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Buffalo

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Revision as of 17:11, 11 July 2023 by Epsilon (talk | contribs) (...technically a non-narrative game so it cannot have a branching narrative)
Buffalo

You may be looking for Buffalo wing or bison.

Buffalo were cattle-like creatures that lived on Earth. Because Roz Forrester's family name, Inyathi, translated as "buffalo", she wasn't allowed to eat a buffalo. (PROSE: The Also People)

They were once the dominant species on Earth, but when their Herd-Leader was trapped in ice they degenerated without his mind. The Bovine Herd Leader revived thousands of years later and was able to travel back in time. He found his species were being wiped out by the Native Americans and guided Christopher Columbus to America in 1492, hoping the Europeans would wipe out the Native Americans and save his herd. However, the Europeans wiped out the buffalo themselves. (AUDIO: Trouble in Paradise)

The Seventh Doctor and Ace saw buffalo living in the Ngorogoro Crater in 1926. (PROSE: Prelude Birthright)

The last buffalo died in captivity in 2193. (PROSE: The Also People)

Cultural references to buffalo

The Sixth Doctor used the password buffalo to access the UNIT telephone line. (AUDIO: Vampire of the Mind) The Ninth Doctor later told Mickey Smith to use same password to access a variety of areas of the UNIT website. (TV: World War Three)

At different points, "bison", "buffalo", and "badwolf" were passwords to the Operations Board on the UNIT website. (PROSE: Secure Login) The password "buffalo", if entered into the override code field, allowed an individual to navigate and fire a missile towards anywhere on Earth. (GAME: Untitled)

Behind the scenes

  • The DWU fails to use buffalo as a synonym for bison — which it is, in a limited sense. Certainly, North American buffalo are bison. However, the kind the Seventh Doctor and Ace saw in Africa would have been African buffalo and not at all bison.
    • However, the U.N.I.T. tie-in website does use the password "buffalo" and "bison" interchangeably.
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