DWA 200
From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Doctor Who Adventures #200 was the issue of the magazine for the week beginning 13 January 2011.
Contents
Free Gift
- Bumper sticker pack
Information / Fact File (Photo feature and Essential Info)
- FACTFILE: This milestone 200th issue had an extended Factfile feature giving 200 Who facts (9 pages).
Comic content
- The Salt Solution (4 pages)
Mega Moments (favourite scene told as a photo-feature)
- None this issue
Fast Facts (Collectable Fact File)
- SJA Alien Files: Abzorbaloff
Posters
- A3 Cyberleader
- A4 Pandorica Alliance Ships
- A4 SJA: Shansheeth
Behind the scenes
- None this issue
Interview
- None this issue
Also featuring
- Welcome and news ("What's Inside?")
- Celebration: Well wishes from the Doctor's friends and foes.
- Gossip: Spoilers, Things they'd never say, separated at birth, and Mons+erma+hics
- Find the: Cryo-cyclinder to win The Coming of the Terraphiles audio book
- Big Puzzle: Giant crossword (2 pages)
- Puzzle page and Quiz
- Readers contributions: Who and You Upload - featuring reader's letters, photos, and art.
- Who Knows! (Q &A)
- Picture Puzzle: Spot the Difference to win lego figures
- Competition Goodies (Cardboard cutout Eleventh Doctor, iPod Nano and Beast Quest books)
- Web Watch (DWA website news)
Credits
- Acting Editor: Paul Laing
- Production Editor: Liza Millett
- Senior Art Editor: Nikki Davies
- No Designer credit is given for this issue.
Hidden Away / Facts
- The Eleventh Doctor showed Earth's scientists proof for Fermat's theorem (why electrons have mass) and faster-than-light travel (using two diagrams and a joke).
- River Song once dated a Nestene duplicate.
- Amy Pond's parents are called Tabetha and Augustus.
- The TARDIS console has mustard and ketchup dispensers.
- The Doctor is on a bowling team with Virginia Woolf.
- The Delerium Archive is on an asteroid and is the biggest museum ever.
- In Sardicktown, Christmas is called "Crystal Feast".
- The Aplans of Alfava Metraxis were humanoid and had two heads.
- Van Gogh's painting The Church at Auvers was probably painted between 1 and 3 June 1890.
Further Information
- Several regular features were not present in this issue due to the nine-page 200 facts feature.
- The subscription offer for this issue is four issues for £1 and a saving of 25% (UK).
- This issue had a cover price of £2.20 (UK) and the free gift was bagged.
- Next issue's free gift is promoted as an inflatable shark!