TARDIS Teaser (game): Difference between revisions

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}}'''''TARDIS Teaser''''' was a narrative prose puzzle game in the ''[[Doctor Who Annual 2006]]''. It featured an original illustration by [[Ben Morris (illustrator)|Ben Morris]] while the writing of the Annual's puzzles was collectively attributed to [[Justin Richards]] and [[Gareth Roberts]].  
}}'''''TARDIS Teaser''''' was a narrative prose puzzle game in the ''[[Doctor Who Annual 2006]]''. It featured an original illustration by [[Ben Morris (illustrator)|Ben Morris]] while the writing of the Annual's puzzles was collectively attributed to [[Justin Richards]] and [[Gareth Roberts]].  


Like the [[Robot Rose (game)|previous game]] in the ''Annual'', ''TARDIS Teaser'' did not have an interactive format as such, only asking the reader/player to guess the solution to the story's mystery before they read on to see the actual answer obtained by the Doctor. However, unlike ''Robot Rose'', ''TARDIS Teaser'' made no effort to fit within the status-quo of the [[Ninth Doctor]]'s [[Doctor Who universe|universe]], featuring him and [[Jack Harkness]] travelling alone in [[the Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]] and being "found" by "the [[Dalek]]s" and their space fleet — despite the Doctor famously being under the impression that the Daleks were destroyed up until his final televised story, ''[[Bad Wolf (TV story)|Bad Wolf]]''/''[[The Parting of the Ways (TV story)|The Parting of the Ways]]''. Due to this ostensible intent ''not'' to count as part of the Doctor's ongoing story as explored on television and elsewhere in the book, this game is not considered [[Tardis:Valid sources|a valid source]] on this Wiki.
Like the [[Robot Rose (game)|previous game]] in the ''Annual'', ''TARDIS Teaser'' did not have an interactive format as such, only asking the reader/player to guess the solution to the story's mystery before they read on to see the actual answer obtained by the Doctor. However, unlike ''Robot Rose'', ''TARDIS Teaser'' made no effort to fit within the status-quo of the [[Ninth Doctor]]'s [[Doctor Who universe|universe]], featuring him and [[Jack Harkness]] travelling alone in [[the Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]] and being "found" by "the [[Dalek]]s" and their space fleet — despite the Doctor famously being under the impression that the Daleks were destroyed up until ''[[Bad Wolf (TV story)|Bad Wolf]]''. Due to this ostensible intent not to count as part of the Doctor's ongoing story as explored on television and elsewhere in the book, this game is not considered [[Tardis:Valid sources|a valid source]] on this Wiki.


== Summary ==
== Summary ==

Revision as of 14:46, 21 May 2020

This subject is not a valid source for writing our in-universe articles, and may only be referenced in behind the scenes sections or other invalid-tagged articles.

TARDIS Teaser was a narrative prose puzzle game in the Doctor Who Annual 2006. It featured an original illustration by Ben Morris while the writing of the Annual's puzzles was collectively attributed to Justin Richards and Gareth Roberts.

Like the previous game in the Annual, TARDIS Teaser did not have an interactive format as such, only asking the reader/player to guess the solution to the story's mystery before they read on to see the actual answer obtained by the Doctor. However, unlike Robot Rose, TARDIS Teaser made no effort to fit within the status-quo of the Ninth Doctor's universe, featuring him and Jack Harkness travelling alone in the TARDIS and being "found" by "the Daleks" and their space fleet — despite the Doctor famously being under the impression that the Daleks were destroyed up until Bad Wolf. Due to this ostensible intent not to count as part of the Doctor's ongoing story as explored on television and elsewhere in the book, this game is not considered a valid source on this Wiki.

Summary

The Daleks have found the TARDIS and it is being chased across space by a detachment of heavily-armed Dalek flying saucers. With the dematerialisation circuit broken and the Doctor busy fixing it, it's up to Captain Jack to plot an escape route using the TARDIS's spacedrive. Giving the TARDIS computer all the data it needs, he asks it how many of the ten Dalek ships are unarmed.

Characters

References

Notes