Retcon: Difference between revisions

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== Behind the scenes ==
== Behind the scenes ==
* "{{w|Retroactive continuity|Retcon}}" stands for ''Ret''roactive ''Con''tinuity and has been used for some time, mainly in relation to role-playing games and comics. It refers to changing events from the past in order to make them fit with the current storyline.
* "{{w|Retroactive continuity|Retcon}}" stands for ''Ret''roactive ''Con''tinuity and has been used for some time, mainly in relation to role-playing games and comics. It refers to changing events from the past in order to make them fit with the current storyline.
[[Category:Psychoactive substances]]
[[Category:Psychoactive substances]]
[[Category:Torchwood Three's items]]
[[Category:Torchwood Three's items]]

Revision as of 02:45, 18 February 2015

You may be looking for the real-world concept.

Retcon, also the name of the pill that was made up of it, the amnesia pill, and occasionally by its more precise name, Compound B67, induced amnesia in anyone that took it. (TV: They Keep Killing Suzie) It was used by Torchwood 3 to keep its operations secret from civilians.

Effects

A side-effect of the pill was induced unconsciousness though it took a while for this to occur. (TV: Everything Changes) Retcon appeared capable of erasing selective memories, or implanting false memories. When given to the party following alien disruption of the wedding of Gwen Cooper and Rhys Williams, it did not result in a large group of people forgetting that Gwen and Rhys were married. However, Jack said it was LV 6 Retcon, implying different level retcon invoked a different effect. (TV: Something Borrowed)

Retcon could erase memories, but didn't remove any other physiological effects; for example, retcon could remove the memory of taking a drug, but had no effect on the addiction, causing an addiction without an obvious reason. (PROSE: Kaleidoscope) It was possible to regain memories, and people were still capable of experiencing deja vu as when Gwen Cooper knew she had seen Suzie Costello somewhere before but only remembered the details after Suzie committed suicide. (TV: Everything Changes)

Overdose & Abuse

Normally, a Retcon pill was meant for a single use to take care of an isolated incident that could compromise Torchwood's secrecy. Retcon was not designed to be used to regularly wipe the memory of an individual, or tamper with the psyche of a mindwiped individual by imparting a multitude of subliminal commands. Doing so could inflict severe psychological damage to a person's mind and drive them insane, or "reprogram" them into subconsciously doing the drugger's bidding. Such manic behavior was forcibly invoked by Suzie Costello, when her attitudes towards Torchwood began to sour dramatically. She confided her experiences with the institute in Max Tresilian, a member of Pilgrim, a discussion group she had joined. Suzie was trying to rescue her sanity after bottling up the unpleasant nature of her job. However, she would resort to giving Max weekly doses of Retcon pills following each exposure of confidential information, which lasted over the course of two years. Inevitably, Suzie's hatred for her job peaked and led her to turn Max into a Trojan Horse that would let Suzie wreak vengeance on Torchwood posthumously if she had died, which would come to pass when she took her own life after she was exposed as a murderer. (TV: Everything Changes). Furthermore, it set in motion a convoluted scheme to resurrect herself and fully liberate her from the institute if she did indeed die. (TV: They Keep Killing Suzie)

History

Similar materials

Behind the scenes

  • "Retcon" stands for Retroactive Continuity and has been used for some time, mainly in relation to role-playing games and comics. It refers to changing events from the past in order to make them fit with the current storyline.