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{{Update|Information from [[The Box of Terrors (audio story)|The Box of Terrors]], [[Omega (series)|Omega comics]], and [[Omega (Cutaway audio story)]]}}
{{Infobox Individual
{{Infobox Individual
|alias            = {{il|Peylix|Omegon|[[Ohm]]}}
|alias            = {{il|Peylix|Omegon|[[Ohm]]}}
|image            = Omega close-left look.jpg
|image            = <gallery>
Omegagallery1.jpg|A
Omegagallery2.jpg|B
</gallery>
|species          = Time Lord
|species          = Time Lord
|species2          = Gallifreyan
|origin            = [[Gallifrey]]
|origin            = [[Gallifrey]]
|affiliation      = Founders of Gallifrey
|affiliation      = Founders of Gallifrey
|spouse            = Patience (Cold Fusion)|Patience
|job              = Solar engineer
|spouse            = Patience (The Tides of Time)|Patience
|first            = The Three Doctors (TV story)
|first            = The Three Doctors (TV story)
|appearances      = [[Omega - list of appearances|'''''see list''''']]
|appearances      = {{appears}}
|actor            = Stephen Thorne
|actor            = Stephen Thorne
|other actor      = Ian Collier
|other actor      = Alan Chuntz
|other actor2     = Peter Davison
|other actor2      = Ian Collier
|other voice actor = [[Daniel Brocklebank]]
|other actor3     = Peter Davison
}}{{dab page|Omega (disambiguation)}}
|other actor4      = Mark Corden
'''Omega''', born as '''Peylix''', also called '''Omegon''' and [[Adherents of Ohm|worshipped]] as '''Ohm''', was a great intergalactic [[engineer]] and co-[[Founders of Gallifrey|founder]] of [[Time Lord]] society, but centuries of loneliness and isolation bent his mind so that he threatened the entire [[universe]]. He was the only person ever to live within the [[anti-matter universe]], which he subsequently ruled over while he used his will to enable him to construct a landscape, with the permission of the anti-matter creature. However, his existence in this realm robbed him of his body and left only his conscious will intact, a realisation that twisted him into murderous insanity aimed towards the Time Lords, whom he blamed for abandoning him to his fate.
|other voice actor = [[Daniel Brocklebank]], [[Brian Blessed]]
}}
{{dab page|Omega (disambiguation)}}
{{counterparts|1=Omega|2=Omega (True Lords' timeline)}}
'''Omega''' - born as '''Peylix''', also known as "'''the Engineer'''" and '''Omegon''', and [[Adherents of Ohm|worshipped]] as '''Ohm''' - was a great intergalactic [[engineer]] and one of the [[Founders of Gallifrey|founders]] of [[Time Lord]] society, but centuries of loneliness and isolation bent his mind so that he threatened the entire [[universe]]. He was the only person ever to live within the [[anti-matter universe]], which he subsequently ruled over while he used his will to enable him to construct a landscape, with the permission of the anti-matter creature. However, his existence in this realm robbed him of his body and left only his conscious will intact, a realisation that twisted him into murderous insanity aimed towards the Time Lords, whom he blamed for abandoning him to his fate.
 
Omega was one of the most significant figures in [[Gallifrey]]an history. He appeared in the [[ROO text]]s, as later scholars on [[Gallifrey]] would call them, alongside [[Rassilon]] and [[the Other]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Goth Opera (novel)|Goth Opera]]'', ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'')


== Biography ==
== Biography ==
=== Early life ===
=== Early life ===
Omega was one of the most significant figures in [[Gallifrey]]an history. He appeared in the [[ROO text]]s, as later scholars on [[Gallifrey]] would call them, alongside [[Rassilon]] and [[the Other]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Goth Opera (novel)|Goth Opera]]'', ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'') He later said he was named Peylix. He had taken the name Omega in response to his teacher, [[Luvis]], who had awarded him a grade of Omega for an essay he had written. In it he had explored the possibilities of increasing the Gallifreyan power by exploding a [[star]]. The resulting energy could be harnessed for time travel. This was seen by his teacher as madness and pure idiocy. The Omega was the lowest mark possible, and Peylix was left with a humiliating nickname that endured even when he and a friend of his, "[[Rassilon|Razz]]", effected this plan, forcibly creating the Time Lords. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (audio story)|Omega]]'') By the time of his "death", Omega had married a [[Gallifreyan]] known as [[Patience (Cold Fusion)|Patience]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'')
==== Becoming Omega ====
Omega, whose original name was "Peylix," ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'') and [[Rassilon]] were born in an era of [[Gallifrey]]'s history when the [[Gallifreyan]] civilisation was turned outwards, perfecting more advanced forms of interstellar travel to guide the development of less advanced cultures and set themselves up as [[God]]s. Rassilon and Omega were among the only Gallifreyans who gave much thought to the future and destiny of Gallifrey. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Legacy of Gallifrey (short story)|The Legacy of Gallifrey]]'') He was also known by the name "the Engineer". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference: Shock Tactics]]'')  


==== Achievements ====
Rassilon and Omega became friends, with Rassilion even allowing Omega to call him "Rass", yet Rassilon was also very dismissive towards his friend. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'') He once referred to Rassilon as his "[[Cousin (rank)|cousin]]", ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (novelisation)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]'') a term used to describe a Gallifreyan of the same [[Great House]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Lungbarrow (novel)|Lungbarrow]]'') Peylix was left with the nickname "Omega" after he had received the "Omega Grade", the lowest mark possible, for an essay he had written that explored the possibilities of increasing the Gallifreyan power by exploding a [[star]], and harnessing the resulting energy for time travel. His teacher, [[Luvis]], saw the plan as "madness and pure idiocy" and made Omega the first person to ever receive the grade. Rassilon argued the new nickname gave Omega a reputation and made him known to the public. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'')
Rassilon was the son of a suet shredder. (PROSE: <em>Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible</em>)


According to Coordinator Engin, Rassilon was initially chiefly regarded as an engineer and architect. (TV: <em>The Deadly Assassin</em>) He and Omega created validium (TV: <em>Silver Nemesis</em>) and, with the Other, they created the Hand of Omega. (PROSE: <em>Remembrance of the Daleks</em>) They planned to use the Hand to induce a supernova in the star Qqaba. The energy released would enable the Gallifreyans to travel through time. (COMIC: <em>Star Death</em>)
Rassilon and Omega became [[solar engineer]]s, a respected class of scientists among the Gallifreyans. While Rassilon dreamed of [[immortality]], Omega, believing immortality to be impossible, turned him over to the prospect of developing [[time travel]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Legacy of Gallifrey (short story)|The Legacy of Gallifrey]]'') In spite of the Omega grade he received on his paper about the subject, ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'') Omega and Rassilon worked on the project for several years until they had developed the final form of the plan to detonate a [[black hole]] and funnel its power back to Gallifrey, which they presented before the [[Gallifreyan Council]]. They were initially dismissive, but [[Tussan's cat]] spoke out in favour of the two engineers and they received the funding their needed. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Legacy of Gallifrey (short story)|The Legacy of Gallifrey]]'')


However, Rassilon was jealous of Omega's popularity amongst the people of Gallifrey, and he prompted Omega's assistant Vandekirian to betray him at the last second. (AUDIO: <em>Omega</em>) Another account stated that Rassilon instead deactivated Omega's protective forcefield remotely seconds before the star's detonation. (PROSE: <em>The Scrolls of Rassilon</em>) This betrayal was hidden from the Gallifreyans: the Fourth Doctor believed that Omega's death was caused by the interference of a Black Sun agent named Fenris the Hellbringer. (COMIC: <em>Star Death</em>)
[[File:Timeless Children Hidden Omega.jpg|thumb|left|Omega on Gallifrey. ([[GRAPHIC]]: ''[[The FIRST Time Lords! (illustration)|The FIRST Time Lords!]]'')]]
According to one of Omega's unreliable memories, at a time when he still wanted to be known by his birth name "Peylix," Omega and Rassilon were only able to begin their experiments after Rassilon led [[Intuitive Revelation|a revolution]] to secure power on Gallifrey. Although Omega pleaded for Rassilon to stop it, his friend argued that it was the only way to remove those who opposed their progress. Afterward, Rassilon became a politican, while Omega carried on as a scientist. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'') According to another account, Omega and Rassilon were both already members of the [[High Council]] when they carried out their time travel experiments. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[A Brief History of Time Lords (novel)|A Brief History of Time Lords]]'') The [[Eleventh Doctor]] later recounted that Rassilon had been "Omega's boss." ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Lost Dimension (comic story)|The Lost Dimension]]'')


Improving on Omega's mathematics to succeed in creating a supernova, (PROSE: <em>A Brief History of Time Lords</em>) Rassilon used his new technology to map out all of creation, invent rules for the universe, and purge reality of all irrationality. This anchoring of the thread created history in Gallifrey's image, and with it, Rassilon and his people truly became lords of all time and space. (PROSE: <em>Christmas on a Rational Planet</em>, <em>The Book of the War</em>) Rassilon also created the Eye of Harmony and the transduction barrier at the dawn of the Rassilon Era. (PROSE: <em>A Brief History of Time Lords</em>)
By the time of his [[Disappearance of Omega|final experiment and "death"]], Omega had married a [[Gallifreyan]] known as [[Patience (The Tides of Time)|Patience]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'') He wrote about the mysteries of the [[Tantalus Eye]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Engines of War (novel)|Engines of War]]'')


=== War against the Vampires ===
==== Achievements ====
During the anchoring of the thread, Rassilon accidentally unleashed the Great Vampires into the universe, (PROSE: <em>Interference - Book One</em>, <em>The Book of the War</em>) beginning the Eternal War. (PROSE: <em>The Pit</em>) Rassilon led the campaign to eliminate the vampires, fighting on the front lines of the conflict for several hundred years. (PROSE: <em>The Book of Lists</em>)
{{Section stub|Information from [[The Evil and the Deep Black Sky (short story)]]}}
Alongside [[Rassilon]], Omega played a part in the creation of the living metal [[Validium]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Silver Nemesis (TV story)|Silver Nemesis]]''; [[PROSE]]: ''[[A Brief History of Time Lords (novel)|A Brief History of Time Lords]]'') Omega was more popular than Rassilon amongst the [[Gallifreyan]]s; Rassilon was a politican and heavily disliked, whereas Omega had become a public hero. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Legacy of Gallifrey (short story)|The Legacy of Gallifrey]]'', [[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (audio story)|Omega]]'') Both nonetheless became beloved public heroes as the years went by, however. One account showed that Omega was eager for their people to establish power over time, while Rassilon, like [[the Other]], was more cautious, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (novelisation)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]'') but Omega's own memories implied the roles were reversed, with Rassilon being eager and Omega being cautious. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'')


At one point during the war, Rassilon left the safety of the main fleet to investigate rumours of a vampire hive. His ship was attacked by the bird-like Ra'ra'vis, and he became their prisoner. Rassilon was asked to perform time experiments for them, to advance their technology. He was saved by Jorus, a Vogan. Rassilon gave Jorus his seal and told the Vogan the power of his race. The seal of Rassilon then became a key piece of iconography on Voga. (PROSE: <em>Jorus and the Voganauts</em>)
With the help of the Other, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Lungbarrow (novel)|Lungbarrow]]'') Omega and [[Rassilon]] enabled the people of Gallifrey to achieve [[time travel]] by using the [[Hand of Omega]], a [[stellar manipulator]] which could make stars go [[supernova]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'', ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]'') In an [[Alternate timeline (The Infinity Doctors)|abnormal state of history]], it was said that two Hands of Omega existed. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'') After the hand was complete, Omega declared it a "[[Key to Time|key to time]]" that would allow them to [[Anchoring of the thread|impose their own order]] upon time to become its "lords", with Rassilon eventually conceding it was a magnificent achievement. The Other, meanwhile, warned that the Hand could become a terrible weapon and warned them to remember their errors with the [[Minyan]]s, although Omega believed they had learned from those mistakes. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (novelisation)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]'')


General Skellis told the recently regenerated and full-bearded Rassilon that his tactic of using dispersal as a way of eliminating any Great Vampire they found caused the Vampires to spread across the universe, and told him that penetrating their heart was a much simpler way of killing them. Rassilon then employed Bowships to hunt them down. (PROSE: <em>The Multi-Faceted War</em>) The campaign was largely successful, but the King Vampire was not found. (TV: <em>State of Decay</em>, PROSE: <em>Interference - Book One</em>)
Omegon told [[K9 Mark I]] that he had "harnessed the power of a thousand suns" to create the system that gave the [[Time Lord]]s the ability to travel in time. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[K9 and the Time Trap (novel)|K9 and the Time Trap]]'') According to other sources, it was with the power unleashed by a single [[supernova]] ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') or, in subtly different accounts, the detonation of an existing [[black hole]], ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Legacy of Gallifrey (short story)|The Legacy of Gallifrey]]'') that Omega hoped to generate enough power to travel through time. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') As [[Mutter's Spiral|Gallifrey's galaxy]] had only one [[Population III star]] at that time, they decided to destroy that one. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'') The star, in an area known as the [[Sector of Forgotten Souls]] ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'') in the [[constellation]] of [[Ao (constellation)|Ao]], ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Lungbarrow (novel)|Lungbarrow]]'') bore the name [[Qqaba]], ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Star Death (comic story)|Star Death]]'', [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'') or [[Polyphilos]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Scrolls of Rassilon (short story)|The Scrolls of Rassilon]]'')


After the war, Rassilon wrote the Record of Rassilon, giving a history of the war and instructions to all Time Lords to kill the King Vampire if ever they came across him. (TV: <em>State of Decay</em>) The record was written into every TARDIS. (PROSE: <em>The Multi-Faceted War</em>)
According to a transmission from [[Anathema]], which may have been influenced by [[Faction Paradox]] propaganda, Rassilon accidentally punched a hole into [[Spiral Yssgaroth|another plane of existence]], allowing the [[Great Vampire]]s to swarm into Gallifrey's universe and beginning the [[Eternal War]], when he first attempted to create and harness the power of a [[black hole]] before [[Hand of Omega|the Engineer's stellar manipulator]] was completed. According to this source, the Engineer was eventually able to plug up the black hole with artificial worlds designed to resemble ordinary [[planet]]s, although he warned Rassilon that surviving followers of the vampires may one day attack these barriers to again unleash the Vampires. When Rassilon decided they should return to Gallifrey to finish the [[stellar manipulator]] for use on a supernova, the Engineer muttered to himself that, if someone drilled to [[Earth|the final artificial planet's]] core, they would unleash [[Stahlman's ooze|something dangerous]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference: Shock Tactics]]'')


According to Faction Paradox-influenced transmissions from Anathema, during the war Rassilon had been exposed to vampire biodata in what he described as inoculation. (PROSE: <em>Interference - Book One</em>) The Cult of Rassilon the Vampire on Gallifrey believed that this caused him to become a vampire. (PROSE: <em>Goth Opera</em>)
=== The "death" of Omega ===
{{Main|Disappearance of Omega}}
{{Section stub|[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)]]}}
The [[Fifth Doctor]] once reflected Omega had "always been a victim of circumstance". ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'') According to most accounts, Omega was lost during the very same great working by which he granted Gallifrey the power to travel in time: the [[stasis halo]] of Omega's [[Starbreaker]], the ''[[Eurydice]]'', was sabotaged, exposing it, and the Starbreaker's crew, to the fury of the black hole. There were several accounts concerning the details and reasons for the sabotage, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Star Death (comic story)|Star Death]]'', [[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'') though [[Boy (Heaven Sent)|one Gallifreyan]] wrote that Omega had "got his sums wrong" and was simply not within a safe distance when the star exploded. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[A Brief History of Time Lords (novel)|A Brief History of Time Lords]]'') At the centre of the explosion, Omega saw the [[Original palimpsest universe|original timeline]] shatter ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'') as the invention of time travel changed reality forever. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Mr Saldaamir (short story)|Mr Saldaamir]]'')


=== Foundation of Time Lord society ===
[[File:Omega (The Whoniverse).jpeg|thumb|left|Omega was lost to the [[anti-matter universe]], but his actions gave his people the power to become Lords of Time. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Whoniverse (novel)|The Whoniverse]]'')]]
When Rassilon returned from the Eternal War, he seized control of Gallifrey (PROSE: <em>The Pit</em>) by overthrowing the matriarchal society of the Pythia. (PROSE: <em>Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible</em>) He brought the Eye of Harmony, actually the singularity of a black hole, to Gallifrey. There it lay beneath the Panopticon. (TV: <em>The Deadly Assassin</em>) As the Time Lords banished the last fragment of impossibility from the universe, Rassilon said:
Historically accounts depicted that Omega's assistant, [[Vandekirian]], had sabotaged the mission on behalf of Rassilon. However, feeling guilty over his betrayal, he cut off his own hand as recompense. Omega did not accept it, and cut off his other hand, placing it in his [[stellar manipulator]], which was later to be known as the [[Hand of Omega]]. Upon which, the Eurydice was destroyed due to Vandekirian's actions. The hand was only named after Omega because Rassilon wanted to use the public's love of Omega to boost his own popularity, reasoning that showering the fallen founder with praise would do better than doing so for the disliked Vandekirian. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'') According to the [[Seventh Doctor]] however, the Hand of Omega was not "literally" a hand, but had instead only received this nickname figuratively, "because Time Lords have an infinite capacity for pretension". ([[TV]]: ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]'')


Now, see what we have created, we have built a world of reason triumphant. And it is good.<em> Rassilon [src]</em>
In his own distorted memories after taking on some of the Fifth Doctor's [[biodata]], Omega recalled that Vandekirian was at least partly responsible for the sabotage. He had discovered that detonating the star would jeopardise the existence of a race called the [[Scintillan]]s. When he realised what would happen, Vandekirian's guilt caused him to destroy his own hand, since its activation required his palm print. However, Omega cut off the man's other hand to activate it anyway, no matter the consquences for the Scintillans, before killing Vandekirian himself. When Omega began to have these memories involving the Scintillans, he was filled with guilt, despite having tried to argue that the reward of time travel for Gallifrey had justified his means.


With his Five Principles, Rassilon led Gallifrey into a more enlightened age, bringing about a new social order. Among these changes, slavery was abolished under Rassilon's rule. (AUDIO: <em>Forever</em>)
However, the Doctor revealed that the history with the Scintillans was a corruption of his own memories; with the Doctor having been filled with guilt over accidentally killing the race himself while trying to rescue a [[Lurman]] colony, Omega happened to take on that guilt after taking some of the Doctor's biodata. The Doctor reasoned Omega had only incorporated it into the memories to "explain away" Vandekirian's betrayal, even implying Omega had not killed Vandekirian as well. The Doctor also reasoned that Omega may have encorporated the story because the founder wanted to believe his exile had a cause, something to blame like an act of genocide, instead of merely being the result of a mistake. As for why Vandekirian betrayed Omega, the Doctor assumed he had indeed either sabotaged the mission on behalf of Rassilon, or he had just succumbed to madness. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'')


According to the histories that Rassilon himself wrote, Pythia retaliated by wrathfully cursing Gallifreyans to be sterile. (PROSE: <em>Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible</em>) However, the sterility may have, in reality, been a result of the anchoring of the thread. (PROSE: <em>The Book of the War</em>) Rassilon solved the problem by creating the Great Houses and building the Looms that artificially birthed new Time Lords and Ladies. (PROSE: <em>Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible</em>)
Although Rassilon publicly wept over Omega's death, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Lungbarrow (novel)|Lungbarrow]]'') the [[Eleventh Doctor]] appeared to believe the theory that Rassilon was behind the tragedy. Indeed, he later recounted to [[Alice Obiefune]] that it was rumoured Omega's "death" had been arranged, with those who spread the rumour claiming Rassilon had ordered "Omega's assistant" to betray the engineer. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Lost Dimension (comic story)|The Lost Dimension]]'')


According to a different account, the President at the time of the Vampire War was Pandak, who Rassilon overthrew in a coup. (PROSE: <em>The Scrolls of Rassilon</em>)
According to other accounts, a man known as "[[Fenris|Fenris the Hellbringer]]" sabotaged Omega's Starbreaker. This nearly meant that the initial [[Gallifreyan]] time travel experiments never came to pass, so the Time Lords "[would] be annihilated before they [had] even come into existence". However, Rassilon intervened, dispatching Fenris; thus, although Omega was lost, the time experiments succeeded. According to this account, Rassilon prevented disaster from overtaking the other three Starbreakers ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Star Death (comic story)|Star Death]]'') before weeping over Omega's death. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Lungbarrow (novel)|Lungbarrow]]'') Most accounts suggested that Fenris had been an agent for the [[Order of the Black Sun]] and acting deliberately, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[4-D War (comic story)|4-D War]]'') but according to one source, the man who caused Omega's death was a "temporal [[tourism|tourist]]" of no import, who had gone back to Gallifrey's ancient history to witness the historic moment of Qqaba's detonation. He was only given the melodramatic name of "Fenris the Hellbringer" in later retellings of the event, postdating his almost immediate obliteration by Rassilon. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Gallifrey: A Rough Guide (short story)|Gallifrey: A Rough Guide]]'')


In the early days of his rule, Rassilon imposed higher taxes on the Gallifreyan people and changed the Games in the Death Zone to use alien warriors rather than Gallifreyans. He also created the transduction barrier that protected Gallifrey from outsiders. Around this time, he was approached by the Stranger, who told him of Gallifrey's future and pleaded with him to change established events to make the Time Lords less powerful and selfish than they would become. (PROSE: <em>The Scrolls of Rassilon</em>)
In yet another account, Omegon told [[K9 Mark I]] that he survived the event during which he granted the Gallifreyans the power to travel in time. Coasting on his fame and the debt he felt Gallifrey owed him, he had himself proclaimed [[Emperor]]. However, the other Time Lords plotted against him, and managed to depose him. They attempted to destroy him with the very "power of a thousand suns" he had harnessed for them, but they only succeeded in marooning him in a "[[anti-matter universe|crimson bubble of time]]", a [[time trap]], from which they believed he could never escape. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[K9 and the Time Trap (novel)|K9 and the Time Trap]]'')


Rassilon and his allies united against the Hyperions. (COMIC: <em>Terrorformer</em>)
=== The survival of Omega ===
Omega was thus presumed dead. Most Gallifreyans, including [[The Doctor]], grew up to revere and admire Omega as their greatest hero. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') The Hand of Omega, meanwhile, had survived and returned to Gallifrey. The [[First Doctor]] would later obtain it for himself. ([[TV]]: ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]'') Like Rassilon, Omega became a legend amongst Gallifreyan society, while [[The Other|the third of their trio]] was forgotten. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (novelisation)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]'') However, Omega had survived the ordeal. He was transported through the black hole into [[Anti-matter universe|another universe]] made of [[anti-matter]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'')


Rassilon led the Fledgling Empires against the Racnoss in the Racnoss Wars, and ultimately won the conflict. (PROSE: <em>Pandoric's Box</em>)
From this anti-matter universe, Omega was able to watch as the invention of Gallifreyan time travel wiped out the [[Original palimpsest universe|original linear universe]], replacing it with numerous [[palimpsest universe|palimpsest histories]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'') Trapped, Omega shaped the universe by force of will and access to the black hole's [[singularity]]. He could even create simple life. However, radiation destroyed his body; the gauntlets, armour and helmet he had designed to protect him from the corrosive effect of the anti-matter now constituted his physical form. At first he shaped his new world into a paradise. As the centuries rolled by he grew weary and depressed, feeling abandoned by his fellow Time Lords. The landscape slowly transformed into a drab, grey desert as he became depressed by the loneliness he was feeling. The universe that had become his home was unstable, unable to exist without a powerful will to give it form; he was trapped and completely unable to escape. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'')


Not long after Omega's incident, Rassilon led the Time Lords against the Nestenes, managing to contain their forces in the Illia galaxy. He persuaded scientist Roppen to reconfigure the Eye of Discord into a new device, one which he dubbed the "Galaxy Eater". After the device's interface gave him a brief encounter with several of his future selves, Rassilon activated the device and destroyed the Nestenes in the Illia galaxy. He then placed the device in the Omega Arsenal for safe keeping. (PROSE: <em>Pandoric's Box</em>)
[[File:Cutaway Comics' Omega.jpg|thumb|Omega as he appeared to [[Oxirgi]]. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Omega (comic story)|Omega]]'')]]
Shortly after the early [[Time Lord]]s abandoned the planet [[Minyos]] after setting themselves up as its gods, ([[TV]]: ''[[Underworld (TV story)|Underworld]]'') Omega, who had long since maintained that Gallifrey had learned from their mistakes with the [[Minyan]]s and had hoped to use the [[Hand of Omega]] to lead his people away from repeating them, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (novelisation)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]'') was able to psychically reach out to [[Oxirgi]], a [[Minyan]] revolutionary, and form a psychic bond with him, with Oxirgi worshipping him in secret as his god. Under Omega's directions, Oxirgi created a [[matter converter]] which could open a gateway through the black hole, thus freeing Omega, if it was powered by a tremendous amount of negative psychic energy. To reach his target, Oxirgi had to create as much chaos and misery on Minyos as possible. When the suffering caused by the violent rioting Oxirgi organised failed to suffice, Omega suggested Oxirgi take control of the [[nuclear bomb]]s left on Minyos by his people and destroy the planet. When [[Malika]] attempted to stop Oxirgi with the help of the [[mindwrangler]] [[Kyril]], Omega poured more of his psychic power into Oxirgi's mind, helping him to fend off Kyril's psychic attacks. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Omega (comic story)|Omega]]'')


Rassilon led the Time Lords in the Millennium War, against the Mad Mind of Bophemeral. His memory of the event was erased, as happened to all others who took part in the war. (PROSE: <em>The Quantum Archangel</em>)
=== Against the Time Lords ===
==== A new plan ====
[[File:Three_Doctors.jpg|thumb|left|Omega with the [[Second Doctor|Second]] and [[Third Doctor]]s. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'')]]
After thousands of years in the void, Omega hit upon a plan of revenge: a captured Time Lord could be forced to take his place, and Omega could leave and wreak vengeance on Gallifrey. This plan was inspired by the [[Verdigris (Verdigris)|Verdigris]], who had travelled into the anti-matter universe in an attempt to get the [[Third Doctor]] released from [[Exile on Earth|his exile]] on [[Earth]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Verdigris (novel)|Verdigris]]'') Using the black hole, he drained power from the Time Lords to stop them from interfering. He sent an [[Anti-matter organism|amorphous life form]] and other, more [[humanoid]] [[gell guard|servitors]] to find the exiled Third Doctor and take him into the black hole. The [[High Council]], unable to send anyone to assist the Doctor, decided to have the [[Second Doctor|second incarnation]] of the Doctor help rectify matters, subsequently contacting and sending his [[First Doctor|first self]] to advise them. Omega brought both incarnations to his domain, entry into which converted all [[matter]] into anti-matter. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'')


Rassilon created the Alliance of Races (COMIC: <em>Gangland</em>) in a war against the Hyperions. (COMIC: <em>Terrorformer</em>) After the Hyperions were defeated, Rassilon and the Alliance of Races embarked on another purge of races that were a threat to universal harmony. One such enemy was Count D'if and his Cybock Imperium. Rassilon challenged D'if to a game of Rassilon's roulette using the Time-Gun of Rassilon. D'if lost and he was wiped from existence. The Twelfth Doctor claimed that it was that moment that the Gallifreyans first began to fear their president. (COMIC: <em>Gangland</em>)
==== Defeated by the Doctors ====
[[File:Sheer_will.jpg|thumb|Omega discovers that he only exists upon his own will. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'')]]
When Omega removed his helmet to prepare for his departure, he discovered that the anti-matter universe had completely dissolved his physical body. He could not leave his universe; he existed only because his will insisted that he exist, but his will was all that was left of him. Consumed by rage and despair, Omega swore to destroy all things; the dark side of his mind took the form of a [[Omega's Champion|demonic champion]]. The Doctors offered freedom to Omega: in actuality the Second Doctor's [[recorder]] which [[the Doctor's TARDIS]] had accidentally shielded from conversion into anti-matter. The Doctors attempted to trick Omega into touching the recorder but instead only infuriated him. When Omega lashed out he knocked the force field generator to the floor, causing the recorder to make contact with the floor and creating a violent matter-antimatter explosion which seemingly killed Omega by collapsing the antimatter world. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'')


Rassilon at the time of the Type 1 TARDIS launch. (COMIC: <em>The Lost Dimension</em>)
Omega and his Gellguards were part of a [[fleet of Alien Monsters]] whose threat to [[Fleet of Alien Monsters' attempted destruction of Earth|destroy]] [[Earth]] was opposed by a [[Legendary Legion]] assembled by the [[Fourth Doctor]]. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|Doctor Who Trump Card Game (game)}})


Rassilon invented TARDISes after a war with the Archons. (AUDIO: <em>The Next Life</em>, PROSE: <em>The Nameless City</em>) The Eleventh Doctor, having accidentally travelled back into Gallifrey's past, helped him with the Type 1 TARDIS, and was lost in the vortex during its first flight. (COMIC: <em>The Lost Dimension</em>)
==== Assailing Gallifrey ====
[[File:Omegon meets K9.jpg|thumb|left|Omegon meets [[K9 Mark I]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[K9 and the Time Trap (novel)|K9 and the Time Trap]]'')]]Having survived his encounter with [[The Doctor|"K9's former master"]], Omegon plotted vengeance on the Time Lords. He learned how to capture spacecraft into his timeless realm; they appeared to disappear from the normal universe in a blink due to no real time existing inside his bubble of frozen, crimson time. A boundary between the bubble of time and the normal universe now existed in the form of a cloud of reddish cosmic gas, seemingly intangible, whose movements Omegon could direct from the inside; he thus intended to move the cloud nearer to [[Gallifrey]] once he had collected a big enough fleet, and launch a surprise assault on the planet, intent on wiping out the Time Lords altogether.


To enable Time Lords to travel through time without ill effects, Rassilon created a genetic link called the Rassilon Imprimatur. (PROSE: <em>Interference - Book One</em>) He also worked with a biologist named Thremix, who had created a virus that he speculated would grant the Gallifreyans immortality. Rassilon ordered the release of the virus, which wiped out a large proportion of the Gallifreyan population, and gave the remainder the ability of full-bodily regeneration. (PROSE: <em>The Scrolls of Rassilon</em>) The Valeyard claimed that Rassilon intentionally implemented a flaw in regeneration, meaning that Time Lords could only do so twelve times, so he alone could have true immortality. (AUDIO: <em>Trial of the Valeyard</em>)
Among the spacecraft he thus highjacked was the entire [[Rigelian Seventh Fleet]], the disappearance of which was investigated by [[K9 Mark I]] on behalf of [[Gallifrey High Command]]. When K9 managed to enter Omegon's realm, he personally greeted him, explaining his history to K9 and trying to convince the hound that his actions were justified. However, K9, deeming that Omegon was mad with revenge, managed to retake control of his own spacecraft, the ''[[K-NEL]]'', launching it at the rocket stores of Omegon's flagship just as the invisible fleet was nearing Gallifrey. The flagship was destroyed in a colossal explosion which seemingly killed Omegon, freeing the captured ship from his control. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[K9 and the Time Trap (novel)|K9 and the Time Trap]]'')


Rassilon created a living weapon known as the Pariah which he used for missions throughout time and space. Rassilon gave the Pariah independent thought. This proved to be a mistake; the Pariah developed a mind of its own and rebelled against him. Rassilon banished the Pariah from Gallifrey, then created Shayde, a more evolved version of the Pariah incapable of independent thought. The Pariah would cause the creation of the Threshold. (COMIC: <em>Wormwood</em>)
=== Facing the Sixth Doctor===
[[File:Omega Versus Sixth Doctor.jpg|thumb|Omega faces the [[Sixth Doctor]] in a conflict of wills. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Search for the Doctor (novel)|Search for the Doctor]]'')]]


Using temporal technology, Rassilon studied the future. He learned of the Divergence, a race which would eclipse his within ten thousand millennia. Fearing this future, he created a self-replicating, biogenic molecule which he sent back in time to seed all habitable planets in Gallifrey's galaxy. This ensured all intelligent life evolved in the form of the Gallifreyans. He trapped the Divergence in their timeline, which Rassilon sealed into a time loop. (AUDIO: <em>Zagreus</em>)
In [[2054]], the [[Fusion Energy Research Network]], a research complex connected via space elevator to the [[FERN Spacelab]], began running experiments on duplicating [[Fusion reactor|Fusion reactions]] safely on [[Earth]]. At the same time, other technicians studied [[Anti-matter]]. The existence of these two studies attracted Omega, himself a [[Solar engineer]]. In [[2056]], Omega encountered the [[Sixth Doctor]] at the Spacelab and attempted to force him to give up the secrets of time travel and his [[the TARDIS|TARDIS]]. The two soon were matched in a battle of will across all of time.


=== Supposed death and survival ===
Omega planned to get revenge on [[Gallifrey]] by trapping it in [[stasis]], as they had done to him, and then subjugating the [[Time Lord]]s. He planned to do this by causing the [[Fusion Energy Research Network]] complex to go nuclear, turning the [[Earth]] hotter than [[the Sun]] and giving him a power-source to accomplish his plan. To gain the trust of the FERN staff, Omega stole the body of the Doctor and took control of the Fusion tests. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Search for the Doctor (novel)|Search for the Doctor]]'')
The Tomb of Rassilon in the Dark Tower. (TV: <em>The Five Doctors</em>)


Rassilon died whilst in his final incarnation. Before his death, he prepared his tomb to test those who sought the gift of immortality. (PROSE: <em>Pandoric's Box</em>) Many rumours surrounded Rassilon's death (or lack thereof). One stated that the Time Lords had revolted and imprisoned him in the Dark Tower in the Death Zone. Borusa, Lord President and the Doctor's former mentor, believed that Rassilon had discovered a form of true immortality beyond the regenerations known to Time Lords. Borusa uncovered and used several artefacts from the Dark Times, including the Coronet of Rassilon (a mind control device) and the Game of Rassilon. The Doctor discovered the truth when Borusa used him to try to discover Rassilon's secret; Rassilon had indeed discovered immortality but realised it was too dangerous a secret to share. Borusa was condemned to immortality as a living statue, imprisoned immobile in Rassilon's tomb. (TV: <em>The Five Doctors</em>)
[[File:Omega as the Doctor.jpg|thumb|Omega, having stolen the body of the [[Sixth Doctor]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Search for the Doctor (novel)|Search for the Doctor]]'')]]


Over the millions of years after the end of Rassilon's Presidency, he came to be revered on Gallifrey. Time Lord history credited Rassilon with creating the traditions of their society; for instance, after Rassilon had a nightmarish vision of a dictatorial, imperialistic Gallifrey, he was said to have created the principles of non-intervention. (COMIC: <em>The Final Chapter</em>) Secret societies on Gallifrey worshipped Rassilon as a god. (AUDIO: <em>Intervention Earth</em>)
While some variations of this source indicated that Omega was successful, that the Earth was destroyed, the Doctor killed or imprisoned, and Gallifrey enslaved; ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Search for the Doctor (novel)#Marker 1|Search for the Doctor: Marker 1]]'', ''[[Search for the Doctor (novel)#Marker 4|Marker 4]]'', ''[[Search for the Doctor (novel)#Marker 25|Marker 25]]'', ''[[Search for the Doctor (novel)#Marker 27|Marker 27]]'',  ''[[Search for the Doctor (novel)#Marker 28|Marker 28]]'', ''[[Search for the Doctor (novel)#Marker 29|Marker 29]]'', ''[[Search for the Doctor (novel)#Marker 31|Marker 31]]'') one specific account stated that with the help of the [[Time Lord]] [[Drax]], [[K9 Mark III]], and a human named [[Dinah (Search for the Doctor)|Dinah]], the Doctor was freed and Omega was defeated before his plan could be completed. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Search for the Doctor (novel)#Marker 32|Search for the Doctor: Marker 32]]'', ''[[Search for the Doctor (novel)#Marker 33|Marker 33]]'')


After fleeing the Homeworld during the First Diaspora following the anchoring of the thread, the Eremites remembered the first President as "Urizen the Architect", a blind old man measuring his dung with a set of dividers. They ironically worshipped this drooling god with the rites of Urizen, during which they were permitted to break their vows of silence to freely laugh. (PROSE: <em>The Book of the War</em>)
=== Affiliation with the Arc of Infinity ===
[[File:Omega during transfer.jpg|thumb|left|Omega during transfer. ([[TV]]: ''[[Arc of Infinity (TV story)|Arc of Infinity]]'')]]
[[Hedin]] of the [[High Council]] contacted Omega to help him. Omega had gained control of the dimensional [[gateway]] known as the [[Arc of Infinity]]. Through the Arc, he had a gateway between his own universe and the [[N-Space|universe of matter]], though he still had no physical form. Omega also had a TARDIS and a servant he had created, [[the Ergon]]. Omega needed to bond with another Time Lord using his [[biodata]] extract. ([[TV]]: ''[[Arc of Infinity (TV story)|Arc of Infinity]]'')


=== Copy in the Matrix ===
On Earth at the time, Omega sent the Ergon to survey the planet, and it ended up in [[Perivale]], where it met [[Ace|Dorothy McShane]] working in a fast food restaurant. She didn't realise it was an alien, and gave it some fries, which it took back to Omega. Omega didn't like them, claiming they didn't have any salt on them. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Anti-Matter with Fries (short story)|Anti-Matter with Fries]]'')
Before he died, Rassilon copied his mind into his creation, the Matrix. (AUDIO: <em>Zagreus</em>)


The copy of Rassilon within the Matrix. (COMIC: <em>The Stockbridge Horror</em>)
Hedin transmitted to Omega the biodata extract for the Doctor, by this time in his [[Fifth Doctor|fifth incarnation]]. Omega established a base in the Earth city of [[Amsterdam]], navigated the Doctor's TARDIS into the Arc and began to link the Doctor's biodata with his own. The Doctor faced execution on Gallifrey to stop Omega's return. This was part of Omega and Hedin's plan: they rigged the execution to hide the Doctor and Omega in [[the Matrix]], safe from Time Lord detection. ([[TV]]: ''[[Arc of Infinity (TV story)|Arc of Infinity]]'')


Within the Matrix, he sat with other advanced beings who collectively called themselves High Evolutionaries and had some involvement in the affairs of the universe. The High Evolutionaries used the Gallifreyan construct known as Shayde on their behalf. (COMIC: <em>The Tides of Time</em>)
=== A new body ===
Omega shifted the Arc to Gallifrey in order to gain control of the Matrix and used its power to create a physical body for himself.


After President Romana reconciled Gallifrey with the Sisterhood of Karn, lifting the Curse of Pythia, (PROSE: <em>Lungbarrow</em>) the Book of Lies said that, from within his tomb, the "Great Grey Eminence" made a deal with Faction Paradox to fold the Doctor's timeline back on itself and return Gallifreyan history to passionless sterility. (PROSE: <em>Unnatural History</em>) When the Master's last trap left the Eighth Doctor suffering from amnesia, Rassilon's spirit guided the Doctor to various locations where his past selves were about to face crucial dangers or defining moments. In the process, the Doctor made "improvements to the pattern of history" for Rassilon. At the end, Rassilon guided the Doctor to Sam Jones, (PROSE: <em>The Eight Doctors</em>) who he knew would never dare to "screw" the Doctor. After Gallifreyan history was rewritten, (PROSE: <em>Unnatural History</em>) Flavia was the current President (PROSE: <em>The Eight Doctors</em>) and the "Eminence" had been taught the ways of paradox. However, these changes to Gallifrey's history were unstable, and the Doctor wasn't sure if Flavia or Romana was President, (PROSE: <em>Unnatural History</em>) or if he'd had parents or been born of a Loom. (PROSE: <em>The Shadows of Avalon</em>)
[[File:Docomega.jpg|thumb|right|Omega, utilising the [[Fifth Doctor]]'s [[biodata]] and form. ([[TV]]: ''[[Arc of Infinity (TV story)|Arc of Infinity]]'')]]
The Doctor tracked him down and sabotaged his equipment in Amsterdam, forcing Omega to step into the physical universe before the transfer was made stable. His new body, a replica of the Doctor's, began to decay and revert to anti-matter. Thwarted and maddened by defeat, Omega willed the acceleration of his conversion to anti-matter to destroy the Earth rather than return to the universe of anti-matter but was destroyed by the Doctor using the Ergon's [[matter converter]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Arc of Infinity (TV story)|Arc of Infinity]]'')


Rassilon and the other Evolutionaries once hired the Threshold to stop a Dalek attempt to invade other realities. (COMIC: <em>Fire and Brimstone</em>)
=== After Amsterdam ===
Omega was recreated by using the Doctor's biodata. However, this had the effect of causing Omega to develop a split personality, being both Omega and the Doctor, but the Doctor persona wasn't aware of his Omega personality. In Amsterdam, Omega secretly boarded the TARDIS of a visiting Time Lord historian and broadcaster, Professor [[Ertikus]], who was in the city to see the site of Omega's destruction. Ertikus travelled to a [[Jolly Chronolidays]] trip to the [[Sector of Forgotten Souls]], with Omega stowed away onboard. Before the trip, Omega met an employee of Jolly Chronolidays, [[Sentia]], with whom he fell in love. He told Sentia all about himself, including his split personality disorder. Omega planned to use the Jolly Chronolidays trip to the Sector of Forgotten Souls to return to the anti-matter universe with Sentia because he found he disliked living in this universe, and wanted to return to his universe where he had godlike power and remained safe.


They sent Shayde to help the Eighth Doctor destroy the Threshold base at Wormwood located on Earth's Moon. (COMIC: <em>The Final Chapter</em>)
While travelling to the Sector of Forgotten Souls, the Doctor persona met Sentia for the first time (although Sentia already knew about this Doctor personality) while the ship was docking into the leisure base. There he met [[Daland]] (an actor who played Omega in the recreations of Omega's experiments) and [[Tarpov]] (another actor who played [[Vandekirian]], Omega's assistant). Tarpov succumbed to the Vandekirian personality, left behind by the psychic residue from Omega's experiments. He tried to stop Omega's experiments by attacking Daland and crushing his own hand in machinery, to stop his handprint being used to release the [[Hand of Omega]], but Omega entered and stopped Tarpov from crushing his other hand. While Tarpov was recovering, Omega tried to kill Tarpov, believing he would give away a secret that he wished to keep quiet, but the medical robot knocked him unconscious. The Omega persona directly communicated with the Doctor persona inside Omega's mind. "Omega" tried to convince "the Doctor" to help him travel to the anti-matter universe with Sentia, and "the Doctor" accepted. Meeting Ertikus for the first time, and discovering he was a Time Lord, "the Doctor" used Ertikus' TARDIS to travel to the recreated ''[[Eurydice]]'' so he could fulfil his mission. But Sentia kidnapped Daland and stole a shuttle, so she could get there, and could use Daland to conduct the marriage ceremony, but Tarpov stowed aboard and escaped onto the ''Eurydice''.


From within the Matrix, Rassilon began to manipulate the Doctor into destroying the Divergence, arranging for him to be possessed by the essence of anti-time and appearing to him before this happened as well as saving him, so that he could become the destructive Zagreus and be used against Gallifrey's enemies. Rassilon possessed the body of Leela – the only body on Gallifrey that he could influence without setting off mental alarms – and used Romana II to teleport them past the barriers in the Death Zone which was her presidential right. He did this to obtain the Ring of Rassilon and unlock his Foundry. He then tried to force Romana to resign in favour of Zagreus, believing that this would ensure the destruction of the Divergence. Rassilon allied with the Doctor's TARDIS, which had also been infected with anti-time, promising to release its consciousness from the infection while using its body to create a sword of anti-time, with which he hoped Zagreus would kill the Divergence.
Tarpov revealed to Sentia that by destroying a star, to create the [[Eye of Harmony]], he would cause the death of a native race called the [[Scintillan]]s, however, Omega continued anyway. Omega then killed Tarpov. Ertikus tried to meet Omega but discovered that "the Doctor" had been in contact with him all along. Omega revealed himself to Ertikus and then killed him. After they were reunited, "the Doctor" sent a telepathic message from Ertikus' [[telepathic circuit]] to the Time Lords explaining everything about the situation to them, so they could send help. Daland and Sentia looked for Ertikus, and Daland found his recorder robot, which had recorded Ertikus' death. Daland realised that "the Doctor" had killed him, and tried to attack the Doctor. Seeing the footage for himself, "the Doctor" realised he was merely a product of Omega's split personality disorder, which was finally confirmed by the arrival of the real Fifth Doctor in his TARDIS, who had been sent by the Time Lords.


However, his plan failed when the Doctor refused to kill, proclaiming his status as the Doctor. Rassilon then used the anti-time sword to kill Matthew Townsend, Tepesh, and Walton Winkle, who had seen the Divergence and been re-constituted in the Matrix with parts of the Doctor. Although Rassilon had hoped that the deaths of his other selves would further break the Doctor, this failed when, at the Doctor's behest, Charley Pollard used the anti-time blade on him. However, he gave into his Zagreus persona to survive with the help of the aspects of himself released when the three were killed, recognising that Rassilon was the real threat. Armed with the anti-time blade, Zagreus refused to be Rassilon's puppet and cast him into the Divergent Universe to end his actions. (AUDIO: <em>Neverland</em>, <em>Zagreus</em>)
Feeling the effects of mental trauma, Omega escaped and began to suffer flashbacks of his earlier life, and the circumstances which led him to take part in the time experiments. After hearing about the Scintillans from Daland, the Doctor confronted Omega, and revealed that the Scintillans weren't a part of the time experiments, but a memory Omega had taken from the Doctor. The Scintillans were a species the Doctor accidentally killed when he tried to save some [[Lurman]]s. The Doctor believed Omega had subconsciously used this to explain away Vandekirian's betrayal. Sentia (taken over by Vandekirian's personality) attempted to pilot the ''Eurydice'' into the anti-matter universe, so Omega would be trapped again. The Doctor and Daland escaped, while Omega was trapped on the ship, as it and Omega were supposedly pulled back into the anti-matter universe again. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'')


The incarnation of Rassilon who was trapped in the Divergent Universe. (AUDIO: <em>The Next Life</em>)
=== Manipulating the Adherents ===
[[File:Earth is destroyed by black hole.jpg|thumb|left|Omega returns ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Intervention Earth (audio story)|Intervention Earth]]'')]]
For centuries on Gallifrey, the [[Adherents of Ohm]] were a secret society that worshipped "Ohm". During the presidency of [[Romana III|Romana's third incarnation]], Omega manipulated them to steal the [[Hand of Omega]] from Gallifrey and use it to create a black hole. Omega then lured [[Tauras]] and brought him and [[Ace's TARDIS]] into the anti-matter universe. When he met Romana he thought the Time Lords society had fallen so low to allow a president from the [[House of Heartshaven]]. Possessing Tauras' body, Omega took Ace's TARDIS and escaped the anti-matter universe, knowing that it would allow him back on Gallifrey as it was known to the [[Celestial Intervention Agency]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Intervention Earth (audio story)|Intervention Earth]]'')  


In the Divergent universe, Rassilon planned to steal the Doctor's TARDIS and escape, but the Doctor stopped Rassilon and left him behind. Rassilon's temporal senses broke down as the universe's time-looped nature left him trapped in a repeating pattern, while the Doctor and his companions returned to the main universe. (AUDIO: <em>The Next Life</em>)
Romana sent [[Irving Braxiatel]] back in time to change history so that Omega would never escape the anti-matter universe, with him instructing her [[Romana II|previous incarnation]] to pre-emptively arrest the Adherents. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Enemy Lines (audio story)|Enemy Lines]]'')


=== The Last Great Time War ===
=== Return in an altered universe ===
In the early days of the Last Great Time War, Rassilon was resurrected from his tomb in the Dark Tower in the Death Zone to lead the Time Lords to battle. (PROSE: <em>Engines of War</em>) To resurrect him, the High Council used the body of Admiral Valerian of the House of Rassilon and imprinted Rassilon's Matrix projection onto him, killing Valerian in the process. (AUDIO: <em>Desperate Measures</em>)
In an [[Infinity Doctor's reality|altered state of reality]], [[Savar]] attempted to rescue Omega by flying his TARDIS into the event horizon of a black hole. He fled in terror upon seeing Omega, in the form of a god that he called "Ohm", however his TARDIS was unable to escape Omega's pull, stretching itself out in its frantic attempts to flee until it became [[the Needle]]. Trillions of years into the future, the black hole had contracted sufficiently the Needle was able to break into the universe, creating [[the Effect]] which enabled Omega to alter history. He rescued [[Patience|the Doctor's wife]] from her death, bringing her to his realm, and manipulated events so [[Infinity Doctor|the Doctor]] would come to his universe, having created a duplicate of himself on the Needle to fool the [[Needle People]].  


Having lost many of his disdains for corruption and immortality with his resurrection, (PROSE: <em>A Brief History of Time Lords</em>) Rassilon wiped out the Tharils, the Porfue and the Krajonnu in the first year of the Time War so that they didn't threaten the Time Lord's supremacy. (PROSE: <em>Lords and Masters</em>) He also retro-evolved dozens of Time Lords to become a possibility engine to aid him in victories throughout the War, creating the discarded race of the Interstitials and succeeding with Borusa. (PROSE: <em>Engines of War</em>)
With the Doctor able to take his place in the anti-matter universe, Omega took possession of the Doctor's duplicate and went back to Gallifrey in [[the Magistrate]]'s TARDIS, forcing [[Larna]], who had come to the Needle to rescue the Doctor, to come with him. He went to the [[Eye of Harmony]], planning to seize its singularity so he could become a god again in the matter universe. He was confronted at the heart of the singularity by the Doctor, who convinced him of the futility of such power. Omega decided to unmake the entire universe however, so the Doctor brought his anti-singularity into contact with Omega's singularity which restored the Eye to normal. As he had just made up the concept of an anti-singularity the Doctor had no idea what had happened to Omega. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'')


During the War, Rassilon was taken to the Death Zone by Pandoric to offer advice to his former self in whether to use the Galaxy Eater to destroy the Nestenes. He warned his former self that he would live past his death and that there would be even greater conflicts in his future. (PROSE: <em>Pandoric's Box</em>)
=== Escaping the anti-matter universe ===
{{Section stub|''[[Lost in Time (video game)|Lost in Time]]'' need to be added.}}
''To be added''


When the Time Lords feared that the Compassionate would side with the Daleks in the War, Rassilon sealed them in a rift at the heart of the planet Galen and told the War Doctor that the Daleks had done this. (AUDIO: <em>The Bleeding Heart</em>)
== Personality ==
=== A founding scientist ===
There was a time when Omega opposed violence and only wanted to be known by his birth name, but, as he carried on, he came to believe that, if he needed to be a monster to bring the Gallifreyans into a "new age of enlightenment", then he would fully become said monster. He also came to begrudgingly accept his nickname "Omega". ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'') By one account, at the time of the creation of the Hand of Omega, [[regeneration]] was already possible for [[Gallifreyan]]s, with Omega having regenerating into the body of "[[Omega (Remembrance of the Daleks)|a huge man]]" with great shoulders and muscles, leading to some to speculate his body was a genetic memory of "the dark time". At one point, he stretched out his arms in a way that made him look like a "[[barbarian]] [[king]]". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (novelisation)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]'') A telecast about "the lives and deaths of Omega" would later be shown on Public Register Video, a Gallifreyan media apparatus. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Pandoric's Box (short story)|Pandoric's Box]]'')


Late into the War, Rassilon sent the War Doctor on a mission to find the Master after he had fled the War.
After the creation of the hand, he was eager to impose Gallifrey's will upon time to make their people into Time Lords, arguing with the Other about the risks of such a prospect. When the two argued about whether they had learned from their mistakes involving the [[Minyan]]s, Omega believed they had but silenced himself after looking into the Other's eyes. While Rassilon came to side with Omega after the scientist asked his fellows if they agreed the hand was "a magnificent achievement", the Other remained cautious. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (novelisation)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]'') According to Omega's memories, however, Rassilon had been the eager one, while Omega himself was cautious. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'')


Rassilon during the Last Great Time War. (TV: <em>The End of Time</em>)
=== Into the supernova ===
Omega was very bitter about his fellow Time Lords, who he believed sacrificed him to attain greatness. He held eternal enmity towards his race, and sought to avenge himself against them.


Four hundred years into the War, Rassilon planned to detonate the Tear of Isha in the Tantalus Eye to stop a Dalek plan to wipe Gallifrey and the Time Lords from history. He consulted Borusa on his plan, who told him it would succeed. Rassilon's plan was foiled by the Doctor, who stole Borusa and the Tear of Isha, using Borusa to wipe the Daleks from the Tantalus Eye without killing all life around it. Rassilon condemned the Doctor's actions and made him an enemy of the Time Lords because of it. (PROSE: <em>Engines of War</em>)
Countless aeons alone left him with little care about anything, deeming the destruction of reality as a "spectacle to behold". He also became paranoid and developed violent mood swings. He lacked any restraint and had a vicious temper. The Doctor considered him to be a madman. However, he was not without heart, appearing to be genuinely upset by the death of [[Hedin]], the one Time Lord who had tried to aid him. Omega also appeared enchanted by small things such as a child's smile and a steam organ during his brief escape from the anti-matter universe, suggesting that his extreme fury was merely the by-product of loneliness and despair. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'', ''[[Arc of Infinity (TV story)|Arc of Infinity]]'') He also felt great guilt and remorse when he mistakenly believed he had been responsible for the destruction of the [[Scintillan]]s. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'')


On the last day of the Time War, Rassilon intended to spare Gallifrey from destruction by using the Ultimate Sanction to turn the Time Lords into beings of pure consciousness to escape the end of creation. The Woman opposed Rassilon's plan to destroy time itself, (TV: <em>The End of Time</em>) along with the Patriarch of the House of Stillhaven. (PROSE: <em>Lords and Masters</em>) Rassilon condemned them to stand behind him in the Panopticon and cover their faces "as monuments of their shame, like the Weeping Angels of old", (TV: <em>The End of Time</em>) and had their names erased from time as further punishment. (PROSE: <em>A Brief History of Time Lords</em>)
Despite being insane, Omega was noted for his extremely strong will, which allowed him to reshape the antimatter universe in the singularity to create an environment as well as servants that suited him. This made him linked to the antimatter realm, as his will alone kept it alive and prevented his escape. He was completely unaware of the fact that his body had corroded away as a result of prolonged exposure to the antimatter realm, and that both his physical form and the world he created were made by his will alone. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'')


Knowing that the Doctor intended to destroy both Time Lords and Daleks by using the Moment, Rassilon contrived to break Gallifrey out of the time-lock that blocked the Last Great Time War from temporal manipulation, and then follow through on his plan. He succeeded. For a brief time, Gallifrey broke free of the time lock and appeared in the skies above Earth. However, Rassilon was opposed by the Tenth Doctor, one of only two Time Lord survivors of the war. Rassilon was badly hurt by one last attack by the Master, the other survivor, out of vengeance once he realised that Rassilon had deliberately driven him mad and destroyed his life. The time-lock resumed and Rassilon, the Time Lords, and Gallifrey itself were all flung back to the Time War. (TV: <em>The End of Time</em>)
== In Time Lord culture ==
[[file:Statue of Omega.jpg|thumb|The [[Statue of Omega]] ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Lost Dimension (comic story)|The Lost Dimension]]'')]]
Rassilon, the Other and Omega were the three most important figures in Gallifrey's history. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Ancestor Cell (novel)|The Ancestor Cell]]'') An ancient [[Statue of Omega]] was in the [[Capitol]], ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Lost Dimension (comic story)|The Lost Dimension]]'') whereas another was built in the [[Great Hall of the Academy]] during his life. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'')


=== After the Time War ===
The [[Feast of Omega]] was a holiday that was celebrated on Gallifrey. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Happy Endings (novel)|Happy Endings]]'') It was the [[Disciples of Omega]] who established the [[transduction barrier]]s. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Renaissance (audio story)|Renaissance]]'') The public forgot that Omega's birth name had been Peylix, with the name instead becoming the subject of a story about a [[time plumber]] who was too curious for his own good; he questioned how everything around him worked, which made everything stop working. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'')
Rassilon on Gallifrey. (TV: <em>Hell Bent</em>)


Rassilon's battle with the Master caused him to regenerate, (PROSE: <em>Pandoric's Box</em>) reportedly because the Master "shoved White Point Stars down his throat". Rassilon screamed through the regeneration, so much that Ohila had to make him "a special draft of potion" to help. (PROSE: <em>Lords and Masters</em>) Despite Rassilon's previous intention to kill the "diseased" Master, (TV: <em>The End of Time</em>) the Time Lords instead cured the Master's "condition" (TV: <em>The Doctor Falls</em>) and locked him up in Gomer's Asylum, which he later escaped from. (PROSE: <em>Lords and Masters</em>)
The [[Belt of Omega]] was part of a Presidential dress which the [[Fifth Doctor]] was forced to wear. Seeing him fit it on, [[Tegan Jovanka]] amusingly suggested that Omega had tried to steal his body because he was jealous. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Time in Office (audio story)|Time in Office]]'', [[TV]]: ''[[Arc of Infinity (TV story)|Arc of Infinity]]'')


After the Doctors united to place Gallifrey in a stasis cube to prevent its destruction, (TV: <em>The Day of the Doctor</em>) Rassilon began work to place it back in the main universe. Not wanting to return to another war, Rassilon found a weak point in the universe at Trenzalore caused by cracks in time and broadcasted a signal calling to the Doctor to see if it was safe to return. When the signal led to the Siege of Trenzalore, Rassilon continued to wait for the Doctor's signal until Clara Oswald alerted him and the Time Lords to the Doctor's inability to regenerate and that the Daleks were preparing to kill him. (PROSE: <em>A Brief History of Time Lords</em>) Using research gathered from Ophiuchus's experience with regeneration, (COMIC: <em>Ophiuchus</em>) Rassilon granted the Doctor a new regeneration cycle, but the Doctor left Trenzalore without freeing Gallifrey. (PROSE: <em>A Brief History of Time Lords</em>)
"[[OMEGA level event]] and "[[Priority Omega]]" were code-phrases during the [[War in Heaven]] and [[Last Great Time War]], respectively. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Subjective Interlock (short story)|Subjective Interlock]]'', [[TV]]: ''[[The Day of the Doctor (TV story)|The Day of the Doctor]]'') The [[Omega Arsenal]] was a stockpile of forbidden weapons locked away in the [[Time Vaults]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Day of the Doctor (TV story)|The Day of the Doctor]]'')


The Time Lords later returned Gallifrey to its original point in space but were forced to hide it near the end of the universe for their safety. (TV: <em>Hell Bent</em>) At some point afterwards, Rassilon was taken to the Death Zone by Pandoric to offer advice to his former self in whether to use the Galaxy Eater to destroy the Nestenes. He told his former self that Gallifrey would stand past all its conflicts. (PROSE: <em>Pandoric's Box</em>)
Secret societies on Gallifrey were dedicated to the worship of [[Rassilon]], Omega, and [[the Other]]. The [[Adherents of Ohm]] were one dedicated to Omega, ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Intervention Earth (audio story)|Intervention Earth]]'') with "Ohm" being a name for Omega used by those who believed him to be a trapped [[god]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'') By the time of his [[Fifth Doctor|fifth incarnation]], the Doctor's battles with Omega had turned Gallifreyan culture against the founder, having revealed many of the unfavorable aspects to Omega's character; Omega went from a revered founder to a story used to scare children into doing homework. By the time of the [[Celestial Preservation Agency]], Omega was no longer seen as a hero, merely considered a joke. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Omega (BFM audio story)|Omega]]'')


Rassilon took members of the House of Stillhaven to be experimented on, but he spared Yayani to a mind wipe for unknown reasons. After Yayani was able to regain her memories, she tried to assassinate Rassilon, but failed, and was then forced into acting out secret missions for the High Council as punishment. (PROSE: <em>Lords and Masters</em>)
[[Coordinator]] [[Jarad]] was once heard to exclaim "Omega's [[ghost]]!" to express shock. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Legion of the Lost (audio story)|Legion of the Lost]]'') In a [[parallel universe]] where the [[Sixth Doctor]] led Gallifrey in [[War in Heaven|the War]], a [[time dreadnought]] was named the ''[[Glorious Aspect of Omega]]''. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Quantum Archangel (novel)|The Quantum Archangel]]'') Following the [[Last Great Time War]], the [[Eleventh Doctor]] believed Omega's memories were stored in [[the Matrix]]. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Sky Jacks (comic story)|Sky Jacks]]'')


Possibly due to being alerted by Missy, Rassilon grew concerned about the prophecies of the Hybrid, and gave an order for Clara to be killed to entrap the Twelfth Doctor in a confession dial to get information out of him. (PROSE: <em>A Brief History of Time Lords</em>) To this end, Rassilon contacted Ashildr to have her assistance in the kidnapping of the Doctor (TV: <em>Face the Raven</em>, <em>Hell Bent</em>) and trap him within his confession dial in an attempt to learn everything that he knew about the Hybrid. The Doctor's refusal to relent led to his being trapped inside the dial for four and a half billion years, constantly dying and recreating himself to breach the dial's barriers rather than confess his secrets. (TV: <em>Heaven Sent</em>, <em>Hell Bent</em>) On his escape, the Doctor finally returned to Gallifrey. (TV: <em>Heaven Sent</em>)
== Other references ==
In the [[video game]] ''[[Happy Deathday]]'', played by [[Izzy Sinclair]] on the [[Time-Space Visualiser]], Omega was among a host of "every single [[enemy]]" that [[the Doctor]] had ever [[defeat]]ed, who were assembled by the [[Beige Guardian]] and pitted against the Doctor's first eight [[incarnation]]s. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Happy Deathday (comic story)|Happy Deathday]]'')


Threatened by the Doctor's presence and still desperate for information on the Hybrid, Rassilon ordered first troops and then the High Council to make contact with the Doctor. However, the Doctor was only willing to speak directly to Rassilon himself. Eventually, Rassilon was forced out into the Drylands to confront him. There, the Doctor held him alone responsible for the crimes of the Last Great Time War, and his treatment in his confession dial. Rassilon tried to have a firing squad execute the unarmed Doctor, who ordered him to "get off my planet." However, the squad purposefully missed due to their great respect for the Doctor. Military reinforcements arrived but had been summoned by the Doctor instead. When Rassilon tried to use his gauntlet to kill the Doctor himself, the General reinforced the Doctor's order. Rassilon was overthrown and replaced by the Doctor, and then banished from Gallifrey. (TV: <em>Hell Bent</em>)
During the [[War in Heaven]], the term "[[OMEGA level event]]" was used to describe direct encounters with [[The Enemy]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Subjective Interlock (short story)|Subjective Interlock]]'') During the [[Last Great Time War]], [[Priority Omega]] was a code phrase used for high priority messages. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Day of the Doctor (TV story)|The Day of the Doctor]]'')


=== Revenge ===
== Behind the scenes ==
Rassilon with his Cybermen allies on Gallifrey. (COMIC: <em>Supremacy of the Cybermen</em>)
=== Development ===
In preliminary discussions for ''The Three Doctors'', the name "[[Ohm]]" was considered for the character of Omega, because OHM looks like WHO upside-down. The symbol for Ohm is the Greek Omega symbol (Ω). This abandoned concept would be referenced in the novel ''[[The Infinity Doctors (novel)|The Infinity Doctors]]'', where, within an [[Alternate timeline (The Infinity Doctors)|abnormal state of history]], it was revealed that the [[Time Lord]] [[explorer]] [[Savar]] met a "mad god" called Ohm inside a black hole while looking for the real Omega. The suggestion is that Ohm is one of an infinity of alternative versions of Omega. In ''[[K9 and the Time Trap (novel)|K9 and the Time Trap]]'', Omega was referred to with the name "Omegon", otherwise remaining identical to the version of the character seen in ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'', evidencing lingering uncertainty in the mind of his creator about Omega's name.


Rassilon found the Cybermen, who were clinging to life at the end of the universe. Rassilon gave the Cybermen leadership and direction and joined with their Cyberiad. Converted into the Cyber-President Rassilon returned to Gallifrey and conquered the planet with the aid of his new allies. He welcomed the Twelfth Doctor when he returned to Gallifrey.
In ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'', [[Stephen Thorne]], who had previously portrayed another vengeful near-deity (the [[Dæmon]] [[Azal]]) in ''[[The Dæmons (TV story)|The Dæmons]]'', was called upon to portray Omega. With the character meant to have no physical body under his helmet, only Thorne's voice was applied to Omega, thus allowing for easy recasting upon Omega's return to the series in ''[[Arc of Infinity (TV story)|Arc of Infinity]]''. The anti-matter god was now embodied and voiced by [[Ian Collier]], who reprised the role in an audio format in the [[Big Finish Doctor Who audio stories|Big Finish audio drama]] ''[[Omega (audio story)|Omega]]''.


As the Doctor tried to gather his remaining Gallifreyan allies, he learned that Rassilon intended to use the accumulated energy of the captured Time Lords to regenerate the universe to fit his vision, only for his plan to be subverted by the Cybermen. The Cybermen placed the Doctor and Rassilon into the Cyberiad. Inside, Rassilon realised his mistake and formulated a plan with the Doctor to use the regenerative energy of the Time Lords to undo what the Cybermen did to the universe. Rassilon helped the Doctor to realise his plans, and the universe was regenerated, setting things to how they were before Rassilon had met the Cybermen.
=== The Timeless Children ===
[[File:The First Time Lords.jpg|thumb|right|Omega (left) stands with the [[Second Tecteun]] (centre) and Rassilon (right).]]
In the scene corresponding to the point in ''[[The Timeless Children (TV story)|The Timeless Children]]'' where [[Second Tecteun|Tecteun's male incarnation]] stands alongside two other Time Lords in full high-collared regalia, the ''Timeless Children'' script release mentions that "we can assume [the other two] are [[Rassilon]] and Omega".<ref>[http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/scripts/doctor-who-s12-ep10-the-timeless-children.pdf ''The Timeless Children'' script]</ref> In late 2020, the BBC released a promotional photograph providing a better look at these Time Lords' faces.<ref>[https://twitter.com/bbcdoctorwho/status/1330956294199635971 "The FIRST Time Lords!" on the official ''Doctor Who'' Twitter account]</ref> [[Mark Corden]], the episode's [[2nd assistant director]], stated on Twitter that he himself was the performer playing Omega, also explaining that he had selected the extra playing Rassilon based on his resemblance to [[Don Warrington]], who had played an incarnation of Rassilon for Big Finish.<ref>https://twitter.com/boristhedalek/status/1330960792716521480</ref><ref>https://twitter.com/lisamcmullin/status/1335016279296651266</ref>


Rassilon was once again left in his Bowship at the end of the universe. The Twelfth Doctor wondered if Rassilon was able to remember the events with the Cybermen like he could. (COMIC: <em>Supremacy of the Cybermen</em>)
=== Cutaway Comics ===
[[John Ridgway]], the artist for [[Cutaway Comics]]' ''[[Omega (comic story)|Omega]]'' miniseries, elaborated in a special feature at the end of the first issue on an early concept he had when called upon to visualise Omega in the comic:
{{quote|You can't have him be a little man like [[the Mekon]]. It has to be dynamic, fluid, and fit in with the script. My original thought, which sadly won't work, is he'd be different every time that you saw him. He could be male in one picture, Chinese in the next, female in the next and all the permutations of that. But the readers would need to understand this is what was happening, without wondering why there were so many different characters.|John Ridgway}}
[[File:Brian Blessed Omega.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Omega as portrayed by [[Brian Blessed]] for the [[Omega (Cutaway audio story)|audio adaptation]].]]
In the end, Omega was depicted in [[Oxirgi]]'s vision as a hazy humanoid figure seemingly made of pure light — thus obviating the need to give him any particular physical features.<ref>''Meet the Creators: John Ridgway'' in [[OMEGA 1]]</ref> However, he was given a much more human appearance when portrayed by [[Brian Blessed]] on the [[Omega (Cutaway audio story)|audio adaptation]]'s cover. Blessed previously appeared in ''[[Mindwarp (TV story)|Mindwarp]]'' as [[Yrcanos]] the "[[barbarian]] [[king]]", a epithet also used to describe an [[Omega (Remembrance of the Daleks)|incarnation of Omega]] who appeared in [[Remembrance of the Daleks (novelisation)|the novelisation]] of ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]''.


== Alternate timelines ==
=== Other matters ===
In one alternate timeline, Rassilon failed to finish the Eye of Harmony before his death and Gallifrey never achieved time travel. (AUDIO: <em>Forever</em>)
A character called "Rassilon's Engineer" appears in a transmission [[Sam Jones]] receives on [[Anathema]] in ''[[Interference - Book One (novel)|Interference - Book One]]''. Although the character is not named, he is strongly implied to be Omega. The transmission originates in a [[Faction Paradox]]-influenced culture built on a Time Lord artefact, so the implication may be that Rassilon attempted to minimise Omega's part in Time Lord history, reducing him to the role of "Rassilon's Engineer".
 
In three alternate timelines, Rassilon never existed, was a woman and loved Omega, and continued to rule Gallifrey after his death from within the Matrix. (PROSE: <em>The Infinity Doctors</em>)
 
In a parallel universe where the Sixth Doctor led the Time Lords in the War, the flagship of the First Imperial Gallifreyan Fleet was a time dreadnought named the <em>Righteous Fist of Rassilon</em>. (PROSE: <em>The Quantum Archangel</em>)
 
== Skills and abilities ==
By the time of the foundation of the Time Lords' civilisation, Rassilon already proved to be able to stop a Gallifreyan fleet from falling into a black hole; moreover, he could spring bolts of power arc from his fingertips, a power called electro-direction. (COMIC: <em>Star Death</em>)
 
During the final days of the Last Great Time War, with the apparent help of a gauntlet, he was able to provoke the molecular dispersal of another Time Lord and to revert the effects of an Immortality Gate on a planetary scale, just with a gesture ending the Master's control and was also capable of developing various scenarios and outcomes and his scheme was only foiled by the Doctor's timely intervention. (TV: <em>The End of Time</em>)
 
== Artefacts ==
A broken statue of Rassilon in the Cloister Room. (TV: <em>Doctor Who</em>)
 
Many important Gallifreyan artefacts bore his name, with Rassilon imbuing them with powers to protect his legacy and enhance his mystique. (PROSE: <em>A Brief History of Time Lords</em>)
 
These included the Sash of Rassilon, the Rod of Rassilon, (TV: <em>The Deadly Assassin</em>) the Coronet of Rassilon, the Harp of Rassilon, (TV: <em>The Five Doctors</em>) the Crown of Rassilon, (TV: <em>The Invasion of Time</em>) and the Seal of Rassilon, a symbol used as a mark of Time Lord authority which appeared as a motif in many Time Lord designs. (TV: <em>The Deadly Assassin</em>, <em>The Five Doctors</em>) These were stored in the Capitol and, save for the supremely powerful Great Key, which at one stage found its way into the hand of Cardinal Borusa, were made available to the Lord President of the Time Lords. (TV: <em>The Invasion of Time</em>)
 
The Black Scrolls of Rassilon, also later obtained by Borusa, contained forbidden, arcane secrets. The fabled Ring of Rassilon, however, capable of conferring a form of immortality upon the wearer, resided in the Tomb of Rassilon in the Dark Tower located in the Death Zone. (TV: <em>The Five Doctors</em>)
 
These artifacts, like many institutions in Time Lord society, were named "of Rassilon", in such number and with such unfailing consistency that the Eighth Doctor once reflected that Joanna Harris "couldn't <em>imagine</em> how much [he'd] had it in here with the This, That and the Other of Rassilon". (PROSE: <em>Vampire Science</em>)
 
== Personality ==
Rassilon addresses the Time Lords during the Last Great Time War. (TV: <em>The End of Time</em>)
 
Rassilon was a charismatic leader who was capable of inspiring his people. The General himself stated that, while Rassilon eventually became corrupt, he was once a good man. (TV: <em>Hell Bent</em>) Indeed, Rassilon was initially a man who hated corruption and was good at detecting it, (TV: <em>The Five Doctors</em>) but became corrupt himself following his resurrection for the Last Great Time War. (PROSE: <em>A Brief History of Time Lords</em>)


During the early history of the Time Lords, Rassilon led the revolution against the last Pythia, (PROSE: <em>Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible</em>) overthrew President Pandak, (PROSE: <em>The Scrolls of Rassilon</em>) and instituted changes to deal with the problems of the Empire, such as ordering the creation of genetic looms to permit the Gallifreyan race to reproduce, (PROSE: <em>Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible</em>) creating the transduction barrier, (PROSE: <em>The Scrolls of Rassilon</em>) and completely ended "the Games" in the Death Zone (TV: <em>The Five Doctors</em>) after a period of using alien warriors instead of Gallifreyans. (PROSE: <em>The Scrolls of Rassilon</em>) Rassilon and the Time Lords also created the Web of Time to purge the universe of irrationality. (PROSE: <em>Christmas on a Rational Planet</em>)
== External links ==
 
{{ldx}}
Controversially, Rassilon ordered the release of a virus that wiped out a large proportion of the Gallifreyan population, while allowing the survivors to regenerate. (PROSE: <em>The Scrolls of Rassilon</em>) He also discovered how to become immortal without having to use regenerations to survive, but believed that the secret was too dangerous to share, and thus kept it to himself, (TV: <em>The Five Doctors</em>) and instituted the non-interference policy after dreaming of a future Time Lord empire that used its power to suppress the weak of the universe. (COMIC: <em>The Final Chapter</em>)
 
Rassilon was intimidating and unforgiving, but was also a hero to many Gallifreyans, (AUDIO: <em>Zagreus</em>) with the Second Doctor calling him "the greatest single figure in Time Lord history", (TV: <em>The Five Doctors</em>) though the Twelfth Doctor recalled how the Gallifreyans began to fear Rassilon after he beat Count D'if at Rassilon's roulette. (COMIC: <em>Gangland</em>) However, his wisdom in recognising the curse of immortality and his opposition to the corrupting influence of power (TV: <em>The Five Doctors</em>) did not prevent him from becoming corrupted by power himself, such as with his prejudice against Vampires, (AUDIO: <em>Zagreus</em>) and becoming increasingly obsessed with avoiding death during the Last Great Time War against the Daleks. (TV: <em>The End of Time</em>)
 
After the loss of Omega, Rassilon wept for him, with the Other musing that Rassilon's later actions were born out of love. (PROSE: <em>Lungbarrow</em>) However, some believed Rassilon to actually be behind the plot to murder Omega, (AUDIO: <em>Omega</em>) despite the evidence against the assassin Fenris, whom Rassilon banished into the Zone of No Return to avenge Omega, (COMIC: <em>Star Death</em>) while another account had it that Rassilon had been responsible for Omega's protective forcefield failing. (PROSE: <em>The Scrolls of Rassilon</em>)
 
After punishing Borusa for attempting to claim immortality, Rassilon offered immortality to the First, Second, Third and Fifth Doctors, and admitted that they had "chosen wisely" after they declined, and sent them back to where they belonged afterwards, (TV: <em>The Five Doctors</em>) even giving the First Doctor complete control of his TARDIS to allow him to attend to unfinished business before his regeneration as a show of gratitude. (PROSE: <em>The Witch Hunters</em>)
 
Rassilon was also manipulative, trying to trick the Eighth Doctor into destroying the Divergence in the belief that they were too different to live, (AUDIO: <em>Neverland</em>, <em>Zagreus</em>) and using the Master as a link between Gallifrey and the rest of the Universe which allowed him to temporarily free Gallifrey from the time lock. (TV: <em>The End of Time</em>)
 
By the end of the Time War, Rassilon had become ruthless, power-hungry and insane, being willing to destroy the whole of creation rather than accept the end of the Time Lords. He planned to change himself and the Time Lords into beings of pure consciousness, free of physical bodies and the ravages of time, in his Ultimate Sanction. Rassilon had also grown in his pettiness, vaporising the Partisan for speaking against his desire to continue the Time War, and taunting the Tenth Doctor with how "the final act of [his] life [would be] murder" after a failed attempt to fool the Doctor into an alliance with him. Even as he was dragged back into the war, Rassilon made one last hateful attempt to kill the Doctor. (TV: <em>The End of Time</em>)
 
Rassilon talks with the Twelfth Doctor. (TV: <em>Hell Bent</em>)
 
Following the end of the Time War, Rassilon retained his arrogance, believing himself superior to others simply for being Lord President, and showed no remorse for locking the Twelfth Doctor in his confession dial to get the information he wanted. He also showed his sadistic side by gloating how he could remove the Doctor's regenerations one at a time. (TV: <em>Hell Bent</em>) After his banishment, Rassilon was driven to teaming up with the Cybermen to survive and reclaim Gallifrey. (COMIC: <em>Supremacy of the Cybermen</em>)
 
== Behind the scenes ==
 
=== Death ===
People with major involvement in the DWU and <em>Doctor Who Magazine</em>, when asked in TEDW 7, were divided over whether the Rassilon seen in the television story <em>The Five Doctors</em> is actually alive or an artificial intelligence or if he had ever died before <em>The Five Doctors</em>.
* According to <em>DWM</em> editor Tom Spilsbury, it hadn't occurred to him before that he was anything other than being alive, and that "it might come down to semantics over what being alive means."
* <em>Doctor Who</em> scriptwriter Gareth Roberts believed that Rassilon is dead and the face that appears is "a clever AI."
* Head writer and executive producer Russell T Davies believed that Rassilon is "clearly alive", with his big face in the story being "A projection from the Matrix. A mental life extending beyond the body's death."
* Novelist, audio writer and comic writer George Mann believed that Rassilon was dead, but the Time Lords had figured out a way of "resurrecting dead people in extreme circumstances," doing "something horrible and timey wimey".
* Novelist, audio writer, comic writer and <em>DWM</em> columnist Jacqueline Rayner described his condition as "a permanent sleep which is pretty much indistinguishable from death", and that "He's immortal, but he has no awareness," and when the trap inside the Tomb of Rassilon is triggered, "he becomes semi-aware so he can oversee or judge what's going on, before going back into his eternal sleep again".
* <em>DWM</em> deputy editor Peter Ware believed that Rassilon is dead by the time of <em>The Five Doctors</em>, and his dead mind is speaking from the Matrix to the Doctors and Borusa. He mentions the line from the television story <em>Hell Bent</em> — "Rassilon the resurrected," as further proof that he had died.
* <em>Doctor Who</em> scriptwriter Mark Gatiss quipped that Rassilon is "biding his time until he regenerates into [actor] Daniel Craig."
* Head writer and executive producer Steven Moffat, who also wrote <em>Hell Bent</em>, understood that Rassilon was "alive, but in 'eternal sleep'," having got up from his eternal sleep to participate in the Time War, "And got killed. And resurrected. Because that happened a lot in the Time War."
* According to scriptwriter Terrance Dicks, who wrote <em>The Five Doctors</em>, Rassilon has "gone to a higher plane where he's a benevolent being who can, if he feels it's a big enough crisis, intervene".
 
=== Other matters ===
* Rassilon was first mentioned in <em>The Deadly Assassin</em>. Before this, evidence pointed to Omega (who had appeared in <em>The Three Doctors</em>) as the founder of Time Lord society. A <em>Doctor Who Weekly</em> comic story, <em>Star Death</em>, attempted to reconcile this by having Rassilon and Omega working together. A few subsequent televised <em>Doctor Who</em> stories, such as <em>Remembrance of the Daleks</em> and <em>Silver Nemesis</em>, also took this approach. <em>Remembrance</em>'s novelisation by Ben Aaronovitch, dipping into the "Cartmel Masterplan", explained that Omega, Rassilon, and another historical figure worked together in enabling the Gallifreyans to have time travel. In the novel <em>The Infinity Doctors</em>' universe, Omega states that the Time Lords had not three but six important central figures. These include Rassilon, Omega, the Other, Apeiron, and two others whose names went unmentioned in that source. The novel <em>The Ancestor Cell</em> also describes Apeiron as a founder of Time Lord society, confirming Pandak as another founder and mentioning, the name Eutenoyar.
* In <em>Interference - Book One</em>, Sam Jones experiences a "transmission" from the Remote which depicts key moments in the Eternal War. Some details of the transmission are historically inaccurate, in part due to propaganda from Faction Paradox. Other details are filtered through Sam's cultural perceptions; for example, she sees Rassilon as being played by Brian Blessed.
Robin Smith's rendition of Rassilon. (DWM 299)
* DWM 299 contained a "Gallifreyan panorama" illustrated by Robin Smith. It featured images of Pythia, Richard Mathews' Rassilon, and Omega in the foreground with Bowships, Great Vampires, and a domed city in the background.
* Rassilon actor Timothy Dalton was credited in <em>The End of Time</em> part one as "The Narrator," as the character's true identity would not be revealed until part two. The Character Options action figure of Rassilon was also packaged and marketed as "The Narrator".
Statues of Rassilon's past incarnations. (COMIC: <em>Supremacy of the Cybermen</em>)
* His depictions in <em>Supremacy of the Cybermen</em>, especially the Don Warrington outfit, seem to be based off a work of fan art.[1]
*


== Footnotes ==
{{Reflist}}
{{Omega stories}}
{{Founders of Gallifrey}}
{{High Council}}
{{The Doctor's family}}
{{NameSort}}
{{NameSort}}


[[pt:Omega]]
[[Category:Renegade Time Lords]]
[[Category:Renegade Time Lords]]
[[Category:Individual Time Lords]]
[[Category:Founders of Gallifrey]]
[[Category:Residents of Gallifrey]]
[[Category:Time Lord history]]
[[Category:Murderers]]
[[Category:Murderers]]
[[Category:Emperors]]
[[Category:Biologically modified individuals]]
[[Category:Biologically modified individuals]]
[[Category:Individuals who altered their appearance to look like the Doctor]]
[[Category:Individuals who altered their appearance to look like the Doctor]]
[[Category:Time Lord travellers between universes]]
[[Category:Time Lord travellers between universes]]
[[Category:Members of the High Council]]
[[Category:Relatives of the Doctor]]
[[pt:Omega]]
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[[Category:Omega]]

Latest revision as of 17:41, 6 October 2024

This article needs to be updated.

Information from The Box of Terrors, Omega comics, and Omega (Cutaway audio story)

These omissions are so great that the article's factual accuracy has been compromised. Check out the discussion page and revision history for further clues about what needs to be updated in this article.

You may wish to consult Omega (disambiguation) for other, similarly-named pages.

Omega - born as Peylix, also known as "the Engineer" and Omegon, and worshipped as Ohm - was a great intergalactic engineer and one of the founders of Time Lord society, but centuries of loneliness and isolation bent his mind so that he threatened the entire universe. He was the only person ever to live within the anti-matter universe, which he subsequently ruled over while he used his will to enable him to construct a landscape, with the permission of the anti-matter creature. However, his existence in this realm robbed him of his body and left only his conscious will intact, a realisation that twisted him into murderous insanity aimed towards the Time Lords, whom he blamed for abandoning him to his fate.

Omega was one of the most significant figures in Gallifreyan history. He appeared in the ROO texts, as later scholars on Gallifrey would call them, alongside Rassilon and the Other. (PROSE: Goth Opera, The Infinity Doctors)

Biography[[edit] | [edit source]]

Early life[[edit] | [edit source]]

Becoming Omega[[edit] | [edit source]]

Omega, whose original name was "Peylix," (AUDIO: Omega) and Rassilon were born in an era of Gallifrey's history when the Gallifreyan civilisation was turned outwards, perfecting more advanced forms of interstellar travel to guide the development of less advanced cultures and set themselves up as Gods. Rassilon and Omega were among the only Gallifreyans who gave much thought to the future and destiny of Gallifrey. (PROSE: The Legacy of Gallifrey) He was also known by the name "the Engineer". (PROSE: Interference: Shock Tactics)

Rassilon and Omega became friends, with Rassilion even allowing Omega to call him "Rass", yet Rassilon was also very dismissive towards his friend. (AUDIO: Omega) He once referred to Rassilon as his "cousin", (PROSE: Remembrance of the Daleks) a term used to describe a Gallifreyan of the same Great House. (PROSE: Lungbarrow) Peylix was left with the nickname "Omega" after he had received the "Omega Grade", the lowest mark possible, for an essay he had written that explored the possibilities of increasing the Gallifreyan power by exploding a star, and harnessing the resulting energy for time travel. His teacher, Luvis, saw the plan as "madness and pure idiocy" and made Omega the first person to ever receive the grade. Rassilon argued the new nickname gave Omega a reputation and made him known to the public. (AUDIO: Omega)

Rassilon and Omega became solar engineers, a respected class of scientists among the Gallifreyans. While Rassilon dreamed of immortality, Omega, believing immortality to be impossible, turned him over to the prospect of developing time travel. (PROSE: The Legacy of Gallifrey) In spite of the Omega grade he received on his paper about the subject, (AUDIO: Omega) Omega and Rassilon worked on the project for several years until they had developed the final form of the plan to detonate a black hole and funnel its power back to Gallifrey, which they presented before the Gallifreyan Council. They were initially dismissive, but Tussan's cat spoke out in favour of the two engineers and they received the funding their needed. (PROSE: The Legacy of Gallifrey)

Omega on Gallifrey. (GRAPHIC: The FIRST Time Lords!)

According to one of Omega's unreliable memories, at a time when he still wanted to be known by his birth name "Peylix," Omega and Rassilon were only able to begin their experiments after Rassilon led a revolution to secure power on Gallifrey. Although Omega pleaded for Rassilon to stop it, his friend argued that it was the only way to remove those who opposed their progress. Afterward, Rassilon became a politican, while Omega carried on as a scientist. (AUDIO: Omega) According to another account, Omega and Rassilon were both already members of the High Council when they carried out their time travel experiments. (PROSE: A Brief History of Time Lords) The Eleventh Doctor later recounted that Rassilon had been "Omega's boss." (COMIC: The Lost Dimension)

By the time of his final experiment and "death", Omega had married a Gallifreyan known as Patience. (PROSE: The Infinity Doctors) He wrote about the mysteries of the Tantalus Eye. (PROSE: Engines of War)

Achievements[[edit] | [edit source]]

This section's awfully stubby.

Information from The Evil and the Deep Black Sky (short story)

Alongside Rassilon, Omega played a part in the creation of the living metal Validium. (TV: Silver Nemesis; PROSE: A Brief History of Time Lords) Omega was more popular than Rassilon amongst the Gallifreyans; Rassilon was a politican and heavily disliked, whereas Omega had become a public hero. (PROSE: The Legacy of Gallifrey, AUDIO: Omega) Both nonetheless became beloved public heroes as the years went by, however. One account showed that Omega was eager for their people to establish power over time, while Rassilon, like the Other, was more cautious, (PROSE: Remembrance of the Daleks) but Omega's own memories implied the roles were reversed, with Rassilon being eager and Omega being cautious. (AUDIO: Omega)

With the help of the Other, (PROSE: Lungbarrow) Omega and Rassilon enabled the people of Gallifrey to achieve time travel by using the Hand of Omega, a stellar manipulator which could make stars go supernova. (TV: The Three Doctors, Remembrance of the Daleks) In an abnormal state of history, it was said that two Hands of Omega existed. (PROSE: The Infinity Doctors) After the hand was complete, Omega declared it a "key to time" that would allow them to impose their own order upon time to become its "lords", with Rassilon eventually conceding it was a magnificent achievement. The Other, meanwhile, warned that the Hand could become a terrible weapon and warned them to remember their errors with the Minyans, although Omega believed they had learned from those mistakes. (PROSE: Remembrance of the Daleks)

Omegon told K9 Mark I that he had "harnessed the power of a thousand suns" to create the system that gave the Time Lords the ability to travel in time. (PROSE: K9 and the Time Trap) According to other sources, it was with the power unleashed by a single supernova (TV: The Three Doctors) or, in subtly different accounts, the detonation of an existing black hole, (PROSE: The Legacy of Gallifrey) that Omega hoped to generate enough power to travel through time. (TV: The Three Doctors) As Gallifrey's galaxy had only one Population III star at that time, they decided to destroy that one. (PROSE: The Infinity Doctors) The star, in an area known as the Sector of Forgotten Souls (AUDIO: Omega) in the constellation of Ao, (PROSE: Lungbarrow) bore the name Qqaba, (COMIC: Star Death, PROSE: The Infinity Doctors) or Polyphilos. (PROSE: The Scrolls of Rassilon)

According to a transmission from Anathema, which may have been influenced by Faction Paradox propaganda, Rassilon accidentally punched a hole into another plane of existence, allowing the Great Vampires to swarm into Gallifrey's universe and beginning the Eternal War, when he first attempted to create and harness the power of a black hole before the Engineer's stellar manipulator was completed. According to this source, the Engineer was eventually able to plug up the black hole with artificial worlds designed to resemble ordinary planets, although he warned Rassilon that surviving followers of the vampires may one day attack these barriers to again unleash the Vampires. When Rassilon decided they should return to Gallifrey to finish the stellar manipulator for use on a supernova, the Engineer muttered to himself that, if someone drilled to the final artificial planet's core, they would unleash something dangerous. (PROSE: Interference: Shock Tactics)

The "death" of Omega[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Disappearance of Omega
This section's awfully stubby.

The Infinity Doctors (novel)

The Fifth Doctor once reflected Omega had "always been a victim of circumstance". (AUDIO: Omega) According to most accounts, Omega was lost during the very same great working by which he granted Gallifrey the power to travel in time: the stasis halo of Omega's Starbreaker, the Eurydice, was sabotaged, exposing it, and the Starbreaker's crew, to the fury of the black hole. There were several accounts concerning the details and reasons for the sabotage, (COMIC: Star Death, AUDIO: Omega) though one Gallifreyan wrote that Omega had "got his sums wrong" and was simply not within a safe distance when the star exploded. (PROSE: A Brief History of Time Lords) At the centre of the explosion, Omega saw the original timeline shatter (PROSE: The Infinity Doctors) as the invention of time travel changed reality forever. (PROSE: Mr Saldaamir)

Omega was lost to the anti-matter universe, but his actions gave his people the power to become Lords of Time. (PROSE: The Whoniverse)

Historically accounts depicted that Omega's assistant, Vandekirian, had sabotaged the mission on behalf of Rassilon. However, feeling guilty over his betrayal, he cut off his own hand as recompense. Omega did not accept it, and cut off his other hand, placing it in his stellar manipulator, which was later to be known as the Hand of Omega. Upon which, the Eurydice was destroyed due to Vandekirian's actions. The hand was only named after Omega because Rassilon wanted to use the public's love of Omega to boost his own popularity, reasoning that showering the fallen founder with praise would do better than doing so for the disliked Vandekirian. (AUDIO: Omega) According to the Seventh Doctor however, the Hand of Omega was not "literally" a hand, but had instead only received this nickname figuratively, "because Time Lords have an infinite capacity for pretension". (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks)

In his own distorted memories after taking on some of the Fifth Doctor's biodata, Omega recalled that Vandekirian was at least partly responsible for the sabotage. He had discovered that detonating the star would jeopardise the existence of a race called the Scintillans. When he realised what would happen, Vandekirian's guilt caused him to destroy his own hand, since its activation required his palm print. However, Omega cut off the man's other hand to activate it anyway, no matter the consquences for the Scintillans, before killing Vandekirian himself. When Omega began to have these memories involving the Scintillans, he was filled with guilt, despite having tried to argue that the reward of time travel for Gallifrey had justified his means.

However, the Doctor revealed that the history with the Scintillans was a corruption of his own memories; with the Doctor having been filled with guilt over accidentally killing the race himself while trying to rescue a Lurman colony, Omega happened to take on that guilt after taking some of the Doctor's biodata. The Doctor reasoned Omega had only incorporated it into the memories to "explain away" Vandekirian's betrayal, even implying Omega had not killed Vandekirian as well. The Doctor also reasoned that Omega may have encorporated the story because the founder wanted to believe his exile had a cause, something to blame like an act of genocide, instead of merely being the result of a mistake. As for why Vandekirian betrayed Omega, the Doctor assumed he had indeed either sabotaged the mission on behalf of Rassilon, or he had just succumbed to madness. (AUDIO: Omega)

Although Rassilon publicly wept over Omega's death, (PROSE: Lungbarrow) the Eleventh Doctor appeared to believe the theory that Rassilon was behind the tragedy. Indeed, he later recounted to Alice Obiefune that it was rumoured Omega's "death" had been arranged, with those who spread the rumour claiming Rassilon had ordered "Omega's assistant" to betray the engineer. (COMIC: The Lost Dimension)

According to other accounts, a man known as "Fenris the Hellbringer" sabotaged Omega's Starbreaker. This nearly meant that the initial Gallifreyan time travel experiments never came to pass, so the Time Lords "[would] be annihilated before they [had] even come into existence". However, Rassilon intervened, dispatching Fenris; thus, although Omega was lost, the time experiments succeeded. According to this account, Rassilon prevented disaster from overtaking the other three Starbreakers (COMIC: Star Death) before weeping over Omega's death. (PROSE: Lungbarrow) Most accounts suggested that Fenris had been an agent for the Order of the Black Sun and acting deliberately, (COMIC: 4-D War) but according to one source, the man who caused Omega's death was a "temporal tourist" of no import, who had gone back to Gallifrey's ancient history to witness the historic moment of Qqaba's detonation. He was only given the melodramatic name of "Fenris the Hellbringer" in later retellings of the event, postdating his almost immediate obliteration by Rassilon. (PROSE: Gallifrey: A Rough Guide)

In yet another account, Omegon told K9 Mark I that he survived the event during which he granted the Gallifreyans the power to travel in time. Coasting on his fame and the debt he felt Gallifrey owed him, he had himself proclaimed Emperor. However, the other Time Lords plotted against him, and managed to depose him. They attempted to destroy him with the very "power of a thousand suns" he had harnessed for them, but they only succeeded in marooning him in a "crimson bubble of time", a time trap, from which they believed he could never escape. (PROSE: K9 and the Time Trap)

The survival of Omega[[edit] | [edit source]]

Omega was thus presumed dead. Most Gallifreyans, including The Doctor, grew up to revere and admire Omega as their greatest hero. (TV: The Three Doctors) The Hand of Omega, meanwhile, had survived and returned to Gallifrey. The First Doctor would later obtain it for himself. (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks) Like Rassilon, Omega became a legend amongst Gallifreyan society, while the third of their trio was forgotten. (PROSE: Remembrance of the Daleks) However, Omega had survived the ordeal. He was transported through the black hole into another universe made of anti-matter. (TV: The Three Doctors)

From this anti-matter universe, Omega was able to watch as the invention of Gallifreyan time travel wiped out the original linear universe, replacing it with numerous palimpsest histories. (PROSE: The Infinity Doctors) Trapped, Omega shaped the universe by force of will and access to the black hole's singularity. He could even create simple life. However, radiation destroyed his body; the gauntlets, armour and helmet he had designed to protect him from the corrosive effect of the anti-matter now constituted his physical form. At first he shaped his new world into a paradise. As the centuries rolled by he grew weary and depressed, feeling abandoned by his fellow Time Lords. The landscape slowly transformed into a drab, grey desert as he became depressed by the loneliness he was feeling. The universe that had become his home was unstable, unable to exist without a powerful will to give it form; he was trapped and completely unable to escape. (TV: The Three Doctors)

Omega as he appeared to Oxirgi. (COMIC: Omega)

Shortly after the early Time Lords abandoned the planet Minyos after setting themselves up as its gods, (TV: Underworld) Omega, who had long since maintained that Gallifrey had learned from their mistakes with the Minyans and had hoped to use the Hand of Omega to lead his people away from repeating them, (PROSE: Remembrance of the Daleks) was able to psychically reach out to Oxirgi, a Minyan revolutionary, and form a psychic bond with him, with Oxirgi worshipping him in secret as his god. Under Omega's directions, Oxirgi created a matter converter which could open a gateway through the black hole, thus freeing Omega, if it was powered by a tremendous amount of negative psychic energy. To reach his target, Oxirgi had to create as much chaos and misery on Minyos as possible. When the suffering caused by the violent rioting Oxirgi organised failed to suffice, Omega suggested Oxirgi take control of the nuclear bombs left on Minyos by his people and destroy the planet. When Malika attempted to stop Oxirgi with the help of the mindwrangler Kyril, Omega poured more of his psychic power into Oxirgi's mind, helping him to fend off Kyril's psychic attacks. (COMIC: Omega)

Against the Time Lords[[edit] | [edit source]]

A new plan[[edit] | [edit source]]

Omega with the Second and Third Doctors. (TV: The Three Doctors)

After thousands of years in the void, Omega hit upon a plan of revenge: a captured Time Lord could be forced to take his place, and Omega could leave and wreak vengeance on Gallifrey. This plan was inspired by the Verdigris, who had travelled into the anti-matter universe in an attempt to get the Third Doctor released from his exile on Earth. (PROSE: Verdigris) Using the black hole, he drained power from the Time Lords to stop them from interfering. He sent an amorphous life form and other, more humanoid servitors to find the exiled Third Doctor and take him into the black hole. The High Council, unable to send anyone to assist the Doctor, decided to have the second incarnation of the Doctor help rectify matters, subsequently contacting and sending his first self to advise them. Omega brought both incarnations to his domain, entry into which converted all matter into anti-matter. (TV: The Three Doctors)

Defeated by the Doctors[[edit] | [edit source]]

Omega discovers that he only exists upon his own will. (TV: The Three Doctors)

When Omega removed his helmet to prepare for his departure, he discovered that the anti-matter universe had completely dissolved his physical body. He could not leave his universe; he existed only because his will insisted that he exist, but his will was all that was left of him. Consumed by rage and despair, Omega swore to destroy all things; the dark side of his mind took the form of a demonic champion. The Doctors offered freedom to Omega: in actuality the Second Doctor's recorder which the Doctor's TARDIS had accidentally shielded from conversion into anti-matter. The Doctors attempted to trick Omega into touching the recorder but instead only infuriated him. When Omega lashed out he knocked the force field generator to the floor, causing the recorder to make contact with the floor and creating a violent matter-antimatter explosion which seemingly killed Omega by collapsing the antimatter world. (TV: The Three Doctors)

Omega and his Gellguards were part of a fleet of Alien Monsters whose threat to destroy Earth was opposed by a Legendary Legion assembled by the Fourth Doctor. (GAME: Doctor Who Trump Card Game [+]Loading...["Doctor Who Trump Card Game (game)"])

Assailing Gallifrey[[edit] | [edit source]]

Having survived his encounter with "K9's former master", Omegon plotted vengeance on the Time Lords. He learned how to capture spacecraft into his timeless realm; they appeared to disappear from the normal universe in a blink due to no real time existing inside his bubble of frozen, crimson time. A boundary between the bubble of time and the normal universe now existed in the form of a cloud of reddish cosmic gas, seemingly intangible, whose movements Omegon could direct from the inside; he thus intended to move the cloud nearer to Gallifrey once he had collected a big enough fleet, and launch a surprise assault on the planet, intent on wiping out the Time Lords altogether.

Among the spacecraft he thus highjacked was the entire Rigelian Seventh Fleet, the disappearance of which was investigated by K9 Mark I on behalf of Gallifrey High Command. When K9 managed to enter Omegon's realm, he personally greeted him, explaining his history to K9 and trying to convince the hound that his actions were justified. However, K9, deeming that Omegon was mad with revenge, managed to retake control of his own spacecraft, the K-NEL, launching it at the rocket stores of Omegon's flagship just as the invisible fleet was nearing Gallifrey. The flagship was destroyed in a colossal explosion which seemingly killed Omegon, freeing the captured ship from his control. (PROSE: K9 and the Time Trap)

Facing the Sixth Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]

Omega faces the Sixth Doctor in a conflict of wills. (PROSE: Search for the Doctor)

In 2054, the Fusion Energy Research Network, a research complex connected via space elevator to the FERN Spacelab, began running experiments on duplicating Fusion reactions safely on Earth. At the same time, other technicians studied Anti-matter. The existence of these two studies attracted Omega, himself a Solar engineer. In 2056, Omega encountered the Sixth Doctor at the Spacelab and attempted to force him to give up the secrets of time travel and his TARDIS. The two soon were matched in a battle of will across all of time.

Omega planned to get revenge on Gallifrey by trapping it in stasis, as they had done to him, and then subjugating the Time Lords. He planned to do this by causing the Fusion Energy Research Network complex to go nuclear, turning the Earth hotter than the Sun and giving him a power-source to accomplish his plan. To gain the trust of the FERN staff, Omega stole the body of the Doctor and took control of the Fusion tests. (PROSE: Search for the Doctor)

Omega, having stolen the body of the Sixth Doctor. (PROSE: Search for the Doctor)

While some variations of this source indicated that Omega was successful, that the Earth was destroyed, the Doctor killed or imprisoned, and Gallifrey enslaved; (PROSE: Search for the Doctor: Marker 1, Marker 4, Marker 25, Marker 27, Marker 28, Marker 29, Marker 31) one specific account stated that with the help of the Time Lord Drax, K9 Mark III, and a human named Dinah, the Doctor was freed and Omega was defeated before his plan could be completed. (PROSE: Search for the Doctor: Marker 32, Marker 33)

Affiliation with the Arc of Infinity[[edit] | [edit source]]

Omega during transfer. (TV: Arc of Infinity)

Hedin of the High Council contacted Omega to help him. Omega had gained control of the dimensional gateway known as the Arc of Infinity. Through the Arc, he had a gateway between his own universe and the universe of matter, though he still had no physical form. Omega also had a TARDIS and a servant he had created, the Ergon. Omega needed to bond with another Time Lord using his biodata extract. (TV: Arc of Infinity)

On Earth at the time, Omega sent the Ergon to survey the planet, and it ended up in Perivale, where it met Dorothy McShane working in a fast food restaurant. She didn't realise it was an alien, and gave it some fries, which it took back to Omega. Omega didn't like them, claiming they didn't have any salt on them. (PROSE: Anti-Matter with Fries)

Hedin transmitted to Omega the biodata extract for the Doctor, by this time in his fifth incarnation. Omega established a base in the Earth city of Amsterdam, navigated the Doctor's TARDIS into the Arc and began to link the Doctor's biodata with his own. The Doctor faced execution on Gallifrey to stop Omega's return. This was part of Omega and Hedin's plan: they rigged the execution to hide the Doctor and Omega in the Matrix, safe from Time Lord detection. (TV: Arc of Infinity)

A new body[[edit] | [edit source]]

Omega shifted the Arc to Gallifrey in order to gain control of the Matrix and used its power to create a physical body for himself.

Omega, utilising the Fifth Doctor's biodata and form. (TV: Arc of Infinity)

The Doctor tracked him down and sabotaged his equipment in Amsterdam, forcing Omega to step into the physical universe before the transfer was made stable. His new body, a replica of the Doctor's, began to decay and revert to anti-matter. Thwarted and maddened by defeat, Omega willed the acceleration of his conversion to anti-matter to destroy the Earth rather than return to the universe of anti-matter but was destroyed by the Doctor using the Ergon's matter converter. (TV: Arc of Infinity)

After Amsterdam[[edit] | [edit source]]

Omega was recreated by using the Doctor's biodata. However, this had the effect of causing Omega to develop a split personality, being both Omega and the Doctor, but the Doctor persona wasn't aware of his Omega personality. In Amsterdam, Omega secretly boarded the TARDIS of a visiting Time Lord historian and broadcaster, Professor Ertikus, who was in the city to see the site of Omega's destruction. Ertikus travelled to a Jolly Chronolidays trip to the Sector of Forgotten Souls, with Omega stowed away onboard. Before the trip, Omega met an employee of Jolly Chronolidays, Sentia, with whom he fell in love. He told Sentia all about himself, including his split personality disorder. Omega planned to use the Jolly Chronolidays trip to the Sector of Forgotten Souls to return to the anti-matter universe with Sentia because he found he disliked living in this universe, and wanted to return to his universe where he had godlike power and remained safe.

While travelling to the Sector of Forgotten Souls, the Doctor persona met Sentia for the first time (although Sentia already knew about this Doctor personality) while the ship was docking into the leisure base. There he met Daland (an actor who played Omega in the recreations of Omega's experiments) and Tarpov (another actor who played Vandekirian, Omega's assistant). Tarpov succumbed to the Vandekirian personality, left behind by the psychic residue from Omega's experiments. He tried to stop Omega's experiments by attacking Daland and crushing his own hand in machinery, to stop his handprint being used to release the Hand of Omega, but Omega entered and stopped Tarpov from crushing his other hand. While Tarpov was recovering, Omega tried to kill Tarpov, believing he would give away a secret that he wished to keep quiet, but the medical robot knocked him unconscious. The Omega persona directly communicated with the Doctor persona inside Omega's mind. "Omega" tried to convince "the Doctor" to help him travel to the anti-matter universe with Sentia, and "the Doctor" accepted. Meeting Ertikus for the first time, and discovering he was a Time Lord, "the Doctor" used Ertikus' TARDIS to travel to the recreated Eurydice so he could fulfil his mission. But Sentia kidnapped Daland and stole a shuttle, so she could get there, and could use Daland to conduct the marriage ceremony, but Tarpov stowed aboard and escaped onto the Eurydice.

Tarpov revealed to Sentia that by destroying a star, to create the Eye of Harmony, he would cause the death of a native race called the Scintillans, however, Omega continued anyway. Omega then killed Tarpov. Ertikus tried to meet Omega but discovered that "the Doctor" had been in contact with him all along. Omega revealed himself to Ertikus and then killed him. After they were reunited, "the Doctor" sent a telepathic message from Ertikus' telepathic circuit to the Time Lords explaining everything about the situation to them, so they could send help. Daland and Sentia looked for Ertikus, and Daland found his recorder robot, which had recorded Ertikus' death. Daland realised that "the Doctor" had killed him, and tried to attack the Doctor. Seeing the footage for himself, "the Doctor" realised he was merely a product of Omega's split personality disorder, which was finally confirmed by the arrival of the real Fifth Doctor in his TARDIS, who had been sent by the Time Lords.

Feeling the effects of mental trauma, Omega escaped and began to suffer flashbacks of his earlier life, and the circumstances which led him to take part in the time experiments. After hearing about the Scintillans from Daland, the Doctor confronted Omega, and revealed that the Scintillans weren't a part of the time experiments, but a memory Omega had taken from the Doctor. The Scintillans were a species the Doctor accidentally killed when he tried to save some Lurmans. The Doctor believed Omega had subconsciously used this to explain away Vandekirian's betrayal. Sentia (taken over by Vandekirian's personality) attempted to pilot the Eurydice into the anti-matter universe, so Omega would be trapped again. The Doctor and Daland escaped, while Omega was trapped on the ship, as it and Omega were supposedly pulled back into the anti-matter universe again. (AUDIO: Omega)

Manipulating the Adherents[[edit] | [edit source]]

Omega returns (AUDIO: Intervention Earth)

For centuries on Gallifrey, the Adherents of Ohm were a secret society that worshipped "Ohm". During the presidency of Romana's third incarnation, Omega manipulated them to steal the Hand of Omega from Gallifrey and use it to create a black hole. Omega then lured Tauras and brought him and Ace's TARDIS into the anti-matter universe. When he met Romana he thought the Time Lords society had fallen so low to allow a president from the House of Heartshaven. Possessing Tauras' body, Omega took Ace's TARDIS and escaped the anti-matter universe, knowing that it would allow him back on Gallifrey as it was known to the Celestial Intervention Agency. (AUDIO: Intervention Earth)

Romana sent Irving Braxiatel back in time to change history so that Omega would never escape the anti-matter universe, with him instructing her previous incarnation to pre-emptively arrest the Adherents. (AUDIO: Enemy Lines)

Return in an altered universe[[edit] | [edit source]]

In an altered state of reality, Savar attempted to rescue Omega by flying his TARDIS into the event horizon of a black hole. He fled in terror upon seeing Omega, in the form of a god that he called "Ohm", however his TARDIS was unable to escape Omega's pull, stretching itself out in its frantic attempts to flee until it became the Needle. Trillions of years into the future, the black hole had contracted sufficiently the Needle was able to break into the universe, creating the Effect which enabled Omega to alter history. He rescued the Doctor's wife from her death, bringing her to his realm, and manipulated events so the Doctor would come to his universe, having created a duplicate of himself on the Needle to fool the Needle People.

With the Doctor able to take his place in the anti-matter universe, Omega took possession of the Doctor's duplicate and went back to Gallifrey in the Magistrate's TARDIS, forcing Larna, who had come to the Needle to rescue the Doctor, to come with him. He went to the Eye of Harmony, planning to seize its singularity so he could become a god again in the matter universe. He was confronted at the heart of the singularity by the Doctor, who convinced him of the futility of such power. Omega decided to unmake the entire universe however, so the Doctor brought his anti-singularity into contact with Omega's singularity which restored the Eye to normal. As he had just made up the concept of an anti-singularity the Doctor had no idea what had happened to Omega. (PROSE: The Infinity Doctors)

Escaping the anti-matter universe[[edit] | [edit source]]

This section's awfully stubby.

Lost in Time need to be added.

To be added

Personality[[edit] | [edit source]]

A founding scientist[[edit] | [edit source]]

There was a time when Omega opposed violence and only wanted to be known by his birth name, but, as he carried on, he came to believe that, if he needed to be a monster to bring the Gallifreyans into a "new age of enlightenment", then he would fully become said monster. He also came to begrudgingly accept his nickname "Omega". (AUDIO: Omega) By one account, at the time of the creation of the Hand of Omega, regeneration was already possible for Gallifreyans, with Omega having regenerating into the body of "a huge man" with great shoulders and muscles, leading to some to speculate his body was a genetic memory of "the dark time". At one point, he stretched out his arms in a way that made him look like a "barbarian king". (PROSE: Remembrance of the Daleks) A telecast about "the lives and deaths of Omega" would later be shown on Public Register Video, a Gallifreyan media apparatus. (PROSE: Pandoric's Box)

After the creation of the hand, he was eager to impose Gallifrey's will upon time to make their people into Time Lords, arguing with the Other about the risks of such a prospect. When the two argued about whether they had learned from their mistakes involving the Minyans, Omega believed they had but silenced himself after looking into the Other's eyes. While Rassilon came to side with Omega after the scientist asked his fellows if they agreed the hand was "a magnificent achievement", the Other remained cautious. (PROSE: Remembrance of the Daleks) According to Omega's memories, however, Rassilon had been the eager one, while Omega himself was cautious. (AUDIO: Omega)

Into the supernova[[edit] | [edit source]]

Omega was very bitter about his fellow Time Lords, who he believed sacrificed him to attain greatness. He held eternal enmity towards his race, and sought to avenge himself against them.

Countless aeons alone left him with little care about anything, deeming the destruction of reality as a "spectacle to behold". He also became paranoid and developed violent mood swings. He lacked any restraint and had a vicious temper. The Doctor considered him to be a madman. However, he was not without heart, appearing to be genuinely upset by the death of Hedin, the one Time Lord who had tried to aid him. Omega also appeared enchanted by small things such as a child's smile and a steam organ during his brief escape from the anti-matter universe, suggesting that his extreme fury was merely the by-product of loneliness and despair. (TV: The Three Doctors, Arc of Infinity) He also felt great guilt and remorse when he mistakenly believed he had been responsible for the destruction of the Scintillans. (AUDIO: Omega)

Despite being insane, Omega was noted for his extremely strong will, which allowed him to reshape the antimatter universe in the singularity to create an environment as well as servants that suited him. This made him linked to the antimatter realm, as his will alone kept it alive and prevented his escape. He was completely unaware of the fact that his body had corroded away as a result of prolonged exposure to the antimatter realm, and that both his physical form and the world he created were made by his will alone. (TV: The Three Doctors)

In Time Lord culture[[edit] | [edit source]]

Rassilon, the Other and Omega were the three most important figures in Gallifrey's history. (PROSE: The Ancestor Cell) An ancient Statue of Omega was in the Capitol, (COMIC: The Lost Dimension) whereas another was built in the Great Hall of the Academy during his life. (AUDIO: Omega)

The Feast of Omega was a holiday that was celebrated on Gallifrey. (PROSE: Happy Endings) It was the Disciples of Omega who established the transduction barriers. (AUDIO: Renaissance) The public forgot that Omega's birth name had been Peylix, with the name instead becoming the subject of a story about a time plumber who was too curious for his own good; he questioned how everything around him worked, which made everything stop working. (AUDIO: Omega)

The Belt of Omega was part of a Presidential dress which the Fifth Doctor was forced to wear. Seeing him fit it on, Tegan Jovanka amusingly suggested that Omega had tried to steal his body because he was jealous. (AUDIO: Time in Office, TV: Arc of Infinity)

"OMEGA level event and "Priority Omega" were code-phrases during the War in Heaven and Last Great Time War, respectively. (PROSE: Subjective Interlock, TV: The Day of the Doctor) The Omega Arsenal was a stockpile of forbidden weapons locked away in the Time Vaults. (TV: The Day of the Doctor)

Secret societies on Gallifrey were dedicated to the worship of Rassilon, Omega, and the Other. The Adherents of Ohm were one dedicated to Omega, (AUDIO: Intervention Earth) with "Ohm" being a name for Omega used by those who believed him to be a trapped god. (PROSE: The Infinity Doctors) By the time of his fifth incarnation, the Doctor's battles with Omega had turned Gallifreyan culture against the founder, having revealed many of the unfavorable aspects to Omega's character; Omega went from a revered founder to a story used to scare children into doing homework. By the time of the Celestial Preservation Agency, Omega was no longer seen as a hero, merely considered a joke. (AUDIO: Omega)

Coordinator Jarad was once heard to exclaim "Omega's ghost!" to express shock. (AUDIO: Legion of the Lost) In a parallel universe where the Sixth Doctor led Gallifrey in the War, a time dreadnought was named the Glorious Aspect of Omega. (PROSE: The Quantum Archangel) Following the Last Great Time War, the Eleventh Doctor believed Omega's memories were stored in the Matrix. (COMIC: Sky Jacks)

Other references[[edit] | [edit source]]

In the video game Happy Deathday, played by Izzy Sinclair on the Time-Space Visualiser, Omega was among a host of "every single enemy" that the Doctor had ever defeated, who were assembled by the Beige Guardian and pitted against the Doctor's first eight incarnations. (COMIC: Happy Deathday)

During the War in Heaven, the term "OMEGA level event" was used to describe direct encounters with The Enemy. (PROSE: Subjective Interlock) During the Last Great Time War, Priority Omega was a code phrase used for high priority messages. (TV: The Day of the Doctor)

Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]

Development[[edit] | [edit source]]

In preliminary discussions for The Three Doctors, the name "Ohm" was considered for the character of Omega, because OHM looks like WHO upside-down. The symbol for Ohm is the Greek Omega symbol (Ω). This abandoned concept would be referenced in the novel The Infinity Doctors, where, within an abnormal state of history, it was revealed that the Time Lord explorer Savar met a "mad god" called Ohm inside a black hole while looking for the real Omega. The suggestion is that Ohm is one of an infinity of alternative versions of Omega. In K9 and the Time Trap, Omega was referred to with the name "Omegon", otherwise remaining identical to the version of the character seen in The Three Doctors, evidencing lingering uncertainty in the mind of his creator about Omega's name.

In The Three Doctors, Stephen Thorne, who had previously portrayed another vengeful near-deity (the Dæmon Azal) in The Dæmons, was called upon to portray Omega. With the character meant to have no physical body under his helmet, only Thorne's voice was applied to Omega, thus allowing for easy recasting upon Omega's return to the series in Arc of Infinity. The anti-matter god was now embodied and voiced by Ian Collier, who reprised the role in an audio format in the Big Finish audio drama Omega.

The Timeless Children[[edit] | [edit source]]

Omega (left) stands with the Second Tecteun (centre) and Rassilon (right).

In the scene corresponding to the point in The Timeless Children where Tecteun's male incarnation stands alongside two other Time Lords in full high-collared regalia, the Timeless Children script release mentions that "we can assume [the other two] are Rassilon and Omega".[1] In late 2020, the BBC released a promotional photograph providing a better look at these Time Lords' faces.[2] Mark Corden, the episode's 2nd assistant director, stated on Twitter that he himself was the performer playing Omega, also explaining that he had selected the extra playing Rassilon based on his resemblance to Don Warrington, who had played an incarnation of Rassilon for Big Finish.[3][4]

Cutaway Comics[[edit] | [edit source]]

John Ridgway, the artist for Cutaway Comics' Omega miniseries, elaborated in a special feature at the end of the first issue on an early concept he had when called upon to visualise Omega in the comic:

You can't have him be a little man like the Mekon. It has to be dynamic, fluid, and fit in with the script. My original thought, which sadly won't work, is he'd be different every time that you saw him. He could be male in one picture, Chinese in the next, female in the next and all the permutations of that. But the readers would need to understand this is what was happening, without wondering why there were so many different characters.John Ridgway

Omega as portrayed by Brian Blessed for the audio adaptation.

In the end, Omega was depicted in Oxirgi's vision as a hazy humanoid figure seemingly made of pure light — thus obviating the need to give him any particular physical features.[5] However, he was given a much more human appearance when portrayed by Brian Blessed on the audio adaptation's cover. Blessed previously appeared in Mindwarp as Yrcanos the "barbarian king", a epithet also used to describe an incarnation of Omega who appeared in the novelisation of Remembrance of the Daleks.

Other matters[[edit] | [edit source]]

A character called "Rassilon's Engineer" appears in a transmission Sam Jones receives on Anathema in Interference - Book One. Although the character is not named, he is strongly implied to be Omega. The transmission originates in a Faction Paradox-influenced culture built on a Time Lord artefact, so the implication may be that Rassilon attempted to minimise Omega's part in Time Lord history, reducing him to the role of "Rassilon's Engineer".

External links[[edit] | [edit source]]

Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]