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|clip = The Doctor Summons the Time Lords - The War Games - Doctor Who - BBC | |clip = The Doctor Summons the Time Lords - The War Games - Doctor Who - BBC | ||
|clip2 = Second Doctor regenerates - Patrick Troughton to Jon Pertwee | |clip2 = Second Doctor regenerates - Patrick Troughton to Jon Pertwee | ||
|music = [[Dudley Simpson]]|thwr=60}} | |music = [[Dudley Simpson]]|thwr=60|thwr2=200|thwr3=201}} | ||
{{dab page|War Games (disambiguation)}} | {{dab page|War Games (disambiguation)}} | ||
'''''The War Games''''' was the seventh and final serial of [[season 6]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. It was the final story of the 1960s and the last produced in monochrome. It was notable for introducing the [[Time Lord]]s and for being the first time that the Doctor's [[Gallifrey|home planet]] was seen. It was also the first story in which [[Derrick Sherwin]] was credited as [[producer]]. Discounting ''[[Season 23|The Trial of a Time Lord]]'' as four narratively linked stories, it was the longest ''Doctor Who'' story to survive the [[Missing episodes|purging of the BBC's videotape archive]] and currently marks the earliest point in the series where first-time viewers may begin watching ''Doctor Who'' in chronological order without encountering any missing episodes. It was also the first story to have a large gap of time between it and the next one. | '''''The War Games''''' was the seventh and final serial of [[season 6]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. It was the final story of the 1960s and the last produced in monochrome. It was notable for introducing the [[Time Lord]]s and for being the first time that the Doctor's [[Gallifrey|home planet]] was seen. It was also the first story in which [[Derrick Sherwin]] was credited as [[producer]]. Discounting ''[[Season 23|The Trial of a Time Lord]]'' as four narratively linked stories, it was the longest ''Doctor Who'' story to survive the [[Missing episodes|purging of the BBC's videotape archive]] and currently marks the earliest point in the series where first-time viewers may begin watching ''Doctor Who'' in chronological order without encountering any missing episodes. It was also the first story to have a large gap of time between it and the next one. |
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