The Gunpowder Plot (video game)
The Gunpowder Plot was the final instalment of the Adventure Games. It introduced Rory Williams into the series and featured the first use of Rutans by BBC Wales. It boasted a much longer and more complicated gameplay experience than the first four instalments.
Summary
After a run-in with a spaceship during departure, the TARDIS lands in 1605, where the crew finds the collision has caused portals to other places in time and space to open. On top of that, a group of men are plotting to assassinate the King with the help of a mysterious woman with glowing green eyes. It seems the Doctor may not be the only alien in town...
Plot
The Eleventh Doctor sent Amy and Rory to Liao Dynasty China for Chinese food. Unfortunately, they mistake the palace for a restaurant, offend the Emperor and have the guards on their tails. The Doctor is in the middle of TARDIS maintenance when a spear is hurled into the Doctor's record player and the TARDIS takes off.
The TARDIS bumps into another space ship, forcing the latter to crash on Earth. The collision also creates a portal to another planet inside the TARDIS. The Doctor explained the portal as a dimensional lesion. He asks Rory to hand him the sonic screwdriver to examine the lesion properly. However, Rory tosses it and the sonic ends up on the other side of the lesion. On the Doctor's orders, Rory walks through the lesion onto another planet to find the screwdriver before returning to the TARDIS.
While Rory is getting the Screwdriver, the Doctor sends Amy to get a Kardanian Vortex Tuner and a Zardak holofield trap from his drawing room and put them together for him. Using the newly-invented dimensional equaliser, the Doctor closes the lesion. The TARDIS picks up a distress beacon from the ship they ran into, and go to investigate.
The group arrives underground in London in 1605, four hundred years after the crash. They discover that the proximity of the two alien ships is creating more lesions throughout London. If they don't close them soon, all of London will be sucked into the lesions to another planet. While the Doctor hunts down and closes lesions, he sends Amy and Rory to find the ship. They spot two suspicious figures talking about a plan to kill the king.
They follow them to their headquarters in the sewers. Using the chopsticks from their takeout, Amy picks the lock into a secret tunnel and they spy on the men. They realise that they are part of the Gunpowder Plot to assassinate the King of England. Rory notes a detail that wasn't in the history books: a female conspirator named Lady Winters.
Amy creates a distraction by taking advantage of a plotter's fear of rats, using her takeout to lure a bunch of them to him. She notices Lady Winter's eyes glow green. Rory steals a document listing the plotters' final meeting before the plot comes to fruition. With the information in hand, Amy tells Rory to find the Doctor while she follows Lady Winters to see if she's not from Earth. Amy loses her in an alley, where a green goo is all that's left of her. A black cat with green eyes passes her...
Elsewhere, the Doctor is trying to close a lesion and instead diverts the location on the other side to where Amy is. He sees a green-eyed cat turn into a Rutan, prompting him to jump through to save Amy. Amy's scream reveals the Rutan's sensitivity to high-pitched sound. Taking this into account, the Doctor uses his screwdriver to scare the Rutan off. The Doctor concludes the ship they bumped into was a Rutan ship.
Amy is also led to the conclusion that Lady Winters is the Rutan they just fought off. She explains to the Doctor that she is working with the Plotters. The Doctor encounters another lesion. This time a man is in shock from having found it, his mind unable to cope. The Doctor closes the lesion, thus bringing the man out of shock. The man tells the Doctor about a orphan named Charlie who has had encounters with Lady Winters, the "green lady", and more lesions. The Doctor has the man take him to the other lesions while he orders Amy to look for Charlie.
Amy finds Barnaby, a friend of Charlie's, but he refuses to talk to her for fear that she'll give him the plague. Amy finds an apothecary who offers to make her a posie said to ward off the plague in exchange for its ingredients. Using the posie, Amy gets Barnaby to talk to her. Barnaby hasn't seen Charlie in days. He's been too busy looking after his younger sister, Annie, to look for him. The last time anyone saw Charlie, he was wet and had been underground.
Meanwhile the Doctor and the man, called Mr. Plum, have tracked down two more lesions, which he seals. Amy arrives shortly after the second one is sealed and explains what she knows about Charlie. Based on those clues, he's been hanging around the drains and near them is where the Rutan ship is.
Meanwhile, Rory has been exploring the London underground and finds Sontarans coming out of the water. Before he can make his escape, he is caught by their mind-controlled servant, Black Rod. The leader of the group, Field Major Kaarsh, wrongly deduces that Rory is working for the Rutans and is tricked into revealing the Sontarans and Rutans are after the Rutan ship because it contains something of strategic value.
Kaarsh decides to imprison Rory as part of a plan to bargain with the Rutans, leaving Black Rod to guard him. Rory sneaks up on Black Rod, steals the mind control device and gets away as Black Rod regains his mind. Black Rod explains he is in the service of the King and investigates threats to his person. He was investigating rumours of the Gunpowder Plot when he came under the control of the Sontarans. After he guides Rory out and away from Sontaran patrols, he tells Rory to find his friends while he returns to his post.
Amy and the Doctor find Rory. All three are aware of the Sontarans in the sewers. Rory gives the Doctor the paper detailing the plotters' next meeting, only to discover it is blank. Using the fireplace in the TARDIS drawing room, the Doctor reveals the details of the meeting have been written in invisible ink. By heating the paper, the Doctor learns that the next meeting is to take place at the Duck and Drake at precisely 9:00.
Using his psychic paper, the Doctor tricks the plotters into thinking he works for King Phillip of Spain and earns their trust by doing tasks vital to the Gunpowder Plot, such as obtain a sedative for the plotters' intended puppet ruler so they can kidnap her without fuss. While the Doctor talks to the plotters, Rory and Amy find a trail of Rutan goo and plan to follow it to the Rutan Ship.
On their way, Rory and Amy discover the Sontarans' weak spot on the back of their neck. Rory and Amy enter the Rutan ship via a lesion and deactivate its security system. They soon run into the brain of the ship, revealed to be alive. The ship doesn't appear to be interested in Rory because he has Rutan goo on him. Amy, on the other hand, is nearly killed by the ship, Rory saves her by giving her some of the Rutan goo. With the ship no longer trying to kill them, they enter the control room, where they find Charlie, who has been captured by the Rutans.
They free Charlie. He thinks they are working with the Rutans and runs away, stealing a green sphere from the Rutan console. However Charlie has left behind his slingshot and a bag of marbles, which prove effective against Sontarans when aimed at their probic vents. Armed with the slingshot, Rory and Amy fight their way through the sewers and get back to the surface. While Amy and Rory are dispatching Sontarans, the Doctor and the conspirators meet with Lady Winters.
To the Doctor's surprise, the conspirators are planning to use forty-one kegs of powder instead of the historical thirty-six. After the meeting, the Doctor convinces Winters that he intends to help her get off Earth, citing the problems her ship and she are causing. Winters claims she needs three things: a pair of energy conversion rods, Parliament removed from the top of the ship and the momentum from the explosion.
The Doctor sends Rory and Amy to look for the rods. They learn that the rods were integrated into a clock and a globe. Rory and Amy collect the rods, bring them back to the ship and install them. Meanwhile the Doctor and Lady Winters encounter a stray Sontaran, whom Winters kills. Winters explains that her ship was carrying a pair of doomsday bombs to wipe out the Sontaran species.
Winters leaves for her ship. At the same time, Guy Fawkes, the explosives expert and most famous of the plotters, gets the Doctor's help with the Plot. After complications caused by the Rutan ship, Guy and the Doctor get to the kegs. The Doctor convinces Guy to use five fewer kegs and light the fuse ahead of schedule.
With this, the Doctor uses the TARDIS to transport Parliament into orbit, safely away from the explosion and the Rutans. Lady Winters calls the Doctor and accuses him of stealing the weapon, demanding it back or else. Amy realises that Charlie has the weapon. He is hiding in Parliament and is under attack by Sontarans. Rory also realises that the ceremonial mace has the second bomb incorporated into it.
The Doctor gives Amy and Rory a Rutan stun device that needs to be repaired. The group splits up — Rory and Amy will go after Charlie and the Doctor will go to Black Rod and get the staff. Unfortunately the Rutans and the Sontarans have turned Parliament into a war zone. The Doctor finds Black Rod and uses the psychic paper to convince him that he is one of Lord Salisbury's agents. Unfortunately they wind up cornered by a Sontaran.
In the meantime, Amy has found Charlie and Rory has repaired the stun device with a musket. After clearing away a few Rutans, Rory finds the weapon Charlie stole. Amy distracts the Sontarans by getting them into a fire fight with a Rutan patrol. Amy frees Charlie. Unfortunately the Sontarans win the fight and come back. Rory barely saves them with his last marble.
Elsewhere, the Doctor signals Black Rod to distract the Sontaran, while he gives him a much needed whack to the back of his head with the mace. The Doctor removes the weapon on the end of the staff and reconfigures the weapon so it is non-functional; if he had made a mistake, that corner of the universe would have been destroyed.
Unfortunately they run into a patrol personally led by Kaarsh. The Doctor lures a patrol of Rutans led by Lady Winters into the Sontaran patrol. The Doctor gives each group a weapon, one reconfigured to wipe out the Rutans — but not telling them which is which. This forces both sides into a stalemate and makes them leave. Kaarsh takes this news in stride; the Doctor's intervention has made their war with the Rutans "honourable" again. Lady Winters, on the other hand, is furious; the device would have ended the war.
With the Rutans and Sontarans gone, the Doctor returns Parliament to its proper place on Earth and goes to greet Guy. The Doctor assures him that even though he failed now, people will still remember him. He boards the TARDIS and leaves history to take its course as Guy continues with the plot, just in time for King James' guards to come in and arrest him.
In an epilogue, we see fireworks over present-day London as an off-screen Doctor recites the familiar poem, "Remember, remember, the Fifth of November..."
Cast
- The Doctor - Matt Smith
- Amy Pond - Karen Gillan
- Rory - Arthur Darvill
- Guy Fawkes - Ralf Little
- Winters - Emilia Fox
- Kaarsh - Dan Starkey
- Charlie - Jamie Oram
- Robert Catesby - Alexander Vlahos
- Thomas Percy - David Ames
- Black Rod - Miles Richardson
- Barnaby - Chris Johnson
- Alice Flowers - Lizzie Hopley
- Geoffrey Plum - Phil Daniels
- Margaret - Amelda Brown
- The Silence - Barnaby Edwards
Crew
- Writer - Phil Ford
- Executive producers - Steven Moffat, Piers Wenger, Anwen Aspden, Charles Cecil, Brain C. McAuliffe
- Senior producer - Mat Fidell
- Drama producer - Gary Russell
- Interactive producer - Richard Jenkins
- Voice editor - Gary Russell
- Sound editor - Nigel James Brown
- Sound effects - Matthew Cox
- Quality insurer - Tom Barker
- Programming lead - James Sutherland
- Programmers - Phil Woods, Carl Dixon, Dan Mallinson, Henry Durrant, Sean Davies, Tom Sedden
- Design and Scripting - Nana Nielsen, Mike Welsh, Sarah Cook
- Concepts/Storyboards - Richard Jordon
- Art Lead - Michael Hirst (as Mick Hirst)
- Artists - Chris Pepper, John Hackleton
- Animation Lead - Ian Dreary
- Animators - Lee Taylor, Phil Hanks, Stephen Thomas (as Steve Thomas), Shruti Rao, Simon Wottage, Robin Butler, Simon Bradley
- Graphic Design Lead - Chantal Beaumont
- Creative Director - Sean Millard
- Core Tech Manager - Stephen Robinson
- Studio Head - Paul Porter
- European VP - Carl Cavers
- Casting Director - Andy Pryor
- Original music by - Murray Gold
Rest to be added.
References
- Amy calls Lady Winters "Lady Gaga."
- Rory accidentally throws the sonic screwdriver into a lesion that leads to an unnamed planet.
- When talking to Black Rod, Rory mentions James Bond.
- The Avix Patrol is a Sontaran squad.
- John Cobb is mentioned.
Story notes
- The Gunpowder Plot is the first pseudo-historical Adventure Game.
- This is also the first Adventure Game to feature Rory Williams as a playable character.
- The episode index at the back of the 2011 edition of Doctor Who: The Encyclopedia places this story between The Girl Who Waited and The God Complex.
- The collectible cards and jelly babies from earlier Adventure Games are replaced in this episode by 41 facts about Jacobean Life and 20 items of Who Trivia, revealed by examining relevant objects.
Production errors
- The sonic screwdriver is clearly seen within the TARDIS in the cut scene when the Doctor asks Rory to retrieve it through a portal.
- The Ood Translator in the TARDIS drawing room is mislabelled an Ood Hindbrain until the player examines it.
- When the Doctor and Amy first encounter a Rutan, the Rutan is able to shoot through the boxes you're supposed to be able to hide behind for safety.
- When retrieving the three items for the plotters, it's possible for the game to forget one you've already done; you'll have to retrieve the fuse wire, parliamentary seal, or sleeping draught over again.
- Characters are occasionally able to pass through walls or fall through the ground, especially in corners.
- When Rory is asked to repair the EMP, he is able to skip it by walking into the bookcase and into the corridor on the other side.
- Sometimes, during the brief door cutscene on London Bridge, the door opens and closes without the Doctor passing through it.
- When talking to characters, the Doctor may end up facing the wrong way.
- When Black Rod distracts a Sontaran, if the player leaves the room without retrieving the staff, the Sontaran is able to shoot the player from behind the wall.
- When Amy is trying to attract the attention of the Rutan to make the Rutan and Sontaran fight each other so she can free Charlie, it is possible for her to fall through the floor to the floor below, where the Doctor is frozen, when trying to move through doorways.
- The game's textual dialogue contains multiple misspellings and grammatical errors.
- After asking a Londoner for gossip and being dismissed, one of Amy's textual responses is "I guess I'm not worth talking too." One of the Doctor's is "Looks like I'm not important enough to chat too."
- Rory's textual dialogue describes the orb in the Rutan ship as "Just like the one attatched to Black Rod's mace."
- A line of Amy's text at the bridge reads "Those rod's are definately somewhere on the bridge."
- Amy's text describes the fishing line as "an environmental hazzard."
- While sneaking past Rutans in Parliament, if the Doctor attempts to go back his text reads "I need to cross the hall to get to Black Rods chambers."
Continuity
- Amy returns to the TARDIS drawing room. (GAME: TARDIS) New objects found there include:
- The Doctor's cot (TV: A Good Man Goes to War)
- A Cyberman's head, either from the Pete's World Cybermen, the Arctic Cybermen, or the Cyber-Legions Cybermen.
- The spy glass from Apalapucia (TV: The Girl Who Waited)
- A hypercube (TV: The Doctor's Wife, The War Games)
- A Silent can appear at any time during the game, in the parts where the player can free-roam, or at random when the player finds a fact about Jacobean life. (TV: The Impossible Astronaut/Day of the Moon, Closing Time, The Wedding of River Song) If not seen, they can be heard breathing loudly in a characteristic rattling and raspy manner. By tracking this sound, the player should be able to locate a Silent (barring the off-chance programming glitches may stop them from appearing even if their breathing is audible). If the player clicks on the Silent near the fact item, the Silent will give more information on the item in question, often from their own perspective, and then disappear with the player character not reacting at all, presumably having forgotten the encounter.
- Amy and Rory both recognise the Sontarans, having seen Strax in TV: A Good Man Goes to War. However, Rory fully understands the danger they represent despite not encountering them in full force as enemies before. (The Doctor may have filled him in while they were recruiting Strax and the others owing him a favour in A Good Man Goes to War.)
- The Doctor claims it has "been a while" since he last saw a Rutan. He last encountered them in his tenth incarnation in either The Sontaran Games or The Taking of Chelsea 426.
- Amy again calls Rory "stupid face." (TV: Day of the Moon)
- The Master's laser screwdriver is still in the console. (GAME: TARDIS)
- Considerably earlier in his personal timeline, the First Doctor and his companions Ian Chesterton, Barbara Wright and Vicki Pallister likewise became embroiled in the events surrounding the Gunpowder Plot in November 1605. (PROSE: The Plotters)
- The Doctor says to Black Rod, "I'm one of Salisbury's agents. Codename, the Doctor," repeating a variation of the line he said in TV: The Impossible Astronaut when he was telling Richard Nixon's Secret Service agents the "codenames" of himself and his companions (the Legs (Amy), the Nose (Rory), and Mrs Robinson (River Song).
- The Doctor says he knows Lord Salisbury as "Bob" - which is actually accurate, as his name was Robert. This continues a tradition of this Doctor calling certain well-known figures "Bob", such as Santa Claus (TV: A Christmas Carol).
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