Clara Oswald (The Daft Dimension)
A version of Clara Oswald existed in the Daft Dimension.
Biography
She was a companion of the Doctor by the time of his regeneration into his twelfth incarnation. After this Twelfth Doctor decided to overhaul the look of his TARDIS's control room to be extremely minimalistic, she gently tried to get him to understand that his idea was far too simplified. (COMIC: The Daft Dimension 477) He would eventually relent. (COMIC: The Daft Dimension 478, The Daft Dimension 479)
When she saw how large his Two Thousand Year Diary had gotten, Clara tried to convince the Doctor to go digital, but he refused, even as lugging the huge book around threatened to injure his back. (COMIC: The Daft Dimension 478)
After an adventure where she and the Doctor had met a legendary character, Clara asked the Doctor why they couldn't meet any more such figures, but the Doctor insisted that the vast majority were fictional. He was particularly dismissive of the possibility of meeting a certain being with "ludicrous" long arms, only for him to appear from behind the Doctor just as he and Clara walked out of the TARDIS onto a grassy plain. (COMIC: The Daft Dimension 479)
After going through an adventure similar to the N-Space Clara and Doctor's adventure on the Moon, (TV: Kill the Moon, COMIC: The Daft Dimension 480) Clara questioned how the creature had laid an egg bigger than itself, prompting the Doctor to demonstrate that the new moon was in fact very tiny, but in much closer orbit to the Earth than its predecessor. (COMIC: The Daft Dimension 480)
The Doctor and Clara later had a Christmas party in the TARDIS with Rusty. Despite the Dalek's objections, the two humanoids insisted on wrapping him in Christmas decorations and thus using him as a Christmas tree. As he protested, Rusty called the Doctor a "good Dalek" and insisted that he could see "beauty, divinity [and] hatred" in the Doctor's soul, but he failed to disturb the Doctor. (COMIC: The Daft Dimension 481)
Behind the scenes
This version of Clara is a parody of her N-Space counterpart.