Boneless: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 18: Line 18:
The Doctor had hoped that their experimenting on the humans in [[Bristol]] was strictly due to some misunderstanding; the Boneless originated from another dimension, and therefore were unable to communicate in a language that 3-D organisms could comprehend. However, following some experimentation he was able to establish rudimentary communication with them, consisting only of sonically encoded numbers. Their subsequent naming of the numbers on the jackets of both a previous victim and their next victim convinced the Doctor they were likely able to read, and were thus aware of what they were doing.  
The Doctor had hoped that their experimenting on the humans in [[Bristol]] was strictly due to some misunderstanding; the Boneless originated from another dimension, and therefore were unable to communicate in a language that 3-D organisms could comprehend. However, following some experimentation he was able to establish rudimentary communication with them, consisting only of sonically encoded numbers. Their subsequent naming of the numbers on the jackets of both a previous victim and their next victim convinced the Doctor they were likely able to read, and were thus aware of what they were doing.  


Satisfied that he had given them a fair chance, and that they could indeed understand him, the Doctor used his [[sonic screwdriver]] and an energy field from the TARDIS to forcibly send them back to their home dimension. He did so without regard to their chances of survival on the return trip, and with a warning to any more Boneless who wished to conquer the 3-D universe: the Doctor would stop them. ([[TV]]: ''[[Flatline (TV story)|Flatline]]'')
Satisfied that he had given them a fair chance, and that they could indeed understand him, the Doctor used his [[sonic screwdriver]] and an energy field from the TARDIS to forcibly send them back to their home dimension. He did so without regard to their chances of survival on the return trip, and with a warning to any more Boneless who wished to conquer the 3-D universe: the Doctor would stop them. The Doctor didn't know whether the Boneless entered the 3-D universe to invade, to infiltrate or to "replace" humanity, but he believed that the role they "seem[ed] determined to play" was that of "monsters". ([[TV]]: ''[[Flatline (TV story)|Flatline]]'')
{{TitleSort}}
{{TitleSort}}
[[Category:Other dimension species]]
[[Category:Other dimension species]]
[[Category:Metamorphic species]]
[[Category:Metamorphic species]]

Revision as of 01:41, 30 October 2014

"Boneless" was the name the Twelfth Doctor gave to two-dimensional beings from another plane. They were able to reduce both lifeforms and other three-dimensional objects to two-dimensional. After taking on three-dimensional forms themselves, they were also able to restore objects back from two-dimensional to three-dimensional. They also demonstrated the ability to drain dimensional energy from the Doctor's TARDIS, causing its external shell to be drastically reduced in size and weakened.

History

The Boneless experimented on and dissected three-dimensional lifeforms and objects, and eventually learned how to exist as three-dimensional beings themselves. Their transformation into 3-D beings was not perfected however, resulting in an appearance where they seemed partially 3-D and partially 2-D.

Boneless in human-like form. (TV: Flatline)

The Doctor had hoped that their experimenting on the humans in Bristol was strictly due to some misunderstanding; the Boneless originated from another dimension, and therefore were unable to communicate in a language that 3-D organisms could comprehend. However, following some experimentation he was able to establish rudimentary communication with them, consisting only of sonically encoded numbers. Their subsequent naming of the numbers on the jackets of both a previous victim and their next victim convinced the Doctor they were likely able to read, and were thus aware of what they were doing.

Satisfied that he had given them a fair chance, and that they could indeed understand him, the Doctor used his sonic screwdriver and an energy field from the TARDIS to forcibly send them back to their home dimension. He did so without regard to their chances of survival on the return trip, and with a warning to any more Boneless who wished to conquer the 3-D universe: the Doctor would stop them. The Doctor didn't know whether the Boneless entered the 3-D universe to invade, to infiltrate or to "replace" humanity, but he believed that the role they "seem[ed] determined to play" was that of "monsters". (TV: Flatline)