to be called the Foxkin.
Escaping into a nearby statis farm, the Doctor found pods that contained human remains. Accessing the records, he found that none of the human colonists travelling to the Twist had survived the journey, despite the population apparently having been descended from them. Analyzing the footage more closely, he deduced that Foxkin were evolution of the foxes that had been aboard the colony ship and, taking sympathy on their deceased precursors, had cloned them back to life before he, Hattie and Jakob were imprisoned by the Foxkin to be kept from revealing the truth. Escaping imprisonment, the group returned to the surface, where Jakob declared that the Foxkin had to be destroyed, but the Doctor revealed he had worked out that Jakob had purposefully killed Idra to stop her from revealing the Foxkin, due to his hatred of the creatures and Idra's desire to broker peace. Jakob fled, and was eventually arrested by the authorities. The Doctor and Hattie held a concert to encourage the humans of the Twist to accept and welcome the Foxkin into their society. In the aftermath, the Doctor invited Hattie for a trip in the TARDIS. (COMIC: The Twist [+]Loading...["The Twist (comic story)"])
While the Doctor and Hattie were having a jamming session, the TARDIS made an emergency landing to a house on windswept moors, attracted by dangerous radiation levels. As the Doctor and Hattie investigated the house, Hattie caught a glimpse of a holographic young girl. Following the hologram through a door, the Doctor and Hattie entered a forest, where they found a mother, Holly, searching for her family. Holly told them that the house, which was her own, had grown new rooms since she purchased furniture at an antique fair. The Doctor discovered that void creatures known as the Spyrillites were being attracted to the house as it had a great source of arton energy. Letting the Spyrillites guide him, he found a room containing an architectural reconfiguration system, and he realised the house was actually a TARDIS.
The Doctor determined that an item Holly brought at the antiques fair was a TARDIS shell, which was dying and leaking arton energy, causing its dimensions to spill into the house and potentially across the whole universe. After finding Holly's family, they were directed to the control room of the TARDIS. Hattie and her family fought off an attack from the Spyrillites as the Doctor programmed the TARDIS to send it to die in the heart of a star, restoring the house to normal. After another jamming session aboard his TARDIS, the Doctor returned Hattie back to her home on the Twist. (COMIC: Playing House [+]Loading...["Playing House (comic story)"])
Living with the Collins family[[edit] | [edit source]]
Wanting to visit a music performance in 1972 London, the Doctor was playing his guitar on the streets when he was sighted by Jess Collins, who followed him to the TARDIS, despite his attempts to avoid her. When the TARDIS picked up an alien distress signal in the London Underground, where Jess' father, Lloyd, worked, Jess followed him to investigate the signal. In the tunnels, they were caught by Lloyd and then attacked by a skeletal bird creature, but the Doctor disabled the creature with electricity from the Underground, noting it was an animated cadaver. Lloyd, injured by the creature, was taken to hospital, where the Doctor scanned him and realised he had an unidentifiable bacterial infection. Returning to the Underground with Jess, the Doctor found a telepathic node on the creature's body, which explained that the creature was an alien called Moan'na, who had fled his kind and disguised himself as a human in 17th century London. The Doctor determined that Moan'na had died of the bubonic plague as a human in 1665, but his alien body had enhanced the illness and caused Lloyd to fall under it.
The Doctor and Jess returned to the hospital and found Lloyd had mutated into a creature like Moan'na, who knocked the Doctor out and took Jess away. Upon awakening, the Doctor and Jess' mother, Devina, pursued them to Brixton, as the infection began mutating more people. The Doctor used the telepathic node to allow Jess and Devina to communicate with Lloyd and break the infection's control over his mind, which, in conjunction with the TARDIS's telepathic circuits, rewrote the DNA infections to change Lloyd and the infected back to normal. However, the the TARDIS's systems overloaded and caused it to retreat within itself. The Collins family invited the Doctor to stay with them while the TARDIS recovered. (COMIC: The Pestilent Heart [+]Loading...["The Pestilent Heart (comic story)"])
The Doctor dismantled the TARDIS's outer plasmic shell and put it back together in the Collins' back garden, where he left it to heal. While explaining to Lloyd what had happened when he was infected, the Doctor was caught off guard by the housecat Tibbsy, and warned Tibbsy that he would be watching him. The next day, the Doctor ruined Devina's fish stew when he used his sonic screwdriver on it, but prepared his own stew for the family himself, and cleaned up the kitchen, with the Collins family impressed with his cooking.
Two days later, while trying to encourage the reweaving of the TARDIS's shell, the Doctor debated with Jess' bother, Maxwell, over who would win in a fight between Batman and Captain America, with the Doctor choosing Captain America and debating his choice with Maxwell afterwards. Later, while Jess was reading M. C. Escher for her art history class, the Doctor recounted the times he met Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, and François Boucher, and when he had his portrait done by the cubist artist Pablo Picasso. While trying to lighten Jess' book with his sonic screwdriver, but it ran out of power, and the Doctor was unable to use the TARDIS to recharge it. With no TARDIS to leave 1972 in, the Doctor instead offered to show Jess the universe through the art she was studying. (COMIC: Moving In [+]Loading...["Moving In (comic story)"])
The Doctor took Jess and Maxwell to the National Gallery to show them a John Constable painting, when an alien creature was released by hunters from Kolothos, where hunting was outlawed, who sent hounds to chase it into the gallery. The Doctor, Jess and Maxwell followed the creature outside into Trafalgar Square, and witnessed the hunter Skadi murder a policeman. The Doctor used a dog whistle to incapacitate the hounds, and when Skadi's husband, Broteas, killed another policeman, the Doctor knocked him out by pulling his electric whip into a fountain. Skadi murdered the small creature she was hunting, and she and her son, Tarquel, took Jess and Maxwell aboard their spaceship.
Left behind on Earth, Broteas was taken to Scotland Yard by DCI Jack Hayes on a murder charge, and the Doctor gave him food in exchange for Skadi's comms frequency. He offered himself and Broteas to Skadi in exchange for her releasing Jess, Maxwell, and the spaceship's menagerie, which Skadi was using to release rare and exotic creatures onto alien worlds so they could be hunted for fun, and then leaving Earth. Skadi sent her hounds after the Doctor in Epping Forest, but the Doctor used a reprogrammed metal horse belonging to Broteas to knock the hounds over. Maxwell tricked Skadi into dropping her sword and having Hayes arrest her when she threatened Tarquel. However, this was part of a ruse to have Tarquel take his parents home to face justice for all of the killing they had done. The Doctor convinced Hayes that Skadi and Broteas facing their own people's justice would be worse off than being tried on Earth, and he let them leave Earth with Tarquel. (COMIC: Bloodsport [+]Loading...["Bloodsport (comic story)"])
While Jess and the Doctor were delivering Christmas cards on 23 December, they saw Walter from across the street behaving oddly and then slamming the door. The Doctor kept an eye on Walter's house all night. The following day, the Doctor saw Walter throw a Snowglobe through his window, and went with Jess and Devina help him. The Doctor defeated the fictional character Obadiah Grimm that had been created from Walter being left alone for too long with the guilt of losing his mother, Carmen, in 1971, and Walter was taken away in an ambulance to treat his mental illness. On Christmas morning, Devina invited the whole street for breakfast as a reminder that the street was a community and to remember Carmen. (COMIC: Be Forgot [+]Loading...["Be Forgot (comic story)"])
During a game of chess with Gabriel Gayle, the Doctor was invited by DCI Hayes to Scotland Yard to help with a case involving a man who had been turned into glass. Hayes and Officer Perkins took the Doctor to the warehouse in Barking where the man had been found, where a giant mosquito attacked and turned Perkins into glass. Though the Doctor and Hayes managed to electrocute the mosquito with a generator, more mosquitoes attacked the warehouse, but the Doctor drew the mosquitoes towards Hayes' car, where they trapped their stingers in the car roof and the Doctor rigged the car to explode, killing the mosquitoes.
Returning to Brixton, the Doctor realised that the events in Barking were a distraction for someone to steal the TARDIS, and also discovered the shrunken body of Gabriel Gayle in the Collins family garden, alerting the Doctor to the presence of the Master, just as he and Hayes were escorted to meet him by Katya Dabrowski. The Master murdered Hayes when he tried to arrest him, and told the Doctor the Collins family were running errands for him when he used the artron energy in their bodies to open a portal to a time locked dimension. The Master linked the Doctor's TARDIS to his TARDIS to aid the Doctor through the time lock so he could be reunited with the Collins family, Katya accompanying the Doctor in his mission.
Followed by the Master into the Time Locked dimension, the Doctor met Kiadine, a being the Time Lords imprisoned for ravaging his world by splitting the chronon. Kiadine gave his life and his temporal powers to the Master to gain his vengeance on the Time Lords. After the Master aged Katya to death, the Doctor and the Master fought with each other over the power of the chronon storm, when the Collins family pulled the Doctor back, standing together against the Master. The Master attacked them, but his blast was repelled with the same artron energy in the bodies of the Collins family that had brought the Master to the dimension. The Master, heavily wounded by the attack, retreated, and, with no-one left to keep time in check, the Doctor and the Collins family evacuated. After Gabriel's funeral, the Doctor said goodbye to the Collins family and left, believing he had outstayed his welcome. (COMIC: Doorway to Hell [+]Loading...["Doorway to Hell (comic story)"])
A return to travelling[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from A Song For Running & Elephant in the Room needs to be added
The Doctor visited the planet Lahn to travel the Spice Route of Shalabar Stone. However, his party was ambushed by alien scavengers led by the Lord Boabdil, who kidnapped the Doctor's fellow traveller, Estrella, sentencing her to be executed the following day by a monster. The Doctor gatecrashed the execution and disorientated the monster, freeing Estrella. Chased into the city, Estrella bought a flying carpet, allowing her and the Doctor to escape their pursuers. (COMIC: The Spice Route [+]Loading...["The Spice Route (comic story)"])
The Doctor found that the Flying Dutchman was making appearances throughout history, and tracked it through time. On a sighting on the seas in 1881 Australia, he was joined by Prince George and Captain Thorpe after they wandered into the TARDIS. The Doctor deduced mathematically that the ship would appear during the Battle of Trafalgar, and he, George and Thorpe managed to board it, only to be confronted by robots claiming to be the ship's crew. After George meddled with the ship's machinery, the robots lost their memory. The Doctor found that the robots had crashed their time ship into the Flying Dutchman and that had caused them to believe they were the crew. The Doctor repaired the ship to send the robots home, and also prepared to return George and Thorpe to their own time as well. (COMIC: Ghosts of the Seas [+]Loading...["Ghosts of the Seas (comic story)"])
Surrounded by robots in the Forbidden Zone, the Doctor had his life saved by Lambert. Lambert and his son, Kiron, declined to travel with the Doctor as the Forbidden Zone was still their home, so the Doctor instead promised to help Kiron every time he was in danger by installing a low-level telepathic link to his wrist device. (COMIC: The Promise [+]Loading...["The Promise (DWAN comic story)"]) He then went and possessed for The Hay Wain painting. (COMIC: Doorway to Hell [+]Loading...["Doorway to Hell (comic story)"])
Attending a book festival, the Doctor learnt of a book series called Fearsome Frights by an author named Charles Abbott. After a girl named Eliza told him that the protagonist of the book shared the name of her brother Sammy, who had disappeared after meeting Abbott at a signing, the Doctor and Eliza tracked the book in the TARDIS, and the Doctor deduced that Abbott was a disguised alien who used a pen made of Incredulitas 4 that could transport matter. They arrived on the planet Antagonista, the setting of the book, and rescued Sammy from zombies. Abbott arrived and tried to attack the group with his pen, but the Doctor used his sonic screwdriver to counter the attack and trap Abbott in a stasis jail cell in space. Dubbing the cell the "writer's block", the Doctor returned Eliza and Sammy home. (COMIC: Shock Horror [+]Loading...["Shock Horror (comic story)"])
The Doctor then visited what he thought was the English countryside for a breath of fresh air, but after almost walking off the side of a floating island, he discovered that he was on New Belgravia. He met the owner of the island, Lord Eskdale, who asked the Doctor to help him find his missing daughter, Charlotte. Shortly after the Doctor accepted the offer, the floating island began to fall towards the ground. In the engine room of the island, the Doctor found Charlotte, who had hid there after seeing her father discriminate against the planet's natives. Eskdale apologised to his daughter, leading to her letting the Doctor into the engine room. He moved the island back into the sky, saving countless lives. (COMIC: Sky Manor [+]Loading...["Sky Manor (comic story)"])
After he rescued Kiron from a Howler, (COMIC: The Promise [+]Loading...["The Promise (DWAN comic story)"]) and needing some time to relax alone, the Doctor visited Eed'n to take photos of the native flora and fauna. After taking a few pictures, he disappointingly discovered that Jain Relph, a professor from the Mega Galactic University, was also on the uninhabited planet cataloguing plant life. As the Doctor began to tell Relph to go away, the two were attacked by spores from Eed'n's plant life and were possessed by an entity called the Plant. The Plant realised that it could go to the beginning of the Universe with the Doctor's TARDIS and seed itself into all lifeforms. However, due to the Doctor having multiple personalities, the Plant had difficulty in completely absorbing him. The Doctor used the little control he had not to pilot the TARDIS to the beginning of time, but to the end, where the Plant died due to lack of sunlight. The Doctor then dropped off Relph at a nearby human colony. (COMIC: Petals [+]Loading...["Petals (comic story)"])
The Doctor then went to 1909 Paris, where he attended the grand reopening of the Galerie d'Art de Parisiennes, and discovered an alien which was taking people into paintings and attempting to drain their lives. The alien attacked the Doctor and pulled him into Bridge over a Pond of Water Lilies, and chased him through multiple paintings until he discovered over victims of the alien. Using a pen, the Doctor drew a door out of the painting world and back into reality and threw a can of white paint at the painting which the alien was hiding in, trapping it in the canvas. (COMIC: Gallery [+]Loading...["Gallery (comic story)"])
The Doctor learned that the Earth Empire trading planet Vourakis 3 was being blockaded and travelled to the planet to stop the blockade before it caused an inter-planetary war. He encountered reporter Heddy Garber and took her onto the ship responsible for the blockade in his TARDIS. They discovered that colony governor Ron Cordell hired a group of Skinks to blockade the planet and were taken prisoner by the Skinks, who tried to drop the Doctor and Garber into their ship's black hole drive, but the Doctor used his sonic sunglasses to sabotage the drive, and it began to destroy the Skink ship. The Doctor and Garber ran back to the TARDIS and escaped just before the entire ship was sucked into a black hole. With Vourakis 3 saved, the Doctor dropped Garber off in Piccadilly Circus before heading off into another adventure. (COMIC: Pirates of Vourakis [+]Loading...["Pirates of Vourakis (comic story)"])
The Doctor visited the planet Rhodia, whose population of three billion was being wiped out by the Shadow Kin, who had emerged during the civil war that was being waged between Rhodia's two factions. He was only able to rescue the Rhodian prince, and the Quill terrorist who was forced to protect him as punishment for her crimes. For their protection, the Doctor relocated the pair to Shoreditch on Earth, where the Quill would serve as a teacher at Coal Hill Academy, with the prince attending her classes as a sixth form student named "Charlie Smith". (TV: For Tonight We Might Die [+]Loading...["For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)"])
The Doctor saved a person from the Weeping Angels in a house. (GAME: Don't Blink [+]Loading...["Don't Blink (video game)"])
The Doctor was invited to Kiron's chambers when he became President. He discovered that every time Kiron was saved, videos of him being protected went viral and he grew in power. Kiron amplified the link to control the population of the entire planet to rebuild the city and enslave their enemies. When the Doctor withdrew his protection of Kiron, the spell was broken. Realising he had done wrong, Kiron asked the Doctor to help set things right. (COMIC: The Promise [+]Loading...["The Promise (DWAN comic story)"])
When the Shadow Kin caught up with Charlie and Quill at the Coal Hill Academy autumn prom night, Quill called the Doctor for help, and he returned to Coal Hill. Confronting the king of the Shadow Kin, Corakinus, the Doctor used their aversion towards light to repel them, forcing them back through the tear in space time from which they came before sealing it. Knowing that such tears would continue to threaten the school as a result of the excess artron energy in the area, the Doctor entrusted Quill and Charlie to defend against whatever would come through alongside Charlie's fellow students who had faced the Shadow King alongside him. Before leaving, the Doctor took Ram Singh, a student who had been maimed by Corakinus, aboard the TARDIS to fit him with a Lothan prosthetic limb to replace his severed leg. (TV: For Tonight We Might Die [+]Loading...["For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)"])
Returning Jata home[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from Royal Wedding, Night of the Worms, Wings of the Predator, & Killer App needs to be added
The Doctor tracked a crashed Q7 starship to the Wyoming desert in 1899 and encountered the bounty hunter Molly Zook, who was tracking the big-time criminal Clint Currie. She showed the Doctor wanted posters of Currie and his horse, Jata, who the Doctor recognised as an Osumaran masquerading as a horse. After buying a horse and painting a star on its forehead so it resembled an Osumaran, the Doctor went to where Currie's gang had tied up their horses and replaced the Osumaran with the real horse. Without the Osumaran to guide him, Currie was caught and arrested by the town's sheriff. The Doctor asked to keep Currie's horse as a reward for helping with the capture. The Osumaran introduced himself as Jata and thanked the Doctor for rescuing him, but the Doctor told Jata that his starship was too broken to work again and decided to take Jata back to Osumare in the TARDIS. (COMIC: From the Horse's Mouth [+]Loading...["From the Horse's Mouth (comic story)"])
During the trip to Osumare, Jata mentioned he was interested in educational systems, which prompted the Doctor to show him an English school in the 21st century. Much to the Doctor's surprise, the school they landed in was filled with students put into a violent trance by their ear buds. The Doctor and Jata hid in the school's chapel with three teachers and a student. The Doctor knew about a secret room in the chapel and guided the student, Jata, and one of the teachers to it when the mind-controlled students broke through the chapel's doors. In the hidden room, the Doctor realised that the student was a Mkali. He confronted the Mkali and asked him to reverse what he had done to the other students. When that didn't work, the Doctor called the Mkali's mother, who became very angry at her son and fixed everything he did. (COMIC: Fear Buds [+]Loading...["Fear Buds (comic story)"])
Temporary companions[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from Invasion of the Mindmorphs, A Cold Snap, The Lost Planet, The Lost Magic, The Lost Flame, & Field Trip needs to be added
After seeing an opera in 1695 Paris, the Doctor was confronted by Julie d'Aubigny after the show when he refused to take part in the standing ovation, with the Doctor escalating the situation by insulting her singing and having Julie challenge him to a sword duel. The duel was interrupted by Cardinal Richelieu, who wanted to question the Doctor, but was stabbed by Julie and exposed as being possessed by dark forces. The Doctor fled to the TARDIS and took Julie with him, knowing that there were mysterious forces at work. The Doctor and Julie went to the Bibliotheque Mazarine library to find information on the forces, with the Doctor using his psychic paper to get the library's curator, Bishop Mazarin, to tell him that Richelieu had created an intelligence network called the Cabinet Noir to intercept the mail of Paris and instructed Mazarin to build a secret library to store confiscated mail, and that Richelieu had experimented with magic and opened a realm of beings, which granted him the ability to not age. Mazarin gave the Doctor the keys to the secret library and told him that Richelieu was plotting to create another portal to plunge the entire world into darkness, but he was suddenly killed by gargoyles before he could say anymore. The gargoyles attacked the Doctor, but Julie managed to destroy the head of one, revealing them to be robots, as the Doctor looked at a chart in the secret library and found an astrological prediction that predicted an eclipse, which the darkness planned to use for their invasion.
The Doctor and Julie escaped the library as the gargoyles burnt it and went to warn King Louis XIV of the plan, only to find he was already possessed by Richelieu and the darkness. Julie was separated from the Doctor and imprisoned to be executed during the king's festival, but the Doctor freed Julie by posing as her executioner. The eclipse began, and the darkness started to emerge and attack. The Doctor used the sonic screwdriver and TARDIS to open a portal into the Ssabrehagen Quaser to spread light across the land, destroying Richelieu and the darkness. Julie asked the Doctor if she could join him in the TARDIS, but he declined. The two instead decided to finish their sword duel. (COMIC: Terror of the Cabinet Noir [+]Loading...["Terror of the Cabinet Noir (comic story)"])
After picking up Dorium Maldovar to use as a ball, the Doctor went to a forested planet to play a game of bowling with Strax, using robotic dinosaurs as pins. Strax arrived on the Time Shark and used himself as a bowling ball. He broke all of the dinosaurs, making it impossible for the game to continue. Afterwards, the Doctor took Strax and the Time Shark with him in the TARDIS to help save the universe. However, instead of helping him, Strax and the Time Shark explored the TARDIS and tried on clothing in the TARDIS wardrobe. (COMIC: The Adventures of Strax & the Time Shark [+]Loading...["The Adventures of Strax & the Time Shark (comic story)"])
On Rickman, the Twelfth Doctor met Alex and Brandon Yow. With the help of the two siblings, the Doctor was able to defeat a Weeping Angel. (AUDIO: The Lost Angel [+]Loading...["The Lost Angel (audio story)"])
The Doctor arrived on board a high-paying ship, stuffed with aristocrats from various species, which attempted to discover and excavate a lost city hidden below the waves of New Oceana. The team eventually arrived to the doors of the Saffshran Ziggurat, which had been sealed for almost a thousand years, and was greeted by an awoken army of Quarks, who swiftly attacked the group. Realising that the Ziggurat was a Quark Manufactorum, the Doctor flooded the city as the team escaped using their breathing devices. (COMIC: Beneath the Waves [+]Loading...["Beneath the Waves (comic story)"])
Solo adventures[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from Death Among the Stars, Rhythm of Destruction, & The Boy With the Displaced Smile needs to be added
The Doctor chased Missy across Earth in different times and places as she stole numerous valuables, from the British Crown Jewels to diamond rings. The Doctor retraced his steps and discovered Missy had left Cybermats as she went. Missy was disappointed that the Doctor had foiled her plan despite not even knowing what the plan was. The Doctor then went off in his TARDIS to have lunch, not even bothering to let Missy explain her plan to him. (PROSE: Dr. Twelfth [+]Loading...["Dr. Twelfth (novel)"])
The Doctor went to New York City in the 1990s to undo the damage from the temporal paradoxes he had played a hand in. While setting up a trap to prevent anyone from interfering with his work, he fell victim to it himself and had to be rescued by Grant, a child obsessed with comics who nicknamed him "Doctor Mysterio", a name the Doctor immediately took a liking to. The Doctor decided to have Grant help him, handing him the Hazandra needed to power his device. However, Grant mistook it for cold medicine he needed and swallowed the gem. As the Hazandra granted wishes, it gave Grant superpowers, as he wanted to help people. The Doctor made Grant promise to never use his powers, so he wouldn't become corrupted by them. He kept an eye on Grant during his later years. (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"])
The Doctor ventured to Catrigan Nova to warn Queen Lydia that her prized gauntlet was part of a Cyberman, but arrived too late to prevent her upgrading her guards and castle, linking her kingdom to the Cyberiad hive mind. Lydia initially imprisoned the Doctor for trying to take the gauntlet from her, but eventually came to listen to him after her daughter, Mida, was unintentionally upgraded by her touch. The Doctor instructed Lydia to lead her fully-converted citizens to the gilded whirlpools of Catrigan Nova, with the nuggets of gold within the pools wearing away the Cybermen into nothingness. Lydia then destroyed the gauntlet, freeing Mida from the Cyberiad. (PROSE: The Mondas Touch [+]Loading...["The Mondas Touch (short story)"])
The Doctor foiled a plot by the Master. (POEM: Winning [+]Loading...["Winning (poem)"])
Reunion with River[[edit] | [edit source]]
Relaxing in his TARDIS after a "long day" that had involved "everybody turn[ing] into lizards" and a piano falling on him, the Doctor was mistakenly summoned by Nardole for a "medical emergency" on Mendorax Dellora and brought to River Song, who failed to recognise the Doctor due to not knowing about his new regeneration cycle, as her "husband", King Hydroflax, needed a lifesaving operation to remove the Halassi Androvar diamond from his head. However, River intended to remove Hydroflax's head, and managed to steal it when Hydroflax, whose head was dispensable, discovered the ruse and tried to kill her and the Doctor, until the Doctor took his head hostage and, with the robotic body unwilling to potentially harm Hydroflax's head, the Doctor and River managed to get teleported out by Ramone, another of River's "husbands".
Arriving back at the TARDIS, the Doctor and River, still not knowing his identity, "stole" the TARDIS to get away from Hydroflax's body, but the TARDIS could not dematerialise with the head inside and the body outside, and River was tricked into letting the body in after it stole Nardole and Ramone's heads. Escaping the body on the Harmony and Redemption, River tried to sell the diamond to Scratch of the Shoal of the Winter Harmony, only to learn that he was a follower of Hydroflax, and the two attempted to leave with Hydroflax's head. However, Hydroflax's robotic body arrived and killed the head, having been promised the Doctor's head as a replacement. To the Doctor's sorrow, he listened to River as she showed a lack of belief in his love for her, saying that while she loved him, he didn't fall in love with people. As the Doctor revealed who he was to River, River told the Doctor she was "just keeping them talking". As a meteor storm hit the ship, the Doctor defeated Hydroflax's body by tricking it into using the universal banking device and he River attempted to stop the Harmony and Redemption from crashing on Darillium. They ultimately failed, barely shielding themselves in the TARDIS instead during the impact.
Regaining consciousness first, the Doctor emerged from the TARDIS on Darillium, and, using the diamond, inspired a man named Alphonse to start a restaurant, so he could travel into the future and book a reservation for a balcony view of the Singing Towers. Dressing formally for River when she awakened, the Doctor gifted her with a sonic screwdriver of her own, and, telling her that nights on Darillium lasted twenty-four years, the two enjoyed the view. (TV: The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"]) True to his word, the Doctor stayed with River on Darillium for twenty-four years. During this time, the Doctor, worried he would be lonely when the night was over, recovered Nardole from Hydroflax's body (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"]) and rebuilt him, using human parts in some places. (TV: The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"])
Guarding the Vault[[edit] | [edit source]]
After leaving Darillium, the Doctor was summoned by an unnamed species to an unnamed planet to act as Missy's executioner. However, after Nardole arrived to deliver a message from River Song, the Doctor decided to spare Missy, but still made an oath to watch over her while she was locked up in a Quantum Fold Chamber for a thousand years. (TV: Extremis [+]Loading...["Extremis (TV story)"])
The Doctor and Nardole learned that Shoal of the Winter Harmony had invaded the capital cities of Earth. Inside their company's building in New York City, the Doctor began working to stop their plan of implanting themselves in the heads of the world leaders, which led him to meet up with Grant, who was now the heroic vigilante known as "the Ghost". Together, along with Lucy Fletcher, they stopped Harmony Shoal by destroying their nuclear spaceship before it could be dropped on New York City and decimate Earth. (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"])
Settling at St. Luke's University[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Doctor and Nardole eventually took the vault to St Luke's University (TV: The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"]) during the 1940s. (AUDIO: Regeneration Impossible [+]Loading...["Regeneration Impossible (audio story)"]) As a result of his promise, the Doctor was prevented from "going off-world unless it [was] an emergency", (TV: Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) and became a lecturer at the university, (TV: The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"]) being labelled a "Lecturer in Almost Everything", (PROSE: Girl Power! [+]Loading...["Girl Power! (short story)"]) and given a professoriate. (AUDIO: Regeneration Impossible [+]Loading...["Regeneration Impossible (audio story)"]) Nardole remained with him to ensure he stuck to his "oath", (TV: Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) as the Doctor had instructed him to. (TV: Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"]) Missy would occasionally ask Nardole to order items for her, and the Doctor would have to approve her requests. (PROSE: Girl Power! [+]Loading...["Girl Power! (short story)"])
In 1997, the Doctor gave a lecture explaining why time travel would be impossible, using the example of a theoretical time traveller going back and giving Adolf Hitler the necessary means to win World War II, stealing a toothbrush from the new timeline and then negating that timeline. He ended the lecture by brushing his teeth. (AUDIO: Emancipation of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Emancipation of the Daleks (audio story)"])
Adventures from St Luke's University[[edit] | [edit source]]
After the Ghost accidentally wore the Amulet of Xanadu, his Hazandra changed its power for the wearer to fall in love against their will. As such he fell in love with Missy who had initially stolen it and in his love-trance moved the Eiffel Tower to New York to impress her. This got the Doctor's attention and took the amulet from Missy who had worn it by accident afterwards. Despite dealing with the amulet, Missy escaped. (COMIC: Missy Loves Ghostie [+]Loading...["Missy Loves Ghostie (comic story)"])
Eight years after the Doctor and Grant parted ways from the Harmony Shoal incident, he asked for his help to retrieve the other gemstones, which he agreed to on the condition he could take his now wife Lucy and stepdaughter Jennifer. This took them to a future New York City ravaged by Ethan Hall who possessed the Arquess, Nixtus III which was overtaken by the Harmony Shoal who had the Alcyone and a Sycorax spaceship and leader Kraxnor who possessed the Sanguinare. With the gemstones retrieved, he took Grant's gemstone from him to save the universe from dark energy. (COMIC: Ghost Stories [+]Loading...["Ghost Stories (comic story)"])
When Missy created a Spacebook group chat with some of history's most famous women, particularly from Tudor England, the Doctor thought that Missy was trying to influence history to prevent St Luke's University from being constructed, allowing her to escape the Vault. However, after the Doctor had disbanded the group by infiltrating the chat and deconstructing Missy's leadership, Missy claimed she had only wanted to help the women fight male oppression, leading the Doctor to believe that her rehabilitation was beginning to take effect. (PROSE: Girl Power! [+]Loading...["Girl Power! (short story)"])
Following a clue of a missing student to a morgue in 1892 London, the Doctor was trapped in an Assassination Box and forced to undergo multiple false regenerations. When the regeneration energy alerted the Eleventh Doctor to his presence, they discovered that a regeneration vampire had trapped the Twelfth Doctor to drain his regenerations. The Eleventh Doctor was able to return the Twelfth Doctor's regenerations by overloading the Assassination Box, killing the vampire. As his past incarnation was knocked unconscious with his memories of the night erased, the Twelfth Doctor returned him to his TARDIS before taking his own leave. (AUDIO: Regeneration Impossible [+]Loading...["Regeneration Impossible (audio story)"])
While in his office, a Time Agent, Keira Sanstrom entered and demanded the Doctor take her to Calandra at gunpoint. Reluctantly the Doctor agreed only to find that the planet had gone wrong due to attempts Keira made to advance it by using her vortex manipulator. The ended up fixing it but the damage done to time was too great and arriving back at St Luke's they found it, along with the rest of Bristol, in ruins. (AUDIO: Flight to Calandra [+]Loading...["Flight to Calandra (audio story)"]) As such they jumped through to several points in time and space to close the fractures in time caused by Keira's meddling. However it seemed that things hadn't come to an end when another Keira appeared in the TARDIS claiming to be from the future. (AUDIO: Split Second [+]Loading...["Split Second (audio story)"]) The other Keira was actually one of the confused from Calandra who arrived to stop Havilland exploiting the weaknesses in time. Once she was defeated, the Doctor allowed Keira to take all the credit for stopping one of the agencies most wanted criminals. (AUDIO: The Weight of History [+]Loading...["The Weight of History (audio story)"])
Meeting Bill[[edit] | [edit source]]
By 2016, (TV: Knock Knock [+]Loading...["Knock Knock (TV story)"]) the Doctor recognised that a canteen worker named Bill Potts was attending his lectures and, admiring her fascination in the unknown, enrolled her in the school as her personal tutor. Bill would meet with the Doctor every day at 6pm for private lessons and kept up a continuously solid grade rate throughout the academic year. As a show of gratitude, Bill gave the Doctor a rug for Christmas, and he returned the gesture by travelling back in time to take photos of her deceased mother.
Sometime into the second term, Bill told the Doctor about a puddle that one of her new acquaintances, Heather, had showed her before she disappeared. Examining the puddle, the Doctor and Bill discovered that the puddle was imitating their movements instead of reflecting their image. Later that night, the Heather-imitating-puddle followed Bill to the Doctor's office and the Doctor, after ensuring the puddle was not after the contents of the Vault, took Bill and Nardole into the TARDIS and led the puddle to Australia, a planet at the other end of the universe in the future, and then a war zone in the Dalek-Movellan War. While Nardole quarantined the area off, the Doctor discovered that the puddle didn't mean them harm, but was following Bill because Heather had promised not to leave without her before the puddle had absorbed her. Bill released Heather from her promise and the puddle departed. The Doctor and Nardole then took Bill back to the University, with the Doctor planning to "mindwipe" her, but he relented when she asked him how he would feel if it was done to him, and he instead told her to leave. After arguing with himself, the Doctor decided to ask Bill to travel with him and took the TARDIS outside the university to welcome her aboard. (TV: The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"])
After fending off Nardole, the Doctor took Bill to visit a human colony in the far future, but grew suspicious when he found no humans in the facility, only the Vardy microbots that had constructed the colony and the their interface, the Emojibots. When the Doctor discovered the Vardy had killed the set-up team, he and Bill escaped the colony, but then ran back in to attempt to destroy the base for the safety of the coming settlers. As soon as the Doctor had wired the ship the city had been built around to explode, Bill showed him that the colonists had already arrived in hibernation waiting for the ship to wake them up, and entering the ship had awakened them prematurely. The Doctor stopped the bomb, and the pair deduced that the Vardy had been built to sustain happiness and had come to view grief as a plague.
The colonists, seeking revenge for their deceased relatives, opened fire on the Emojibots, which prompted the Vardy to attack. Realising that the Vardy had gained sentience, the Doctor rebooted the Vardy, erasing their memories of the humans, before beginning diplomatic negotiations between the humans and Vardy for a peaceful co-existence. Having achieved peace, the Doctor tried to return the TARDIS to the university just after they left, (TV: Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) but instead landed during the frost fair of 1814.
Deciding to explore the fair, the Doctor and Bill noticed green glowing lights under the ice, but were approached by a street urchin named Kitty before they could investigate. However, Kitty was distracting them from another urchin, who stole the Doctor's sonic screwdriver, but was sucked under the ice in the resulting chase. Unable to save the boy, the Doctor and Bill convinced Kitty to take them to her gang of urchins, and learned that they were getting paid to lead people onto the ice. The Doctor decided to venture under the ice with Bill to see what was in the Thames, and found a large fish-like creature chained down to the riverbed. Investigating the nearby river dredgers, the Doctor learned that the creature's waste was being dug up as a supplement for coal on Lord Sutcliffe's orders.
Captured by Sutcliffe's men after the Doctor assaulted him for his racism towards Bill, Sutcliffe revealed that his family had known about the sea creature for years and the fuel it provided was accelerating industrialism. Sutcliffe had the Doctor and Bill tied up near a dynamite-laced-tent, but they were able to escape. Leaving Bill and the urchins to clear the River of people, the Doctor moved the explosives towards the creature's chains, freeing it when Sutcliffe activated the dynamite. As the ice shattered from the creature's escape, killing Sutcliffe, the Doctor rescued Bill by pulling her off of the ice before they got soaked as the sea creature passed them by. After amending Sutcliffe's will to name one of the urchins as his heir, the Doctor and Bill returned to the university, where the Doctor used a coin trick he had learned to convince Nardole to let him continue travelling with Bill. (TV: Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) The Doctor and Bill would meet up for adventures on Saturdays. (TV: World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"])
Early adventures with Bill[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from Diamond Dogs, The Shining Man, The Last Action Figure, & I Am the Doctor needs to be added
After Bill asked him to help her move into a student house, the Doctor grew suspicious of the fact that an old, large house was being rented to Bill and five other students for so little. Bill and the Doctor discovered that the Landlord was using strange insects to keep his mother alive in a wooden form by feeding people to them every twenty years; convincing the mother that her son was wrong to keep her alive this way, the Doctor was able to free the house's recent victims, while the Landlord and his mother were consumed by the insects and the house collapsed. (TV: Knock Knock [+]Loading...["Knock Knock (TV story)"])
The Doctor continued adventuring on his own on occasion, notably evading a ring of tanks and a murderous Black Dalek through cleverness; he also travelled to a city that was about to be destroyed by an exploding volcano, all to rescue a single bird left behind in its cage, whom he then released from a mountain's peak in the presence of Bill. (WC: A Hero like the Doctor [+]Loading...["A Hero like the Doctor (webcast)"])
Threats from the Dreamspace[[edit] | [edit source]]
Landing on Titan to get a good view of Bill's favourite planet, Saturn, the Doctor and Bill were swept up in the trail of a land-cruiser studying the surrounding continent of Xanadu. Discovering that the vessel was being funded by Rudy Zoom and was inspired by a vision held by the psychic Lady Takashi, the Doctor and Bill joined the crew in exploring Titan. After several hours, they found a dome hiding a garden inside a cavern, perfectly supported with no animal life. Travelling to the centre of the ecosystem, the Doctor discovered two dead trees. When they were attacked by a robot which saw them as weeds, the group scattered and Bill and the Doctor were separated. Just as soon as the Doctor had deactivated the robot, the plants around them came alive and formed their own bodies, interested in consuming the flesh-based beings around them.
The Haluu plants wrapped themselves around the humans, but the Doctor was able to free himself and Lady Takashi by reactivating the robot and using it against them. The Haluu progenitor Sythorr raised itself out of the ground and ate most of the human expedition. Sythorr intended to wipe Rudy and Bill's memories and use them to take his seeds with them so he can spread his influence across Earth and take it over. The Doctor explained to Sythorr's lover, Oksanna, that Sythorr had placed the minds of dead humans he claimed in the Dreamspace inside the garden's Haluu. Oksanna remembered her life as a human and sacrificed herself to destroy Sythorr along with the domed garden. As the Doctor, Bill, Rudy and Lady Takashi escaped to the ship, the last piece of Sythorr warned the Doctor before dying that "the unknown soldier [was] stirring." (COMIC: The Soul Garden [+]Loading...["The Soul Garden (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Bill landed in the Indian Territory of 1880, where the outlaw Seth Shelton tried to hold Bill hostage, but she was saved by United States Deputy Marshal Bass Reeves and the scout Joey Two Trees, who had Shelton arrested and intended to take him back to Arkansas to stand trial. Joey showed the Doctor and Reeves that a stag had had its heart ripped out of its body, and they then saw a group of Stikini carry Bill away to a ceremony being performed by the Seminole medicine woman Totika. The Doctor and Reeves freed Bill from her capture, but the ceremony caused her to swap her body with the Stikini Cocheta in the Red Skies, another area in the Dreamspace which the Stikini were native to. The Doctor incapacitated Cocheta using the noise of his sonic screwdriver, and contacted Bill in the Dreamspace. Bill and the Seminole banished there by Totika willed themselves out of the Red Skies, forcing the Stikini back there, and Reeves and Joey destroyed the totem used in Totika's ceremonies. Afterwards, the sky opened up, and the group saw the Stikini get burnt by an unknown force in the Red Skies. Returning to the TARDIS, the Doctor and Bill saw the TARDIS had impossible carvings on its exterior. (COMIC: The Parliament of Fear [+]Loading...["The Parliament of Fear (comic story)"])
Searching for answers, the Doctor and Bill went to the Renath Archive library on Cornucopia to try to identify it, but the Doctor failed to identity any relevant symbol after going through all of the books in the archive. When the head librarian, Matildus Galathea, showed signs of a weakening mind, she asked her granddaughter, Sashana, to be handed custody of the archive, with the Doctor as witness. Before custody could be handed over, Bill, joined by the Kaballus Kids, told them to stop. Bill took a photograph on her phone which revealed Sashana's true form, and Sashana revealed that Matildus had no granddaughter, that she was psychically sowing doubt in Matildus' mind and was blocking her memories so she could sell off the library's collection. Sashana began to fry the group's brains with her mind, but was stopped after Bill summoned the Ristallian crater-hound Archie, whose simple brain couldn't be kept back. After Sashana was arrested, the Doctor realised the carving wasn't a symbol, but a coded message, and decided to visit Alan Turing. (COMIC: Matildus [+]Loading...["Matildus (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Bill went to visit the Galatean duplicate of Alan Turing on the lunar colony Athenia to decipher the markings on the TARDIS, only to learn that Alan had been missing for two years. When Chiyoko told the Doctor where to find Alan, they found him inside a replica of King's College, Cambridge on the Moon's surface, and learned that the code on the TARDIS was part of the Dreamspace-residing Phantom Piper, who tricked the Doctor into coming to Alan so that Alan's Block Transfer Computation could make the Piper take physical form. At the Doctor's suggestion, Alan defeated the Piper and prevented the Piper's plot to start war between humans and Galateans by tricking him into shooting a bullet at a mathematical construct of Alan, which allowed Alan to break down the code of the bullet, which was part of the Piper. Afterwards, Fey Truscott-Sade arrived to warn the Doctor about "the Absence" and told him to assemble his forces. (COMIC: The Phantom Piper [+]Loading...["The Phantom Piper (comic story)"])
Following Fey, the Doctor and Bill ended up in an entropy bubble that began draining the power from the TARDIS. Exploring where they landed, they found that many other time travellers, such as Count Jodafra and Gol Clutha and her mercenaries, were also trapped. During an attack by the Clockwise Men, the Doctor used Jodafra's time machine, the Salvation, to power up the TARDIS and escape, but only after Fey reappeared, leading Jodafra to his death at the hands of the Clockwise Men. Returning to Cornucopia, the Doctor met back up with Annabel Lake to enlist help from Wonderland to find out more about Fey's change in behaviour. After escaping a mid-air attack by Fey, they made it to Wonderland HQ, where the Doctor explained to everyone how Fey had apparently died attempting to rescue a Loshann child during the Last Great Time War.
Returning to Matildus, the Doctor used a copy of Peter Pan to access Fey in the Dreamspace, where she explained about her survival and her plans to attack the Time Lords, with the help of an entire map of the space/time vortex gained by the Absence, who appeared as the fully matured Loshann child. Learning Fey's only surviving relative, Alexander Truscott, was involved, the Doctor and Bill went to 2018 London to find him. Upon locating him, Truscott explained his history of altering Fey's mind to make her hate the Time Lords, but was interrupted by the Doctor's "cavalry" of the Twelfth General, Marshal Reeves, and Totika. They fled as Fey and the Clockwise Men prepared their attack, only to discover that Shayde was reforming himself as a black sphere around Fey.
Entering the sphere, the group entered the Dreamspace, where the Doctor showed Fey that she had never saved the Loshann child and the Absence had never existed. With her illusion broken, the area of the Dreamspace shattered and Shayde wiped Fey’s mind of her time with him at the cost of his own life. The Doctor dropped Fey off at Wonderland in London and left, neglecting to say goodbye due to his intention to one day see her again. (COMIC: The Clockwise War [+]Loading...["The Clockwise War (comic story)"])
More adventures with Bill[[edit] | [edit source]]
While he was "correcting" the history books in the Terrance Dicks Library, the Doctor received a phone call from Jenny before her bowship crashed into the library. Happily greeting his daughter, the Doctor brought her to his office, where she told him that she had been trying to save Jack Harkness and Tara Mishra from a white hole on Sultath, only for herself to be saved by the Fifth Doctor, and him, Jack and Tara being swallowed by the singularity. When the same white energy that Jenny had described attacked St Luke's University, the Doctor realised that time travellers were not affected by the energy and tried to enter the TARDIS, only to find that it had merged with that of his tenth incarnation. Strategising with his predecessor, the Doctors and Jenny ejected themselves from the TARDIS, only to be surrounded by a mob of possessed students, but they were saved by the Ninth Doctor as a massive white hole opened in the sky.
Joined by Bill, Nardole, Gabby Gonzalez and Cindy Wu, the three Doctors ran into the Ninth Doctor's TARDIS, but found that all three of their ships had merged before the craft began being consumed by the white energy that the Doctors had now traced to the Void. When the Eighth Doctor arrived, he revealed that all of his past incarnations were also trapped in the Void. Leaving their eighth incarnation to safeguard Earth, the other Doctors flew into the Void in Jenny's bowship and discovered that the universe was being caused by a Type 1 TARDIS that their eleventh incarnation had failed to correctly pilot. After being updated by the Eleventh Doctor to his situation, the other Doctors realised that the Type 1 could be made to listen to another TARDIS, linking it to the prior versions of their ship and having it jettison all that it had consumed. With the crisis over, the Twelfth Doctor returned to St Luke's University with his ninth, tenth and eleventh incarnations, and bade his past incarnations and their companions farewell, with Jenny opting to leave with the Ninth Doctor. (COMIC: The Lost Dimension [+]Loading...["The Lost Dimension (comic story)"])
The Doctor was summoned by Bill to her home due to a future version of her turning up. This led to them colliding with a Dalek War Saucer in the time vortex and thus landed in an alternate 2017 where the human race enslaved the Dalek populace due to the saucer crashing on St Luke's university in an alternate 1997, killing the Doctor and Nardole. There they met that timeline's Bill Potts and with the three Bills prevented that timeline from happening crashing two versions of the Dalek ship together in the vortex, the older Bill sacrificing herself for that to happen. He then dropped off the alternate timeline Bill in 1997 to give her 20 years away from a timeline with totalitarian rule, and sealing the loop that started the adventure off in the first place. (AUDIO: Emancipation of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Emancipation of the Daleks (audio story)"])
The Doctor took Bill to Plex's adopted home planet to see the first generation born independently, only to find them to be hostile. With the Chameleon Arch biodata module having broken since he last used it, the Doctor instead brought the planet to peace by telling the clones a glamourised version of their history. As they flew away in the TARDIS, the Doctor told Bill about his history with Plex. (COMIC: The Promise [+]Loading...["The Promise (FCBD comic story)"]) The Doctor then took Bill to see the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953. When he asked her what she thought, Bill stated that she preferred Victoria's coronation. (COMIC: Where's the Doctor? [+]Loading...["Where's the Doctor? (comic story)"])
The Doctor and Bill tracked what appeared to be a shooting star to the village of Little Smallington. Arriving at the village hall, they learned the star was actually a hog-shaped multi-function recycling drone on a rampage because of its overheated nuclear reactor. With the aid of the young Smallington Secret Squad, they lured "Hangry the hog" into a trap using all the metal they could find that resulted in the mechanical hog landing in a river. After the Doctor retrieved him from the river and fixed his reactor, the Secret Squad decided to keep the now-friendly Hangry as a mascot. (COMIC: Loose in the Lane [+]Loading...["Loose in the Lane (comic story)"])
Temporal crisis[[edit] | [edit source]]
While travelling in the TARDIS with Bill, the Doctor was affected by a temporal crisis affecting all his other incarnations, rendering TARDIS travel all but impossible except from one vortex energy-charged space-time Waypoint to the next. His initial emergency landing was on Gallifrey, where he was contacted by the time-hopping K9 Mark IV on behalf of the Thirteenth Doctor and informed about the basic situation. At K9's advice, he stole a stash of Kyfred Gems from the Panopticon, and headed to the Untempered Schism with Bill to try and use them to stabilise the temporal energy by hurling them into the Time Vortex "like skipping stones".
After completing this, he returned to his TARDIS, which had charged up with vortex energy, only to be chased through time by a Dalek and forced into another emergency landing, in the Nevada desert where he'd parted with Clara. There, he was met with the immortal version of Clara postdating their break-up. In these aberrant temporal circumstances, he was able to recognise her, but did not understand how she was alive, which Clara refused to elaborate about. Things got more confusing when another Clara, from an earlier point in her and the Doctor's time-streams, also made her presence known. After the younger Clara disposed of the Dalek, talking it into self-destructing, the older Clara and the Doctor travelled onwards to another Waypoint, the Underhenge housing the Pandorica. After escaping from the Cybermen, they parted ways again with Clara returning to her and Me's TARDIS. The time-hopping K9 tried to recruit the Twelfth Doctor's help for UNIT, who had detected Sea Devil activity, but in the end it was the Thirteenth Doctor who intervened.
Still under Stonehenge, the Twelfth Doctor was met with the Lone Centurion, Rory Williams, and then with a version of River Song. Experiencing severe time echoes that made him flash back to his second and third incarnations, he finally realised that he was losing his Time Sense, shedding symbiotic nuclei at every Waypoint, even as some of his other selves came to "parallel" conclusions. (GAME: Lost in Time [+]Loading...["Lost in Time (video game)"])
Blindness[[edit] | [edit source]]
Urging to see the universe again, the Doctor answered a distress beacon from Chasm Forge, bringing Nardole with him and Bill when he tried to stop the Doctor leaving. Finding the station overrun with dead bodies reanimated by their smartsuits, and the oxygen limited to those suits, the TARDIS crew put themselves into the suits and were updated on the situation by the survivors, Tasker, Ivan, Abby and Dahh-Ren. When the survivors needed to escape the deceased crew by walking outside the station, Bill's smartsuit malfunctioned and removed her helmet, leaving her exposed to the vacuum of space. After she lost consciousness, the Doctor gave her his helmet, causing him to lose his vision as a consequence of being exposed to the vacuum. Realising that the smartsuits were killing people because they were designed to by the company who created them, Ganymede Systems, to remove the expensive workers, the Doctor linked the survivors' with the power system of the station, leaving it so that the whole station would explode if the smartsuits killed any of them. Telling the spacesuits A.I. his actions and that it would result in Ganymede Systems losing a lot of money, the suits became non-hostile and let the Doctor and the survivors leave.
Having his eyes' appearance restored, but secretly still leaving him blind, the Doctor dropped Ivan and Abby off at Ganymede Systems Head Office to make a complaint, and returned Bill back to his office at St Luke's University, where he revealed to Nardole that he was unable to restore his vision. (TV: Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"]) Using his sonic sunglasses to see, the Doctor was outside the Vault when he recovered an email titled Extremis. It came from his "Shadow World" counterpart, warning him of an impending attack by the Monks. (TV: Extremis [+]Loading...["Extremis (TV story)"])
After a pyramid appeared in Turmezistan, the Doctor, as the President of Earth, was called upon to deal with the situation by the Secretary General of the United Nations. At the pyramid, the Doctor, Bill, Nardole, the Secretary General, US Colonel Don Brabbit, Russian official Ilya Svyatoslavovich and China official Xiaolian were shown a vision of an apocalyptic Earth by the Monks, who demanded the Earth surrender to them out of love so they could prevent that future from happening. The Doctor refused to, but the Secretary General took the offer out of fear, and was killed for giving the wrong consent.
Setting out to determine the cause of the world ending threat, the Doctor came to the conclusion that they were dealing with a bacteria that would be accidentally released soon. Hacking the CCTV cameras of all the labs on the world to see which one the Monks would reactivate, the Doctor and Nardole went to Agrofuel Research Operations to prevent the catastrophe, while Bill, Brabbit, Svyatoslavovich and Xiaolian went to negotiate with the Monks. At the lab, after ordering Nardole to move the TARDIS and get himself to safety from the bacteria, the Doctor learned from Erica that a misplaced decimal point had resulted in the creation of the deadly bacteria. With the lab's automatic vent systems primed to send the bacteria into the atmosphere in a short time, the Doctor rigged an explosion to sterilise the lab and destroy the bacteria before it could be released.
However, the Doctor became trapped in the part of the lab about to be destroyed when his sonic sunglasses couldn't read the combination lock to the lab door. With Nardole not responding, the Doctor admitted he was blind to Bill and, though he was prepared to die for his mistake, Bill, as the last remaining representative, surrendered Earth to the Monks in exchange for them restoring the Doctor's vision, telling the Doctor the Earth needed him too much. With his vision returned, the Doctor escaped the lab, but was telepathically told by the Monks that he would only "see [their] world." (TV: The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"]) As Earth fell to the Monks, the Doctor pretended to be loyal to them to lure them into a sense of security as he planned a revolution. As part of his deception, the Doctor wrote and produced propaganda for the Monks aboard a prison boat off the coast of Scotland, slowly freeing the minds of his guards from the Monk's control. Once Nardole had recovered from the bacteria, the Doctor updated him on the situation.
After six months of the Monks' rule, and on Nardole's suggestion, the Doctor had him bring Bill to him, but not without making sure the Monks weren't affecting her. Once Nardole had brought Bill to the prison boat, the Doctor acted as if he was truly working with the Monks, and sent in his guards to hold Bill at gunpoint, having already told his guards to use blanks to avoid a fatality. When his manipulations caused Bill to grab a pistol and shoot him, the Doctor faked a regeneration to completely fool Bill, admitting to the test after he ended the regeneration effect. Knowing that Missy would have information on the Monks, the Doctor and his companions stole the prison boat to sail to Bristol.
Arriving back at St Luke's University, the Doctor and Bill entered the Vault to converse with Missy, who revealed that the only known way to stop the Monks was to kill their "lynchpin", not knowing that this was Bill. The Doctor refused to sacrifice Bill and instead set out to the Monks' headquarters in London, where the Giant Monk was transmitting the Monks' signals from strategically placed statues, with the Doctor planning to sacrifice himself by destroying the Giant Monk. After they managed to breach the Cathedral, the Doctor was unable to overpower the Giant Monk, and was restrained by Bill and Nardole to prevent him stopping Bill sacrificing herself, but she was able to survive by thinking of her mother, with a memory "so pristine" that it managed to break the Monks' conditioning. With humanity starting to realise the false history of the Monks, the Monks chose to flee the planet, erasing all memory of themselves as they did so. With everything returning to normal, the Doctor returned to the Vault, where he listened as Missy revealed she was starting to feel guilt for the lives she had taken in the past. (TV: The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"])
Final adventures[[edit] | [edit source]]
Info from Plague City, Dead Media, The Great Shopping Bill, A Confusion of Angels, & Pain Management needs to be added
The Doctor was tricked by Ziggy when she swapped bodies with Bill, but her plan was foiled by Bill and Lou, who were able to reverse the body swap. Ziggy then explained that she had wanted them return her to her home planet, Onhwhie, as she had been exiled for speaking up against the unjust government. After some persuading from Bill and Lou, the Doctor agreed to return Ziggy to Onhwhie. (PROSE: Bill and the Three Jackets [+]Loading...["Bill and the Three Jackets (short story)"])
While taking Bill and Nardole to NASA, the Doctor witnessed the discovery of a message reading ""GOD SAVE THE QUEEN"" on the surface of Mars, and went to investigate in 1881. After sending Nardole to get supplies from the TARDIS, it dematerialised due to a glitch, trapping the Doctor and Bill on Mars. As they continued to investigate, they discovered that an Ice Warrior named Friday had brought a platoon of British soldiers, led by Colonel Godsacre, with him to Mars to reward them with Martian treasures for assisting him in his return. When the Ice Queen Iraxxa reawakened upon the discovery of her tomb, the human soldiers opened fire on fire in a panic, and she declared war on them. As Godscare was overthrown in a mutiny led by Neville Catchlove, the Doctor and Bill were imprisoned with him as the humans fought the reawakened Ice Warrior army.
With the aid of Friday, they escaped. After Godscare executed Catchlove when he took Iraxxa hostage, the Doctor helped the Victorians and the Ice Warriors form a truce, subsequently helping them make contact with Alpha Centauri, with the Doctor helping Godscare to leave the ""GOD SAVE THE QUEEN"" message to help the Galactic Federation find the Ice Warriors. As the two armies departed, the Doctor and Bill were rescued by Nardole and Missy, Nardole having let her out of the Vault to assist him. (TV: Empress of Mars [+]Loading...["Empress of Mars (TV story)"])
While the Doctor was trying to take Bill to see a polar bear, the TARDIS was diverted to an island in the North Atlantic in the 9th century, where they discovered Ice Warriors led by Grand Marshall Sskoll and Vikings. To the Doctor's horror, he discovered that the Ice Warriors were in pursuit of a strain of the Flood, and that his old enemy, Fenric, was plotting to use the Flood to contaminate the Earth's water supply so that he could take over. The Doctor convinced a Haemovore to destroy the Flood on Earth for mutual benefit by detonating a nearby volcano, because if Fenric's plot succeeded, it would erase the Haemovores from existence and replace them with the Flood. As the surviving Ice Warriors, Haemovores and Vikings left, the Doctor and Bill got to see a polar bear. (COMIC: The Wolves of Winter [+]Loading...["The Wolves of Winter (comic story)"])
Still seeing potential for Missy, the Doctor bio-locked her in the TARDIS for her to do "basic maintenance". (TV: The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"])
Answering a summons from Kate, the Doctor and Bill arrived in Piccadilly Circus to find everyone caught in a phase-shift into another plane. Upon entering the plane, the Doctor and Bill learnt that the Kar-yns were using the Memetic Achieve to manipulate their host into reviving them. While the Doctor distracted them, Bill convinced the host to reject the Kar-yn, and they were destroyed, reverting everything to normal. (COMIC: Tulpa [+]Loading...["Tulpa (comic story)"])
Wanting to prove his superior knowledge of the Ninth Legion, the Doctor took Bill and Nardole to 2nd century Aberdeen to solve the mystery of their disappearance. Separating from Bill, the Doctor and Nardole found corpse drained of the absorbed sunlight in their body, and were taken prisoner by the Picts. After learning that their leader, a young girl named Kar, made claim to destroying the Ninth Legion in her role as "the Gatekeeper", the Doctor and Nardole escaped to a Cairn, where the Doctor found a rift leading to a dimension of Light-eating locusts. Though he only stood in the dimension for a few seconds, when he returned to Aberdeen, he found that two days had passed, with Nardole having joined the Picts and been unable to find Bill.
After Kar confessed to releasing the "Eater of Light" to destroy the Ninth Legion, Bill appeared with the remaining Roman soldiers, and the Doctor was able to broker a peace between the Pict and Roman children. With the two armies working together, the Doctor had them draw the Light-eating locust to the Cairn and force it back through the rift. While the Doctor intended for himself to enter the other dimension to fight off the horde of locusts, he was overpowered by Bill and the Picts, and had his place voluntarily taken by Kar and the Ninth Legion, who entered the rift as the Cairn collapsed. Returning to the TARDIS, the Doctor told Bill and Nardole of Missy being locked in the TARDIS, and allowed her to hear the music of the Picts as they talked about their old friendship. (TV: The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"])
Tracking an old Dalek harvest ship to Gosligi's Branch, the Doctor tricked the ship into beaming him and Bill aboard, and he was able to override it back into a "basic function", rendering the ship harmless. He then gave the ship to the people of Gosligi's Branch. (COMIC: Harvest of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Harvest of the Daleks (comic story)"])
Last stand[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Mondasian colony ship[[edit] | [edit source]]
Deciding to give Missy a proper test of character, the Doctor convinced Bill and Nardole to let her lead a rescue mission with them by responding to a distress call. Finding a colony ship heading towards a black hole, the Doctor's test ended when Bill was shot by Jorj and taken away by the ship's crew. After spending a time with Jorj, the Doctor, Missy, and Nardole took the elevator to the bottom of the ship in pursuit. (TV: World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"]) As they descended, a time portal with a humanoid hand reaching out, but the Doctor was unable to properly examine the anomaly before it disappeared. (COMIC: The Road To... [+]Loading...["The Road To... (comic story)"]) The Doctor, Nardole and Missy eventually arrived on the one-thousand-and-fifty-sixth floor to find Bill converted into a Mondasian Cyberman, as Missy teamed up with her previous incarnation, who gloated that they were witnessing the "Genesis of the Cybermen". (TV: World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"]) Despite being attacked and subsequently overpowered by the pair as Nardole fled, the Doctor was able to update the computer algorithm to include two heart species in the Cybermen's hunt before he lost consciousness.
After he woke up on the roof to hear the Master and Missy gloating about their victory and Cyber-converted Bill posed behind, the other Cybermen received the update, leading to the army to lay siege to the hospital. However, the Doctor signalled Nardole to collect him in a stolen shuttlecraft. As the two Masters climbed aboard, the Doctor was grabbed by a Cyberman and electrocuted severely. Heavily wounded, the Doctor collapsed, slowly losing consciousness as he saw Bill come to his rescue and transported him to the shuttlecraft, carrying him out when they crash landed on Floor 0507. The Doctor spent the next two weeks recovering on the floor's solar farm under Hazran's care, as his body prepared to regenerate, despite the Doctor's efforts to resist it. After helping Bill come to terms with her situation, the Master and Missy revealed they had found the floor's lift. Once they reached Missy, she unwittingly called upon the Cybermen by activating the floor's lift. After fighting off a lone Cyberman, which was of a more advanced model due to the time that had passed for the Cyberman-controlled city below, the Doctor began to prepare defences and make an evacuation plan for the farm. When the Master and Missy made to leave, the Doctor confronted them, begging them to stay and help, to no avail, aside from Missy briefly considering it. Realising that the Cybermen would eventually attack, the Doctor forced Nardole to lead the evacuation to Floor 0502, with only Bill staying with him to face the Cybermen. After they separated to their posts, the Doctor faced the army of Cybermen by blasting as many as he could with Nardole's software hacking of the ship's systems, but was eventually surrounded and struck down by multiple shots. Holding back his regeneration energy as it overcame him, the Doctor detonated the entire deck, killing all the Cybermen in the area, as well as fatally injuring himself. (TV: The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"])
Refusing to change[[edit] | [edit source]]
Sometime later, the Doctor awoke in the TARDIS with no clue as to how he got there, (TV: The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) believing he had staggered into the console room after the explosion and simply collapsed. (PROSE: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)"]) Entering a "state of grace", (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) the Doctor declared he would not go on living if it meant becoming someone else, and consciously halted the regeneration process. In response, the TARDIS took him to a snowy landscape, where the Doctor, still refusing to change, found himself face to face with his first incarnation (TV: The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) just before his regeneration at the South Pole in December 1986. The First Doctor, not realising that he had returned to the wrong TARDIS, mistook the Twelfth Doctor for another Time Lord who had come to take his TARDIS back, just as time suddenly froze around them and a World War I Captain appeared out of the snow. As a bright light shined upon them, the Doctors and the Captain retreated into the TARDIS where the Twelfth Doctor convinced the First Doctor of his identity as the TARDIS was pulled into inside a hovering spaceship.
As the First Doctor was sent out as a distraction, the Twelfth Doctor worked on getting the TARDIS working, until he overheard a Glass Woman offer Bill Potts in exchange for the Captain, and went to embrace her, though expressed disbelief at Bill's seemingly miraculous return. The Doctor examined the Glass Woman with the First Doctor, who realised that the Glass Woman was based on a real person and, at the prompting of Bill, the Twelfth Doctor chose to flee. Lowering the winch holding the TARDIS, the Doctor was able to escape the spaceship with Bill, the Captain and his first incarnation, who led everyone to his TARDIS. The Twelfth Doctor, knowing that their best chance of stopping Glass Woman was to discover who she was, and that the First Doctor's TARDIS databanks were incomplete, decided to visit his "old friend" Rusty the "good Dalek" for the information and piloted the First Doctor's TARDIS to Villengard.
Upon arrival, the Captain was attacked by a Kaled mutant, and the Twelfth Doctor, still not entirely trusting her, ordered Bill to stay in the TARDIS to help him recover. Walking with the First Doctor, the Twelfth Doctor was forced to rest when his state of grace weakened him, and took the time to discuss regeneration with his first incarnation until they came under attack from Rusty in a tower. After getting Rusty to scan him and see that he was already dying, Rusty stopped and allowed the Twelfth Doctor to enter his tower. Leaving the First Doctor behind for his own protection, the Doctor greeted Rusty in the tower, and negotiated with him for access to the Daleks' Pathweb by reasoning that helping him would "hurt the Daleks". From the Pathweb, the Doctor learned of the Testimony's benevolent agenda (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) but immediately realised the real Bill Potts was not with him on the planet. (PROSE: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)"])
As time froze again, the First Doctor arrived with Bill, who officially revealed herself to be a glass avatar and reminded the Doctors that the Captain had to die at his allotted point in time to correct the timeline error caused by the two Doctors "trying to die twice in the same lifetime". Knowing they were to blame, the Twelfth Doctor requested for him and the First Doctor to be the ones to return the Captain to 1914, which was agreed to. On the return flight to 1914, the Twelfth Doctor did his best to comfort the Captain, who commented on how he had promised his wife that he would be home for Christmas, giving the Twelfth Doctor the idea to adjust the time period for the Captain by a couple of hours and make it so that time resumed for him at the beginning of the Christmas Armistice. (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) He made a quick visit to Gladys Presley to reclaim two alien communicators, but decided not to when he saw her using them to speak with her son, Elvis. (PROSE: That's All Right, Mama [+]Loading...["That's All Right, Mama (short story)"])
As the Doctors and the Glass Woman returned the Captain to the crater where he was supposed to die, with a perception filter rendering them invisible, the First Doctor agreed to the Captain's request for the Doctors to look in on his family, the Lethbridge-Stewarts, from time to time. Once time resumed, the Glass Woman departed and the Doctors watched as the Captain and his German opponent prepared to kill each other before both sides of the battlefield began singing Christmas carols, signalling that the Twelfth Doctor's plan had worked, as he explained the Christmas Armistice to his first incarnation. After watching the Armistice for a few hours, the Doctors shook hands as they started glowing with regeneration energy. Bidding farewell to each other after the First Doctor decided that he was ready to regenerate, the Twelfth Doctor told him to go "the long way round" to see if he was ready to face his own. As his first incarnation departed, the Doctor, briefly rendered visible, saluted the Captain, a salute he returned with confusion. (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Death[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Main article: Twelfth Doctor's regeneration
Wrapping himself in his Crombie coat as he sat alone on the battlefield, the Doctor was joined by Bill's glass avatar, who he decided to take "one last stroll" with as she assisted him back to his TARDIS. After the Testimony restored the Doctor's memories of Clara Oswald, a glass avatar of Nardole arrived to convince the Doctor not to die as "everybody in the universe might just go cold" if he did. The Doctor expressed a desire to have peace and rest which his friends agreed that he could as it was his choice and expressed understanding as they shared a final "cuddle" before the glass avatars teleported away.
Deciding that it was "time to leave the battlefield", the Doctor returned to his TARDIS, where he looked at the universe through the scanner and declared that "they [would] get it all wrong without [him]" and contented that "one more lifetime [wouldn't] kill anyone", (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) as he finally understood that it was he himself who kept evil from winning over good in the universe. (PROSE: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)"]) Holding back the regeneration for a few more moments, the Doctor gave an advisory speech to his successor. Having said his peace, the Doctor underwent an explosive regeneration into a female incarnation, which caused the control room to sustain extensive damage. (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Post-mortem[[edit] | [edit source]]
As the Thirteenth Doctor continued to recover from the immediate after effects of the regeneration, she heard the voice of the Twelfth Doctor continue to speak to her, helping her to remember instances from their previous incarnations that related to the new sensations she was feeling and what she would face, and gave her some final advice. As the Twelfth Doctor finally began to let go, ready for his time as the Doctor to fully end, the TARDIS began experiencing "multiple operation failures". (COMIC: The Many Lives of Doctor Who [+]Loading...["The Many Lives of Doctor Who (comic story)"]) As his new incarnation crashed through the night sky above Sheffield, the Twelfth Doctor tried to argue with her to distract her from her imminent plummeting to the ground. (PROSE: Things She Thought While Falling [+]Loading...["Things She Thought While Falling (short story)"])
During the restoration of the Cyber-Empire, the Thirteenth Doctor used the memory of all her previous incarnations to escape the Matrix. (TV: The Timeless Children [+]Loading...["The Timeless Children (TV story)"])
Undated events[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Speaking to an unseen audience, the Twelfth Doctor explained the workings of the bootstrap paradox by using a hypothetical situation of a man with a time machine using his knowledge of Ludwig van Beethoven to travel back in time and inadvertently became Beethoven as a result. (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"])
- During the time when he had grown out his hair, the Twelfth Doctor visited Daughter of Mine during her imprisonment in the mirrors to ask her whether she was sorry. She never did apologise to him and in fact considered him "the worst." (AUDIO: Shadow of a Doubt [+]Loading...["Shadow of a Doubt (audio story)"])
- At one point, the Twelfth Doctor left the Pandora Bolt with Jim and Midge in 2020 London, along with specific instructions to leave the two puzzle boxes a distance of one mile apart, in each of their shops. (AUDIO: Lost Property [+]Loading...["Lost Property (audio story)"])
- The Twelfth Doctor visited the Chibolg Mega-Stamps Convention on Ghent, and prevented a massacre that would have resulted in a war. He then paid the staff to cater to the Ninth Doctor, who arrived soon after, and give him a room to relax in. (PROSE: A Day to Yourselves [+]Loading...["A Day to Yourselves (short story)"])
Legacy[[edit] | [edit source]]
Upon meeting her, the newly-regenerated Thirteenth Doctor told Yasmin Khan that "half an hour ago, [she] was a white-haired Scotsman". (TV: The Woman Who Fell to Earth [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Fell to Earth (TV story)"])
The Thirteenth Doctor was still in possession of the Twelfth Doctor's ID card. (COMIC: A Little Help from My Friends [+]Loading...["A Little Help from My Friends (comic story)"])
When the Thirteenth Doctor tried to release her voice activated handcuffs that had been used to bind her and Yaz, with no effect, she stopped to wonder if they were not responding to her voice because she might have been Scottish when she set them up, leading her to try speaking to them in a Scottish accent, mimicking her Twelfth, as well as her Seventh incarnation. (TV: The Halloween Apocalypse [+]Loading...["The Halloween Apocalypse (TV story)"])
The Thirteenth Doctor included excerpts written by her predecessor in her book, A Short History of Everyone. She also wrote about him in the book. (PROSE: A Short History of Everyone [+]Loading...["A Short History of Everyone (novel)"])
When the Fourteenth Doctor first met Shirley Anne Bingham, who assumed him to be the Tenth Doctor due to his physical resemblance to him, she was confused to hear that he was aware that his Tenth incarnation would go on to be, among other incarnations, a Scotsman. (TV: The Star Beast [+]Loading...["The Star Beast (TV story)"])
When the world was swept up in the chaos caused by Stooky Bill and the Giggle, Kate Lethbridge-Stewart told the Doctor that she required the authority of a world leader to give UNIT permission to shoot down the KOSAT 5 satellite to avoid the international consequences of shooting down the South Korean satellite, to which the Doctor, (TV: The Giggle [+]Loading...["The Giggle (TV story)"]) having retained his past self's authority as President of the Earth, (PROSE: The Giggle [+]Loading...["The Giggle (novelisation)"]) invoked the Gold Protocol to order a galvanic beam to take down the satellite. (TV: The Giggle [+]Loading...["The Giggle (TV story)"])
When Rogue used his deep scanner on the Fifteenth Doctor, the images of seventeen earlier incarnations were projected, including that of the Twelfth Doctor. (TV: Rogue [+]Loading...["Rogue (TV story)"])
Alternate timelines[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Doctor and Clara became involved in a "Multi-Doctor event" with the Tenth Doctor, Gabby Gonzalez, the Eleventh Doctor and Alice Obiefune due to the machinations of an alternate timeline version of the Twelfth Doctor who had joined with the Voord after being "betrayed" by Clara, and was manoeuvring events to ensure his existence. However, though he was able to set his younger counterpart on the path to joining with the Voord, his plot was undone by Gabby being sent back in time by a Weeping Angel and giving her younger self a warning. (COMIC: Four Doctors [+]Loading...["Four Doctors (comic story)"])
In an alternate 1997, a Dalek War Saucer crashed into St Luke's University, killing the Doctor and Nardole. This timeline was negated when the original timeline's Doctor and Bill, as well as two Bills from the new timeline were able to stop the initial crash from happening in the first place. (AUDIO: Emancipation of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Emancipation of the Daleks (audio story)"])
Other references[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Twelfth Doctor was portrayed by actor Peter Capaldi in the BBC science fiction series Doctor Who, who was cast in 2013; (PROSE: A Letter from the Doctor 464 [+]Loading...["A Letter from the Doctor (DWM 464 short story)"]) an advert which had an obscured image of Capaldi in his role was applied to the side of a bus (TV: In the Forest of the Night [+]Loading...["In the Forest of the Night (TV story)"]) in November 2014; (PROSE: "Assessing the Risk" [+]Part of The Time Lord Letters, Loading...{"namedpart":"Assessing the Risk","1":"The Time Lord Letters (novel)"}) in October 2015, Capaldi was in the ninth series of Doctor Who; (WC: The Zygon Isolation [+]Loading...["The Zygon Isolation (webcast)"]) and on 29 April 2016, Capaldi wrote a letter to be printed in the 500th issue of Doctor Who Magazine. (PROSE: A Letter from the Doctor 500 [+]Loading...["A Letter from the Doctor (DWM 500 short story)","A Letter from the Doctor 500"]) The Eleventh Doctor also saved Capaldi from a Mandrel. (COMIC: The Girl Who Loved Doctor Who [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Loved Doctor Who (comic story)"])
Psychological profile[[edit] | [edit source]]
Personality[[edit] | [edit source]]
Burdened with an unending anger, (COMIC: Doorway to Hell [+]Loading...["Doorway to Hell (comic story)"]) and a fear of what his rage was capable of, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) the Twelfth Doctor started his journey as a gruff yet compassionate man, (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) ho struggled with the inner turmoil of his questionable morality (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) and how his action could lead to devastating consequences (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) even as he embraced a goofier side of himself. (TV: The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)"], The Zygon Invasion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Invasion (TV story)"]) He eventually made peace with himself, (TV: The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"]) embracing his role as both warrior and protector (TV: [[[Empress of Mars (TV story)|[Empress of Mars]] [+]Loading...["[Empress of Mars (TV story)"], The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"]) to become a true paragon of kindness and hope. (TV: The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) Though he grew lax enough to use the contemporary slang (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"]) he had previously looked down upon, (COMIC: Terrorformer [+]Loading...["Terrorformer (comic story)"]) the Doctor never softened from his harsh attitude to those he saw as impulsive and reckless due to their short-sightedness, (TV: The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"]) but would try to inspire his foes to better themselves when he could. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"], The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"], The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"])
With his main impetus for many adventures being to stimulate his scientific curiosity, (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) the Doctor would be forever enthralled by the strange beauties he found in a universe that birthed grand creations. (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) However, beneath the fierce determination and adventurous persona, the Twelfth Doctor was a weary man who would succumb to despair when pushed to the brink, (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"], Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"], Extremis [+]Loading...["Extremis (TV story)"], The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) feeling ostracised from a universe that didn't "see" him. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"])
Blunt to the point of insensitiveness, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) and reluctant to lie to alleviate a situation, (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) the Doctor would allow actions to prove a point instead of false praise, (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"]) though he knew the importance of giving people the hope they needed to ensure their survival, (TV: Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"]) and would have them focus on their chances of survival, however slim, to encourage them to prevail. (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"], Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"]) Though he tried to avoid pessimism, (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"]) the Doctor would not give his sympathies lightly. (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"], The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"], The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"]) He could also be oblivious to his faults, while criticising the same faults he saw elsewhere. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"])
He struggled to disguise himself in the mundane world, failing to hide his alien nature by openly calling people "humans", (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Empress of Mars [+]Loading...["Empress of Mars (TV story)"]) and had a tendency to resolve his problems with explosions, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"], Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"], The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) which he chalked up as a "childish impulse". (TV: Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) While he would not run from danger, (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) he would hide from his shame, (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) and shirk his responsibilities to indulge in more excitable activities, (TV: The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"], The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"]) having trouble ignoring the call for adventure. (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"])
After struggling with the inner turmoil of his questionable morality (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) and how his action could lead to devastating consequences, (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) the Doctor made peace with himself, (TV: The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"]) embracing his role as both warrior and protector, (TV: Empress of Mars [+]Loading...["Empress of Mars (TV story)"], The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"]) even growing lax enough to use the contemporary slang (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"]) he had previously looked down upon. (COMIC: Terrorformer [+]Loading...["Terrorformer (comic story)"])
The Doctor also hoped to one day find Gallifrey and reacted with devastation when his hope of finding it turned out to be a false lead. (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) When he finally did manage to find his way to Gallifrey after enduring "4.5 billion years" of torture within his confession dial, he first returned to his old barn hideaway in the Drylands and then led a coup against Rassilon to banish him and the High Council for their part in escalating the Time War. After using the Time Lords' technology to save Clara from the Quantum Shade, the Doctor fled from Gallifrey once again. (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"])
Starting his life as a cynical man with a dry, acerbic wit, brutal honesty and fierce internalised anger, the Twelfth Doctor adopted a less caring attitude and a more practical nature, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) even claiming that he brought Clara with him to care for others for him (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) and to nod along with his ideas. (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) Despite coming across as uncaring, with a complete disregard for social niceties, he would fight to protect those in his care and would react with devastation if harm befell them (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"], World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"]) or if he caused them emotional grief due to overestimating how they could handle a situation. (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"]) He would also regret the deaths of good people, especially if the survivors displayed an unpleasant attitude. (TV: Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"])
Preferring to keep his softer side hidden under a "reputation [of] grumpiness", (COMIC: The Hyperion Empire [+]Loading...["The Hyperion Empire (comic story)"]) the Doctor would make people keep their emotions in check while they were distressed, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) making him come across as callous and dismissive, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], In the Forest of the Night [+]Loading...["In the Forest of the Night (TV story)"]) which he refused to be apologetic for. (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"]) He himself tried to avoid his own emotions by preferring to talk about subjects he enjoyed during emotional moments. (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"]) However, behind his cold exterior, he was extremely self-reflective, to the point where he even questioned whether he was a good man, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) knowing that he often found himself in situations that forced him to make terrible decisions. (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"]) Clara felt that "there were several layers to the Doctor's emotions." (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"])
Unlike his immediate predecessor, the Twelfth Doctor was not an affectionate individual, failing to return hugs, or protesting against them, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"]) believing they were just another way to hide one's face. (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) He also expressed a dislike of holding hands with others, though made an exception for Clara and Shona McCullough, (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) but he drew the line at performing a high five with Clara. (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) He was also uncomfortable with kissing, (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) with even a peck on the check stunning him. (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"]) However, he pecked Missy on the lips in gratitude for forcing him into self-reflection, (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) kissed Clara's forehead while complimenting her brilliance in a moment of excitement, (COMIC: The Big Hush [+]Loading...["The Big Hush (comic story)"]) and gave Meghan, a donkey he had befriended, a kiss on the head when he thought no one was looking. (PROSE: All the Empty Towers [+]Loading...["All the Empty Towers (short story)"])
While he identified himself as a civilian, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) the Doctor did not hide how superior he felt with his intelligence, (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) unafraid to put people down with harsh comments upon meeting them, (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) even claiming to have laughed at Orson Pink's name. (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) While his personal views caused him to make unfavourable judgments of people upon meeting them, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"]) the Doctor knew not to be judgmental of alien behaviour, (TV: Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"]) and was quick to bond with fellow rebels. (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) However, he was not above saying how funny he found humans' "small brain[s]" (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) and telling them to panic over their "short lifespan", (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) though he was quick to call out his own idiocy when he realised he had made a mistake. (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], In the Forest of the Night [+]Loading...["In the Forest of the Night (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"])
Because names were "not [his] area", (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) the Doctor could neglect to ask for names when he met someone, (TV: In the Forest of the Night [+]Loading...["In the Forest of the Night (TV story)"]) as he often chose to forget people, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) or didn't have time to remember individual names. (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) As such, the Doctor made a habit of assigning nicknames to others based on their appearance, an accessory they carried or their profession, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) and would insist on addressing them as their nickname, such as calling Maths teacher Danny Pink "P.E." due to him being a former soldier, (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], In the Forest of the Night [+]Loading...["In the Forest of the Night (TV story)"]) though he dropped the nickname after Danny died. (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) He also continued to address Rigsy as "Local Knowledge" when he was standing in front of him, (TV: Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"]) and when they reunited years later, only dropping the nickname when he learned Rigsy's life was in danger. (TV: Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"]) He would also start addressing people by their real names instead of nicknaming them when they earned his respect. (COMIC: The Eye of Torment [+]Loading...["The Eye of Torment (comic story)"])
However, after embracing the idea of being "just a bloke in a box", (TV: The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"]) the Doctor employed a wackier demeanour, (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"], The Zygon Invasion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Invasion (TV story)"]) wearing more casual clothing, (TV: The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"]) and relaxing by playing his guitar in the TARDIS. (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"], The Zygon Invasion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Invasion (TV story)"]) He made a better effort to be nicer through the use of apology cue cards (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"]) in order to live up to the idea of who he thought "the Doctor" should be. (TV: The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"], Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"]) He also began to accept Clara's attempts to hug him, (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) and even started hugging her on the odd occasion, (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) as well as asking if he could hold her hand in frightful moments. (TV: Sleep No More [+]Loading...["Sleep No More (TV story)"]) However, he did not entirely abandon his pragmatic ideology, (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) and would resume being hostile when angered. (TV: The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"], Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"])
After having his mind wiped by a neural block (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"]) caused him to decide to simply be "an old man messing about in time and space", (PROSE: Haunted [+]Loading...["Haunted (short story)"]) the Doctor adopted a kinder approach to how he handled situations, though he did not wish to be seen as "sentimentalise[d]" (TV: Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) and was still cynical on the never changing aspects of the universe. (TV: The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"]) While he retained his crossness, (TV: The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) being against "cheerful[ness]" and "charm", (TV: Knock Knock [+]Loading...["Knock Knock (TV story)"], The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"]) he was more willing to laugh at the silliness he found in his travels (TV: The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"]) and would be deliberately pedantic in the face of danger. (TV: For Tonight We Might Die [+]Loading...["For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)"], The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Though he was against vengeance, (TV: For Tonight We Might Die [+]Loading...["For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)"]) the Doctor still stood in defiance of those "who contribute[d] nothing of worth to the world and crush[ed] the hopes and dreams of working people". (TV: The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"]) Now content that "only idiots [had] the answers", (TV: Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) he was more comfortable with being open about his ignorance, (TV: The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"]) and agreed that he was "completely out of [his] mind". (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"]) While he "never notice[d] the tears", (TV: The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"]) he was better at making friends, (TV: Knock Knock [+]Loading...["Knock Knock (TV story)"]) even playing the part a playful jokester with Bill, (TV: Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) as he tried to avoid being serious. (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"])
Though he remained reluctant to initiate a hug at first, (COMIC: The Good Companion [+]Loading...["The Good Companion (comic story)"]) the Doctor accepted being a hugger by the time he reunited with Maxwell Edison, giving an affectionate one to Max, (COMIC: The Stockbridge Showdown [+]Loading...["The Stockbridge Showdown (comic story)"]) and also embraced the chance to hug Bill after losing her in a conflict with the Cybermen. (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Having accepted that "times end", the Doctor found the courage in himself to finally face his night on Darillium with River Song, embracing the bittersweet "happy ever after" for them that had previously been too hard to bear. (TV: The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"]) After he left Darillium, the Doctor allowed Nardole to accompany him to avoid being lonely. (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"]) While normally in control of himself and disciplined in his actions, (TV: Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) the Doctor's longing to travel again while guarding the Vault at St Luke's University led him to indulge in more impulsive and reckless actions that left his guard down. (TV: Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"], The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"], World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"])
Viewed as an egotist by Clara Oswald, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"]) the Doctor had a consistently anti-authoritarian attitude, only ever asking who was in charge so he would "know who to ignore", (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) seeing it as his place to give the explanations, (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) and also did not like it when somebody else tried to "do the naming." (TV: Sleep No More [+]Loading...["Sleep No More (TV story)"]) As he "hardly ever listen[ed] when other people [were] talking", (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"]) the Doctor tended to stop listening to ongoing conversations when he lost interest, (TV: Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) as he saw only himself as being "someone worth talking to". (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"]) He enjoyed his privacy, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"]) and preferred to be left alone when on a mission. (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"])
The Doctor also showed a strong compassionate streak, willing to put himself in a dangerous situation in the place of stranger as equally as a dear friend, (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"]) and make enormous personal sacrifices simply to liberate others from suffering. (TV: The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"], The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) He would also try to avoid harming those who were not in control of their actions, as well as defend them from their captors or those who would cause them further harm. (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"], The Crawling Terror [+]Loading...["The Crawling Terror (novel)"]) He was just as quick to forgive those that had wronged him, (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"]) and try to make peace with even his oldest enemies, (TV: The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"], Extremis [+]Loading...["Extremis (TV story)"]) believing that while "passion [fought], [it was] reason [that won]." (TV: Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"])
While he described himself as having had "sophistication and timeless sartorial elegance" restored, (COMIC: Terrorformer [+]Loading...["Terrorformer (comic story)"]) the Twelfth Doctor was not above acting childish by competing with others, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) or deliberately annoying someone. (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) He also let down his gruff guard to do a victory dance after moving the shrunken TARDIS off a train line with his hand, (TV: Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"]) and ecstatically steer Santa Claus's sleigh. (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) Kevin Alperton noted that, while the Doctor looked old, he had an energy to him that made him seem younger and different. (PROSE: The Crawling Terror [+]Loading...["The Crawling Terror (novel)"])
While he made it his mission to always stay with those he could help to be "kind", (TV: The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) the Twelfth Doctor was willing to leave a situation altogether if he believed he had nothing to contribute, justifying himself by pointing out the dangers of everyday life and how he was not an authority figure, (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) though he would justify his actions with the phrase "daddy knows best". (TV: The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"])
The Twelfth Doctor did not see himself as a "hero", merely someone who was "just passing the time" by passing by, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) but would answer distress signals, believing that he only saw "the true face of the universe when it [was] asking for [his] help", (TV: Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"]) and deemed the Earth as his protectorate. (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Enjoying the "deep and lovely dark", the Doctor enthusiastically tried to find out the cause of his childhood nightmares, (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) was delighted when he finally saw the Foretold, (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"]) got giddy over possibly finding out the existence of ghosts, (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) was very eager to explore a mysterious house (COMIC: Playing House [+]Loading...["Playing House (comic story)"]) and gleefully laughed as he sped a ship into British waters. (TV: The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"]) Hoping to find danger wherever he went, (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"]) he branded solutions that he found easy to be "boring", (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) though he did appreciate how the occasional anti-climax was good for his health. (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"])
Though he did not know the reason, believing it to simply be his old age, (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) the Twelfth Doctor expressed a strong disgust for soldiers and military figures; (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) being "decidedly prickly in his dealing with anything remotely military", (PROSE: The Crawling Terror [+]Loading...["The Crawling Terror (novel)"]) though claimed his disdain was flexible in a crisis, (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) and he eventually lost his bitterness over time as he grew kinder. (TV: The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"]) He was also easily annoyed by swashbucklers who did not take things seriously and insisted on fighting pointless battles, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) and was disgusted by businesspeople who valued profit above anything else, (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], Sleep No More [+]Loading...["Sleep No More (TV story)"]) including politicians (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"])
The Doctor was also "against" bantering. (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) didn't like being saluted, (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) wasn't "a fan" of the Tivolians, (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"]) and disliked losing, even in a friendly game of chess. (COMIC: Doorway to Hell [+]Loading...["Doorway to Hell (comic story)"]) He claimed to dislike the colour of his kidneys, (TV: The Time of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Time of the Doctor (TV story)"]) karaoke, mimes, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) tanks, (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) songs that got stuck in his head, (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) racism and talking in the cinema. (TV: The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"]) He voiced a hatred for being wrong in public, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) babysitters, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) Candy Crush, (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) money, (COMIC: Terrorformer [+]Loading...["Terrorformer (comic story)"]) missing the obvious, (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) pantomime, (PROSE: Behind You [+]Loading...["Behind You (short story)"]) cyclopes, (COMIC: Doctor on the Menu [+]Loading...["Doctor on the Menu (comic story)"]) vikings, (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) gardening, (TV: Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"]) Christmas, (COMIC: Relative Dimensions [+]Loading...["Relative Dimensions (comic story)"]) being sure of something, "lying-down people", (TV: The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"]) "themed planets", (COMIC: The Dragon Lord [+]Loading...["The Dragon Lord (comic story)"]) and "brave people". (TV: The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"])
While he claimed to hate not knowing about something when faced with the Teller, (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"]) he was known to admire the unexplainable. (TV: Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) He also told Ohila that, while he trusted her, he didn't necessary like her, (WC: Prologue [+]Loading...["Prologue (webcast)"]) and confessed to Petronella Osgood that he considered London to be a "dump". (TV: The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"]) However, just before his regeneration, the Doctor denounced hate as "always foolish", and proclaimed that "love [was] always wise." (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
The Twelfth Doctor liked roundels, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) working under pressure, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) "a show-stopping entrance", (COMIC: Terrorformer [+]Loading...["Terrorformer (comic story)"]) a "good locked-room mystery", (TV: Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"]) being challenged, (COMIC: Spirits of the Jungle [+]Loading...["Spirits of the Jungle (comic story)"]) puppets, (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) the title "Doctor Mysterio", "pressing buttons and switches", (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"]) and rivets. (TV: Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) His "lucky number" was 12, (TV: The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)"]) and he considered "maths and alcoholic beverages" to be the "best way to spend the morning". (TV: For Tonight We Might Die [+]Loading...["For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)"])
He was interested in Maths (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) and insects, (TV: Knock Knock [+]Loading...["Knock Knock (TV story)"]) and had a liking for books, particularly ones about Garfield, reacting with anger towards those he believed burned books, and also believed that women who liked books to be the best kind. (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) When he redecorated the TARDIS control room, he included numerous shelves full of a variety of books, and a recliner to enjoy reading them in, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) sometimes even leaving his books scattered around the console room. (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"])
Not only did he want a Ferrari car, (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) he also jumped at the chance to fly with a jetpack (COMIC: Spirits of the Jungle [+]Loading...["Spirits of the Jungle (comic story)"]) and enjoyed "poncing about in a big plane". (TV: The Zygon Invasion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Invasion (TV story)"]) He also enjoyed bicycles because they reminded him of Call the Midwife. (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) While he thought football was a "boring sport", he considered darts to be "something worth practicing". (TV: For Tonight We Might Die [+]Loading...["For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)"])
While he didn't like to eat liver, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) pears, (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"]) and fish, (TV: Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) he did have an enjoyment for sausages, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) candy floss, (PROSE: All the Empty Towers [+]Loading...["All the Empty Towers (short story)"]) porridge, (PROSE: Deep Time [+]Loading...["Deep Time (novel)"]) sherbet lemons, (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) and Chinese food. (TV: Knock Knock [+]Loading...["Knock Knock (TV story)"])
The Twelfth Doctor preferred to live in the moment, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"]) where "everything is huge, everything is so important, every detail, every moment, every life clung to[gether]." He claimed to the Half-Face Man that the people of Earth "[were] never small to [him]". (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) By his own testament, he did not suffer fools gladly, (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) nor did he tolerate poor manners, even when held at gunpoint, and believed that one should make requests politely, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) as well as avoid bad language, (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) and gloating. (GAME: The Doctor and the Dalek [+]Loading...["The Doctor and the Dalek (video game)"]) He "[found] it best to keep an open mind, unclouded by the opinions of others", favoured the direct approach when he encountered an obstacle, and believed it was always best to assume and plan for the worst-case scenario. (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"])
He also viewed pain as a gift, believing that "without the capacity for pain, [one] can't feel the hurt [they] inflict," (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) and also thought that "a bit of shame never hurt anyone," (TV: The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"]) and that true immortality was "everybody else dying". (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) Indeed, the Doctor held a veneration of the dead, (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"]) ceasing all insults towards Danny Pink after being told of his passing, (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) was morally outraged with the Fisher King for using the souls of the dead as transmitters for his armada, (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"]) and become hurt when he thought the Testimony Foundation had duplicated Bill after she "gave her life so that people she barely knew could live". (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Stubborn in his beliefs to the point that he would deny any evidence that contradicted his statements in the face of proof confirming otherwise, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) the Doctor also believed that one could always find something to be distracted by, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) felt invasions of Earth were justified after hearing about the horror film Alien, (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) and expressed the opinion that an enemy was "just a friend [one] didn't really know yet". (WC: Prologue [+]Loading...["Prologue (webcast)"]) He thought that "hardly anything [was] evil, but [that] most things [were] hungry", and that "hunger look[ed] very [much] like evil from the wrong end of the cutlery". (TV: The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"]) He also didn't believe in dragons. (COMIC: The Dragon Lord [+]Loading...["The Dragon Lord (comic story)"])
Having a liking for "quick learners", (COMIC: Spirits of the Jungle [+]Loading...["Spirits of the Jungle (comic story)"]) the Doctor believed that education came fastest in life threatening situations, and claimed that begging "wasn't [his] style", (COMIC: Terrorformer [+]Loading...["Terrorformer (comic story)"]) unless his friends were threatened. (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) While he believed that "a good death [was] the best anyone [could] hope for", (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) he didn't think it was possible to "die well". (TV: For Tonight We Might Die [+]Loading...["For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)"]) When giving life advice, the Doctor would say to laugh hard because everything was "always funny", to run fast "like hell" because people always needed to, to never fail at being kind, and to always make amends if they acted cruel and cowardly. (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Even though he identified himself as a pacifist (COMIC: Terrorformer [+]Loading...["Terrorformer (comic story)"]) and believed necessary evils to be a last resort, (COMIC: The Fractures [+]Loading...["The Fractures (comic story)"]) the Twelfth Doctor was unafraid to trade blows with others. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"], World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"]) Though he initially stated that murder was against his "programming", (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) the Doctor knew there were "situations when the options available [were] limited" and death was unavoidable, (TV: Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) and was willing to allow a few inevitable deaths if it meant saving the majority, acting like a pragmatist that would not hesitate to abandon someone whose fate was already sealed, nor mourn for an ally until his objective had been reached. (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"], Sleep No More [+]Loading...["Sleep No More (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) However, the Doctor was still willing to go out of his way to try and save people if their deaths were not an immediate inevitability, even if it was the life of a caged bird. (WC: A Hero like the Doctor [+]Loading...["A Hero like the Doctor (webcast)"])
The Doctor was practical regarding death, being quick to recover what he could when there was nothing he could do to save someone, instead focusing on what he could control when all hope seemed lost, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"]) even being willing to sacrifice others when he had broader goals in mind, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"]) sometimes even devising a plan in which others' skills would prove useful. (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"])
While he was adamant not to kill out of hatred, (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"]) especially when conflicts could be resolved diplomatically, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"]) the Doctor was willing to kill to spare others from the burden of taking a life, (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) or when acting in extreme selfishness and being assured they could recover with a regeneration. (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"]) He once gave permission for UNIT to engage Zygons with lethal force, so long as they kept fatalities to a minimum, (TV: The Zygon Invasion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Invasion (TV story)"]) and left Ron Cordell and some Skinks to be devoured by a black hole after tampering with the black hole drive's containment field. (COMIC: Pirates of Vourakis [+]Loading...["Pirates of Vourakis (comic story)"]) He also viewed certain creatures as expendable, as he wanted to kill a Kantrofarri to save Clara from slowly being devoured by it, (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) and crushed a Love Sprite under his heel to prevent it attacking him. (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"])
While he did not dwell on the subject much, the Twelfth Doctor was still haunted by the War Doctor's actions in the Last Great Time War, and claimed to hear "more screams than anyone could ever be able to count" whenever he closed his eyes. When he learned that all Bonnie truly wanted was a pointless war between humanity and the Zygons, he went into a furious and grief-stricken tirade by telling her that he knew what war was really like and that he would not allow her to lead others to their deaths. (TV: The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"]) While he disliked guns, (TV: The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) he noted that it was foolish to disregard them when they were useful, (PROSE: The Crawling Terror [+]Loading...["The Crawling Terror (novel)"]) and was willing to utilise them when he felt the need to, but would immediately discard them once they was no longer needed. (TV: The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"], Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"])
While he could forget the consequences of time travelling when carried away, (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) the Twelfth Doctor was unwilling to alter the Web of Time, (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) fearing that the ramifications from the tiniest changes could be catastrophic, spreading "carnage and chaos across the universe like ripples on a pond," (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"]) though he preferred to create "ripples" instead of "tidal waves." (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"])
He believed it was okay to send people to their deaths if history recorded them as deceased, (PROSE: The Crawling Terror [+]Loading...["The Crawling Terror (novel)"]) and told Mason Bennett that he "[couldn't] just go back and cut off tragedy at the root because [then] [he'd] find [him]self talking to someone [he'd] just saw dead on a slab, [and] then [he] really [would] see ghosts". (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"]) However, he knew "to hold [himself] to the mark" on how to save a single soul despite the Web of Time due to Donna Noble's words to his tenth incarnation at Pompeii, (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) and was willing to change certain points he encountered if "even a ghastly future [proved] better than no future at all". (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"]) Emotionally broken after the death of Clara, the Doctor used an extraction chamber on Gallifrey to save her from the Quantum Shade, and also attempted to prevent her from returning to her death, despite it being a fixed point in time, (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"]) and engineered events to prevent Archibald Hamish Lethbridge-Stewart and a German soldier from killing each other, claiming that "a couple fewer dead people on the battlefield" would not "hurt". (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Diagnosed with "Attention Deficit [Disorder]" by Clara, (TV: The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)"]) the Doctor would include mundane outcomes in his summarisation when explaining the consequences of actions taken, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"], The Zygon Invasion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Invasion (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"]) had trouble recognising people's age group, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"]) forgot people he had only recently met, (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], In the Forest of the Night [+]Loading...["In the Forest of the Night (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) and was also shown to have a poor concept on the passage of time. (TV: The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)"], The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"])
He claimed that taking charge was his "superpower", (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"]) and listed "investigating", "playing with time" and "resistance" among his specialities, (COMIC: Terrorformer [+]Loading...["Terrorformer (comic story)"], The Swords of Kali [+]Loading...["The Swords of Kali (comic story)"], The Fractures [+]Loading...["The Fractures (comic story)"]) with Clara also adding "interfering and infuriating" to the list. (COMIC: Terrorformer [+]Loading...["Terrorformer (comic story)"])
Feeling it was his house, (TV: Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"]) and method of escaping his troubles, (COMIC: Theatre of the Mind [+]Loading...["Theatre of the Mind (comic story)"]) the Doctor redecorated his console room to have bookshelves, chairs and workbenches. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) He told Bill Potts that the TARDIS was a "technological marvel", "science beyond magic", and "the gateway to everything that ever was, or ever can be." (TV: The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"]) He did, however, occasionally enact violence against his TARDIS out of frustration, striking its column with his fists hard enough to damage it after discovering Missy's coordinates to Gallifrey had been a lie, (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) and later struck the console with enough force to believe he had broken a finger. (PROSE: Deep Time [+]Loading...["Deep Time (novel)"])
Initially thinking he was "overbearing, manipulative and consciously aware of his own intelligence", (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"]) the Twelfth Doctor came to see himself a "scary, handsome genius from space" (TV: Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) who was "adorable, hugely intelligent, but still approachable". (TV: The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"])
According to Affinity, the Doctor kept his predecessors "lodged in his head", and held a low opinion of them and himself, (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"]) even comparing a Multi-Doctor event to The Krankies. (WC: Doctors Assemble! [+]Loading...["Doctors Assemble! (webcast)"]) While he reflected that the First Doctor was "not much fun", (PROSE: Full Stop [+]Loading...["Full Stop (short story)"]) the Twelfth Doctor was delighted by some of his habits when he encountered him at the South Pole, such as still calling the TARDIS "the ship". However, he was embarrassed by the First Doctor's habit of making comments that were inappropriate in the Twelfth Doctor's eyes, especially when he threatened to give Bill a "jolly good smacked bottom" if she kept on swearing. (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) Additionally, he was, at times, critical of his previous incarnations' clothing, thinking that his fourth incarnation's scarf "looked stupid", (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) and regarded the Eleventh Doctor's fondness for bow ties as "a bit embarrassing", (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"]) though complimented the Zygon Osgood's bow tie as "nice". (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"])
While he held the Ninth Doctor in high regards, saying the Continuity bomb could not find a timeline where he wasn't "fantastic", the Twelfth Doctor had a frosty accord with the Tenth Doctor, who refused to consider the twelfth incarnation as a future incarnation until the Blinovitch Limitation Effect confirmed he was, when he met his two previous incarnations. Conversely, the Eleventh Doctor was willing to accept him as his next incarnation and was happy to know he had more life in the future. While he degraded them as "manic pixie dream Doctors", the Twelfth Doctor expressed concern that the two would come to know him as the "scary Doctor". He held the Ninth Doctor in higher regards, saying the Continuity bomb could not find a timeline where he wasn't "fantastic". (COMIC: Four Doctors [+]Loading...["Four Doctors (comic story)"]) In a later encounter with his tenth incarnation, the Twelfth Doctor referred to him as "Bambi", being dismissive of how overtly emotional he had been and having some embarrassment for his obsession with Rose Tyler, but seemed to retain a fondness for the Tenth Doctor's life. (COMIC: Vortex Butterflies [+]Loading...["Vortex Butterflies (comic story)"]) Even after undergoing a more positive outlook, the Twelfth Doctor still disliked the Tenth Doctor for his "excited puppy routine". (COMIC: The Lost Dimension [+]Loading...["The Lost Dimension (comic story)"])
Though he preferred him to other incarnations, (COMIC: Four Doctors [+]Loading...["Four Doctors (comic story)"]) the Twelfth Doctor disliked his immediate predecessor for his enjoyment of bow ties and fezzes, and overuse of the word "cool". (COMIC: Terrorformer [+]Loading...["Terrorformer (comic story)"]) However, upon seeing Adrian Davies, a teacher at Coal Hill School with a resemblance to his eleventh incarnation, the Doctor, mistaking Adrian as Clara's boyfriend, arrogantly assumed that Clara was dating Adrian because of his uncanny resemblance to "a certain dashing young time traveller", reflecting more favourably on his predecessor. (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"])
As with his previous incarnations, the Twelfth Doctor relied on his companions to keep him from succumbing to his darker nature, and actively praised them for it, even claiming that Clara Oswald needed a "raise" for dealing with him, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) and telling Bill Potts that people like her encouraged him to put up with the rest of humanity. (TV: The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"]) He also enjoyed it when his companions asked him obvious questions, claiming that it helped him think, (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) but disliked it when they pointed out mistakes he made, (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"]) and identified them as his "social interface with the human race", (COMIC: The Fractures [+]Loading...["The Fractures (comic story)"]) and the main reason he didn't need an army. (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) However, he was willing to place his companions in danger if it meant appeasing his curiosity, often leaving them out of the details in his plans, or using them to distract attention away from himself. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"]) However, if he believed the situation was too dangerous for them, the Doctor would send his companions to the safety of the TARDIS while staring down the threat alone. (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
He held deep affection for Clara Oswald, considering her to be his best friend, (TV: Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"]) and cared for her to the point that her betraying him couldn't make a difference to how he felt about her. (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) His connection with her was so deep that, after her death by Quantum Shade, he respected her wishes to not target Ashildr for her role in Clara's death. (TV: Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"]) However, after spending four billion years in a temporal loop mourning losing her, (TV: Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"], Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"]) he became unhinged, deciding no one would stop him bringing Clara back, threatening all who tried to prevent him restoring her to life, even forcing the Eleventh General to regenerate, until events forced him to lose his memories of Clara. (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"]) When his memories of her were restored, he was delighted, thankful he could finally remember her face. (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Although he tended to be dismissive of Nardole, (TV: Knock Knock [+]Loading...["Knock Knock (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"], The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) the Doctor still took his advice in stock (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"]) and chose to sacrifice his own life so Nardole could escape certain death. (TV: The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"])
The Doctor also grew close with Bill Potts, making her his personal student while at St Luke's University, even going back in time to obtain pictures of her mother as a Christmas gift in gratitude for her gifting him a carpet, (TV: The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"]) even though he did not like the carpet. (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) He confided in Bill about his concerns over Missy and made it his personal mission to save Bill from death at the hands of the Cybermen. (TV: World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"]) He also didn't like Bill seeing him physically vulnerable, going as far as not telling her about his blindness, (TV: The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"]) or his impending regeneration. (TV: The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"])
Seeing them as "stupid, brilliant, [and] brave semi-sentient monkeys", (COMIC: The Eye of Torment [+]Loading...["The Eye of Torment (comic story)"]) the Twelfth Doctor claimed to the Half-Face Man that the people of Earth "[were] never small to [him]," and, unlike his tenth incarnation, he didn't think he deserved a reward or a "promised land" because he had "already [gone] a very long way" to protect the people (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) becoming a lost soul beyond redemption. (TV: Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"]) Though he liked them for their optimism, (TV: Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) the Doctor would insult humans when he saw them being slow-minded, greedy and violent, dubbing Earth the "planet of the pudding-brains." (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) Nonetheless, he tolerated the company of those who could engage with him intellectually, (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"]) unless they got on his bad side first, (COMIC: The Fractures [+]Loading...["The Fractures (comic story)"]) and claimed to respect humanity enough to allow it to determine its own future without any interference from him, (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"]) giving insight and knowledge to those who would listen, while still leaving the decision up to them. (TV: Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) As with his previous incarnation, the Twelfth Doctor also liked people who got straight to the point. (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) He though that someone who wasn't scared in a life-threatening situation was "an idiot", (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) though was aware that giving in to fear "[did]n't help". (TV: Knock Knock [+]Loading...["Knock Knock (TV story)"]) He also cared for mortal lives, (TV: Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) however brief they seemed to him. (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"])
Because of his more celibate nature, (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) the Doctor failed to notice when someone was asking him if they looked attractive, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) but did call a female Tyrannosaurus rex a "big sexy woman" while in a post-regenerative state. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) He also considered Rona Bellows to be "sexy", (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) and shared a mutual attraction with River Song. (TV: The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"]) He didn't care about sexuality, instead being bothered by people hating each other, and didn't approve of revenge either. (COMIC: The Swords of Kali [+]Loading...["The Swords of Kali (comic story)"])
Despite his grumpy nature, the Twelfth Doctor had a soft spot for children, (TV: Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) trying to help them to overcome their fears, (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) build them up when they thought little of themselves, (TV: In the Forest of the Night [+]Loading...["In the Forest of the Night (TV story)"]) and help their education. (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) He would stop to help them when he saw them in need, (TV: Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"]) and would feel regretful if he felt he had let them down, (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) as well as great fury when finding babies unattended. (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"])
The Twelfth Doctor's hatred toward the Dalek species was rigid, with Clara describing it as "prejudice", (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) though he did stop to mourn Lumpy, a Dalek that had deceived him into friendship. (GAME: The Doctor and the Dalek [+]Loading...["The Doctor and the Dalek (video game)"]) He believed Daleks were incapable of change and was closed-minded as he dealt with their presence, and would refuse to help a Dalek unless his interests were peaked. After his act of fixing a malfunctioning "good" Dalek caused it to revert to "bad", the Doctor was almost pleased that his belief of there being "no such thing as a good Dalek" was vindicated. (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) Despite his hatred of them, the Doctor admitted to the Governor that the Dalek Emperor "[was] nothing compared to your average mobile phone sales assistant". (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"])
He also held a disregard for the Cybermen, unceremoniously flattening two with his TARDIS. (GAME: The Doctor and the Dalek [+]Loading...["The Doctor and the Dalek (video game)"]) He knew to be cautious around them, (TV: Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"]) though he would try to reason with the ones that were "fresh out the factory". (TV: World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"])
When Rusty the Dalek looked into the Twelfth Doctor's mind, he saw hatred and noted that the Doctor was "a good Dalek", while Clara believed the Doctor was trying to be a good man, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) and claimed that he "always care[d]" by the time of her death. (TV: Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"]) When questioned by Lisa Foster, Clara reluctantly admitted she thought the Doctor was "kind of [cool], in a strange sort of way", which Lisa interpreted as meaning "an uncool sort of way". (COMIC: The Fractures [+]Loading...["The Fractures (comic story)"]) Bill Potts once described the Twelfth Doctor as "part-cool professor, [and] part-cat chasing [a] laser pointer", (COMIC: The Promise [+]Loading...["The Promise (FCBD comic story)"]) while Keira Sanstrom felt he was "all showmanship". (AUDIO: Never the End Is [+]Loading...["Never the End Is (audio story)"])
While Ashildr considered the Doctor to be a "passionate and powerful Time Lord", (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"]) Perkins noted his inability to decide whether the Doctor was a genius "or just incredibly arrogant", (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"]) with Danny Pink, in complete bitterness for his need to feel the pain he inflicted, compared the Doctor to a "blood-soaked old general". (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"])
The Oracle described the Twelfth Doctor as "a man of taste and discrimination," (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) while Orestes Milton believed the Doctor "affect[ed] an air of ignorance and indifference, but beneath it [were] undercurrents of knowledge and curiosity". (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"]) Daughter of Mine considered him "the worst". (WC: Shadow of a Doubt [+]Loading...["Shadow of a Doubt (audio story)"])
Much as his tenth incarnation expressed, the Twelfth Doctor associated regeneration with death, recalling Snowcap as "the place where [he] died". He viewed the process as "huge, [and] terrible", with his self-preservation keeping his memories of the experience from consuming him. (COMIC: Blood and Ice [+]Loading...["Blood and Ice (comic story)"]) He also believed that regeneration was to be used only when completely necessary, and to use it to fix a broken toe was "a waste of a life". (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) Despite his beliefs, when pushed to extremes, the Doctor was willing to force a fellow Time Lord to regenerate if it benefited him. (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"])
When faced with the prospect of dying without regenerating while facing the Fisher King, the Doctor, though initially appearing distraught, quickly dismissed any concern, saying that he "had a good innings", and calling himself a mere "clerical error" of a regeneration. (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"]) When cornered by the Veil, the Doctor admitted that he was afraid of dying, (TV: Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"]) but was unafraid to sacrifice himself for the greater good. (TV: The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"], The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"])
After the regeneration progress was triggered by an attack from a Mondasian Cyberman, the Doctor, angry at the idea of constantly "being other people", refused to change into his next body. (TV: The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) When confronting the glass avatars of Bill Potts and Nardole, the Doctor confessed he was "tired of losing people" and, feeling "there [had] to be an end", seeing his long life as "[an] [empty] battlefield, because everyone else [had] fallen". After a final cuddle with the glass avatars, the Doctor decided it was "time to leave the battlefield", and entered the TARDIS alone. Upon looking at the "silly old universe" on the TARDIS scanner, the Doctor, realising that the "more [he] save[d] it, the more it need[ed] saving", decided that "one more lifetime wouldn't kill anyone". Giving instructions to his successor to "never be cruel, [and] never be cowardly", that "hate [was] always foolish, and [that] love [was] always wise", to "never fail to be kind", and to never reveal their name, the Doctor "let [himself] go" and regenerated into a female body. (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Habits and quirks[[edit] | [edit source]]
Much like his seventh incarnation, the Twelfth Doctor spoke with a Scottish accent, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) which was noted to be Glaswegian in contrast to the Seventh Doctor's Highlands one by Bernice Summerfield. (PROSE: Big Bang Generation [+]Loading...["Big Bang Generation (novel)"]) Fully embracing his Scottish accent as an entitlement to complain about things, the Doctor would put down the English, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) and was known to "go all Scottish" when annoyed. (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"])
With his accent, he was prone to boasting about himself, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"], The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"], The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"], The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) making intimidating threats, (TV: Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"], Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"], Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"], Extremis [+]Loading...["Extremis (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) or just stating the apparent ineffectiveness of others' actions in a subtle tone. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"], The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"], The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"]) However, when truly angered, the Doctor would quietly hiss with a rage hidden behind unnerving tranquillity. (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"], Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"], The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"], Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"])
When proposing a theory or plan, the Doctor would use words such as "question", "proposition" or "proposal", and would begin his conclusion with "answer", "conjecture", "conclusion" or "plan". (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"], The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) After working out the important questions and the answers in his head, he waited for others to come to the same conclusion, only to give out the answer after they proposed the wrong reactions. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], In the Forest of the Night [+]Loading...["In the Forest of the Night (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], Sleep No More [+]Loading...["Sleep No More (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"])
During his early life, the Twelfth Doctor would often accuse things, even other people, of developing faults, errors and malfunctions when he didn't think they were working the way he though they were meant to, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) and would call people "pudding-brains", or "pudding headed", when he found them slow-minded or stupid. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"])
When in a moment of realisation or thinking intensely, the Doctor would often tell people to "shut up/it", regardless of if they were speaking or not. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"], The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"]) He would also issue the instruction to those who had earned his ire, regardless of their status, occupation or how petty the ire was, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"]) and when he wished to avoid a subject of conversation. (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"], Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"], The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"], World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"])
When instructing someone to pay attention, the Doctor would command them to "listen". (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"], The Zygon Invasion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Invasion (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], Knock Knock [+]Loading...["Knock Knock (TV story)"], Extremis [+]Loading...["Extremis (TV story)"], The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"], World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"], The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) He also made a habit of saying, "Well...", to start his sentences. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"], The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)"], Sleep No More [+]Loading...["Sleep No More (TV story)"], The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"])
He frequently called those who annoyed him with their apparent unintelligence and poorly thought out actions an "idiot", (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"], Empress of Mars [+]Loading...["Empress of Mars (TV story)"]) and even used the term to describe himself. (TV: In the Forest of the Night [+]Loading...["In the Forest of the Night (TV story)"], Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Wanting to avoid using foul language, (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"]) the Twelfth Doctor often used "hell" as an intensive, (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"], Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"], The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"], Extremis [+]Loading...["Extremis (TV story)"], The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"], Empress of Mars [+]Loading...["Empress of Mars (TV story)"], The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"]) and spoke the name of God in vain. (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"], The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"], The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"])
The Doctor often made puns, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"], The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"], The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"], The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) though hypocritically would complain about others making them. (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) Never one to miss the chance for a quotation, the Doctor often reciting quotes and scriptures that matched his current predicament, be they from media, music or literature. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], Sleep No More [+]Loading...["Sleep No More (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"], The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"])
Like his fourth incarnation, the Twelfth Doctor would talk directly to himself, (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) and act like his was being watched by someone when there was no evidence of him having company. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"], Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"]) He was also known for giving soliloquies. (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"], The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Much like his predecessor, the Twelfth Doctor used hand gestures to extenuate a point, but applied more dedication to his movements as he stood firm, spoke with conviction, and punctuated his points across with a pointed index finger, though he would become more spontaneous when thinking intensely. (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) He typically stood with one leg stretched forward and his hands rested together in front of him. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"], Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"], Sleep No More [+]Loading...["Sleep No More (TV story)"], The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"]) Commonly, he would stick out his index and baby fingers with his thumb and lower his middle and ring fingers, with the gesture being so associated with him that it was depicted as his stance on a wanted poster drawing (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) and an advertisement poster designed by Zip Betterblast. (COMIC: Time and PR in Space [+]Loading...["Time and PR in Space (comic story)"])
In a deviation from his stagnant posture, he would wring his hands together in a fidgety manner, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)"], The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"], The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"]) but also kept his fingers interlocked together when explaining or contemplating something. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"], The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"], The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"], The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"], Empress of Mars [+]Loading...["Empress of Mars (TV story)"])
When in thought, he was also known to tap his teeth with his finger, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"], Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"]) cradle his face in his hand, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], For Tonight We Might Die [+]Loading...["For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"]) or twiddle his thumb on his hand. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"], Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"], The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"], For Tonight We Might Die [+]Loading...["For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) He would also gesture by turning his hand with his fingers together and thumb stuck out, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"], Empress of Mars [+]Loading...["Empress of Mars (TV story)"])
Much like previous incarnations, the Twelfth Doctor would often flick back his coat and rest his hands in his pockets. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"], Sleep No More [+]Loading...["Sleep No More (TV story)"], Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"], The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], Knock Knock [+]Loading...["Knock Knock (TV story)"], The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"], World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"])
He was also known to cross his arms together, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"], Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"],The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"], The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], Empress of Mars [+]Loading...["Empress of Mars (TV story)"]) rest one hand or both on his hips, (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"],Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"], Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"], Empress of Mars [+]Loading...["Empress of Mars (TV story)"]) and stand with his hands crossed behind his back. (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], The Zygon Invasion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Invasion (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], For Tonight We Might Die [+]Loading...["For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"], The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"], The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Upon seeing a vase of picked flowers, the Doctor would grab a few and smell them, holding them right up to his nose. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"], Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"]) When brooding, would lean his face into his right hand as he looked downwards while pulling at his face. (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], In the Forest of the Night [+]Loading...["In the Forest of the Night (TV story)"], Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"], The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"])
Much like his fourth and ninth incarnations, the Twelfth Doctor would grin when he was pleased or amused, flashing his upper teeth widely as he smiled in his giddiness. (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"], Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"], The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"], For Tonight We Might Die [+]Loading...["For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)"], The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"], The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"], Empress of Mars [+]Loading...["Empress of Mars (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Something of a foodie, the Twelfth Doctor would stop to help himself to food and drinks during his adventures, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"], Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) sometimes carrying food on his person to eat at a moment's notice (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"], The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) or indulging in a takeaway meal. (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], Knock Knock [+]Loading...["Knock Knock (TV story)"]) Unlike his previous incarnation, he had a tolerance for alcoholic beverages, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) and took his tea with extra sugar, (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) due to his high blood pressure, (TV: Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) once having seven sugars in his tea. (PROSE: The Shining Man [+]Loading...["The Shining Man (novel)"])
He would absentmindedly scratch at his right cheek,[source needed] and snap his fingers.[source needed] He tended to say, "basically", when giving a quick summation.[source needed]
When not out adventuring, the Doctor could be found jotting down equations and theories on various chalkboards in the TARDIS console room, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) or on hard surfaces that could bear markings. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"]) He also employed chalkboards as a form of non-verbal communication within a mind, (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"]) and in his lectures at St Luke's University. (TV: Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"]) He also utilised a yo-yo on occasion. (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"])
The Doctor kept a spare sonic screwdriver in case something happened to his first. (PROSE: Big Bang Generation [+]Loading...["Big Bang Generation (novel)"]) Even after he discarded his old screwdriver for a pair of sonic sunglasses, (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"], The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"]) he still carried a model of his screwdriver to use on the odd occasion, (COMIC: The Ministry of Time [+]Loading...["The Ministry of Time (comic story)"], The Dragon Lord [+]Loading...["The Dragon Lord (comic story)"]) after Clara returned one of his old spares to him. (COMIC: Clara Oswald and the School of Death [+]Loading...["Clara Oswald and the School of Death (comic story)"]) After receiving a new sonic screwdriver, (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"]) he began to use it in conjunction with the sonic sunglasses. (TV: The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"], The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
In his later life, the Doctor spent time using Wi-Fi to pass the time, but didn't want anyone seeing his browser history, (TV: The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"]) as it contained a series of cat photos that he and River Song had used to communicate, which he found somewhat embarrassing. (PROSE: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)"])
Skills[[edit] | [edit source]]
Highly observant, the Twelfth Doctor was able to notice certain individuals in a crowd, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"], The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"]) realise suspicious activity ahead of others, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) and pick up on details that helped him unearth others' deceptions and plans. (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"], The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) Being a Time Lord, the Doctor could also detect when a light shield aura was near him, (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) and was also able to fiddle with equipment and pilot the TARDIS while completely blind. (TV: Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"]) However, when his attention was focused elsewhere, or he relied too much on his own brilliance or his technology, certain things around him would go amiss. (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"], Sleep No More [+]Loading...["Sleep No More (TV story)"], Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"], Knock Knock [+]Loading...["Knock Knock (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
He was also able to make accurate deductions from keenly observing his surroundings, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"], Sleep No More [+]Loading...["Sleep No More (TV story)"]) and could also correctly deduce others' histories and how they felt in their environments from sheer observation. (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"]) He noticed that Orestes Milton was a time traveller due to his choice of words, (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"]) and solved the riddle of the Foretold within sixty-six seconds. (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"])
As "sneaky" as ever, (COMIC: The Stockbridge Showdown [+]Loading...["The Stockbridge Showdown (comic story)"]) the Doctor was able to spin an apparent fatal outcome into an advantage, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"], Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"]) He was also able to organise a bank heist to save the Teller and its mate, even erasing his planning of the heist to guarantee success. (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"])
The Twelfth Doctor was a capable fighter, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) being skilled in Venusian aikido, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"]) and able to stun people with a single punch to their face, (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) with the Half-Face Man and Kali both to remarking that the Doctor was "stronger than [he] look[ed]." (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]; COMIC: The Swords of Kali [+]Loading...["The Swords of Kali (comic story)"]) He was also a highly proficient swordsman, able to best Robin Hood in a duel using a spoon, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"]) take on Kali's three swords with a single blade, (COMIC: The Swords of Kali [+]Loading...["The Swords of Kali (comic story)"]) and reportedly bested Bors' broadsword with a daffodil. (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) He was also skilled with a Gunstick, shooting several Handmines from a distance while also avoiding hitting Davros. (TV: The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"])
Strong and durable, the Doctor was able to briefly support his own weight singlehandedly, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) withstand several blows from Abesse, (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) upstage Michael Smith by easily holding two baskets of rocks, (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"]) smash up the TARDIS console with his bare hands in a grief-stricken rage, (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"]) and slam a door shut in a struggle with the Veil. He was also capable of repeatedly striking a wall of Azbantium with his fists after breaking every bone in his hand, and was still able to use his hands to pull a lever afterwards. (TV: Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"]) However, his durability was not absolute, with the Doctor being easily knocked to the ground when taken by surprise from behind, (TV: The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"], The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) and unable to escape the grip of a CyberMondan without assistance. (TV: The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"])
He also possessed lightning-fast reflexes, (PROSE: The Crawling Terror [+]Loading...["The Crawling Terror (novel)"]) notably being able to snatch the sonic screwdriver back from Spider's hand seconds before he was devoured by a sea creature, (TV: Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) and discreetly change the codes on the Saxon Master's computer in a matter of seconds without either the Master or Missy noticing. (TV: The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) After being thrown out of Boat One in an explosion, the Doctor was able to skydive towards his descending TARDIS, even fighting against the wind currents to place the TARDIS key in the lock. (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Loading...["Death in Heaven (TV story)"])
Believing himself to be a good magician, (TV: The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)"]) the Doctor could disappear when people were looking away, (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"]) swipe things without detection, (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) hide objects in others' pockets, (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"]) and carry beverages in his pockets that seemed to appear out of thin air. (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"], The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"]) He practised traditional coin magic (TV: The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)"]) and could perform hat tricks. (TV: Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"]) He was also able to swipe the General's sidearm before the General could regain his senses from being punched in the face. (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"])
Like his previous incarnations, the Twelfth Doctor also displayed telepathic abilities, being able to link his mind with Rusty to show him the beauty of the universe, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"]) put Clara through a telepathic scenario with the aid of a sleep patch, (TV: Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"]) send a sedated Clara messages on blackboards by holding her hand, (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) hijack a mind scythe to work for him, (COMIC: The Instruments of War [+]Loading...["The Instruments of War (comic story)"]) establish a psychic link with a door to unlock it, (TV: Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"]) and leave a message in Bill Potts's subconscious from a small distance. (TV: World Enough and Time [+]Loading...["World Enough and Time (TV story)"]) With a quick touch to the head, the Doctor could render someone unconscious, and also leave their memories "scrambled" (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) to induce a mind wipe. (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"]) Not only could he perform eye-fixation hypnotism with verbal commands, but also claimed that he could perform hypnosis that affected all the senses due to his Time Lord abilities. (COMIC: Trust [+]Loading...["Trust (comic story)"])
The Twelfth Doctor was a skilled inventor, able to quickly build and assemble what he needed to achieve his goals, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"], Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"]) even rebuilding the TARDIS's radio into a clockwork squirrel after it annoyed him too much. (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"])
Despite denying being a Doctor of Medicine, (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"]) the Twelfth Doctor possessed at least a limited medical knowledge, being able to resuscitate Lafcardio with artificial resuscitation after Lafcardio's lungs were filled up with soot, with the Governor noting that the Doctor worked on Lafcardio like an expert. (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) He was also able to perform accurate post-mortems, (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"], The Crawling Terror [+]Loading...["The Crawling Terror (novel)"]) and attach a Lothan prosthetic leg to Ram Singh. (TV: For Tonight We Might Die [+]Loading...["For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)"])
The Doctor also had a good sense of smell, which he used to assess his surroundings to deduce the time period he was in, (COMIC: The Swords of Kali [+]Loading...["The Swords of Kali (comic story)"]) which he could also do by putting his finger in the wind. (TV: Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"], Sleep No More [+]Loading...["Sleep No More (TV story)"]) He could detect a plasmic discharge field on scent alone. (COMIC: Doorway to Hell [+]Loading...["Doorway to Hell (comic story)"])
Though he had forgotten how to play the drums, (COMIC: One! Two! Three! Four! To Doomsday [+]Loading...["One! Two! Three! Four! To Doomsday (comic story)"]) the Twelfth Doctor could play the electric guitar, (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"], Before the Flood [+]Loading...["Before the Flood (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"], The Zygon Invasion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Invasion (TV story)"], Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"]) even being able to play while blind. (TV: The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"]) He was proficient enough with his guitar to join the Space Pirates on stage, (COMIC: The Twist [+]Loading...["The Twist (comic story)"]) and keep up with Hattie Munroe when playing alongside her in the TARDIS. (COMIC: Playing House [+]Loading...["Playing House (comic story)"])
Despite initially forgetting how to pilot his TARDIS due to post-regenerative trauma, (TV: The Time of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Time of the Doctor (TV story)"]) the Doctor soon mastered his way around the TARDIS console, though admitted to Bill Potts that he mostly negotiated with the TARDIS when it came to "steer[ing]". (TV: Smile [+]Loading...["Smile (TV story)"]) Not only could he save people by piloting the TARDIS around them (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) and deposit them from the TARDIS during dematerialisation, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"]) he was successfully able to return Clara home in time for her dates, (TV: Into the Dalek [+]Loading...["Into the Dalek (TV story)"], Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"], Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"], The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) though he had noticeable difficulty slowly fly the TARDIS above London. (TV: Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"])
He could also ride a horse, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"], The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) and drive a car, (TV: The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"]) being able to identify a vehicle by type and maker, and also summarise its capabilities. (COMIC: Doorway to Hell [+]Loading...["Doorway to Hell (comic story)"])
The Twelfth Doctor retained his predecessor's ability to converse in multiple languages, such as dinosaur, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) donkey, (PROSE: All the Empty Towers [+]Loading...["All the Empty Towers (short story)"]) and baby. (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) He also claimed that he knew semaphore, which had left British Sign Language "erased" from his mind, though he could still sign, just without the knowledge of what he had signed. (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) He eventually learnt how to sign properly again. (TV: Merry Christmas from See Hear [+]Loading...["Merry Christmas from See Hear (TV story)"])
A credited escapologist, (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) the Doctor boasted at teaching Harry Houdini "everything he [knew]", (COMIC: The Swords of Kali [+]Loading...["The Swords of Kali (comic story)"]) and was repeatedly able to escape from his cell at the Prison. (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) He was also a talented gambler, being able to win $800,000 in less than an hour using "simple mathematics", (COMIC: Gangland [+]Loading...["Gangland (comic story)"]) and dancer, with Clara noting that he could apply for Strictly Come Dancing. (COMIC: Trust [+]Loading...["Trust (comic story)"]) His performing abilities extended into acting, notably in how he fooled the Monks into believing that he wanted to assist them as a figurehead for their propaganda, even fooling Bill. (TV: The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"])
Despite believing himself not to be suited for the task, (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"]) the Doctor had a talent for holding a crowds' attention, (TV: The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"], Oxygen [+]Loading...["Oxygen (TV story)"]) having a strong sense of showmanship, (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"], The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"]) and quick comedic timing. (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"])
Similar to his ninth incarnation, the Twelfth Doctor could slow down his perception of time by locking himself in a secure location in his mind, embodied as his TARDIS control room with his companion present, where he could take the time to re-evaluate the predicament he was in to his companion and find a way out of it. (TV: Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"])
Similar to his tenth incarnation, the Twelfth Doctor had a measure of control over his regeneration energy, being able to summon a small amount for Davros, (TV: The Witch's Familiar [+]Loading...["The Witch's Familiar (TV story)"]) and fake a regeneration to fool Bill. (TV: The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"]) After being electrocuted by a CyberMondan, the Doctor managed to resist regenerating for two weeks, though was unable to walk properly without assistance for periods of time. Even as his regenerative process instinctively triggered itself after he was further damaged by another Mondasian Cyberman's energy blaster and the destruction of Floor 0507, the Doctor forced it back further despite the strain it placed on him, almost regenerating completely. (TV: The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"]) He managed to hold it back for several more hours until he decided to regenerate. (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Appearance[[edit] | [edit source]]
Being of a light build, (COMIC: Chime Time [+]Loading...["Chime Time (comic story)"]) the Twelfth Doctor was a tall, thin-faced man with a tousled mop of silver-grey hair, (PROSE: The Crawling Terror [+]Loading...["The Crawling Terror (novel)"]) and intense blue eyes framed by unruly, expressive eyebrows, (TV: The Day of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Day of the Doctor (TV story)"]) which he called "attack eyebrows" that could "take bottle tops off" and were "ready to secede and set up their own independent state of eyebrows". (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) He also had a hooked nose, with big ears. (TV: The Time of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Time of the Doctor (TV story)"]) Recognising that he had "seen [his] face somewhere before", (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) the Doctor eventually realised that he had the face of an older looking Lobus Caecilius, a man whose family his tenth incarnation had saved from the destruction of Pompeii on Donna Noble's insistence, and concluded that he had subconsciously chose Caecilius' face to remind himself that he always "save[d] people". (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) At some point, the Doctor appeared to have had his left earlobe pierced, as he had visible scarring on his ear by the time he extracted Clara from her timeline. (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"])
The Twelfth Doctor's hair was a silvery shade of grey, kept short and combed down, (TV: The Time of the Doctor [+]Loading...["The Time of the Doctor (TV story)"], Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) though occasionally styled into a coif. (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) However, he later let his hair grow out, and become curlier, (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"], The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)"], Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"], For Tonight We Might Die [+]Loading...["For Tonight We Might Die (TV story)"]) but had it cut down by the time he met River on Mendorax Dellora. (TV: The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"]) After he left Darillium, (TV: Extremis [+]Loading...["Extremis (TV story)"]) his hair had grown back to its old length. (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"], The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"]) When his body began to regenerate, his regeneration energy caused his hair length to grow out immensely. (TV: The Doctor Falls [+]Loading...["The Doctor Falls (TV story)"], Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (TV story)"])
Upon first seeing his reflection, the Twelfth Doctor described his face as being "absolutely furious", though he later admitted that it was "all right up until the eyebrows". (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) He also described himself as a "distinguished gentleman with [a] twinkle in his eye", (COMIC: The Swords of Kali [+]Loading...["The Swords of Kali (comic story)"]) and considered his intimidating eyebrows as both a major contributor to his gravitas, (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"]) and the reason many viewed him as a hostile. (COMIC: The Swords of Kali [+]Loading...["The Swords of Kali (comic story)"])
The Twelfth Doctor was called a "boney rascal" and a "desiccated man-crone" by Robin Hood, who also described him as being "pale as milk", (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"]) with Shona McCullough calling him a "skeleton man". (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"])
While she once noted that the Doctor's face "always looked serious", (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"]) Clara Oswald described him as looking like a "grey-haired stick insect", (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) and even used such an image for him on her caller ID, (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"]) with Sontaran commander Kygon Brox also comparing the Doctor to a stick insect. (COMIC: The Instruments of War [+]Loading...["The Instruments of War (comic story)"])
The Governor believed the Doctor had "a face for fury", and that it was "made up of storms" and "[boiled] away like a dying star". (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) Ross McNamara compared the Doctor's "craggy" face to "the surface of the Moon." (PROSE: Haunted [+]Loading...["Haunted (short story)"])
Shortly after their regeneration, the Thirteenth Doctor described her predecessor as "a white-haired Scotsman". (TV: The Woman Who Fell to Earth [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Fell to Earth (TV story)"])
Clothing[[edit] | [edit source]]
Main attires[[edit] | [edit source]]
Aiming for "minimalism", (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"]) the Twelfth Doctor initially donned a navy blue covert coat with shawl lapels and a crimson lining over a matching cardigan with a white collared shirt, midnight blue trousers, and black brogue shoes. On his left hand ring finger, he had a pair of gold rings, a normal gold band and a second ring with a greenish amber setting that rested atop the first band, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) which the Doctor considered to be a wedding ring that symbolised his marriage to River Song. (PROSE: Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)"]) Occasionally, the Doctor would replace his cardigan with a single-breasted waistcoat, with colours ranging in dark blue and plain black, (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], Flatline [+]Loading...["Flatline (TV story)"]) and change his dark blue trousers to black. (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) His socks were either decorated with cartoon animals (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) or plain black, (TV: Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"]) and his underpants reportedly had question marks. (TV: The Zygon Invasion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Invasion (TV story)"]) While Clara noted his clothes made him look Victorian, (PROSE: Silhouette [+]Loading...["Silhouette (novel)"]) the Doctor believed he looked like a magician. (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"])
Though his Crombie coat remained a constant staple of his appearance, he would wear them in a variety of colours and materials, with colours coming in navy blue, (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"]) black, (COMIC: The Eye of Torment [+]Loading...["The Eye of Torment (comic story)"]) blue, (COMIC: The Hyperion Empire [+]Loading...["The Hyperion Empire (comic story)"]) maroon, (COMIC: The Highgate Horror [+]Loading...["The Highgate Horror (comic story)"]) black velvet, (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"]) and worn-out grey. (TV: Extremis [+]Loading...["Extremis (TV story)"]) To go with his maroon Crombie coat, the Doctor also owned a scarlet waistcoat with matching trousers and shoes. (COMIC: The Highgate Horror [+]Loading...["The Highgate Horror (comic story)"])
The Doctor would also wear variations of his attire, switching from vested garments with a snowy shirt for a simple dress shirt on its own, coloured in burgundy, (TV: Robot of Sherwood [+]Loading...["Robot of Sherwood (TV story)"]) dark navy blue, (TV: Time Heist [+]Loading...["Time Heist (TV story)"]) or black with a white polka dot pattern. (TV: Kill the Moon [+]Loading...["Kill the Moon (TV story)"]) Other times, he would dispense with the shirts as well and don a black crew neck jumper (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) with small star-shaped sparkles on the front that helped him see in the dark, (PROSE: Royal Blood [+]Loading...["Royal Blood (novel)"]) and later began wearing a zip up hoodie under his coat, with colours ranging in plain black, (TV: Last Christmas [+]Loading...["Last Christmas (TV story)"]) green, (TV: Under the Lake [+]Loading...["Under the Lake (TV story)"]) and blue. (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) Under his jumper, he wore a white, (TV: Listen [+]Loading...["Listen (TV story)"]) red, (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) or grey T-shirt. (COMIC: Time and PR in Space [+]Loading...["Time and PR in Space (comic story)"]) On one occasion, he wore a burgundy ladder jumper. (TV: The Return of Doctor Mysterio [+]Loading...["The Return of Doctor Mysterio (TV story)"])
Around the time he began to regularly play his electric guitar, (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Loading...["The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)"]) the Doctor, though he continued to wear his hoodie under his Crombie coat, replaced his jumper with an ivory T-shirt and a pair of baggy plaid trousers similar in style to those of his second incarnation, either in a gunmetal grey design, (TV: The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)"]) a Prussian blue design with a white plaid pattern, (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"] a navy blue tartan pattern with crimson stripes, (TV: The Woman Who Lived [+]Loading...["The Woman Who Lived (TV story)"]) or a bottle green colour. (COMIC: The Ministry of Time [+]Loading...["The Ministry of Time (comic story)"]) His vest wear included a dusty pink Henley top underneath a Misty Mountain T-shirt, (TV: The Doctor's Meditation [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Meditation (theatrical film)"]) a Negative Flower T-shirt, (TV: The Girl Who Died [+]Loading...["The Girl Who Died (TV story)"]) a plain white T-shirt, (COMIC: The Ministry of Time [+]Loading...["The Ministry of Time (comic story)"]) and a black T-shirt with a shark on it. (TV: Face the Raven [+]Loading...["Face the Raven (TV story)"])
During his time at St Luke's University, the Doctor began wearing a single-breasted black velvet frock coat with a cornflower blue lining, while the rest of the his outfit came with many variations. Accompanying the frock coat would be a puce, dark green or black hoodie, a green ladder, black distressed or blue paint splatter jumper, a white shirt or longline burgundy, blue or black t-shirt, (TV: The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"], The Eaters of Light [+]Loading...["The Eaters of Light (TV story)"]) and a blue or black waistcoat with notched lapels and brown buttons. (TV: The Pilot [+]Loading...["The Pilot (TV story)"]) On one occasion, he dispensed with the waistcoat and wore a simple scarlet dress shirt. (TV: The Pyramid at the End of the World [+]Loading...["The Pyramid at the End of the World (TV story)"]) He also began keeping the cuffs of his sleeves unrolled. (TV: The Lie of the Land [+]Loading...["The Lie of the Land (TV story)"])
Other costumes[[edit] | [edit source]]
Following his regeneration, the Doctor was placed into a Victorian nightshirt and slippers by the Paternoster Gang to help him rest. While investigating reports of spontaneous human combustion, the Doctor exchanged his old watch for a coat from a vagabond, which he wore over his nightshirt. After infiltrating Mancini's Family Restaurant, the Doctor stole a Clockwork Droid's suit in order to masquerade as one to get close to the Half-Face Man. (TV: Deep Breath [+]Loading...["Deep Breath (TV story)"])
For formal wear, the Twelfth Doctor would don a black double-breasted suit jacket, black trousers and low-rising waistcoat, his black brogue boots, a white dress shirt and an ebony black cravat tie. (TV: Mummy on the Orient Express [+]Loading...["Mummy on the Orient Express (TV story)"], The Husbands of River Song [+]Loading...["The Husbands of River Song (TV story)"]) When he took Bill Potts to the frost fair of 1814, the Doctor wore his velvet frockcoat, but favoured more Regency era clothing in the form of navy trousers, an azure blue brocade waistcoat, a sapphire blue cravat, a white shirt, black gloves and a navy top hat that he later swapped for a black one. (TV: Thin Ice [+]Loading...["Thin Ice (TV story)"])
When going into "deep cover" as Coal Hill School's temporary caretaker, the Doctor donned an ocher brown warehouse coat over his black crew neck jumper, (TV: The Caretaker [+]Loading...["The Caretaker (TV story)"]) and was photographed wearing the same coat while brandishing a mop at some point before 5 March 2005. (PROSE: Rose [+]Loading...["Rose (novelisation)"])
After returning to Gallifrey, the Doctor discarded his waistcoat and velvet Crombie coat in favour of a black overcoat, which he found in his old barn. When he returned to his TARDIS, he resumed wearing a new Crombie coat what had been left for him by Clara as a parting gift. (TV: Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"])
While imprisoned in the Prison, the Doctor was fitted with a standard orange uniform. (PROSE: The Blood Cell [+]Loading...["The Blood Cell (novel)"]) While visiting 1963 Las Vegas, the Doctor donned a blue fedora at Clara's urging. (COMIC: Gangland [+]Loading...["Gangland (comic story)"]) When Zip Betterblast gave him a "re-design" for his TV appearance, the Doctor received blue jeans, a cap with a "DW" logo, and yellow sleeveless V-neck top with a palm tree island image on it. (COMIC: Time and PR in Space [+]Loading...["Time and PR in Space (comic story)"])
Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]
Information from invalid sources[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Promotional material for Doctor Who Experience mentions that the green amber stone on the Twelfth Doctor's ring was "allegedly" collected on the planet Raxacoricofallapatorius.
- In DWM 477, showrunner Steven Moffat jokingly answered one fan's question on what colour the Doctor's kidneys now were, after he had complained about their colour, as "Froon", a colour which only the Doctor could see.
- Writing in DWM 495, Moffat confirmed that the photo-realistic painting of Clara seen during Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"] was painted by the Doctor himself. Capaldi himself is a trained artist, although his style is more on the caricature side.
- According to the Doctor Who The Official Annual 2018, which is not accepted as a valid source for in-universe articles on this wiki, the Doctor and River had a home on Darillium during their final night; their address was "Flat 40, Singing Towers View, Darillium".
- In the twentieth anniversary edition of Who Killed Kennedy by David Bishop, an epilogue was added in which James Stevens contacts the Twelfth Doctor and convinces him to alter the coordinates of the Master's Time Ring so that he can travel to 11 August 1971 and prevent Francis Cleary from killing his former companion Dodo Chaplet.
Casting[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Capaldi was the second actor, after Sixth Doctor actor Colin Baker, to have played an on-screen character in Doctor Who before being cast as the Doctor, having played Lobus Caecilius in The Fires of Pompeii [+]Loading...["The Fires of Pompeii (TV story)"] and John Frobisher in Torchwood: Children of Earth. However, if one counts David Tennant's appearances in various Big Finish audios and Scream of the Shalka prior to his casting as the Tenth Doctor, Capaldi is actually the third actor to have appeared in Who-media prior to taking on the role.
Peter Capaldi's age[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Cast at 55 years old, Peter Capaldi was the oldest actor to regularly portray the Doctor since First Doctor actor William Hartnell, who was a few months Capaldi's junior. War Doctor actor John Hurt, however, remains the oldest actor to portray a new incarnation of the Doctor upon debuting, at 73 years old.
Costume influences[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Peter Capaldi wanted to wear his wedding ring as part of the Doctor's attire, and requested a prop to disguise it. He was given an amber ring with a gemstone that fitted over the top of his original band. It was revealed in the Twice Upon a Time [+]Loading...["Twice Upon a Time (novelisation)"] novelisation that the ring was the Doctor's wedding ring from his marriage to River Song.
- As part of his discussions with the costume designers, Peter Capaldi asked for his original costume to be closer to how fashion was in the 1960s so as to better reflect the origins of the show. In addition, he asked for the coat to be black, since he always remembered the First Doctor's coat as black as a child - being as the show was in black in white.
- His costume was revealed in DWM 470 and online earlier than planned to preempt a tabloid scoop.[source needed]
Other matters[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Like the War Doctor and the Ninth Doctor before him, the Twelfth Doctor debuted in a television story before his regeneration from his predecessor was screened.
- Peter Capaldi pierced his left ear earlier in life and the scar from his piecing was visible during close-ups of his face in Hell Bent [+]Loading...["Hell Bent (TV story)"]. This is the second time the Doctor has sported noticeable body modification from the previous life of his actor; Jon Pertwee's arm tattoo from his Royal Navy days was visible in a scene in Spearhead from Space [+]Loading...["Spearhead from Space (TV story)"].
- In several series 9 episodes, most notably Heaven Sent [+]Loading...["Heaven Sent (TV story)"], the Doctor displays a slight limp, because Capaldi had injured his knee early in filming of the season, and underwent surgery to repair the knee late in 2015. As Capaldi later explained, "We realised what it is: you run down these corridors and you reach the end and then you spin to make sure you get a nice close-up. You spin on that leg and you put tension on that knee."[1]
- The Twelfth Doctor's tenure was the last to be completed during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II.
External links[[edit] | [edit source]]
Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- ↑ Debnath, Neela (21 December 2016). Doctor Who star Peter Capaldi reveals 'dangerous and troubling' moment during filming. Express. Retrieved on 23 December 2016.
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