Crossover: Difference between revisions

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* ''[[Mind My Minions (webcast)|Mind My Minions]]'' was also a crossover, this time with ''Despicable Me'' spin off ''Minions'' and for the second time ''[[Coronation Street]]''.
* ''[[Mind My Minions (webcast)|Mind My Minions]]'' was also a crossover, this time with ''Despicable Me'' spin off ''Minions'' and for the second time ''[[Coronation Street]]''.
* ''[[Looking for Pudsey (TV story)|Looking for Pudsey]]'' crossed-over many shows including ''[[Strictly Come Dancing]]'' and ''The Great British Bake Off'' but only one non-real world show. The latter being yet again ''[[Call the Midwife]]'' with [[Jenny Agutter]] played her character again.
* ''[[Looking for Pudsey (TV story)|Looking for Pudsey]]'' crossed-over many shows including ''[[Strictly Come Dancing]]'' and ''The Great British Bake Off'' but only one non-real world show. The latter being yet again ''[[Call the Midwife]]'' with [[Jenny Agutter]] played her character again.
* The {{wi|Family Guy}} season 15 episode ''Inside Family Guy'' contained a licensed crossover appearance by the [[Tenth Doctor]], with [[David Tennant]] reprising his role, in a cutaway scene in which the Griffin family watch a TV story titled ''[[Doctor Who Farted (TV story)|Doctor Who Farted]]''. The episode aired on [[Fox Broadcasting Company|Fox]] (a brief return to the network for the franchise since [[Doctor Who (TV story)|the TV movie]] twenty years prior) in the US, and on ITV2 in the UK.


=== Comics ===
=== Comics ===

Revision as of 23:13, 23 December 2021

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A crossover is a story in which elements from two fictional universes, originally created to be distinct, are brought together for the span of a specific narrative.

There have been many crossovers between stories officially set in the Doctor Who universe and other works of fiction, some licensed on the part of the property being crossed over with, some not. Some use devices such as the Land of Fiction to allow characters from the DWU to "meet" individuals who are, otherwise, as fictional to them as to the reader.

However, many crossovers imply that the property being crossed over with is actually a part of the DWU, even if that was not that property's creators' original intent. Others make use of the idea of the Multiverse to establish the Doctor's home dimension as distinct from, but coexisting with, other dimensions inabited by various unrelated fictional characters.

Official crossovers

By definition, only stories licensed to use the DWU concepts they contain are covered on this Wiki. The following crossovers are, however, notable for also having been licensed appearances of the "foreign" concepts with which the DWU characters interact. They were usually advertised as crossovers.

Television

  • The earliest planned televised crossover was in the 1965 episode "The Feast of Steven", in which the Doctor Who production team hoped to use the main cast and setting of Z-Cars for some scenes set in a police station. However, Z-Cars producer David Rose rejected the idea.
The image of a Dalek, under license from Terry Nation, appeared on television in 1966... on ITV!

Comics

Audio

Prose

Video games

  • Doctor Who was one of 30 different franchises to be represented in the mass-crossover video game LEGO Dimensions.

Unofficial crossovers

The following crossovers are usually brief cameos by, or allusions to, elements of non-DWU works of fiction in DWU stories. The non-DWU elements are unlicensed and sometimes not explicitly named.

The following lists are such crossovers as they occurred within stories licensed from the DWU's point of view; however, the symmetrical situation often occurs, with elements of the DWU being acknowledged in other works of fiction. Such unlicensed crossovers are listed as "in-universe references" at Cultural references to the Doctor Who universe.

Audio

Television

Comics

Prose