Kane's Story was a Sixth Doctor comic published in Doctor Who Magazine. It was the first story to feature the Skeletoids, who would form the basis of the comics' plot up until Frobisher's Story. It would also be the first DWM story to feature a human companion originating from the TV series without the reveal of an illusion. In terms of non-human companions, K9 had appeared in comics as early as 1980's Timeslip, and illusions of Peri Brown and arguably Zoe Heriot had previously been seen in Funhouse and The Tides of Time respectively.
Summary[[edit] | [edit source]]
With the TARDIS awaiting repairs, the Sixth Doctor meets Kane, a man who tells him of the approaching menace that threatens much of the galaxy, including the Earth.
Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]
to be added
Characters[[edit] | [edit source]]
Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Doctor buys a burger and Kane demonstrates his telekinesis on it.
- The Skeletoids invade outposts on Sigma IV.
- Peri is living in New York City in 1985.
- A gang member speculates whether or not Superman will emerge from the TARDIS. Another gangster wears a KISS jacket.
- The Skeletoids demolish both the Dalek and Cyberman empires.
- A summit was called to address the Skeletoid menace, with Davros, the Cyber-Emperor and the Draconian High Commission invited to be in attendance.
Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Peri, an American in New York City, tells her boss to find a new "skivvy" when she quits. The term is a British colloquialism used for low-ranking domestic servants. While an inconsistency on its own, Peri is known for using a number of British slang words in her vocabulary across various forms of media. A possible side-effect of her parents' globetrotting careers as archaeologists. She also uses the word, "skivvy", in AUDIO: Paradise 5.
- Almost uniquely, this comic is the first of a four-part story to use an idiosyncratic naming style for each episode (i.e. "Appl.'s Story"). While unusual for the time, it was common practice in the early 1960s for each instalment to possess its own title.