Jagganth Daiki-Nagata: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary
Tag: sourceedit
m (Bot: Automated text replacement (-’ +'))
Tag: apiedit
Line 9: Line 9:
'''Jagganth Daiki-Nagata''' was the leader of a [[human]] [[Soldier|military]] rescue team in the [[38th century]] assigned to investigate why all contact had been lost with the ''[[Le Verrier]]'' [[space station]] in orbit around [[Neptune (planet)|Neptune]]. She has the habit of calling others "pet".
'''Jagganth Daiki-Nagata''' was the leader of a [[human]] [[Soldier|military]] rescue team in the [[38th century]] assigned to investigate why all contact had been lost with the ''[[Le Verrier]]'' [[space station]] in orbit around [[Neptune (planet)|Neptune]]. She has the habit of calling others "pet".


Upon encountering the [[Twelfth Doctor]] and [[Clara Oswald]] on Le Verrier, Nagata instantly assumed that they had something to do with the disappearance of the station’s crew. However, with the Doctor’s help she soon discovered that the truth: the crew had been consumed by their own [[sleep dust]]. Having taken the [[Morpheus pod|Morpheus]] process for granted whilst on Triton, Nagata was horrified to discover that the pods also evolved human sleep dust over time to become a sentient lifeform in the shape of the [[Sandman (Sleep No More)|Sandmen]]. Aiding the Doctor in determining that whilst the lumbering Sandmen appeared blind, their visual receptors were being hijacked by the dust, she discovered that everyone who had used the Morpheus pods was now a spy for [[Gagan Rassmussen]], who had been using the video to send a signal to create more Sandmen throughout the [[solar system]].
Upon encountering the [[Twelfth Doctor]] and [[Clara Oswald]] on Le Verrier, Nagata instantly assumed that they had something to do with the disappearance of the station's crew. However, with the Doctor's help she soon discovered that the truth: the crew had been consumed by their own [[sleep dust]]. Having taken the [[Morpheus pod|Morpheus]] process for granted whilst on Triton, Nagata was horrified to discover that the pods also evolved human sleep dust over time to become a sentient lifeform in the shape of the [[Sandman (Sleep No More)|Sandmen]]. Aiding the Doctor in determining that whilst the lumbering Sandmen appeared blind, their visual receptors were being hijacked by the dust, she discovered that everyone who had used the Morpheus pods was now a spy for [[Gagan Rassmussen]], who had been using the video to send a signal to create more Sandmen throughout the [[solar system]].


Nagata was ultimately the only member of the rescue team to survive the Morpheus incident. ([[TV]]: ''[[Sleep No More (TV story)|Sleep No More]]'')
Nagata was ultimately the only member of the rescue team to survive the Morpheus incident. ([[TV]]: ''[[Sleep No More (TV story)|Sleep No More]]'')

Revision as of 01:07, 30 August 2016

Jagganth Daiki-Nagata was the leader of a human military rescue team in the 38th century assigned to investigate why all contact had been lost with the Le Verrier space station in orbit around Neptune. She has the habit of calling others "pet".

Upon encountering the Twelfth Doctor and Clara Oswald on Le Verrier, Nagata instantly assumed that they had something to do with the disappearance of the station's crew. However, with the Doctor's help she soon discovered that the truth: the crew had been consumed by their own sleep dust. Having taken the Morpheus process for granted whilst on Triton, Nagata was horrified to discover that the pods also evolved human sleep dust over time to become a sentient lifeform in the shape of the Sandmen. Aiding the Doctor in determining that whilst the lumbering Sandmen appeared blind, their visual receptors were being hijacked by the dust, she discovered that everyone who had used the Morpheus pods was now a spy for Gagan Rassmussen, who had been using the video to send a signal to create more Sandmen throughout the solar system.

Nagata was ultimately the only member of the rescue team to survive the Morpheus incident. (TV: Sleep No More)