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{{Infobox Video Game
{{title dab away}}
|video game name= Destiny of the Doctors
{{real world}}
|image= [[Image:Destiny_of_the_Doctors.jpg|250px]]
{{ImageLinkVideoGame}}
|doctor = <ul><li>[[First Doctor]] (cameo)</li><li>[[Second Doctor]] (cameo)</li><li>[[Third Doctor]]</li><li>[[Fourth Doctor]]</li><li>[[Fifth Doctor]]</li><li>[[Sixth Doctor]]</li><li>[[Seventh Doctor]]</ul>
{{Infobox Story SMW
|companions = [[The Brigadier]]
|image        = Graak.jpg
|enemy= [[Auton|Autons]]<br>[[Dalek|Daleks]]<br>[[Cyberman|Cybermen]]<br>[[Ice Warrior|Ice Warriors]]<br>[[The Master]]<br>[[Quark|Quarks]]<br>[[Sea Devil|Sea Devils]]<br>[[Silurian|Silurians]]<br>[[Sontaran|Sontarans]]<br>[[Zygon|Zygons]] |
|main character      = [[The Graak]]
|setting = [[Siralos]]
|featuring    = First Doctor
|developer= [[BBC Multimedia]] and [[Studio Fish]]
|featuring2  = Second Doctor
|publisher= [[BBC Multimedia]]
|featuring3  = Third Doctor
|platform= [[Wikipedia:Personal computer|PC]]
|featuring4  = Fourth Doctor
|genre= Real time VR strategy / puzzle
|featuring5  = Fifth Doctor
|release date= [[1997]]
|featuring6  = Sixth Doctor
}}
|featuring7  = Seventh Doctor
'''''Doctor Who: Destiny of the Doctors''''' was a computer game based on [[Doctor Who]] released in [[1997]] in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia and some European countries. It featured specially recorded audio by [[Tom Baker]], [[Peter Davison]], [[Colin Baker]], [[Sylvester McCoy]], and [[Nicholas Courtney]] and specially recorded video with [[Anthony Ainley]] reprising his role as [[the Master]].
|companions   =  
|enemy       = The [[Tremas Master]]
|setting      = [[Siralos]]
|writer      = Hannah Redler, Gary Russell, Terrance Dicks, Andy Russell
|director    = Nick Holden
|producer    = [[Dave Anderson]]
|designer    = Jason White
|developer   = [[Studio Fish]]
|publisher   = BBC Multimedia
|platform     = [[PC]]
|genre       = {{il|Action}}
|release date = 5 December 1997
}}{{you may|Destiny of the Doctor|n1=the Destiny of the Doctor audio series|Destiny of the Doctors (home video)|n2 = the episodic adaptation of this video game}}
'''''Doctor Who: Destiny of the Doctors''''' was a [[1997 (releases)|1997]] action video game developed by [[Studio Fish]] and published by [[BBC Multimedia]]. It featured specially recorded audio by [[Tom Baker]], [[Peter Davison]], [[Colin Baker]], [[Sylvester McCoy]], and [[Nicholas Courtney]]. It also featured specifically recorded cut scenes with [[Anthony Ainley]] reprising his role as {{Ainley}}, in what would be his final performance in the role before his passing in 2004.


==Publisher's Summary==
According to writer [[Gary Russell]], it was his intention that the game was a direct prequel to [[1996 (releases)|1996]]'s ''[[Doctor Who (TV story)|Doctor Who]]'' TV movie. The game ends with the [[Tremas Master]] being locked up by "monsters", implicitly one of the species featured in the game, with the Master telling the Doctor: "you know what these monsters will do to me." The intention, to Russell, was that these monsters were the [[Dalek]]s, and that this story would lead directly into the Master being [[The Master's trial (Doctor Who)|executed]] on [[Skaro]].[https://groups.google.com/g/rec.arts.drwho/c/SKPqdYfXk3s/m/vBNXDqW4cWgJ] This explains the absence of the [[Eighth Doctor]], and makes this story one of ''several'' intended to lead directly to the 1996 film.
'''The Master holds the seven incarnations of the Doctor as prisoners in a vast combat arena.'''


'''He must be challenged'''
== Publisher's summary ==
The Master holds the seven incarnations of the Doctor as prisoners in a vast combat arena.


You are the challenger - the [[Graak]] - an electo-telepathic entity created by the Doctor. Succeed, and the tables are turned on the Master. Fail and the Doctors, and Graak, are removed from space and time forever.
He must be challenged.


You are the challenger — [[the Graak]] — an electo-telepathic entity created by the Doctor. Succeed, and the tables are turned on the Master. Fail and the Doctors, and Graak, are removed from space and time forever.


Features:
* real-time VR environment
* [[Dalek]]s, [[Cyberman|Cybermen]], [[Sea Devil]]s, [[Zygon]]s and more...
* City of Thoughts database - 600 entries with text, stills, audio and video
* original video of all seven past BBC Doctors
* specially shot video and new newly recorded audio
* 28 mind-bending quests
* seven action-packed challenges
* up to 20 hours of play
The more you play, the harder it gets!
''There are some corners of the universe that have bred the most terrible things. Things that act against everything that we believe in.''
''They must be fought — and defeated!''
== Plot ==
=== Intro ===
{{Ainley|c}} is on the planet [[Siralos]], a planet of pure psychic energy. Through the use of the planet's energy he has created [[the Determinant]], a realm under his own control, and initiates plans to bend the Universe to his will. To begin, he summons and imprisons the seven complete incarnations of [[the Doctor]]. He recalls each Doctor in reverse order, giving a mocking account of each incarnation. The Doctors create [[the Graak]], a champion to battle the Master on their behalf. Amused, the Master accepts the Doctors' challenge, declaring the destiny of the Doctors to be in the Graak's hands.
The Graak awakens in the [[TARDIS console room|console room]] of the [[Fourth Doctor]]'s [[The Doctor's TARDIS|TARDIS]]. Via [[telepathic contact]] from the [[Fourth Doctor]], the Graak learns of his purpose and begins his task.
=== Freeing the Doctors ===
The Doctors' levels can be initiated, visited, and completed in different orders, depending upon the actions of the player. Each timeline begins in the [[TARDIS console room|console room]] of [[the Doctor's TARDIS|the Doctor in question's TARDIS]], where the player has chosen to send the Graak via use of the TARDIS console. After the first six times the Graak frees one of the trapped Doctors, he is transported back to the console room to proceed to another level and continue his task. After the final Doctor is freed and the last level is completed, the game ends.
==== First Doctor ====
Leaving the console room of the [[First Doctor]]'s TARDIS, the Graak finds the corridors patrolled by [[Cyberman|Cybermen]].
The Graak arrives at the Great Divide, where the Master gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.
''To be added''


[[Image:Destiny of the Doctors Sontaran.jpg|right|thumb|200px|A Sontaran appears]]
[[File:Destiny_of_the_Doctors_screenshot.jpg|thumb|left|A Dalek, and Graak's energy level counter.]]
Features:
Inside the Determinant, the Master is stacking [[playing card]]s. He shows the Graak a small box, which he implies was taken from the [[Celestial Toymaker]], and orders the Graak inside.
*real-time VR environment
 
*[[Dalek]]s, [[Cybermen]], [[Sea Devil]]s, [[Zygon]]s and more...
Inside the box, the Graak is attacked by [[Quark]]s. Eventually the Graak finds and frees the First Doctor.
*'''City of Thoughts''' database - 600 entries with text, stills, audio and video
 
*original video of '''all seven past BBC Doctors'''
The Graak is transported back to the Master, who claims to still be toying with the Graak. [[Telekinesis|Telekinetically]] knocking over his house of cards, the Master threatens the Graak and sends him away.
*'''specially shot video''' and '''new newly recorded audio'''
 
*'''28''' mind-bending quests
==== Second Doctor ====
*'''seven''' action-packed challenges
The Graak is in the [[Second Doctor]]'s TARDIS. [[Robot Yeti|Yeti]] patrol the corridors.
*up to '''20 hours''' of play
 
The Graak arrives at the Great Divide, where the Master gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.
 
''To be added''
 
The Master is sitting behind an Underground ticket booth and makes a ticket for the Graak that reads "NO RETURN." The Graak is transported aboard a twisted version of the London Underground, during which he has to avoid more Yeti, roadblocks, and the Master's train ahead of him. At the end of the Track, the Second Doctor is Freed.
 
Aboard the Master's train, which is emblazoned with a red "M" emblem and the slogan "we'll never get you there," the Master angrily orders the Graak to go away and threatens to change the rules.
 
==== Third Doctor ====
[[File:Destiny of the Third Doctor.jpg|thumb|The Master recalls the Earthbound Doctor]]
The Graak is in the [[Third Doctor]]'s TARDIS. The Doctor has informed the Graak that the Third Doctor's TARDIS workshop contains his old radio. With this, the Graak can contact [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart]].
 
After retrieving the radio, the Graak is contacted by the Brigadier. The Brigadier tells the Graak that he can use the radio to contact [[UNIT]], and that the Doctor has somehow linked the TARDIS's security cameras to the UNIT surveillance system; in this way, the Brigadier can follow the Graak's progress.
 
The Graak manoeuvres through the TARDIS, with Autons patrolling the corridors. He eventually finds his way to the Great Divide, where the Master gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.
 
''To be added''
 
The next the Graak sees is the Master behind the controls of a spacecraft. He orders for the countdown to begin, and a [[Dalek]] begins counting down from five, ending in "Blast off!"
 
The Graak follows the Master in another craft and manages to shoot it down. After he disables the Master's craft, the Third Doctor is shown to be freed from the Master's trap.
 
The Master is seen in his cockpit, where alarms are ringing. A Dalek voice can be heard saying "Evacuate, evacuate..." The Master calmly looks at the Graak, says "Bad move, Graak, bad move," and sends him away.
 
==== Fourth Doctor ====
[[File:Destiny_of_raston_warrior_robot.jpg|thumb|left|The Graak is attacked by a [[Raston Warrior Robot]] in the Doctor's brain.]]
The Graak finds himself in the fourth Doctor's TARDIS, where he can hear the Fourth Doctor telepathically calling for help. Leaving the console room, the Graak finds the corridors patrolled by [[Cyberman (Mondas)|Cybermen]].
 
The Graak returns to the Great Divide, where the Master gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.
 
''To be added''
 
Inside the Determinant, the Master attempts to hypnotise the Graak into giving up on saving the Doctor. The Graak is teleported inside the Fourth Doctor's brain. The Fourth Doctor attempts to telepathically guide the Grakk toward him.
 
[[File:Destiny_of_the_terserous_master.jpg|thumb|[[The Master#A body in decay|The decaying Master]] appears on a wall.]]
On his way through the Doctor's brain the Graak encounters images of the Master's various incarnations, images of the Doctor himself, and a [[Raston Warrior Robot]]. Eventually, The Graak finds and frees the Fourth Doctor.
 
==== Fifth Doctor ====
The Graak is aboard the [[Fifth Doctor]]'s TARDIS. [[Silurian]]s patrol the corridors. The Graak returns to the Great Divide, where the Master gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.
 
''To be added''
 
The Master is dressed as a king at a medieval court. "Let the proceedings commence," he declares, opening a curtain and sending the Graak through.
 
The Graak finds himself in a joust against a Sontaran. Via his telepathic contact the Fifth Doctor tells Graak of Sontarans, their history, and their one weakness. The Graak defeats the Sontaran, and the Fifth Doctor is freed.
 
==== Sixth Doctor ====
The Graak finds himself in the [[Sixth Doctor]]'s TARDIS. [[Ice Warrior]]s patrol the corridors, and the Graak has to avoid them in order to return to the Great Divide.
 
Once inside the Great Divide, the Master gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.
 
''To be added''
 
[[File:Cyber_Tomb.jpg|thumb|The Cyber Tomb, with a Cyberman patrolling to the right.]]
The Master is standing in a room, and is looking out the window where beautiful springtime images appear. The Master states that it's not for him, and decides to turn back the clock so that everything freezes. The Graak then has to manoevre through a maze of ice, and collect a series of yellow stars. At the end, he finds and frees the Sixth Doctor.
 
The Graak returns to the Master's room, which is now in a state of disarray with snow all over the place and lightning in the background. The Master tells the Graak that he has incurred his wrath, and will receive no mercy, and sends him away.
 
==== Seventh Doctor ====
The Graak finds himself in the [[Seventh Doctor]]'s TARDIS. Daleks patrol the corridors.
 
Graak returns to the Great Divide, where the Master is waiting. He gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.
 
''To be added''
 
[[File:Destiny_of_the_sea_devil.jpg|thumb|left|A [[Sea Devil]].]]
The Master drives up to the Graak in a small red car. He laughs and asks the Graak, "Where's your sense of humour? I look no more ridiculous in this then the Doctor does in his beloved [[Bessie]]." He then starts his car and begins driving, taunting the Graak. The Seventh Doctor then asks "Is that Bessie I hear?"
 
The Graak finds himself driving Bessie in a road race against the Master, avoiding the Autons which block the road. The Graak wins the race, and the Seventh Doctor is freed.
 
The Master driving the car is revealed to be an Auton duplicate. The genuine Master approaches the car, berating the "incompetent dummy" for losing the race.
 
=== Ending ===
The Graak finds himself in the Great Divide. The Master appears and taunts him, pointing out that the Doctor is not in the Determinant after all. He explains that, despite all of the Graak's work, the Doctors are still within his possession. The [[Cloister Bell]] sounds, signalling that the TARDIS is in distress. The Master states that as soon as he exits the Determinant, the TARDIS will self destruct
 
(When playing this level, if Graak does not begin with at least 740 points of Energy, then he will die before the entire level plays out. However, this does not change the outcome of the game, it just cuts to the last scene.)
 
The Graak finds himself deep within the TARDIS, where the Sea Devils were earlier, the Cloister Bell continuing to sound. The Graak works his way toward a room with blue diamonds on the floor and, at the top of a ramp, four large square stones. The Graak uses a portion of his life force (the player's energy counter) to activate the light, and the Doctor appears. The Graak continues activating all of the other stones until he has no more remaining life force, sacrificing himself to save the Doctors.
 
In a black void, the Master is staring off worriedly into the distance. He begins to quickly walk away, but a green light appears and he is transported away.
 
The Master finds himself trapped in a jail cell. He pleads for the Doctor and the Graak to summon the energies of Siralos and free him, insisting that the entire battle was just meant as a stimulating intellectual challenge and he always played it by the rules. Fearful of what "those monsters" will do to him now they've got him, the Master continues begging for the Doctor's help as he is taken off into the distance by his unidentified captors.


'''The more you play, the harder it gets!'''
== Characters ==
=== Major characters ===
* [[The Graak]] - [[David Coker]]
* [[Seventh Doctor]] - [[Sylvester McCoy]]
* [[Sixth Doctor]] - [[Colin Baker]]
* [[Fifth Doctor]] - [[Peter Davison]]
* [[Fourth Doctor]] - [[Tom Baker]]
* [[Third Doctor]] - represented solely by archive video and audio of [[Jon Pertwee]] from the TV series
* [[Second Doctor]] - represented by archive video and audio of [[Patrick Troughton]] from the TV series, and [[David Coker]] for original dialogue
* [[First Doctor]] - represented by archive video and audio of [[William Hartnell]] from the TV series, and [[David Coker]] for original dialogue
* [[The Master]] - [[Anthony Ainley]]
* [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|The Brigadier]] - [[Nicholas Courtney]]


'''There are some corners of the universe that have bred the most terrible things.'''
=== Monsters ===
All monsters voiced by archive audio from the TV series and/or [[David Coker]].
* [[Auton]]
* [[Cyberman|Cybermen]]
* [[Cybermat]]
* [[Dalek]]s
* [[Ice Warrior]]s
* [[Quark]]s
* [[Raston Warrior Robot]]s
* [[Sea Devil]]s
* [[Silurian]]s
* [[Sontaran]]s
* [[Robot Yeti|Yeti]]
* [[Zygon]]s


'''They must be fought — and defeated!'''
== Crew ==
* [[Writer]] - Hannah Redler
* City of Thoughts and Monster Databases written by [[Gary Russell]]
* Doctors Voice Script - Gary Russell
* Brigadier and Master Voice Scripts - [[Terrance Dicks]]
* Master's Video Script - [[Andy Russell]], Terrance Dicks, Gary Russell
* Creative director - Nick Holden
* [[Executive producer]] - [[Dave Anderson]]
* [[Developer]] - [[Studio Fish]]
* [[Publisher]] - [[BBC Multimedia]]


==Details==
== Details ==
The game was released in a standard computer game box with a single PC CD-ROM disc inside a standard CD case, in set in the centre of the box. The CD case contained a 16 page colour instruction booklet.
The game was released in a standard computer game box with a single PC CD-ROM disc inside a standard CD case, in set in the centre of the box. The CD case contained a 16 page colour instruction booklet.


== Game features ==
* The City of Thoughts database and the TARDIS database are two of the more notable features of the game, allowing the player to access 600 entries from the BBC archives, including detailed information on many TV stories, monsters and other characters. This includes many video clips of which this was the first release.
== Worldbuilding ==
* The [[Auton]]s can have their control signals scrambled by the Doctor's radio.
* The Master has Graak steal a [[Cybermat]], an ancient [[Silurian]] artefact and the [[Zygon]]s' mushroom.
* The [[Cloister Bell]] is heard many times in the TARDIS.


== Notes ==
* The [[1997 (releases)|1997]] release date of this game followed the release of the 1996 TV movie ''[[Doctor Who (TV story)|Doctor Who]]'' starring [[Paul McGann]], set in [[1999]].
* The Master makes reference to the seven "complete" incarnations of the Doctor as opposed to the "seven past incarnations" or just "the seven incarnations". This makes it ambiguous as to when this takes place. Given that the Master is portrayed by Anthony Ainley, this would imply that the Seventh Doctor is nearing the end of his incarnation, as stated in [[TV]]: ''[[Doctor Who (TV story)|Doctor Who]]''. Although the game packaging uses the logo for the 1996 TV movie, the [[Eighth Doctor]] is neither seen nor mentioned anywhere in the game. While the [[City of Thoughts]] database entry on the Seventh Doctor falls short of mentioning his regeneration, it does state that his "spirit of curiosity and adventure will carry him into his next incarnation". Although this game was released a year after the TV movie, development began before the TV movie aired and anything was known about a new incarnation of the Doctor.
* [[Gary Russell]], credited in the game not only as a writer for the aforementioned City of Thoughts but also for "subject matter expertise", had close links to the TV Movie’s production from having written [[The Novel of the Film (novelisation)|its novelisation]] in February 1996. (''[[Doctor Who: Regeneration]]'') Russell later confirmed that he "deliberately had the Master taken away by the Daleks at the end of DotD to lead into the TVM (thus also explaining why there was no McGann)."<ref>https://groups.google.com/g/rec.arts.drwho/c/SKPqdYfXk3s/m/vBNXDqW4cWgJ</ref>
* Russell noted that this controversially does not take into-account the [[The Master (First Frontier)|''First Frontier'' Master]]. Russell also wrote [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Novel of the Film (novelisation)|The Novel of the Film]]'', which name dropped the [[Tzun]] from ''First Frontier'', and [[AUDIO]]: ''[[Dust Breeding (audio story)|Dust Breeding]]'', where the Tremas Master was reverted from his [[Traken]] body to his [[Decayed Master|Decayed Thirteenth incarnation]]. All three stories contradict each other.
* [[Ian Levine]] began an unlicensed fan project to expand ''Destiny of the Doctors'' into an actual episode of ''Doctor Who'' featuring [[Sylvester McCoy]] as the Seventh Doctor, with himself appearing as a [[Time Lord]].


[[Image:Destiny_of_the_Doctors_screenshot.jpg|200px|thumb|Dalek and 'health counter' from '''Destiny of the Doctors''']]
== Continuity ==
* The Master sends Graak out for many of the Doctor's items, including a [[Key of Rassilon|Key to the Matrix]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Ultimate Foe (TV story)|The Ultimate Foe]]'') his [[Stattenheim remote control]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') his [[Metebelis crystal]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Green Death (TV story)|The Green Death]]'', ''[[Planet of the Spiders (TV story)|Planet of the Spiders]]'') and [[Excalibur]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Battlefield (TV story)|Battlefield]]'')
* The [[Dalek]]s are vulnerable to [[Dalekanium bomb|Dalekanium grenades]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Day of the Daleks (TV story)|Day of the Daleks]]'')


==Game Features==
== Modern availability ==
*The City of Thoughts database and the TARDIS database are two of the more notable features of the game, allowing the player to access 600 entries from the BBC archives, included is detailed information on much of the TV stories, monsters and other characters, many containing video clips some which hadn't been released at that point.
[[File:Destiny of the Doctors.jpg|thumb|''Destiny of the Doctors'' cover]]
*Anthony Ainley recorded video footage as The Master specially for this game. It was the last time he reprised the role of [[the Master]]. Many of these videos were included as a special feature on the DVD release of ''[[Survival]]'', Ainley's last television story appearance as the Master; an outtake from these sessions was also added to the end of part 4 of the 2007 DVD release of ''[[The Keeper of Traken]]'', as a tribute to Ainley.
''Destiny of the Doctors'' is currently out-of-print. The game was made for computers running {{w|Windows 95}}; due to changes in Windows operating systems over the years, the video segments of ''Destiny of the Doctors'' are not likely to function under modern Windows systems (though some degree of success might be found by modern Windows users.) There has been no indication of any plans to release the game in an updated edition, or port it to non-Windows-95 systems. Both developers involved in the game's production, [[BBC Multimedia]] and [[Studio Fish]], have since shut down, decreasing the likelihood of any rereleases.
*Most of the action takes place in the Doctor's TARDIS.


==Characters==
The video footage of Anthony Ainley as the Master recorded for this game was preserved, and most of it was released as a bonus feature on the DVD release of ''[[Survival (TV story)|Survival]]''. An outtake from the recording sessions was appended to the DVD release of ''[[The Keeper of Traken (TV story)|The Keeper of Traken]]'' in tribute to Ainley; technically an {{w|Easter egg (media)|Easter egg}}, it is not listed in the menus but is instead viewed by allowing part four to play past the closing credits.


*[[Graak]] - the player character
== External links ==
*[[Seventh Doctor]] - [[Sylvester McCoy]]
* {{imdb|title|0185274}}
*[[Sixth Doctor]] - [[Colin Baker]]
*[[Fifth Doctor]] - [[Peter Davison]]
*[[Fourth Doctor]] - [[Tom Baker]]
*[[Third Doctor]] - represented solely by audioclips from series
*[[Second Doctor]] - represented by audioclips from series and an unknown voice actor for original dialogue
* [[First Doctor]] - represented by audioclips from series and an unknown voice actor for original dialogue
*[[The Master]] - [[Anthony Ainley]]
*[[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|The Brigadier]] - [[Nicholas Courtney]]
*[[Auton]]
*[[Cybermen]]
*[[Dalek]]s
*[[Ice Warrior]]s
*[[Quark]]s
*[[Raston Warrior Robot]]s
*[[Sea Devil]]s
*[[Silurian]]s
*[[Sontaran]]s
*[[Yeti]]
*[[Zygon]]s


== Continuity ==
{{DWVG}}
*Where this game fits into continuity is uncertain. The [[1996]] release date of this game coincides with the release of ''[[Doctor Who (1996)|Doctor Who]]'' starring [[Paul McGann]]. This is noted by the use of the TV movie logo on the packaging and the Master's reference to the "seven complete incarnations of the Doctor" suggesting that at the time of this story, the Seventh Doctor had already regenerated. However, no reference is made to the [[Eighth Doctor]] and the appearance of Anthony Ainley as the Master clearly puts this story prior to the TV movie. Also notable is that the City of Thoughts entry for the Seventh Doctor ends without mentioning his regeneration. Therefore, a possible interpretation of the Master's statement about the "complete incarnations" may be that this story takes place near the end of the Seventh Doctor's life at some point before the TV movie. This last theory is borne out by the fact that on the rear cover, the Seventh Doctor appears in his outfit from the TV movie.
{{Tremas Master stories}}
*It has also been suggested that this game directly links into the TV movie, ending with The Master held captive by an unknown enemy (though heavily implied to be the Daleks) and punished with the opening of the TV Movie. The incarnation of The Master seen to be exterminated resembles the Ainley incarnation (though played by [[Gordon Tipple]]).
{{Dalek game stories}}
*The [[First Doctor|First]] and [[Second Doctor]]s seem to recognise the Master in his current incarnation so this would suggest they were taken out of time sometime after ''[[The Five Doctors]]''.
{{Cyberman stories}}
{{Quark stories}}
{{Sontaran stories}}
{{Zygon stories}}
{{Homo Reptilian stories}}
{{Ice Warrior stories}}
{{Auton stories}}
{{TitleSort}}
[[ru:Судьба Докторов]]


== Availability ==
[[Category:1997 video games]]
Due to changes in operating systems over the years, the video segments of ''Destiny of the Doctors'' are not likely to function under current Windows systems such as XP or Vista, and to date there has been no indication of it being released in an updated edition (or ported to other systems like Macintosh). The footage of Anthony Ainley as the Master, however, was preserved and it was released as a bonus feature on the DVD release of ''[[Survival]]''. An outtake from the recording sessions was appended to the DVD release of ''[[The Keeper of Traken]]'' in tribute to Ainley; technically an [[Easter egg]], it is not listed in the menus but is instead viewed by allowing episode 4 to play past the closing credits.
[[Category:Nestene/Auton video games]]
[[Category:Doctor Who video games]]
[[Category:Dalek video games]]
[[Category:The Master stories]]
[[Category:Ice Warrior video games]]
[[Category:Silurian and Sea Devil video games]]
[[Category:First Doctor video games]]
[[Category:Yeti stories]]
[[Category:Quark stories]]
[[Category:Cyberman video games]]
[[Category:Multi-Doctor video games]]
[[Category:Cybermat video games]]
[[Category:Raston Warrior Robot stories]]
[[Category:Second Doctor video games]]
[[Category:Third Doctor video games]]
[[Category:Fourth Doctor video games]]
[[Category:Fifth Doctor video games]]
[[Category:Sixth Doctor video games]]
[[Category:Seventh Doctor video games]]
[[Category:Stories set entirely in the TARDIS]]
[[Category:Stories with unique variations of the Doctor Who opening titles]]
[[Category:Sontaran video games]]
[[Category:Zygon video games]]
[[Category:Video games with unique variations of the Doctor Who theme]]
[[Category:Davros video games]]
[[Category:Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart video games]]
[[Category:Tremas Master stories]]

Latest revision as of 19:28, 3 November 2024

RealWorld.png

Doctor Who: Destiny of the Doctors was a 1997 action video game developed by Studio Fish and published by BBC Multimedia. It featured specially recorded audio by Tom Baker, Peter Davison, Colin Baker, Sylvester McCoy, and Nicholas Courtney. It also featured specifically recorded cut scenes with Anthony Ainley reprising his role as the Tremas Master, in what would be his final performance in the role before his passing in 2004.

According to writer Gary Russell, it was his intention that the game was a direct prequel to 1996's Doctor Who TV movie. The game ends with the Tremas Master being locked up by "monsters", implicitly one of the species featured in the game, with the Master telling the Doctor: "you know what these monsters will do to me." The intention, to Russell, was that these monsters were the Daleks, and that this story would lead directly into the Master being executed on Skaro.[1] This explains the absence of the Eighth Doctor, and makes this story one of several intended to lead directly to the 1996 film.

Publisher's summary[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Master holds the seven incarnations of the Doctor as prisoners in a vast combat arena.

He must be challenged.

You are the challenger — the Graak — an electo-telepathic entity created by the Doctor. Succeed, and the tables are turned on the Master. Fail and the Doctors, and Graak, are removed from space and time forever.

Features:

  • real-time VR environment
  • Daleks, Cybermen, Sea Devils, Zygons and more...
  • City of Thoughts database - 600 entries with text, stills, audio and video
  • original video of all seven past BBC Doctors
  • specially shot video and new newly recorded audio
  • 28 mind-bending quests
  • seven action-packed challenges
  • up to 20 hours of play

The more you play, the harder it gets!

There are some corners of the universe that have bred the most terrible things. Things that act against everything that we believe in.

They must be fought — and defeated!

Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]

Intro[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Tremas Master is on the planet Siralos, a planet of pure psychic energy. Through the use of the planet's energy he has created the Determinant, a realm under his own control, and initiates plans to bend the Universe to his will. To begin, he summons and imprisons the seven complete incarnations of the Doctor. He recalls each Doctor in reverse order, giving a mocking account of each incarnation. The Doctors create the Graak, a champion to battle the Master on their behalf. Amused, the Master accepts the Doctors' challenge, declaring the destiny of the Doctors to be in the Graak's hands.

The Graak awakens in the console room of the Fourth Doctor's TARDIS. Via telepathic contact from the Fourth Doctor, the Graak learns of his purpose and begins his task.

Freeing the Doctors[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Doctors' levels can be initiated, visited, and completed in different orders, depending upon the actions of the player. Each timeline begins in the console room of the Doctor in question's TARDIS, where the player has chosen to send the Graak via use of the TARDIS console. After the first six times the Graak frees one of the trapped Doctors, he is transported back to the console room to proceed to another level and continue his task. After the final Doctor is freed and the last level is completed, the game ends.

First Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]

Leaving the console room of the First Doctor's TARDIS, the Graak finds the corridors patrolled by Cybermen.

The Graak arrives at the Great Divide, where the Master gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.

To be added

A Dalek, and Graak's energy level counter.

Inside the Determinant, the Master is stacking playing cards. He shows the Graak a small box, which he implies was taken from the Celestial Toymaker, and orders the Graak inside.

Inside the box, the Graak is attacked by Quarks. Eventually the Graak finds and frees the First Doctor.

The Graak is transported back to the Master, who claims to still be toying with the Graak. Telekinetically knocking over his house of cards, the Master threatens the Graak and sends him away.

Second Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Graak is in the Second Doctor's TARDIS. Yeti patrol the corridors.

The Graak arrives at the Great Divide, where the Master gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.

To be added

The Master is sitting behind an Underground ticket booth and makes a ticket for the Graak that reads "NO RETURN." The Graak is transported aboard a twisted version of the London Underground, during which he has to avoid more Yeti, roadblocks, and the Master's train ahead of him. At the end of the Track, the Second Doctor is Freed.

Aboard the Master's train, which is emblazoned with a red "M" emblem and the slogan "we'll never get you there," the Master angrily orders the Graak to go away and threatens to change the rules.

Third Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Master recalls the Earthbound Doctor

The Graak is in the Third Doctor's TARDIS. The Doctor has informed the Graak that the Third Doctor's TARDIS workshop contains his old radio. With this, the Graak can contact Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart.

After retrieving the radio, the Graak is contacted by the Brigadier. The Brigadier tells the Graak that he can use the radio to contact UNIT, and that the Doctor has somehow linked the TARDIS's security cameras to the UNIT surveillance system; in this way, the Brigadier can follow the Graak's progress.

The Graak manoeuvres through the TARDIS, with Autons patrolling the corridors. He eventually finds his way to the Great Divide, where the Master gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.

To be added

The next the Graak sees is the Master behind the controls of a spacecraft. He orders for the countdown to begin, and a Dalek begins counting down from five, ending in "Blast off!"

The Graak follows the Master in another craft and manages to shoot it down. After he disables the Master's craft, the Third Doctor is shown to be freed from the Master's trap.

The Master is seen in his cockpit, where alarms are ringing. A Dalek voice can be heard saying "Evacuate, evacuate..." The Master calmly looks at the Graak, says "Bad move, Graak, bad move," and sends him away.

Fourth Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Graak is attacked by a Raston Warrior Robot in the Doctor's brain.

The Graak finds himself in the fourth Doctor's TARDIS, where he can hear the Fourth Doctor telepathically calling for help. Leaving the console room, the Graak finds the corridors patrolled by Cybermen.

The Graak returns to the Great Divide, where the Master gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.

To be added

Inside the Determinant, the Master attempts to hypnotise the Graak into giving up on saving the Doctor. The Graak is teleported inside the Fourth Doctor's brain. The Fourth Doctor attempts to telepathically guide the Grakk toward him.

The decaying Master appears on a wall.

On his way through the Doctor's brain the Graak encounters images of the Master's various incarnations, images of the Doctor himself, and a Raston Warrior Robot. Eventually, The Graak finds and frees the Fourth Doctor.

Fifth Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Graak is aboard the Fifth Doctor's TARDIS. Silurians patrol the corridors. The Graak returns to the Great Divide, where the Master gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.

To be added

The Master is dressed as a king at a medieval court. "Let the proceedings commence," he declares, opening a curtain and sending the Graak through.

The Graak finds himself in a joust against a Sontaran. Via his telepathic contact the Fifth Doctor tells Graak of Sontarans, their history, and their one weakness. The Graak defeats the Sontaran, and the Fifth Doctor is freed.

Sixth Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Graak finds himself in the Sixth Doctor's TARDIS. Ice Warriors patrol the corridors, and the Graak has to avoid them in order to return to the Great Divide.

Once inside the Great Divide, the Master gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.

To be added

The Cyber Tomb, with a Cyberman patrolling to the right.

The Master is standing in a room, and is looking out the window where beautiful springtime images appear. The Master states that it's not for him, and decides to turn back the clock so that everything freezes. The Graak then has to manoevre through a maze of ice, and collect a series of yellow stars. At the end, he finds and frees the Sixth Doctor.

The Graak returns to the Master's room, which is now in a state of disarray with snow all over the place and lightning in the background. The Master tells the Graak that he has incurred his wrath, and will receive no mercy, and sends him away.

Seventh Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Graak finds himself in the Seventh Doctor's TARDIS. Daleks patrol the corridors.

Graak returns to the Great Divide, where the Master is waiting. He gives him a choice of five Symbols to get into the Determinant.

To be added

The Master drives up to the Graak in a small red car. He laughs and asks the Graak, "Where's your sense of humour? I look no more ridiculous in this then the Doctor does in his beloved Bessie." He then starts his car and begins driving, taunting the Graak. The Seventh Doctor then asks "Is that Bessie I hear?"

The Graak finds himself driving Bessie in a road race against the Master, avoiding the Autons which block the road. The Graak wins the race, and the Seventh Doctor is freed.

The Master driving the car is revealed to be an Auton duplicate. The genuine Master approaches the car, berating the "incompetent dummy" for losing the race.

Ending[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Graak finds himself in the Great Divide. The Master appears and taunts him, pointing out that the Doctor is not in the Determinant after all. He explains that, despite all of the Graak's work, the Doctors are still within his possession. The Cloister Bell sounds, signalling that the TARDIS is in distress. The Master states that as soon as he exits the Determinant, the TARDIS will self destruct

(When playing this level, if Graak does not begin with at least 740 points of Energy, then he will die before the entire level plays out. However, this does not change the outcome of the game, it just cuts to the last scene.)

The Graak finds himself deep within the TARDIS, where the Sea Devils were earlier, the Cloister Bell continuing to sound. The Graak works his way toward a room with blue diamonds on the floor and, at the top of a ramp, four large square stones. The Graak uses a portion of his life force (the player's energy counter) to activate the light, and the Doctor appears. The Graak continues activating all of the other stones until he has no more remaining life force, sacrificing himself to save the Doctors.

In a black void, the Master is staring off worriedly into the distance. He begins to quickly walk away, but a green light appears and he is transported away.

The Master finds himself trapped in a jail cell. He pleads for the Doctor and the Graak to summon the energies of Siralos and free him, insisting that the entire battle was just meant as a stimulating intellectual challenge and he always played it by the rules. Fearful of what "those monsters" will do to him now they've got him, the Master continues begging for the Doctor's help as he is taken off into the distance by his unidentified captors.

Characters[[edit] | [edit source]]

Major characters[[edit] | [edit source]]

Monsters[[edit] | [edit source]]

All monsters voiced by archive audio from the TV series and/or David Coker.

Crew[[edit] | [edit source]]

Details[[edit] | [edit source]]

The game was released in a standard computer game box with a single PC CD-ROM disc inside a standard CD case, in set in the centre of the box. The CD case contained a 16 page colour instruction booklet.

Game features[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The City of Thoughts database and the TARDIS database are two of the more notable features of the game, allowing the player to access 600 entries from the BBC archives, including detailed information on many TV stories, monsters and other characters. This includes many video clips of which this was the first release.

Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The Autons can have their control signals scrambled by the Doctor's radio.
  • The Master has Graak steal a Cybermat, an ancient Silurian artefact and the Zygons' mushroom.
  • The Cloister Bell is heard many times in the TARDIS.

Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The 1997 release date of this game followed the release of the 1996 TV movie Doctor Who starring Paul McGann, set in 1999.
  • The Master makes reference to the seven "complete" incarnations of the Doctor as opposed to the "seven past incarnations" or just "the seven incarnations". This makes it ambiguous as to when this takes place. Given that the Master is portrayed by Anthony Ainley, this would imply that the Seventh Doctor is nearing the end of his incarnation, as stated in TV: Doctor Who. Although the game packaging uses the logo for the 1996 TV movie, the Eighth Doctor is neither seen nor mentioned anywhere in the game. While the City of Thoughts database entry on the Seventh Doctor falls short of mentioning his regeneration, it does state that his "spirit of curiosity and adventure will carry him into his next incarnation". Although this game was released a year after the TV movie, development began before the TV movie aired and anything was known about a new incarnation of the Doctor.
  • Gary Russell, credited in the game not only as a writer for the aforementioned City of Thoughts but also for "subject matter expertise", had close links to the TV Movie’s production from having written its novelisation in February 1996. (Doctor Who: Regeneration) Russell later confirmed that he "deliberately had the Master taken away by the Daleks at the end of DotD to lead into the TVM (thus also explaining why there was no McGann)."[1]
  • Russell noted that this controversially does not take into-account the First Frontier Master. Russell also wrote PROSE: The Novel of the Film, which name dropped the Tzun from First Frontier, and AUDIO: Dust Breeding, where the Tremas Master was reverted from his Traken body to his Decayed Thirteenth incarnation. All three stories contradict each other.
  • Ian Levine began an unlicensed fan project to expand Destiny of the Doctors into an actual episode of Doctor Who featuring Sylvester McCoy as the Seventh Doctor, with himself appearing as a Time Lord.

Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]

Modern availability[[edit] | [edit source]]

Destiny of the Doctors cover

Destiny of the Doctors is currently out-of-print. The game was made for computers running Windows 95; due to changes in Windows operating systems over the years, the video segments of Destiny of the Doctors are not likely to function under modern Windows systems (though some degree of success might be found by modern Windows users.) There has been no indication of any plans to release the game in an updated edition, or port it to non-Windows-95 systems. Both developers involved in the game's production, BBC Multimedia and Studio Fish, have since shut down, decreasing the likelihood of any rereleases.

The video footage of Anthony Ainley as the Master recorded for this game was preserved, and most of it was released as a bonus feature on the DVD release of Survival. An outtake from the recording sessions was appended to the DVD release of The Keeper of Traken in tribute to Ainley; technically an Easter egg, it is not listed in the menus but is instead viewed by allowing part four to play past the closing credits.

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