Howling:Time is in Flux: Difference between revisions

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The new series constantly states that time is in flux, likely as a way to get rid of many continuity errors such as why, 1n 2012, did Henry van Statten not recognise the Dalek after the Dalek invasion in The Stolen Earth/Journey's End.  However in The Waters of Mars (set in 2059) Adelaide remembers the Dalek invasion.  This seems to imply that time changes take place along the Doctor's personal timeline.  Is this a coincedence?  Or is the Doctor somehow a lot more important than everything else?--[[User:TemporalSpleen|TemporalSpleen]] 14:11, January 4, 2010 (UTC)
The new series constantly states that time is in flux, likely as a way to get rid of many continuity errors such as why, 1n 2012, did Henry van Statten not recognise the Dalek after the Dalek invasion in The Stolen Earth/Journey's End.  However in The Waters of Mars (set in 2059) Adelaide remembers the Dalek invasion.  This seems to imply that time changes take place along the Doctor's personal timeline.  Is this a coincedence?  Or is the Doctor somehow a lot more important than everything else?--[[User:TemporalSpleen|TemporalSpleen]] 14:11, January 4, 2010 (UTC)


The Doctor doesn't need to be more important: just accept that he's moved into a new timeline or it diverged after the events of Dalek.
The Doctor doesn't need to be more important: you can just accept that he's moved into a new timeline or it diverged after the events of Dalek. [[Special:Contributions/86.180.136.214|86.180.136.214]] 17:06, January 4, 2010 (UTC)

Revision as of 17:06, 4 January 2010

The Howling → Time is in Flux
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Run back to the forums if you're scared.


The new series constantly states that time is in flux, likely as a way to get rid of many continuity errors such as why, 1n 2012, did Henry van Statten not recognise the Dalek after the Dalek invasion in The Stolen Earth/Journey's End. However in The Waters of Mars (set in 2059) Adelaide remembers the Dalek invasion. This seems to imply that time changes take place along the Doctor's personal timeline. Is this a coincedence? Or is the Doctor somehow a lot more important than everything else?--TemporalSpleen 14:11, January 4, 2010 (UTC)

The Doctor doesn't need to be more important: you can just accept that he's moved into a new timeline or it diverged after the events of Dalek. 86.180.136.214 17:06, January 4, 2010 (UTC)