Talk:City of the Daleks (video game): Difference between revisions

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::I remember reading somewhere that there have been numerous Skaros. Once one is destroyed, the Daleks move onto a new one. Anyway, I can't ever remember it being said that Skaro was locked inside the Time War. I know Gallifrey was, but where was it ever said that Skaro was?
::I remember reading somewhere that there have been numerous Skaros. Once one is destroyed, the Daleks move onto a new one. Anyway, I can't ever remember it being said that Skaro was locked inside the Time War. I know Gallifrey was, but where was it ever said that Skaro was?
== The Lodger ==
Now that The Lodger has aired, can the timeline be narrowed down any further? --[[User:Andrew Nagy|Andrew Nagy]] 03:14, June 13, 2010 (UTC)

Revision as of 03:14, 13 June 2010

Infobox

What is wrong with the infobox? ☆The Solar Dragon (Talk - Contribs.)☆ 10:48, May 31, 2010 (UTC)

It's fine now. It was because Template:! was vandalised. ☆The Solar Dragon (Talk - Contribs.)☆ 11:14, May 31, 2010 (UTC)

"Previous story"

Unless there's actually something in the game that references the events of the yet-to-be-telecast season 5 finale, it's highly doubtful it takes place after The Big Bang. All the advance publicity says it takes place after the events of Victory of the Daleks, so that's what should be indicated, barring any direct reference to suggest otherwise. (I wouldn't know - outside the UK we aren't being allowed to see the game). 68.146.81.123 13:35, June 3, 2010 (UTC)

I'm not sure "previous story" is supposed to refer to the Doctor's timeline. The question is, what _is_ it supposed to refer to?
There are two similar cases to look at.
  • Attack of the Graske clearly takes place after The Christmas Invasion, and it was also broadcast after that episode. However, it skips the previous and next links in its infobox, and both The Christmas Invasion and New Earth (TV story) ignore it in theirs.
  • Music of the Spheres was released between Journey's End and The Next Doctor, but probably does not take place then in the Doctor's timeline. The infobox links to those two episodes anyway, and they both include links to it as well as secondary links to skip over it, and then the Timeline section discusses the issue.
Just as with MotS, we don't actually know when this occurs in the Doctor's timeline, except that it's some time while the 11th Doctor is traveling with Amy after Victory of the Daleks. It could be directly after that episode, or it could be after the 2011 Christmas special. We really don't know.
So, the MotS solution seems reasonable. Except that in that case, MotS was the last "episode" in production numbering, and it was broadcast after the last episode as well. In this case, the BBC have said the Adventure Games count as episodes 14-17 of series 5, but and the release dates are interleaved during the year (CotD being between Cold Blood and Vincent and the Doctor), so they don't match, and I have no idea which one is supposed to go there.
  • However, the June 2nd release date was an early test version, with the offical release on June 5th. A trailer is being shown after Vincent and the Doctor. So if we go by acutal release date, the game occurs between Vincent and the Doctor and The Lodger.
Given all this confusion, I think it's best to use the Graske solution and just not have these links. --Falcotron 17:14, June 3, 2010 (UTC)
If you disagree, please undo this change manually, rather than just reverting, because I accidentally made this change together with a set of other changes.... --Falcotron 17:38, June 3, 2010 (UTC)
Someone has now not only put this between Cold Blood and Vincent and the Doctor (including putting proper links in those articles), but also added to the Timeline section that it appears before Vincent. I understand the argument for why it has to come after Cold Blood, but how do we know it comes before Vincent? --Falcotron 23:14, June 3, 2010 (UTC)
Give that the official release was just after Vincent first aired, I'd say that it would take place after Vincent.

Geek Mythology 18:44, June 6, 2010 (UTC)

help

I know this isnt about the article but when I go to play the game it says theres a bug in it and it closes. Can anyone help? Darkraider09 15:53, June 3, 2010 (UTC)

That happened to me first time. Try again. It worked for me second time. User:Solar Dragon/Signature 16:26, June 3, 2010 (UTC)
So far I've done it twice still no luck Darkraider09 17:01, June 3, 2010 (UTC)
Try uninstalling and and reinstalling it again then. User:Solar Dragon/Signature 17:06, June 3, 2010 (UTC)
There is a whole troubleshooter section on the bbc website. The major problem seems to be slow running.Baziel 03:30, June 4, 2010 (UTC)
I've checked every Q&A, nothing to whats wrong with mine Darkraider09 12:20, June 4, 2010 (UTC)

Collectables

How many collectables did people find? I didn't explore a huge amount, any did'nt find many ,but I'm pretty sure all those spaces can't have been filled in this one installment - there simply weren't enough places to hide them.Baziel 03:33, June 4, 2010 (UTC)

Yeah more found later. I've looked everywhere and I believe I've found all of them for this episode which are:

Doctors

  • Fifth
  • Sixth
  • Tenth

Companions

  • Amy Pond
  • K-9

Friends

  • Captain Adelaide Brooke
  • Adipose
  • Hath
  • Liz Ten

Enemies

  • Daleks
  • Smiler
  • Sisters of Water

Jelly Babies

  • Chocolate
  • Blackcurrent

--Vitas 03:53, June 4, 2010 (UTC)

If we can get a complete list of these (and I'm sure one of the gamer-nerd sources will have one soon if the BBC doesn't release one), it would probably be worth putting in the article in some form. --Falcotron 06:27, June 4, 2010 (UTC)

Appearing Daleks?

There's conflict even within this wiki as to which Daleks are missing - this page now claims it to be the orange scientists that aren't present, I've looked again and I'm sure that's wrong. The Daleks in the story are clearly the orange ones, If anyone has trouble telling the orange and yellow apart, look at the bumps - the yellow eternal has black ones, all the others are silver. It's the eternals that don't appear.Baziel 20:39, June 4, 2010 (UTC) edit: look at the Victory_of_the_daleks.jpg‎ and compare it to the pic on this page- definitely the scientists in the story and the eternals absent.Baziel 20:43, June 4, 2010 (UTC)

Page has been edited, but that's still the Orange Dalek in the loading screen, the yellow and orange do look very similar though, it's only the black bumps (or lack of them) that show that ones orange 80.0.213.247 02:46, June 5, 2010 (UTC)

I'm sure I've seen both the orange, and yellow daleks. Orange ones moving around, and a yellow one stationary in the corridor before the visualisation room. Geek Mythology 18:44, June 6, 2010 (UTC)
Nah, its an orange one before the visualiser room. Fan555 21:55, June 6, 2010 (UTC)

They look almost identical, and the lighting can trick you, but it's all in the bumps!!Baziel 14:28, June 7, 2010 (UTC)

Non-UK

I guess this site wouldn't want manual how to run game outside of UK, would it? --TakeruDavis 09:36, June 6, 2010 (UTC)

Help please

I just downloaded City of the Daleks but I need help. Just after arriving on Skaro you need to do that maze to get through the first door. But how do you do it? It is so HARD! I keep hitting the wall. Any hints on how to beat this maze?Fallen5 18:03, June 6, 2010 (UTC)

Use a steady hand. I did it first time. User:Solar Dragon/Signature 18:05, June 6, 2010 (UTC)
I would lower mouse sensitivity --TakeruDavis 18:19, June 6, 2010 (UTC)
I find it easy on a laptop mousepad type thing. Geek Mythology 18:44, June 6, 2010 (UTC)
Small movements. Take it slowly. User:Solar Dragon/Signature 18:46, June 6, 2010 (UTC)
No, what seems to be happening is that I start it, drop it, and go to pick it up. As I do, the mouse flys up and hits the wall, so I fail. And I'm using a laptop mouseFallen5 16:46, June 7, 2010 (UTC)
Well then, keep your finger firmly down on the left button then. User:Solar Dragon/Signature 16:49, June 7, 2010 (UTC)
I found the game in general easier with a mix of keyboard and trackpad instead of a mouse. --Falcotron 22:45, June 8, 2010 (UTC)

Controversy section needed

The article needs a Controversy section. There's sufficient criticism online now regarding the fact the game isn't being released for free outside the UK (not just fans complaining on boards, but things like the Doctor Who Information Network blog in Canada). Plus as a direct result of the game being geofenced, there are numerous media sources reporting that people are seeking pirated versions, many of which are infected with malware (EDIT: after typing this I noticed copies of the game are now even being put up for auction on eBay). Additional controversial points include the fact none of the advance publicity from the BBC indicated there would be restrictions on the release. There should be sufficient reputable sources to build a section from this. 68.146.81.123 18:49, June 8, 2010 (UTC)

Really? EBay and pirated versions? Thats bad. It can be easily downloaded from website, with just using correct proxy. Even instalation can be fooled to think it is in UK. But I guess it could have bad consequences for this site if detailed manual was here... But if you want it, I can post it. --TakeruDavis 19:00, June 12, 2010 (UTC)

Skaro makes this thing non-canonical

Irrespective of the nice sentiments from Wenger and company that this is another episode of series 5, doesn't the presence of Skaro completely render this thing non-canonical? How can Skaro have possibly survived as a place in normal space, freely visitable by the Doctor and the Daleks, if the "entire war was time-locked" (DW: The End of Time)? So the Dalek homeworld was kept, ruined, outside the time-lock, but Skaro wasn't? This story is a major challenge to one of the fundamental "truths" of the new series, and we as a wikia community, should have a serious debate as to whether to consider it canonical — quite apart from what the production team are telling us. Of course they're going to say it's a "real" episode, and that it "counts", cause ultimately they want us to buy them. (At some stage they will be on sale.) But that doesn't mean we have to fall for their schtick, does it? As Captain Jack said in The Parting of the Ways, "One minute they're the greatest threat in the universe, the next minute they vanished out of time and space." I don't see how you go from that, to "Well, actually, their planet is still here in an easily-repairable state." No, this game is deeply threatening to the mythology, if you stop and think about it for even a few minutes. We should declare it non-canonical. CzechOut | 15:34, June 10, 2010 (UTC)


Its not for fans to say whats canon and whats not. If the officials say it is then it is. Fan555 15:41, June 10, 2010 (UTC)

You're misunderstanding the nature of canonicity in the DWU. Piers Wenger's line "Everything you see and experience within the game is a part of the Doctor Who universe" is quite a different thing to saying, "It's absolutely a part of canon." "Canon" and the "Doctor Who universe" are not strictly the same thing. Something can be set in the DWU without it being canon. Fanon is set in the DWU, but it isn't a part of it. A fan film can strive to "look and feel like a proper episode of Doctor Who", but it isn't a part of canon.
The official policy of the BBC on canon is that there is no policy. The officials are actually silent on whether or not this thing is a part of canon but they have used the marketing line that it is like an "extra" episode. They want us to fall for that line. And really, from strictly a viewing/playing standpoint, it's much more important that it feels like a part of the DWU than that it's a part of canon.
Nevertheless, canon is important to us, the editors of this wikia, because we need to know what things we can cite when writing an article, and what things we can't. Because the BBC have never held a firm view of canonicity, this wikia has therefore had to develop its own canon policy, and we have already disallowed some games under that policy. The FASA DW RPG was written with all the best intentions in the world, just like this thing. But we don't allow it as a canonical reference. I'm saying this game, too, should be under that policy. CzechOut | 17:07, June 10, 2010 (UTC)
This episode IS canonical. Skaro was destroyed completely in Rememberance of the Daleks, but it was the main base for the Daleks in the Time War, and was ruined. Apparently, the Skaro that was destroyed was another planet disguised! So in the Time War, the real Skaro, was left in ruins. But it wasn't Time Locked because the Doctor thought that all the Daleks didn't exsist anymore (apparently, he made the Time Locks). He also didn't Time Lock Arcadia, as the Doctor and Amy visited it before Vincent and the Doctor. So it IS in canon. Where abouts for the Doctor is probably after Victory as he (said on page) dons the jacket he lost in Flesh and Stone, but it could happen after Cold Blood, or after Vincent or the Doctor, The Lodger maybe? Also, I didn't even know the jackets were different at all! For the Daleks this takes place after Victory or The Big Bang, which might mean they take place AFTER the Main Series! Also, Jack said ""One minute they're the greatest threat in the universe, the next minute they vanished out of time and space." so Skaro could have been consumed by a Time Field! Then, as everything was released from the Pandorica, it returned to it's original place. It's an interesting theory... Kerange 17:19, June 10, 2010 (UTC)
I remember reading somewhere that there have been numerous Skaros. Once one is destroyed, the Daleks move onto a new one. Anyway, I can't ever remember it being said that Skaro was locked inside the Time War. I know Gallifrey was, but where was it ever said that Skaro was?

The Lodger

Now that The Lodger has aired, can the timeline be narrowed down any further? --Andrew Nagy 03:14, June 13, 2010 (UTC)