Celestial Toyroom: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Celestial Toyroom| ]]
[[Category:Celestial Toyroom| ]]
[[Category:Locations outside the universe]]
[[Category:Locations visited by the First Doctor]]
[[Category:Locations visited by the First Doctor]]
[[Category:Locations visited by the Sixth Doctor]]
[[Category:Locations visited by the Sixth Doctor]]

Revision as of 22:23, 25 December 2023

The Celestial Toyroom, (TV: The Celestial Toymaker [+]Loading...["The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)"], etc.) or just the Toyroom, (COMIC: The Greatest Gamble [+]Loading...["The Greatest Gamble (comic story)"], Relative Dimensions [+]Loading...["Relative Dimensions (comic story)"]) was a pocket universe[source needed] and the realm of the hyper-dimensional, immortal being known as the Celestial Toymaker.

Structure

It was filled with toys and traps which the Toymaker used to play against the opponents he brought there, including some toys who would interact with and play against his opponents. Anyone who lost the games became a plaything of the Toymaker forever. (TV: The Celestial Toymaker, COMIC: The Greatest Gamble [+]Loading...["The Greatest Gamble (comic story)"], etc.) The Toymaker had complete control over the Toyroom, including its gravity. (COMIC: The Greatest Gamble [+]Loading...{"page":"42","1":"The Greatest Gamble (comic story)"}) When the Toyroom began to deteriorate given its vast age, the Twelfth Doctor was also able to exert control over the toys in the Toyroom as the Toymaker's powers began to wane. (COMIC: Relative Dimensions [+]Loading...["Relative Dimensions (comic story)"]) Time also had little meaning inside, as the passage of days was indistinguishable from the passage of years. (COMIC: The Greatest Gamble [+]Loading...{"page":"42","1":"The Greatest Gamble (comic story)"})

The Toyroom was a sliver of reality that he could occasionally step out of, but he wouldn't survive for long outside of this dimension. This was a result of the rules set down for him in the childhood of the universe. (AUDIO: The Magic Mousetrap) The Toyroom was seemingly located within the universe, as the barriers that protected the Toyroom seemed to completely surround it. (COMIC: Relative Dimensions [+]Loading...["Relative Dimensions (comic story)"]) However the Fourteenth Doctor explained that the Toyroom existed outside the universe, a 'hollow beneath the under-universe'. (TV: The Giggle)

The Toymaker also resided in a "Toy Shop", which was the one part of his realm actually connected to him, and while the rest of his realm could be destroyed, the Toy Shop would only die when he did. (PROSE: Divided Loyalties)

Outside the Shop was a void; anyone who tried to leave the Shop entered again as if in a loop. The windows could repair themselves. (AUDIO: Solitaire)

If the Toymaker ever lost a game, he would pay the price by losing his Toyroom, which would disappear. He would then have to build another, although he was all right with this as he got bored with the Toyroom after a while. He would, however, destroy the person who caused this. The Toyroom included the Trilogic game and TARDIS hopscotch. (TV: The Celestial Toymaker)

The outside view of the new Celestial Toyroom. (COMIC: Relative Dimensions)

According to one account, the Toymaker wasn't able to create new Toyrooms, requiring the Doctor's help to do so; his new Toyroom was built from the TARDIS's Zero Room, the exterior of which looked like a jumbled TARDIS. (COMIC: Relative Dimensions [+]Loading...["Relative Dimensions (comic story)"])

History

According to the First Doctor, the Celestial Toymaker, a native of the same universe as the Doctor, created the Toyroom himself as "a universe entirely in his own vision". He began drawing people in "like flies" to become a part of his world, with him and his games becoming "notorious across the universe". (PROSE: The Celestial Toymaker) According to other accounts, the Toymaker predated the Doctor's universe (AUDIO: Black and White) and he became imprisoned in the Toyroom in "the childhood of the universe". (AUDIO: The Magic Mousetrap) The Toymaker later indicated that the Toyroom was "ancient". (COMIC: Relative Dimensions [+]Loading...["Relative Dimensions (comic story)"])

During his time of wandering the Earth to sample its games, (PROSE: The Nightmare Fair [+]Loading...["The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)"]) the Toymaker lured many people of varying cultures to the Toyroom, transforming them into his "toys"; on one such instance, he led gambler Gaylord Lefevre there on the pretence of private game of cards in a cabin of the paddle steamer Lefevre was travelling in. They passed the Toymaker's collection of people before entering a room to play their game. After the Toymaker transformed Lefevre into a toy after he attempted to cheat the Toymaker, an unknown amount of time passed before the Toymaker lead a Roman soldier into the Toyroom for another game. (COMIC: The Greatest Gamble [+]Loading...["The Greatest Gamble (comic story)"])

The Celestial Toymaker once trapped the First Doctor, Steven and Dodo in the Toyroom and forced them to play games to win their freedom. The travellers eventually defeated the Toymaker and left the Toyroom. (TV: The Celestial Toymaker)

The Eighth Doctor and Izzy progressed through the Celestial Toyroom after finding that the Toymaker had trapped the area around Stockbridge, going through games of Snakes and Ladders and Hangman before the Toymaker revealed his possession of the Imagineum, which he used to create a duplicate of the Doctor, placing them in a game of gladiatorial chess while Izzy and Maxwell Edison had to navigate a game of mousetrap. The Toyroom began to dissipate after the Doctor used the Imagineum to create a duplicate of the Toymaker, who then began to play against him in a stalemate as he faded back into the Dark Places whence he came from. (COMIC: Endgame [+]Loading...["Endgame (DWM comic story)"])

The Toyroom confesses to the Twelfth Doctor about the deterioration of the Toyroom. (COMIC: Relative Dimensions [+]Loading...["Relative Dimensions (comic story)"])

When the Toyroom became old and began to break down, the Toymaker feared that he would be "loose in a wild, unforgiving universe", which to him was an "infinite horror". He lured the Twelfth Doctor and Clara Oswald inside on the pretence of a party invitation from Susan, wanting to steal the TARDIS in order to keep the Toyroom contained. After escaping the clutches of toys based on Amy Pond, Rory Williams, Sarah Jane Smith, Susan, Steven Taylor, Bernice Summerfield, Cinder, K9 and Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart, the Doctor and Clara travelled between christmas cards before reaching one with Krampus, who chased them through Candy Land and Snakes and Ladders until the Doctor was able to charm the snakes from the game with his recorder to ensnare the mythological beast. The Doctor and Clara found themselves in a room with a massive Christmas tree when the Toymaker began flying towards them in a toy biplane, which the Doctor crashed by controlling a bauble to collide with it.

The Toymaker attempted to trap the Doctor and Clara in a box made of playing cards, then they battled with armies made of toys: the Doctor controlled a Voc robot, a Daffodil Man Auton, a playing card based upon the Tenth Doctor, Bessie, K1, and plastic soldiers, while the Toymaker controlled peg dolls, the toy Susan and Alistair, a vicious teddy bear, a toy robot, a rocking horse, nutcrackers, a clown jack in the box, and a dragon. After realising they were equally matched, the Doctor instead challenged him to a game of Truth or Dare, allowing the Toymaker to "win" the TARDIS. After it materialised around the Toyroom, the Doctor rebuilt it with the Zero Room and the jettisoned it into space, allowing the Toymaker to have his "magical toy box". (COMIC: Relative Dimensions [+]Loading...["Relative Dimensions (comic story)"])

The Toymaker once toyed with the Tenth Doctor, some Daleks, the TARDIS, a Cyberman, and an Adipose, while tempting a new victim with the Trilogic Game. (POEM: The Toymaker [+]Loading...{"page":"32-33","1":"The Toymaker (poem)"})

When at the edge of the universe, the Fourteenth Doctor invoked the concept of salt to hold back the Not-things, (TV: Wild Blue Yonder [+]Loading...["Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)"]) the initiation of a game resulted in the Toymaker being able to leave his Toyroom and enter the universe. (TV: The Giggle [+]Loading...["The Giggle (TV story)"])