1966 Dalek invasion of Earth: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 23:11, 2 March 2023

This article needs a big cleanup.

This page either needs to be deleted or heavily reworked, in light of the revelation that the invasion didn't actually happen.

These problems might be so great that the article's factual accuracy has been compromised. Talk about it here or check the revision history or Manual of Style for more information.

The 1966 Dalek invasion of Earth was a fake Dalek invasion of Earth created as a tourist attraction by the Dalek Dome entertainment company, using fake Daleks who believed themselves to be real. It began during the World Cup Final at Wembley Stadium in 1966. As the invasion progressed and spread across the Earth, however, the "Daleks" fought the newly-regenerated Fourteenth Doctor and successfully cornered him, firing on him to exterminate the Doctor. Upon realising he was not dead despite being shot multiple times, however, the Doctor began to suspect the Daleks invading the Earth were not real Dalek units, despite the Supreme Dalek indeed believing itself to be real.

History

"There's a flying saucer over Wembley! There are robots on the pitch! Hover machines - with flamethrowers I think! What are they? What do they want?"A commentator reacts to the Daleks' arrival at Wembley Stadium [src]

The 1966 Dalek invasion of Earth was an attraction created by the Dalek Dome, an entertainment company which used the campaigns and horrors carried out by the Daleks as inspiration. The fake Daleks involved in the "invasion" believed themselves to be real. Time tourists were offered the attraction as an experience. (COMIC: Liberation of the Daleks)

The newly regenerated Fourteenth Doctor (TV: The Power of the Doctor) received a distress signal from the TARDIS and arrived during the 1966 World Cup Final, searching the crowd for a group of four alien time tourists. Their encounter was interrupted by the arrival of a flying saucer above the Stadium, which unleashed a horde of Bronze Daleks, who began their attack by exterminating the players on the field. Across the Earth, Bronze Daleks attacked and exterminated. Egypt was lit aflame, with the Sphinx being destroyed. The Doctor believed the invasion to be real.

The Daleks pursue the Doctor to his TARDIS. (COMIC: Liberation of the Daleks)

With the royal box having been evacuated, the Doctor made his way there to get the Daleks' attention using his sonic screwdriver. The Supreme Dalek ordered his exterminaton so the Daleks abandoned their attack to converge on him instead, to the annoyance of the tourists who decided to travel to other parts of London and San Francisco to witness the Daleks invading and killing. At Wembley, the Daleks pursued the Doctor out of the stadium to his TARDIS, which a saucer seized before he could enter. The Supreme ordered the Daleks not to engage in discourse with the surrounded Doctor, instead telling them to simply exterminate him. However, after all the lasers hit their target, the Doctor still stood alive, much to the surprise of the Daleks and the Doctor alike.

With subsequent shots also hitting their mark but not killing the Doctor, the enraged Supreme ordered the Doctor be taken to its command saucer. Meanwhile, Daleks on hoverbouts carved into Mount Rushmore with their lasers, adding the casing of a Supreme Dalek to the statue of American Presidents. The family of time tourists took a photo before the new monument. On the command saucer, the Doctor scanned himself with the sonic screwdriver rather than submit to Dalek scans, finding that all his readings were normal and therefore he should not be immune to Dalek blasts. Throwing himself onto the Supreme's casing to annoy it, the Doctor offered to uncover what was going on if the Daleks withdrew their invasion forces, which was transmitted to the invasion force as a temporary retreat. Across the Earth and above it, Daleks flocked back to their saucers, with the family, currently in the ruins of Egypt, noting the Daleks were not supposed to leave yet.

As the saucers pulled back from Earth, the Doctor scanned the bronze Daleks before him in the command room, finding that all the drones before him shared the exact same traits. More than mere clones, the Daleks were the same biologically, atomically, and chemically, which the Doctor declared was proof they were not real Daleks. The Supreme, however, decried this as a lie and ordered its fleet to enter Formation Red Icosahedron around the Earth to prove they were real. Surrounding the planet, the Dalek saucers fired and appeared to destroy the planet, horrifying the Doctor. However, just as the Daleks prepared to take the Doctor to Skaro to be studied for his apparent immunity to extermination, two Dalek Dome employees arrived and took the Doctor away via dematerialisation, with the Daleks failing to detect the two employees due to shielding. Nevertheless, the Supreme gloated in victoy at having captured the Doctor's TARDIS. (COMIC: Liberation of the Daleks)

Behind the scenes

Doctor Who Magazine #585
  • The cover of Doctor Who Magazine #585 featured a live-action version of the Dalek invasion on the cover and as a full-size poster inside.