Talk:The War Chief: Difference between revisions

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Is the name "War Chief" his daily, but not true name, like the Doctor or the Master, or was just a class name given to Magnus by the [[War Lord]]s in the [[War Games]]? ([[User:Ceryu|Ceryu]] 14:30, July 2, 2010 (UTC))
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Based on the other titles that people had, [[The War Lord]] for example, the name was probably more of a title given to him by the war lords.Icecreamdif 21:49, September 27, 2010 (UTC)
== War Games novelisation ==


I think it's worth mentioning (in a behind the scenes box or whatever) that in the first appearance of the character 'Magnus' it's not made clear that this is in fact the War Chief - given the way the character is presented (both written, and drawn in a vaguely Delgado-esque way), the choice of name (Ma-----), and the point of the story (clearly an important event in the lives of both Magnus and the Doctor and the origins of a significant feud between them), I think it's fairly clear that the *author's original intention* was that Magnus was the young Master and this was later retconned by others for reasons best known to themselves. Turning Magnus into the War Chief sort of renders 'Flashback' incomprehensible in that on-screen in The War Games there's no implication the Doctor and the War Chief had a close prior relationship.
I'm not seeing any reference by the War Chief to him and the Doctor being the only ones to have stolen TARDISes. The only comment on the subject I can see is a section near the beginning of Chapter 10 where the Doctor exclaims "It's my TARDIS that you want. But surely you have one of your own?", to which the War Chief replies "No more mine than yours is really yours! We are both thieves, Doctor. Yes, I do have a TARDIS hidden away." [[User:Skteosk|Skteosk]] [[User talk:Skteosk|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 08:04, 25 June 2022 (UTC)


== Mention in FASA that he is The Master  ==
:The reference to there only being two time lords that have stolen a TARDIS is in a different novel. ''[[Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon (novelisation)|Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon]]'', I think. [[User:LauraBatham|LauraBatham]] [[User talk:LauraBatham|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 09:21, 25 June 2022 (UTC)


Does anyone have a copy of the FASA Role Playing Game handy? If so, could they say ''exactly'' what it says about The War Chief being The Master? Thanks.
::I acknowledge that one's there. I removed a reference to a similar comment in ''[[Doctor Who and the War Games (novelisation)|Doctor Who and the War Games]]'' last night, only for someone to restore it. I removed it again this morning. [[User:Skteosk|Skteosk]] [[User talk:Skteosk|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 10:16, 25 June 2022 (UTC)


I have the relavent sections, and in all truth it mentions nothing of the    Master being the War Chief, only that they were allies during an uprising and the Master helped the War Chief when he worked for the War Lord. It only points out that the Master and Monk were one and the same. I have heard elsewhere however, that the earliest editions were the ones that maintained that the War Chief and the Master were the same Time Lord. Whether this is true or not i can't really verify, but someone out there must know.[[Special:Contributions/86.9.234.213|86.9.234.213]]<sup>[[User talk:86.9.234.213#top|talk to me]]</sup> 17:19, July 16, 2012 (UTC)
:: ''War Games'' also references this fact. The quotes (both, remember, by the same man in the same book range) are these, with the relevant passages bolded — [[User:Skteosk]], you cut your quote above off too early! Though it's quite an understandable oversight.


{{quote|"'''There have been two stolen, you know'''."<br />The younger Time Lord didn't know. "By our enemies?"<br />"No. By Time Lords. They both became bored with this place. It was too peaceful for them, not enough happening." The old Keeper smiled to himself, as though remembering with some glee '''all the fuss when ''two'' TARDISes were stolen'''. "One of them nowadays calls himself 'the Doctor'. The other says he is 'the Master'."|''Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon''}}


== FASA lists the War Chief as a seperate character ==
{{quote|"Now I understand," said the Doctor. "It's my TARDIS that you want. But surely you have one of your own?"<br />The War Chief smiled. "No more mine than yours is really yours. '''We are both thieves, Doctor. Yes, I do have a TARDIS hidden away'''. But are not two better than one? While I rest and enjoy the spoils of victory, you can patrol our empire. And I shall do the same for you."<br />"''Our'' empire?"<br />"We shall rule the galaxy without fear of oppoisition," the War Chief said confidently. "For '''we shall be the only two who can travel through both space and time'''."|''Doctor Who and the War Games''}}


I have all the modules for the FASA rpg and nowhere does it say that the War Chief is the Master, only another fellow renegade who teamed up with the Master on a few occasions. It even has a drawing of his newest incarnation! Is it worth keeping the sentence about FASA saying that he was the Master?[[User:TARDIS43|TARDIS43]] [[User talk:TARDIS43|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 14:00, December 11, 2012 (UTC)
:: Note that the latter extract actually alters what the TV story said on this point: the TV script seems to suggest that the War Chief doesn't ''have'' a TARDIS of his own. It has room to assume that he had one when he ran away but later lost access to it, but it certainly doesn't highlight it. So this passage was a very deliberate addition Hulke made to the story when retelling it for the Target format.


== Reverted edits ==
{{quote|'''DOCTOR:''' Now I understand. It's my Tardis that you're after, isn't it?<br />'''WAR CHIEF:''' Exactly! When we are in control, the machines I have brought with me will have expired. If we hold '''the only space time travel machine''', we can rule our galaxy without fear of opposition.|''The War Games''}}


I have reverted the edits made by [[user:41.133.47.166]] to this page and [[Magnus]], [[The War Games]] and [[the Master]]. Several months ago this user tried to make his point on several talk pages, but failed to provide convincing evidence per this wiki's rules. I reverted the edits and suggested he try the forums; as he did not do so, I've reverted his edits again. [[User:Shambala108|Shambala108]] [[User talk:Shambala108|<span title="Talk to me"></span>]] 16:19, January 29, 2014 (UTC)
:: In any case, setting aside the tone issue in your previous message, I do want to thank you for your recent diligent work here, @Skteosk. This and previous talk page discussions have established that the idea that the War Chief became the Master does exist in [[Tardis:Valid sources|valid sources]], in the same way that such as ideas as the Doctor being a 49th century human does; but it's easy to get tunnel vision when one is defending a view that goes against the grain. The older, non-chronological version of the overview of the evidence for against really wasn't balanced enough, and while your edits in turn went too far in the other direction, I think the synthesis I tried to produce in my further edits last night is clearly superior to what was there before. <span style="color: #baa3d6;font-family:Comic Sans;">[[User:Scrooge
MacDuck|'''Scrooge MacDuck''']]</span> <span style="color: #baa3d6;">[[User_talk:Scrooge MacDuck|⊕]]</span> 10:23, 25 June 2022 (UTC)


== Connection with the Master in Timewyrm: Exodus ==
::Okay, I ''kind'' of get what you're going for here, but I still think it's a lot more ambiguous than "the Doctor and the War Chief are the only ones to have stolen TARDIses". Okay, the War Chief says "we shall be the only two who can travel through both space and time". But that means...what exactly? They're obviously not the only two Time Lords in existence, because the climax of the story involves a visit to a planet which is full of other Time Lords who can also travel through space and time. You ''could'' interpret it as meaning they're the only Time Lords to have left Gallifrey, but you could equally interpret it as simply meaning that they'll have an advantage over the War Lords which means they can easily take over from them. I think it leaves plenty of room for other Renegade Time Lords to exist in other galaxies or whatever. (Incidentally, I had another problem with half your signature not being present when I started editing. I've tried to put it back as I found it, apologies if I didn't succeed.) I see you've now edited it to reflect that, so fair enough. [[User:Skteosk|Skteosk]] [[User talk:Skteosk|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 11:26, 25 June 2022 (UTC)


Currently this page claims that Terrance Dicks would often use the phrase “Tall, dark and satanically handsome” to describe the Roger Delgado incarnation of the Master in his Target Novelisations, and that this is evidence of a more explicit connection between the two characters.
== Terror of the Autons ==
There's a huge glaring problem with saying the War Chief/Master situation is solved, especially when using ''Doctor Who and the Terror of the Autons'' as supporting evidence. The War Chief did not escape from justice in The War Games. The War Lord *had him killed* (even if later stories retcon this or revive him, this doesn't change the shooting and order beforehand). The quote "Already he had been behind several Interplanetary Wars, always disappearing from the scene before he could be brought to justice. If ever he were caught, his fate would I be far worse than the Doctor’s exile." has NOTHING to do with that plot point.  


But I’ve searched through copies of all the Target Novelisations featuring the Delgado Master and I can’t find this phrase or any variation of it used once. Although in almost all of these novelisations Delgado is described as having a “sallow face”, “pointed beard”, and “deep burning eyes” which isn’t particularly close to the phrase used in Timewyrm: Exodus. If someone could point me to an example of Dicks describing Delgado as “Tall, dark and satanically handsome” or any variation of that, I’ll be happy enough with that but I just don’t think he ever did.
And the source ''Doctor Who and the Terror of the Autons'' (not talking about either version of ''The War Games'') absolutely nowhere "established that the Doctor and the Master were the only two renegades ever to have run away from Gallifrey". At all. It is adding misinformation to readd that. It's false. It's made up. There's no establishment irrespective of the War Chief link.


Furthermore, when taken at face value and knowing that the phrase doesn’t appear to crop up in any novelisations I can’t really say that Timewyrm: Exodus actually does draw any clear connection between The War Chief and the Master.
If we want to split hairs about ''well, Time Lord monickers only came about later and that's why the War Chief has a different name''. Then it would probably be worth pointing out the Master escaping a clear death scene wouldn't really be a thing until probably Ainley's time. Maybe there's isolated points in the 70s, but as a defining moment? [[User:Tybort|Tybort]] [[User talk:Tybort|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 18:23, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
: And it's really weird that [[Talk:The Master/Archive_7#Adding a section for the War Chief in the biography]]'s conclusion appears to stem from this error. Why can I not identify the statement "the Doctor and the Master were the only two Time Lords ever to steal a TARDIS while summarising the events of The War Games in the same breath" anywhere in ''Terror of the Autons'' (originally attributed to ''Doomsday Weapon'')? Not even in the interplanetary war part on pages 25 and 26. [[User:Tybort|Tybort]] [[User talk:Tybort|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 18:37, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
::The "only two" thing was a misattribution of a plot point from ''Doomsday Weapon'' to ''Terror of the Autons'', yes. Thank you for correcting remaining instances of it in the main namespace.


The end scene features the War Chief engulfed in flames, with Ace seeing him appear “Young, tall, dark and satanically handsome” for a brief moment in the flames. So what this page would currently be implying is that Ace witnesses the War Chief regenerating into Roger Delgado.  
::I do not, on the other hand, follow what your issue with the "the War Chief was killed" thing is. You needn't invoke the stuff about Ainley's miraculous escapes — the addition to Time Lord lore which occurred after ''War Games'' is simple enough: the idea that ''Time Lords regenerate when they are killed''. (As documented at [[First Doctor's renewal]] and [[Second Doctor's change of appearance]], what had happened in the Hartnell-Troughton and Troughton-Pertwee transitions was a little more ambiguous; it took until the Pertwee era for the idea that regeneration might follow violent injury to take root.) The idea, then, in the War Chief=Master accounts, is quite plainly that the Brayshaw War Chief ''regenerated'' after the War Lord had him shot, and then made his escape, having now adopted a new face — presumably Delgado's, but there could be interim incarnations. This is in fact what both ''[[Timewyrm: Exodus (novel)|Timewyrm: Exodus]]'' and ''[[The Legions of Death (game)|The Legions of Death]]'' say happened, all Master lore aside; it is what you would ''expect'' to happen to the War Chief after the camera cuts away from him, in view of the Pertwee-onwards lore about how regeneration works. The War Chief survived with a new face; of course he did. That's what his kind do.


But the novel so far has gone to great lengths to make it clear to the reader that the War Chief can’t regenerate due to his aborted regeneration. To the extent that he tries to steal the Doctor’s body to survive. So it would seem strange to make such a point of the War Chief’s inability to regenerate throughout the novel only for it to amount to nothing in the end,
::Whether the ''Terror of the Autons'' novelisation in particular was ''intended'' to support the Master=War Chief claim is something I've grown more unsure about the more I've investigated the topic; in that it does seem like Hulke was the big proponent of the idea, not Dicks. (This is also [[Dave Rudden]]'s understanding; he refers to War-Chief=Master belief as being "of the House of Hulke".) But it's certainly a valid reading of the text. The key quote is not the "interplanetary wars" business, but the Doctor going "he was luckier than I" when he hears that the Master escaped the Time Lords with his TARDIS still operational. Could be that he's drawing a parallel between his own capture, and a near-capture of the Master in entirely different circumstances, but it's not exactly incongruous with the text to link it to Hulke's accounts, and take it that he's referring to their shared presence at the War Games, from which the Master (newly-regenerated) slipped away, while the Doctor didn't.


Additionally, the Doctor describes the Edward Brayshaw incarnation of the War Chief as having been “Tall, dark and handsome” earlier in the book. So does it not make considerable sense that the “tall, dark and satanically handsome” man we see at the end of the book is intended to be Edward Brayshaw, rather than Roger Delgado?
::(Terrance Dicks ''does'' make the claim that the Master was the only other Renegade the Doctor had ever fought by the time of ''Three Doctors'', in, well, [[The Three Doctors (novelisation)|the ''Three Doctors'' novelisation]]; and of course, a literal reading of that claim would conflate the Master with the Monk and the War Chief. I think this is where the mistaken claim that "only two ever to run away" came from Dicks originated.) --[[User:Scrooge MacDuck|Scrooge MacDuck]] [[User talk:Scrooge MacDuck|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 20:39, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
 
I just feel as though the paragraph as it currently stands is misleading. Again as I say because it draws a direct connection between The War Chief and The Master in this novel as though Dicks had intentionally suggested they were the same character in this particular novel. In reality, the only thing supporting this idea was that Dicks had supposedly used the same “satanically handsome” phrase to describe Delgado in earlier Target books, but as far as I can tell he did no such thing. Therefore the page should be changed. Timewyrm: Exodus only really builds off of continuity directly from the War Games and doesn’t really draw inspiration from anywhere else. I’m not trying to suggest that the book considers the two separate characters, just that it doesn’t actually do anything to draw a connection between the two, unlike say the Target Novelisation of Terror of the Autons. [[User:SarahJaneFan|SarahJaneFan]] [[User talk:SarahJaneFan|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 13:55, 7 January 2021 (UTC)
::You may very well have a point about the "''satanically handsome'' was a Delgado cliché" thing turning out to be an urban legend. However, I do think the most reasonable interpretation of that scene ''is'' that the War Chief has succeeded in regenerating, at the very last second. I mean, the novel ''also'' makes a point of the fact that he's stuck as a two-faced monster due to his failed regeneration; it wouldn't especially make any ''more'' sense for him to somehow revert to Brayshaw out of nowhere!
 
::Whether the "tall, dark and satanically handsome" incarnation glimpsed by Ace is {{Delgado|n= the Delgado Master}} is perhaps another question, and if no evidence can be found I support edits to the current claims. However, I do think the most sensical interpretation of the scene is that it's doing the "surprise! the villain somehow survived and ''may'' be back… although who knows?" thing, and this implying that yup, the War Chief did manage to regenerate. Whether the person he became is Delgado, an earlier Master, or even (why not?) the post-Brayshaw non-Master War Chief from the FASA game, the fact remains that Occam's razor points to a regeneration. [[User:Scrooge MacDuck|Scrooge MacDuck]] [[User talk:Scrooge MacDuck|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 14:11, 7 January 2021 (UTC)
 
::: I wouldn’t necessarily agree that Occam’s razor suggests that a regeneration took place. I would perhaps argue that it appeared to be an example of the common horror trope where the villain’s true or original appearance is revealed in their final moments, especially as the book as a whole seems to draw from old horror films. But nevertheless I would certainly agree that the scene should be treated as a ambiguously on the wiki as it is on the page. And it is currently is, so I have no issues there.
 
::: As I say, the Delgado connection is my main issue here. It doesn’t seem to be true, and if not then it means there isn’t a connection drawn between the Master and the War Chief in *this particular* novel, but also nothing in it to suggest they’re separate characters. Well apart from the implication that he may have died at the end but for the Master that’s just Wednesday so it doesn’t make a difference.
 
::: In summary, while I do believe the “satanically handsome” man is Brayshaw and the intention was that he died at the end of the novel, it’s left completely ambiguous and any argument of what happened next or whether the War Chief is the Master isn’t to be found in this book. At least not unless anyone comes forward with evidence connecting Delgado to the “satanically handsome” phrase. So it would just mean that this novel doesn’t have any evidence supporting them being the same character but there’s also not necessarily anything refuting the idea. [[User:SarahJaneFan|SarahJaneFan]] [[User talk:SarahJaneFan|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 15:04, 7 January 2021 (UTC)
:::: Hmmm. Well, I suppose it's a matter of lit-crit vs. in-universe logic. We {{Dhawan|n= have seen}} Time Lords regenerating after all even though they had seemingly been killed in a manner preventing regeneration; whereas the possibility of a Time Lord who'd been warped into a monster by a failed regeneration "reverting to their previous form in their last moments" doesn't really seem to have any backing. At best I could see this following the FASA notion of how the Master sometimes regenerated into the same face several times over, and applying it to the War Chief — so that Kriegslieter does indeed regenerate somehow in that final scene, ''but'' into a second Brayshaw incarnation.
 
:::: I also would say it's an overstatement to say the Delgado connection "doesn’t seem to be true". It certainly ''could'' be true, we merely have insufficient evidence to say ''whether'' it's true. [[User:Scrooge MacDuck|Scrooge MacDuck]] [[User talk:Scrooge MacDuck|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 15:16, 7 January 2021 (UTC)
 
Actually if anything it’s an understatement. I’ve been through all of the novelisations, Terrance Dicks never describes Delgado in a way that would connect to the phrase used to describe the War Chief at the end of Timewyrm Exodus. I’m like 99% sure of that. I was merely allowing the opportunity for someone to prove me wrong. [[User:SarahJaneFan|SarahJaneFan]] [[User talk:SarahJaneFan|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 15:46, 7 January 2021 (UTC)
:: Oh, I'm not disputing that you're right about the "tall, dark and satanically handsome" connection ''in itself'' being an urban myth. In fact I've been going through my own archive and I came to the same conclusion. I am merely saying that just because the phrase isn't the dead-giveaway some people thoughtlessly claimed it was, doesn't mean the man Ace sees ''can't'' be a younger version of Delgado. It's ''possible'', in the same way that [[The Doctor (The Cabinet of Light)|this Doctor]] may well be [[Ninth Doctor 4 (The Tomorrow Windows)|that Doctor]] in-universe despite the similarities in the prose descriptions being coincidental.
 
:: And indeed, the "Satanic Handsome = Roger" idea has been repeated so widely that it's often used as a basis in fanmade timelines of the Master when attempting to work in Delgado. Wrong as it may initially have been, I wouldn't be at all surprised if, should a new licensed story someday address the War Chief=Master connection, it fed into the notion of Delgado coming immediately after Kriegslieter.
 
:: That's only an epistemological side-point, though, and not hugely relevant to our editing in the main namespace. [[User:Scrooge MacDuck|Scrooge MacDuck]] [[User talk:Scrooge MacDuck|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 15:59, 7 January 2021 (UTC)
 
== "Auton Invasion" ==
 
Where in the novelisation "Doctor Who and the Auton Invasion" does it make reference to the War Chief being an earlier incarnation of the Master? What chapter/page?

Latest revision as of 20:42, 28 April 2024

Archive.png
Archives: #1

War Games novelisation[[edit source]]

I'm not seeing any reference by the War Chief to him and the Doctor being the only ones to have stolen TARDISes. The only comment on the subject I can see is a section near the beginning of Chapter 10 where the Doctor exclaims "It's my TARDIS that you want. But surely you have one of your own?", to which the War Chief replies "No more mine than yours is really yours! We are both thieves, Doctor. Yes, I do have a TARDIS hidden away." Skteosk 08:04, 25 June 2022 (UTC)

The reference to there only being two time lords that have stolen a TARDIS is in a different novel. Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon, I think. LauraBatham 09:21, 25 June 2022 (UTC)
I acknowledge that one's there. I removed a reference to a similar comment in Doctor Who and the War Games last night, only for someone to restore it. I removed it again this morning. Skteosk 10:16, 25 June 2022 (UTC)
War Games also references this fact. The quotes (both, remember, by the same man in the same book range) are these, with the relevant passages bolded — User:Skteosk, you cut your quote above off too early! Though it's quite an understandable oversight.

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

"Now I understand," said the Doctor. "It's my TARDIS that you want. But surely you have one of your own?"
The War Chief smiled. "No more mine than yours is really yours. We are both thieves, Doctor. Yes, I do have a TARDIS hidden away. But are not two better than one? While I rest and enjoy the spoils of victory, you can patrol our empire. And I shall do the same for you."
"Our empire?"
"We shall rule the galaxy without fear of oppoisition," the War Chief said confidently. "For we shall be the only two who can travel through both space and time."'Doctor Who and the War Games

Note that the latter extract actually alters what the TV story said on this point: the TV script seems to suggest that the War Chief doesn't have a TARDIS of his own. It has room to assume that he had one when he ran away but later lost access to it, but it certainly doesn't highlight it. So this passage was a very deliberate addition Hulke made to the story when retelling it for the Target format.

DOCTOR: Now I understand. It's my Tardis that you're after, isn't it?
WAR CHIEF: Exactly! When we are in control, the machines I have brought with me will have expired. If we hold the only space time travel machine, we can rule our galaxy without fear of opposition.'The War Games

In any case, setting aside the tone issue in your previous message, I do want to thank you for your recent diligent work here, @Skteosk. This and previous talk page discussions have established that the idea that the War Chief became the Master does exist in valid sources, in the same way that such as ideas as the Doctor being a 49th century human does; but it's easy to get tunnel vision when one is defending a view that goes against the grain. The older, non-chronological version of the overview of the evidence for against really wasn't balanced enough, and while your edits in turn went too far in the other direction, I think the synthesis I tried to produce in my further edits last night is clearly superior to what was there before. [[User:Scrooge

MacDuck|Scrooge MacDuck]] 10:23, 25 June 2022 (UTC)

Okay, I kind of get what you're going for here, but I still think it's a lot more ambiguous than "the Doctor and the War Chief are the only ones to have stolen TARDIses". Okay, the War Chief says "we shall be the only two who can travel through both space and time". But that means...what exactly? They're obviously not the only two Time Lords in existence, because the climax of the story involves a visit to a planet which is full of other Time Lords who can also travel through space and time. You could interpret it as meaning they're the only Time Lords to have left Gallifrey, but you could equally interpret it as simply meaning that they'll have an advantage over the War Lords which means they can easily take over from them. I think it leaves plenty of room for other Renegade Time Lords to exist in other galaxies or whatever. (Incidentally, I had another problem with half your signature not being present when I started editing. I've tried to put it back as I found it, apologies if I didn't succeed.) I see you've now edited it to reflect that, so fair enough. Skteosk 11:26, 25 June 2022 (UTC)

Terror of the Autons[[edit source]]

There's a huge glaring problem with saying the War Chief/Master situation is solved, especially when using Doctor Who and the Terror of the Autons as supporting evidence. The War Chief did not escape from justice in The War Games. The War Lord *had him killed* (even if later stories retcon this or revive him, this doesn't change the shooting and order beforehand). The quote "Already he had been behind several Interplanetary Wars, always disappearing from the scene before he could be brought to justice. If ever he were caught, his fate would I be far worse than the Doctor’s exile." has NOTHING to do with that plot point.

And the source Doctor Who and the Terror of the Autons (not talking about either version of The War Games) absolutely nowhere "established that the Doctor and the Master were the only two renegades ever to have run away from Gallifrey". At all. It is adding misinformation to readd that. It's false. It's made up. There's no establishment irrespective of the War Chief link.

If we want to split hairs about well, Time Lord monickers only came about later and that's why the War Chief has a different name. Then it would probably be worth pointing out the Master escaping a clear death scene wouldn't really be a thing until probably Ainley's time. Maybe there's isolated points in the 70s, but as a defining moment? Tybort 18:23, 28 April 2024 (UTC)

And it's really weird that Talk:The Master/Archive_7#Adding a section for the War Chief in the biography's conclusion appears to stem from this error. Why can I not identify the statement "the Doctor and the Master were the only two Time Lords ever to steal a TARDIS while summarising the events of The War Games in the same breath" anywhere in Terror of the Autons (originally attributed to Doomsday Weapon)? Not even in the interplanetary war part on pages 25 and 26. Tybort 18:37, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
The "only two" thing was a misattribution of a plot point from Doomsday Weapon to Terror of the Autons, yes. Thank you for correcting remaining instances of it in the main namespace.
I do not, on the other hand, follow what your issue with the "the War Chief was killed" thing is. You needn't invoke the stuff about Ainley's miraculous escapes — the addition to Time Lord lore which occurred after War Games is simple enough: the idea that Time Lords regenerate when they are killed. (As documented at First Doctor's renewal and Second Doctor's change of appearance, what had happened in the Hartnell-Troughton and Troughton-Pertwee transitions was a little more ambiguous; it took until the Pertwee era for the idea that regeneration might follow violent injury to take root.) The idea, then, in the War Chief=Master accounts, is quite plainly that the Brayshaw War Chief regenerated after the War Lord had him shot, and then made his escape, having now adopted a new face — presumably Delgado's, but there could be interim incarnations. This is in fact what both Timewyrm: Exodus and The Legions of Death say happened, all Master lore aside; it is what you would expect to happen to the War Chief after the camera cuts away from him, in view of the Pertwee-onwards lore about how regeneration works. The War Chief survived with a new face; of course he did. That's what his kind do.
Whether the Terror of the Autons novelisation in particular was intended to support the Master=War Chief claim is something I've grown more unsure about the more I've investigated the topic; in that it does seem like Hulke was the big proponent of the idea, not Dicks. (This is also Dave Rudden's understanding; he refers to War-Chief=Master belief as being "of the House of Hulke".) But it's certainly a valid reading of the text. The key quote is not the "interplanetary wars" business, but the Doctor going "he was luckier than I" when he hears that the Master escaped the Time Lords with his TARDIS still operational. Could be that he's drawing a parallel between his own capture, and a near-capture of the Master in entirely different circumstances, but it's not exactly incongruous with the text to link it to Hulke's accounts, and take it that he's referring to their shared presence at the War Games, from which the Master (newly-regenerated) slipped away, while the Doctor didn't.
(Terrance Dicks does make the claim that the Master was the only other Renegade the Doctor had ever fought by the time of Three Doctors, in, well, the Three Doctors novelisation; and of course, a literal reading of that claim would conflate the Master with the Monk and the War Chief. I think this is where the mistaken claim that "only two ever to run away" came from Dicks originated.) --Scrooge MacDuck 20:39, 28 April 2024 (UTC)