The Toymaker: Difference between revisions

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Restoring the neutral and more detailed version of the biography. On no account should all the Gough appearances be grouped together! The whole Rallon and regeneration thing is only "by one account". "Relative Dimensions" is not intended to be the Twelfth Doctor slipping into the pre-Time War universe somehow (???). That sort of fanficking belongs in the theory namespace and nowhere else. There may have been good edits in there, but they'll have to be readded individually.
(Don't have time to go through everything rn but I'm changing back the image as we ought to discuss it given the popularity of this page)
Tag: Reverted
(Restoring the neutral and more detailed version of the biography. On no account should all the Gough appearances be grouped together! The whole Rallon and regeneration thing is only "by one account". "Relative Dimensions" is not intended to be the Twelfth Doctor slipping into the pre-Time War universe somehow (???). That sort of fanficking belongs in the theory namespace and nowhere else. There may have been good edits in there, but they'll have to be readded individually.)
Tag: Manual revert
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The Toymaker - Harris incarnation.png|Harris
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|alias      = {{il|The Celestial Toymaker|The Guardian of Dreams|The Crystal Guardian|The Mandarin|[[No Cha]]|[[Urizen's game-master]]}}
|alias      = {{il|Celestial Toymaker|Guardian of Dreams|The Crystal Guardian|The Mandarin|[[No Cha]]|[[Urizen's game-master]]}}
|affiliation = The Toymaker's legions
|affiliation = The Toymaker's legions
|sister      = Hecuba
|sister      = Hecuba
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{{you may|Celestial Puppet Master|the Gamemaster}}
{{you may|Celestial Puppet Master|the Gamemaster}}
{{counterparts |name=the Toymaker|2=The Toymaker (Barusa's universe)|3=Celestial Toymaker (Earth-33⅓)}}
{{counterparts |name=the Toymaker|2=The Toymaker (Barusa's universe)|3=Celestial Toymaker (Earth-33⅓)}}
'''The Toymaker''' was a powerful individual who ensnared sentient beings in seemingly childish [[game]]s, with their freedom as the stakes. However, the Toymaker hated to lose and the games were always rigged in his favour.
'''The Toymaker''', also known as the '''Celestial Toymaker''', was a powerful being who ensnared sentient beings in seemingly childish [[game]]s, with their freedom as the stakes. However, the Toymaker hated to lose and the games were always rigged in his favour.
 
His origins were mysterious, apparently by his own design. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cite source|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}) According to some accounts, the Toymaker was the '''Guardian of Dreams''', one of the six [[Guardians of Time]], a group of [[Great Old One]]s. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) Where the other five Guardians were each associated with a colour, the Guardian of Dreams was associated with '''crystal'''. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Quantum Archangel (novel)}}) The Toymaker was known to the [[China|Chinese]] as the [[trickster]]-[[god]] '''[[No Cha]]'''. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Christmas on a Rational Planet (novel)}})
 
The Toymaker was a long-standing enemy of [[the Doctor]], playing at least three games against them over millennia. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})
 
The Toymaker had a sister named [[Hecuba]], who was known as the Queen of Time. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Queen of Time (audio story)}})


== Biography ==
== Biography ==
=== Origins ===
=== Origins ===
According to the [[Sixth Doctor]], "nobody [knew]" who the Toymaker really was. He was said to be "old beyond imagining" and to predate "[[Time Lord]] records". A team of modern Gallifreyan researchers who attempted to "chart his path through time" gave up, bored of all the games he played with his own past. The Doctor speculated that they didn't try any harder than that because they couldn't find a way to control him. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}) Indeed, one account showed the Toymaker acknowledging different origins in separate conversations with [[Adric]] and the [[Fifth Doctor]], once even altering the details of his story mid-conversation. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}})
According to the [[Sixth Doctor]], "nobody [knew]" who the Toymaker really was. He was said to be "old beyond imagining" and to predate "[[Time Lord]] records". The team of modern Gallifreyan researchers who later attempted to "chart his path through Time" gave up, bored of all the games he played with his own past. The Doctor speculated that they didn't try any harder than that because they couldn't find a way to control him. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}})  
 
His only known family was a sister named [[Hecuba]], who was known as the Queen of Time. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Queen of Time (audio story)}})


==== As one of many toymakers ====
Indeed, one account showed the Toymaker acknowledging different origins in conversation with Adric and with the Doctor, once even altering the details of his story mid-conversation. ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) [[Auteur]] noted that liking the records of themselves "all muddled up" was one of the things they had in common. ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|The Two Auteurs (short story)}})
As the [[Time Lord]]s' data banks on the Toymaker during [[the Doctor's early life]] described him only as a vague legend, with some reports implying that there existed several Toymakers rather than just one, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) the [[First Doctor]] saw the Toymaker he encountered as a native to the same universe as himself, and that he had "lasted" for "thousands of years" by the time of their first encounter. He told [[Steven Taylor]] and [[Dodo Chaplet]] that "this Toymaker" was "immortal, like all [[toymaker]]s", explaining that "the urge to create toys that are ultimately destructive [was] unfortunately part of [their] universe", such that the world was metaphorically full of "destructive toymakers" like him. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (novelisation)}})


==== As a being from another universe ====
==== As a being from another universe ====
Though disagreeing on the details, a number of accounts attributed the Toymaker's powers to him being a native of a [[Parallel universe|different universe]] than [[the Doctor's universe|the Doctor's own]].
Though disagreeing on the details, a number of accounts attributed the Toymaker's powers to his being a native of a [[Parallel universe|different universe]] than [[the Doctor's universe|the Doctor's own]].


While facing the Toymaker in [[Blackpool]], the [[Sixth Doctor]] came to believe that he had finally cracked the riddle of the Toymaker's origins, deducing that the Toymaker originated in another universe and was "hurled" into the Doctor's universe by some kind of "catastrophe", believing his theory explained the Toymaker's longevity and immunity to the usual laws of physics. The Toymaker did not confirm or deny the theory, but did corroborate the Doctor's conclusion that he had lived for "millions of years", and then told the Doctor that he used his powers to build and assist civilisations for the first few "thousands of millennia" he spent in the Doctor's universe until he eventually got bored and only mindless destruction could give him any satisfaction; after an equal length of time spent destroying everything he had previously built up, he discovered [[game]]s as his final and lasting distraction, as they allowed him to embrace nihilism without falling into inactive apathy, surrendering all to the whims of chance. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}})
While facing the Toymaker in [[Blackpool]], the [[Sixth Doctor]] came to believe that he had finally cracked the riddle of the Toymaker's origins, deducing that the Toymaker originated in another universe and was "hurled" into [[the Doctor's universe]] by some kind of "catastrophe". This would explain his longevity, and, more broadly speaking, his being immune to the usual laws of physics. The Toymaker did not confirm or deny the theory, but he did corroborate the Doctor's conclusion that the Toymaker had lived for "millions of years". He then seemed to bear his soul to him, and told him that for the first few "thousands of millennia" he spent in [[the Doctor's universe]], he used his powers to build and assist civilisations — creating "ships, continents, whole planets even". However, he eventually got bored, until only mindless destruction could give him any satisfaction at all; after an equal length of time spent destroying everything he had previously built up, he discovered [[game]]s as his final and lasting distraction, as they allowed him to embrance nihilism without falling into inactive apathy, surrendering all to the whims of chance. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}})


Some accounts claimed that the Toymaker was the [[crystal]]-coloured Guardian of Dreams, counterbalancing the other five [[Guardian of Time|Guardians of Time]], the most powerful [[Great Old One]]s who had survived from [[Great Old Ones' universe|a destroyed universe]] in which they had been an [[earlier race of Time Lords]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}, {{cs|The Quantum Archangel (novel)}}) Six Guardians were stated in one account as having been in attendance for the [[Event One|creation of the universe]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Whoniverse (novel)}}) While trying to win [[Adric]] to his side, the Toymaker tried to broker comradery with the [[E-Space]] native by saying he was also "from another universe", having been "born elsewhere and forced to live out [his] life in a place not [his] own", until he seemingly changed his story by claiming to be a voluntary exile in the manner of the Doctor, though he specified that he was not a [[Time Lord]]. However, this same account also saw the Toymaker identifying himself as a Great Old One and the Guardian of Dreams to the Doctor and [[Stefan (The Nightmare Fair)|Stefan]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}})
This theory echoed the Sixth and Seventh Doctors' explanations of the nature of the [[Great Old One]]s in other accounts, as a specific group of beings who had escaped the destruction of [[Great Old Ones' universe|their universe]] by jumping into the Doctor's own at the moment of [[Event One]]. These accounts did not mention the Toymaker, but ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Millennial Rites (novel)}}, {{cs|All-Consuming Fire (novel)}}) later accounts lumped the Toymaker in with a pantheon of "[[Elder God]]s" also including the likes of [[Fenric]], ([[AUDIO]]: {{cite source|Black and White (audio story)}}) loosely matching the earlier list of Great Old Ones. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Millennial Rites (novel)}}, {{cs|All-Consuming Fire (novel)}})


Yet another account simply suggested that the Toymaker originated from "outside [[time]] and [[space]]". ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Doctor Who Character Encyclopedia: Updated Edition (reference book)|page=35}}) One source saw the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] describe the Toymaker as an "elemental force" with "the power of a god", and suggested that he originated outside the universe; he described [[the Toymaker's domain]] as "a hollow beneath the [[Under-Universe]]". In this account, the Toymaker and the Doctor both suggested that the Toymaker had never properly "entered" [[the Doctor's universe]] before [[the Giggle]]. ([[TV]]: {{cite source|The Giggle (TV story)}})  
In fact, some accounts claimed that the Toymaker was the [[crystal]]-coloured Guardian of Dreams, counterbalancing the other five [[Guardian of Time|Guardians of Time]], the most powerful [[Great Old One]]s who had survived from [[Great Old Ones' universe|a destroyed universe]] in which they had been an [[earlier race of Time Lords]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}, {{cs|The Quantum Archangel (novel)}}) Six Guardians were stated in one account as having been in attendance for the [[Event One|creation of the universe]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Whoniverse (novel)}})


==== As the Nexus of the Primeval Cauldron ====
While trying to win [[Adric]] to his side in an account which otherwise treated him as a Great Old One and Guardian, the Toymaker claimed: "I, too, am from another universe, Adric. Born elsewhere and forced to live out my life in a place not my own". Later in the conversation with Adric, he seemingly changed his story, now claiming to be a voluntary exile in the manner of the Doctor, though he specified that he was not a [[Time Lord]]. However, this same account also saw the Toymaker identifying himself as a Great Old One and the Guardian of Dreams to the Doctor and [[Stefan (The Nightmare Fair)|Stefan]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}})
When the [[Sixth Doctor]] was drawn to [[Blackpool]] by the Toymaker, he believed he was detecting the presence of "the Nexus of the [[Primeval Cauldron]] of Space-Time itself" before he realised that he had been detecting the Toymaker upon coming face-to-face with him, with the Toymaker claiming to be the [[Space-Time Vortex]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)}})


==== As a Great Old One ====
==== As a being from outside time and space ====
According to the [[Eighth Doctor]], the Toymaker originated in "the [[Dark Places]]", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Endgame (DWM comic story)}}) with the [[Twelfth Doctor]] similarly claiming that the Toymaker was spawned in the [[Dark Times|chaos before time]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}}) Likewise, the [[Seventh Doctor]] described the Toymaker as an [[Elder God]] originating from the [[Old Times]] at the beginning of the universe. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Magic Mousetrap (audio story)}}, {{cs|Black and White (audio story)}}) In fact, one account equated him with the [[China|Chinese]] [[trickster]]-[[god]] [[No Cha]], depicting him as one of the magical entities from the chaotic "[[time before this]]" who had survived the [[Time Lord]]s' [[Anchoring of the thread|imposition of rationality]] upon the universe. Only when rationality's foothold on the universe lessened, such as during the reign of the [[Carnival Queen]], was the Toymaker able to descend from his realm outside time and space, and interfere in the physical world once again. ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Christmas on a Rational Planet (novel)}})
Yet another account simply suggested that the Toymaker originated from "outside [[time]] and [[space]]". ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Doctor Who Character Encyclopedia: Updated Edition (reference book)|page=35}}) One source saw the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] describe the Toymaker as an "[[elemental force]]" with "the power of a god", and suggested that he originated outside the universe; he described [[the Toymaker's domain]] as "another realm, a hollow beneath the [[Under-Universe]]". In this account, the Toymaker and the Doctor both suggested that the Toymaker had never properly "entered" [[the Doctor's world]] before his battle with the Fourteenth Doctor. ([[TV]]: {{cite source|The Giggle (TV story)}})  


In contrast, one account mentioned the "chap" who became "obsessed with games" and took to dressing like a [[China|Chinese]] [[Mandarin (bureaucrat)|mandarin]] as a member of one of the [[elder race]]s from the [[original palimpsest universe]]; in this account, this original state of reality before the [[Great House]]s' interference was one of perfect linearity, and it was only after the introduction of [[time travel]] to the universe that various members of the elder races went mad and turned their powers to evil or mischief. ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Mr Saldaamir (short story)}})  
This source suggested that the Fourteenth Doctor had accidentally summoned the Toymaker into reality by casting salt at the [[edge of the universe]] ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}, {{cs|Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)}}) where he had recently met more primitive beings who referred to themselves as "[[not-thing]]s" and exhibited a range of powers, including reshaping and resizing themselves. They claimed to have come from the [[nothing]] which existed beyond the edge, being shaped by distant echoes of the thoughts and lives of the universe's inhabitants. Having been shaped by these echoes of "war and blood and fury and hate", their sole burning desire was to enter reality, "play [mortals'] vicious games, and ''win''". This ethos ([[TV]]: {{cs|Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)}}) echoed the linked account's depiction of the Toymaker as holding that "all that exists is to win or to lose", hence placing games above the Doctor's notions of good and evil. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) The [[Fifteenth Doctor]] later inferred that the [[Goblin]]s followed the Toymaker into the universe as part of [[The Toymaker's legions|his legions]]; after he defeated the Goblins, they appeared to either be erased from [[existence]] or be pulled back into another [[world]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Church on Ruby Road (novelisation)|chaptnum=Thirteen and Eighteen|page=100, 137}})


==== As an Archon ====
==== As a native of the Doctor's universe ====
[[Auteur]] believed that the being [[Mortimus]] had once described as "a being of vast mental powers, who could build and destroy entire realms with his mind", had originally been a fellow [[Archon]] from the [[Gallifreyan history|early history]] of their people, specifically [[Urizen's game-master]]. When Urizen and the other early Archons began to plan the [[anchoring of the thread|anchoring of the universe]] along the rules of [[logic]], the game-master dissented, wanting to use the rules of play as the organising principle instead. In the moment of anchoring, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Two Auteurs (short story)}}) although he successfully "wove" his "urge to build destructive toys" into "the very fabric of the universe itself", ensuring his own [[immortality]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Book of the Snowstorm (short story)}}) he realised that the other founders' insistence on the rules of logic were diluting his own vision. As a result, still infused with the power of the [[caldera]], he "packed his bag and stomped off to the cosmic basement to make his own universe". He was subsequently forgotten, with the records of his existence becoming "muddled up, just how he like[d] them". ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Two Auteurs (short story)}})
Some accounts suggested the Toymaker was not extradimensional, but simply an ancient and powerful native of [[the Doctor's universe]], possibly a survivor of the [[Dark Times]], a member of [[Time Lord|the Doctor's own kind]], or both.


=== Creating the Celestial Toyroom ===
The [[First Doctor]] believed the Toymaker to be one of many. By his understanding, the Toymaker he encountered was native to [[the Doctor's universe|the same universe]] as himself, and had "lasted" for "thousands of years" by the time of their first encounter. He told [[Steven Taylor]] and [[Dodo Chaplet]] that "this Toymaker" was "immortal, like all [[toymaker]]s", explaining that "the urge to create toys that are ultimately destructive [was] unfortunately part of [their] universe", such that the world was metaphorically full of "destructive toymakers" like him. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (novelisation)}})
According to the [[First Doctor]], the Toymaker succeeded in creating a [[universe]] of "entirely in his own vision" called the [[Celestial Toyroom]], where he would "manipulate people and turn them into his playthings". The Toymaker and his games became "notorious throughout the universe" as he spread his influence to attract people into his world and try to make them part of it. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (novelisation)}})


Out of [[boredom]], ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=41}}) the Toymaker began spending centuries of his time wandering the Earth and sampling its various games, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)|The Nightmare Fair]]'') frequently challenging [[human]]s from across history. He lured people from a variety of cultures to the Toyroom, turning them into toys when they lost his games. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=39-42}})
The [[Sixth Doctor]] was drawn to [[Blackpool]] believing that he had detected the presence of "the Nexus of the [[Primeval Cauldron]] of Space-Time itself" there. Upon coming face-to-face with the Toymaker, he realised that he had been detecting the Toymaker himself, and deduced that the Toymaker had "set up the [[Space-Time Vortex]]", to which the Toymaker corrected: "Doctor, I ''am'' the Space-Time Vortex". ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)}}, [[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}) When [[Peri Brown]] marvelled at the thought of the Toymaker as "a being the Time Lords couldn't handle", the Doctor, who had yet to come up with his later theory about the Toymaker being from another universe pointed out that "there [were] lots of them… Time Lords generally aren't very good at handling things, especially ''themselves''". ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}})  


=== Possessing Rallon ===
According to the [[Eighth Doctor]], the Toymaker originated in "the [[Dark Places]]", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Endgame (DWM comic story)}}) with the [[Twelfth Doctor]] similarly claiming that the Toymaker was spawned in the [[Dark Times|chaos before time]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}}) Likewise the [[Seventh Doctor]] described the Toymaker as an [[Elder God]] originating from the [[Old Times]] at the beginning of the universe. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Magic Mousetrap (audio story)}}, {{cs|Black and White (audio story)}}) In fact, one account equated him with the [[China|Chinese]] [[trickster]]-[[god]] [[No Cha]], depicting him as one of the magical entities from the chaotic "[[time before this]]" who had survived the [[Time Lord]]s' [[Anchoring of the thread|imposition of rationality]] upon the universe. Only when rationality's foothold on the universe lessened, such as during the reign of the [[Carnival Queen]], was the Toymaker able to descend from his realm outside time and space, and interfere in the physical world once again. ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Christmas on a Rational Planet (novel)}})
While the Toymaker in a dormant and disembodied state, the [[First Doctor]], [[Rallon]] and [[Millennia]] arrived in the Toyroom in a stolen [[TARDIS]] to investigate the legend of the Toymaker. After he managed to possess Rallon, the Toymaker made Millennia one of his living toys, with the Doctor able to best him with the help of the [[Dymova]]. Knowing that he would become an even more worthy opponent given time to mature, the Toymaker allowed the Doctor to leave the Toyroom. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}})


When initially meeting what their old "handsome" school-mate had become, [[Auteur]] did not actually realise that he had merged with the ancient being of the same name, believing him to have simply taken on a [[Renegade Time Lord|renegade]]'s [[vocational name|title]] as several other members of [[Broken generation|their generation]] had done. At that time, having become "sole supplier of toys to all of [[Fairyland]]", he was calling himself "the Wonderful Toymaker" and claiming to himself be a [[fairy]]. The next time he and Auteur met prior to [[Auteur's twelfth regeneration]], he had started claiming to be a [[Great Old One]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|The Two Auteurs (short story)}}) as he would still maintain when meeting the [[Sixth Doctor]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) [[The Goddess of Gendar]], Auteur's twelfth incarnation, found both claims ridiculous. However, she was later told by her [[Monochrome Auteur|future self]] about the relationship between the "old egomaniac needy game-player, and [the] young egomaniac needy game-player". According to the future Auteur, it had not been a straightforward [[possession]]; in fact, the two [[Lesser Time Elemental|elemental]]s had merged outright, leaving "just the one schizoid liar"; as Auteur put it, "Pinocchio [had] become Gepetto". ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|The Two Auteurs (short story)}})  
In contrast, one account mentioned the "chap" who became "obsessed with games" and took to dressing like a [[China|Chinese]] [[Mandarin (bureaucrat)|mandarin]] as a member of one of the [[elder race]]s from the [[original palimpsest universe]]; in this account, this original state of reality before the [[Great House]]s' interference was one of perfect linearity, and it was only after the introduction of [[time travel]] to the universe that various members of the elder races went mad and turned their powers to evil or mischief. ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Mr Saldaamir (short story)}})  


Indeed, although Rallon's individuality would later reassert itself in full — much to the distress of what remained the original "pure" Toymaker — their consciousnesses had substantially merged, with the Toymaker's personality and behaviour being influenced by Rallon's own. ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) His servant [[Stefan (The Nightmare Fair)|Stefan]] would go on to observe broad aspects of the Toymaker's personality which were actually part of Rallon's, including "a sense of [[morality]], of good and evil"; without him the Toymaker was "cold and harsh". ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Divided Loyalties (novel)}})
[[Auteur]] believed that the being [[Mortimus]] had once described as "a being of vast mental powers, who could build and destroy entire realms with his mind", ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|The Two Auteurs (short story)}}) namely the Toymaker, ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) had originally been a fellow [[Archon]] from the [[Gallifreyan history|early history]] of their people, specifically [[Urizen's game-master]]. When Urizen and the other early Archons began to plan the [[anchoring of the thread|anchoring]] of the universe along the rules of [[logic]], the game-master dissented, wanting to use the rules of play as the organising principle instead. In the moment of anchoring, ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|The Two Auteurs (short story)}}) although he successfully "wove" his "urge to build destructive toys" into "the very fabric of the Universe itself", ensuring his own [[immortality]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|The Book of the Snowstorm (short story)}}) he realised that the other founders' insistence on the rules of logic were diluting his own vision. As a result, still infused with the power of the [[caldera]], he "packed his bag and stomped off to the cosmic basement to make his own universe". He was subsequently forgotten, with the records of his existence becoming "muddled up, just how he likes them". ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|The Two Auteurs (short story)}})


==== Playing against new opponents ====
=== Creating the Celestial Toyroom ===
[[file:lead On.png|thumb|The Toymaker challenges [[Gaylord Lefevre]] to a [[playing card|game of cards]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=40}})]]
According to the [[First Doctor]], the Toymaker succeeded in creating a [[universe]] of his own, "entirely in his own vision" called the [[Celestial Toyroom]], where he would "manipulate people and turn them into his playthings". The Toymaker and his games became "notorious throughout the universe" as he spread his influence to attract people into his world and try to make them part of it. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (novelisation)}})
On one of many occasions when he tricked game-players from across human history into playing games with him, the Toymaker lured a professional [[gambler]] from the [[Old West]] named [[Gaylord Lefevre]] from [[Steamboat (The Greatest Gamble)|his steamboat]] in [[Mississippi River|the Mississippi]], challenging him to [[playing card|a game of cards]]. After Gaylord attempted to mark the cards to "even the [[score]]" when his [[luck]] began to sour, the Toymaker proclaimed that the game was [[forfeit]] and transformed him into one of his many toys after playing along briefly to his cheating attempt. The Toymaker later challenged [[Roman soldier (The Greatest Gamble)|a Roman soldier]], leading him past the toy version of Gaylord. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)}})


In the [[18th century]], [[Hsen Ling]] told stories of his own abduction by the trickster-god [[No Cha]], who he beat in an unearthly game of [[cards]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Christmas on a Rational Planet (novel)}}) [[Mortimus]] also had an encounter with the Toymaker, with the Toymaker coming to like him. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}})
Out of [[boredom]], ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=41}}) the Toymaker began spending centuries of his time wandering the Earth and sampling its various games, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)|The Nightmare Fair]]'') frequently challenging [[human]]s from across history. He lured people from a variety of cultures to the Toyroom, turning them into toys when they lost his games. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=39-42}}) In the [[18th century]], [[Hsen Ling]] told stories of his own abduction by the trickster-god [[No Cha]], who he beat in an unearthly game of [[cards]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Christmas on a Rational Planet (novel)}})


==== Rematch with the First Doctor ====
=== First encounter with the Doctor ===
[[File:ToymakerPointsAndGrins.jpg|thumb|left|The Toymaker has a clever idea. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}})]]
The [[Time Lord]]s' data banks on the Toymaker on [[Gallifrey]] during [[the Doctor's early life]] described him only as a vague legend, with some reports implying that there existed several Toymakers rather than just one. When the [[First Doctor]] investigated the legend with his friends [[Rallon]] and [[Millennia]] in a stolen [[TARDIS]], they arrived in the Toyroom and found the Toymaker in a dormant, disembodied state. However, he managed to possess Rallon and make Millennia one of his living toys, with the Doctor able to best him with the help of the [[Dymova]]. Knowing that he would become an even more worthy opponent given time to mature, the Toymaker allowed the Doctor to leave the Toyroom. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}})
After compiling a list of games to play, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Traveller From Beyond Time (short story)|page=21}}) the Toymaker drew [[the Doctor's TARDIS]] to his realm, so he could make the Doctor play his games again with his companions, [[Steven Taylor]] and [[Dodo Chaplet]], but arranged things so that the Toyroom would vanish completely at their moment of victory, leaving him the only survivor and the Doctor and his companions his subjects forever. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) However, Rallon was able to keep the Toymaker's powers in check and ensured that he abided by the rules of his games to help the Doctor to escape. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) The Doctor soon outwitted the Toymaker again and escaped, leaving his realm in chaos, and the Doctor believing that the Toyroom no longer existed, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) but the Toymaker later stated that he had actually been banished to the [[ether]] for [[millennia]] after his defeat. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Endgame (DWM comic story)}})


==== Attack on Stockbridge ====
When initially meeting what their old "handsome" school-mate had become, [[Auteur]] did not actually realise that he had merged with the ancient being of the same name, believing him to have simply taken on a [[Renegade Time Lord|renegade]]'s [[vocational name|title]] as several other members of [[Broken generation|their generation]] had done. At that time, having become "sole supplier of toys to all of [[Fairyland]]", he was calling himself "the Wonderful Toymaker" and claiming to himself be a [[fairy]]. The next time he and Auteur met prior to [[Auteur's twelfth regeneration]], he had started claiming to be a [[Great Old One]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|The Two Auteurs (short story)}}) as he would still maintain when meeting the [[Sixth Doctor]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) [[The Goddess of Gendar]], Auteur's twelfth incarnation, found both claims ridiculous. However, she was later told by her [[Monochrome Auteur|future self]] about the relationship between the "old egomaniac needy game-player, and [the] ''young'' egomaniac needy game-player". According to the future Auteur, it had not been a straightforward [[possession]]; in fact, the two [[Lesser Time Elemental|elemental]]s had merged outright, leaving "just the one schizoid liar"; as Auteur put it, "Pinocchio [had] become Gepetto". ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|The Two Auteurs (short story)}})
[[File:Celestial Toymaker End Game.jpg|thumb|The Toymaker welcomes the [[Eighth Doctor]] to the [[Celestial Toyroom]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Endgame (DWM comic story)}})]]
Having been banished to the ether in his defeat, the Toymaker spent [[millennia]] searching for a way to best the Doctor, eventually finding that the [[Imagineum]] would be able to create a version of the Doctor under his bidding that was more powerful than the original. As the Imagineum had been in [[spacecraft (Endgame)|a spacecraft]] that crashed on Earth and looted by the [[Knights Templar]], the Toymaker played and won a game of [[canasta]] with a descendant of the Templar living in the [[1990s]] named [[Marwood (Endgame)|Marwood]], placing him under his bidding and the Imagineum in his possession. However, Marwood's [[adjutant]], [[Felix (Endgame)|Felix]], stole a component of the Imagineum called [[the Focus]], and entrusted it with [[Maxwell Edison]] and [[Izzy Sinclair]], before he was killed by Marwood in a mirror version of [[Stockbridge]] the Toymaker made, while keeping the real village in a [[Macro-Dimensional Linkage Device]] that resembled a [[snowglobe]].


When the [[Eighth Doctor]] arrived in the fake Stockbridge, the Toymaker confronted him when he, Max and Izzy tried to retreat to his TARDIS. While the Doctor and Izzy were able to escape from his clutches, Max was captured, and taken to the Macro-Dimensional Linkage Device that the Toymaker had sealed the real Stockbridge in. When the Doctor and Izzy mounted a rescue from the Toyroom, the Toymaker had Marwood and his dolls capture them, and forced them to play games of [[snakes and ladders]] and [[hangman]] before the Toymaker unveiled his possession of the Imagineum. The Toymaker placed Izzy and Max in a game of [[mousetrap]] and created [[Eighth Doctor (Imagineum)|his duplicate]] of the Doctor, placing them in a game of [[gladiatorial chess]].  
Indeed, although Rallon's individuality would later reassert itself in full — much to the distress of what remained the original "pure" Toymaker — their consciousnesses had substantially merged, with the Toymaker's personality and behaviour being influenced by Rallon's own. ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Divided Loyalties (novel)}})
{{quote|This body is being sustained by him. Me. Whatever. Here, let me explain. I needed a body — sadly my original one did not… suit this Universe. Your friend's is the first I have come across that isn't enfeebled and prone to wearing out every seventy years. Mortality is such a burden, I find. This one could last a good thousand years I should imagine. (…) I think there is a tiny spark of him somewhere inside me, acting as a cohesion to keep this frame together.|[[The Toymaker]] ([[PROSE]]: [[Divided Loyalties (novel)|Divided Loyalties]])}}
His servant [[Stefan (The Nightmare Fair)|Stefan]] would go on to observe broad aspects of the Toymaker's personality which were actually part of Rallon's, including "a sense of [[morality]], of good and evil"; without him the Toymaker was "cold and harsh". ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Divided Loyalties (novel)}})


Despite his duplicate being physically superior to him, the Doctor was able to convince his duplicate not to fight by explaining that he was merely just another one of the Toymaker's playthings. After seeing the Toymaker murder Marwood after growing bored of him, the duplicate of the Doctor was left with no doubt that he too would eventually befall the same fate, so he turned on the Toymaker, going to kill him, but the Doctor instead used the Imaginuem to create [[Celestial Toymaker (Imagineum)|a duplicate]] of the Toymaker, sending him and his duplicate to compete in a perpetual [[stalemate]] in the [[Dark Places]] where the Toymaker originated. As the Toyroom began to dissipate, the Doctor, Izzy, and Max fled, while the Doctor's duplicate remained so he could destroy the Imagineum, and the Doctor restored Stockbridge after Max took the "snowglobe" with him from the Toyroom. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Endgame (DWM comic story)}})
=== Continued activities ===
[[file:lead On.png|thumb|The Toymaker challenges [[Gaylord Lefevre]] to a [[playing card|game of cards]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=40}})]]
On one of many occasions when he tricked game-players from across human history into playing games with him, he lured [[Gaylord Lefevre]] — a professional [[gambler]] from the [[Old West]] — from [[steamboat (The Greatest Gamble)|his steamboat]] in [[Mississippi River|the Mississippi]], challenging him to [[playing card|a game of cards]]; when Gaylord's [[luck]] began to sour he attempted to mark the cards to "even the [[score]]", but, aware of Gaylord's deception, the Toymaker proclaimed that the game was [[forfeit]] and transformed him into one of his many toys after playing along briefly. He later challenged [[Roman soldier (The Greatest Gamble)|a Roman soldier]], leading him past the toy version of Gaylord. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=39-42}}) This account showed him already looking as he later would during his rematch with the [[First Doctor]]; ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)}}, [[TV]]: {{cite source|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) by one account which acknowledged Gaylord, he only gained that body — [[Rallon]]'s — after his first encounter with a younger Doctor, placing those events after that encounter.


==== Further activities ====
At some point between his first encounter with the Doctor and his encounter with the [[Fifth Doctor]], the Rallon-merged Toymaker had an encounter with [[Mortimus]], whom the Toymaker rather liked. ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Divided Loyalties (novel)}})
{{section stub|Info from ''[[Murder in the Dark (short story)|Murder in the Dark]]'', & ''[[Trick or Treat (short story)|Trick or Treat]]'' needs to be added}}
[[File:The Toymaker poem.JPG|thumb|left|The Toymaker toys with the [[Tenth Doctor]]. ([[POEM]]: {{cs|The Toymaker (poem)|page=32}})]]
The Toymaker attempted to persuade a victim to play the [[Trilogic Game]], while speaking about his toys and their sadness, as he toyed with the [[Tenth Doctor]], [[The Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]], a [[Cybusman]], an [[Adipose]], and some [[Bronze Dalek]]s. ([[POEM]]: {{cs|The Toymaker (poem)|page=32-33}})


[[File:Toymaker wins.JPG|thumb|The [[Twelfth Doctor]] gives the Toymaker his TARDIS. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}})]]
=== Rematch with the First Doctor ===
When the Toyroom began to break down due its ancient age, the Toymaker feared that he would be "loose in a wild, unforgiving universe", thus luring the [[Twelfth Doctor]] and [[Clara Oswald]] on the pretence of a party hosted by [[Susan Foreman (toy)|Susan]], wanting to steal the Doctor's TARDIS to keep the Toyroom contained. After the toy replicas of some of the Doctor's previous companions failed to capture him, the Toymaker flew a toy [[biplane]] towards him and Clara, but, as the Toymaker's power over the Toyroom was waning, the Doctor was able to take some control, causing the biplane to crash by hitting it with a giant [[bauble]].
[[File:ToymakerPointsAndGrins.jpg|thumb|left|The Toymaker has a clever idea. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}})]]After compiling a list of games to play, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Traveller From Beyond Time (short story)|page=21}}) the Toymaker drew [[the Doctor's TARDIS]] to his realm, so he could make the Doctor play his games again with his companions, [[Steven Taylor]] and [[Dodo Chaplet]], but arranged things so that the Toyroom would vanish completely at their moment of victory, leaving him the only survivor and the Doctor and his companions his subjects forever. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) However, Rallon was able to keep the Toymaker's powers in check and ensured that he abided by the rules of his games to help the Doctor to escape. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) The Doctor soon outwitted the Toymaker again and escaped, leaving his realm in chaos, and the Doctor believing that the Toyroom no longer existed, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) but the Toymaker later stated that he had actually been banished to the [[ether]] for [[millennia]] after his defeat. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Endgame (DWM comic story)|part=Three}})


The Doctor and the Toymaker then battled with toy armies until the Doctor realised they were equally matched, deciding to propose a game of [[Truth or Dare]], during which the Toymaker revealed his fears about the Toyroom's collapse and, thinking he was outsmarting the Doctor, dared him to give the TARDIS to him, which the Doctor did. As the TARDIS materialised around the Toyroom, the Doctor and Clara travelled to the control room, rebuilding the Toyroom with the [[Zero Room]] and ejecting it into space, where the Toymaker could play in solitude. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}})
=== Visit to the Shadow Dimensions ===
[[File:Brief Encounter - Games.png|thumb|The [[The Mandarin-the Entity chess match|four dimensional chess match]] played between the Mandarin and [[the Entity (Games)|the Entity]] in [[Shadow Dimensions|his non-world]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Games (short story)|page=22}})]]
At some point, "the Mandarin" began tracking [[the Entity (Games)|the Entity]] through the [[Arabian plains]], intending to challenge him to a game, but was unable to as the Entity was "hurled" into a [[non-world]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Games (short story)|page=22}}) the [[Shadow Dimensions]], by [[the Doctor]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Curse of Fenric (novelisation)}}) and so he had to travel to the non-world to challenge him there instead. After agreeing on the [[stake (gambling)|stakes]] — the Mandarin would relinquish his body to the Entity if he lost or the Entity would become the Mandarin's [[toy]] if he were to lose instead — the Entity chose [[four dimensional chess]] as the [[The Mandarin-the Entity chess match|game of choice]]. After playing for an unknowable duration of time, the [[advantage]] swaying between them, the Mandarin realised, towards the [[endgame]], that he was going to lose, so, for the first time, he was able to comprehend the [[concept]] of a [[stalemate]]. After such an event happened, the Entity demanded a rematch, but the Mandarin declined explaining they were equally matched rendering a rematch pointless, and thus left the non-world, thanking the Entity for teaching him that "perhaps winning [wasn't] everything after all." ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Games (short story)|page=22}})


=== Becoming the Mandarin ===
=== Becoming the Mandarin ===
Line 100: Line 100:
By this account, although the Toymaker had meaningfully regenerated, in a way which altered his personality, he kept the same face as before; ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) this tallied with one account of the Doctor's subsequent encounter with the Toymaker in Blackpool, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)}}) while another, otherwise-similar account of this event showed that the new Toymaker had adopted a different physical appearance and voice altogether, ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}) which he would retain during an encounter with the [[Eighth Doctor]]. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Solitaire (audio story)}})
By this account, although the Toymaker had meaningfully regenerated, in a way which altered his personality, he kept the same face as before; ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) this tallied with one account of the Doctor's subsequent encounter with the Toymaker in Blackpool, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)}}) while another, otherwise-similar account of this event showed that the new Toymaker had adopted a different physical appearance and voice altogether, ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}) which he would retain during an encounter with the [[Eighth Doctor]]. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Solitaire (audio story)}})


[[File:Toymaker Nightmare Fair Cover.jpg|thumb|right|The Toymaker in [[Blackpool]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)}})]]
=== The Mandarin in Blackpool ===
The Toymaker began operating in late 20th-century Blackpool, indulging in the same impulse that had led to his wanderings. Using the Space Mountain thrill-ride as his base-of-operations, he instructed Stefan, as well as [[Yatsumoto]] and others, to begin the development of arcade cabinets with video games that killed the players that failed with an electronic monster projected from the video screen. The Toymaker goaded the [[Sixth Doctor]] and [[Peri Brown]] into a series of traps and games while they were on holiday in Blackpool. However, when the Doctor recognised his infinite loneliness, the Toymaker was agitated enough to cheat the Doctor of his game and use the video game's murderous monster to kill him, but he was thwarted by the combined intervention of Peri and his other surviving prisoners. To ensure his video games could never be released to harm the people of Earth, the Doctor turned one of the neural relays the Toymaker had built to passively redirect his telekinetic energy against its creator, using it to trap the Toymaker in an endless mental [[time loop]] sustained by his own mental energy. The Doctor believed that the Toymaker could not escape from such a fate until his body finally died of old age after uncountable millions of years. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)}})
[[File:Toymaker Nightmare Fair Cover.jpg|thumb|right|The Toymaker in [[Blackpool]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)}})]]Whichever face he wore, the Toymaker began operating in late 20th-century Blackpool, indulging in the same impulse that had led to his wanderings. Using the Space Mountain thrill-ride as his base-of-operations, he instructed Stefan, as well as [[Yatsumoto]] and others, to begin the development of arcade cabinets with video games that killed the players that failed with an electronic monster projected from the video screen. The Toymaker goaded the [[Sixth Doctor]] and [[Peri Brown]] into a series of traps and games while they were on holiday in Blackpool. However, when the Doctor recognised the Toymaker's infinite loneliness, the Toymaker was agitated enough to cheat the Doctor of his game and use the video game's murderous monster to kill him, but he was thwarted by the combined intervention of Peri and his other surviving prisoners. To ensure his video games could never be released to harm the people of Earth, the Doctor turned one of the neural relays the Toymaker had built to passively redirect his telekinetic energy against its creator, using it to trap the Toymaker in an endless mental [[time loop]] sustained by his own mental energy. The Doctor believed that the Toymaker could not escape from such a fate until his body finally died of old age after uncountable millions of years; the Doctor confessed to Peri that he was quite aggrieved to have had no other option but to visit such a "loathsome" fate upon his ancient foe. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)}}, [[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}})
 
=== The Seventh Doctor's trap ===
"Stirred up" by [[Fenric]] as part of a game among the [[Elder God]]s, ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Gods and Monsters (audio story)}}) the Toymaker lured several people into his domain, including the [[Seventh Doctor]] and his companions [[Ace]] and [[Hex]]. Working under the Doctor's leadership, the group of victims were apparently successful in defeating the Toymaker and imprisoning his essence in a doll. Each of them ate a piece of the doll, dividing the Toymaker so that he would no longer be capable of using his powers. The Doctor concocted an elaborate plan to keep control over the fragments of the Toymaker in the minds of each member of the group until the Toymaker withered away forever. As this plan involved the Doctor forgetting having made the plan in the first place, he wound up short-circuiting it. In the end, it was revealed that the Toymaker had been in control all along, allowing himself to be absorbed into humanity so that he could "feel what it was like to lose". Finally, one of the people involved, the chess master [[Swapnil Khan]], managed to trap the Toymaker in a seemingly-perpetual stalemate in his [[The Toymaker's domain|own dimension]], but not before the Toymaker had reduced everyone except the Doctor, Ace, Hex, and Khan's daughter, [[Queenie Glasscock]], to wooden dolls. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Magic Mousetrap (audio story)}})
 
=== Facing the Eighth Doctor and Charley ===
In an account which depicted him in the same persona encountered by the [[Sixth Doctor]] in [[Blackpool]], ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}) the Toymaker captured [[the Doctor's TARDIS]] and took it to [[Celestial Toyshop|his Toyshop]], where he transformed the [[Eighth Doctor]] into a [[puppet]] and the Doctor's companion, [[Charlotte Pollard|Charley Pollard]], was forced to take part in his riddle, but was tricked by the Toyshop, which shrunk to 0% of its original size and the body the Toymaker was using was destroyed within it. The Toymaker swore that when his new body had formed, he would take his revenge upon the Doctor and Charley, who had escaped before the Toyshop's destruction. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Solitaire (audio story)}})


=== The Mandarin persists ===
=== Facing the Eighth Doctor and Izzy ===
The Toymaker captured [[the Doctor's TARDIS]] and took it to [[Celestial Toyroom|his Toyshop]], where he transformed the [[Eighth Doctor]] into a [[puppet]] and the Doctor's companion, [[Charley Pollard]], was forced to take part in his riddle, but was tricked by the Toyshop, which shrunk to 0% of its original size and the body the Toymaker was using was destroyed within it. The Toymaker swore that when his new body had formed, he would take his revenge upon the Doctor and Charley, who had escaped before the Toyshop's destruction. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Solitaire (audio story)}})
{{section stub|Info from ''[[Murder in the Dark (short story)|Murder in the Dark]]'', & ''[[Trick or Treat (short story)|Trick or Treat]]'' needs to be added}}
[[File:Celestial Toymaker End Game.jpg|thumb|The Toymaker welcomes the [[Eighth Doctor]] to the [[Celestial Toyroom]]. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Endgame (DWM comic story)}})]]
According to one account which purported to be the Toymaker's first encounter with the Doctor after his defeat at the [[Trilogic Game]], the Toymaker, having been banished to the ether in his defeat, spent [[millennia]] searching for a way to best the Doctor, eventually finding that the [[Imagineum]] would be able to create a version of the Doctor under his bidding that was more powerful than the original. As the Imagineum had been in [[spacecraft (Endgame)|a spacecraft]] that crashed on Earth and looted by the [[Knights Templar]], the Toymaker played and won a game of [[canasta]] with a descendant of the Templar living in the [[1990s]] named [[Marwood (Endgame)|Marwood]], placing him under his bidding and the Imagineum in his possession. However, Marwood's [[adjutant]], [[Felix (Endgame)|Felix]], stole a component of the Imagineum called [[the Focus]], and entrusted it with [[Maxwell Edison]] and [[Izzy Sinclair]], before he was killed by Marwood in a mirror version of [[Stockbridge]] the Toymaker made, while keeping the real village in a [[Macro-Dimensional Linkage Device]] that resembled a [[snowglobe]].


[[File:Brief Encounter - Games.png|thumb|left|The [[The Mandarin-the Entity chess match|four dimensional chess match]] played between the Mandarin and [[the Entity (Games)|the Entity]] in [[Shadow Dimensions|his non-world]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Games (short story)|page=22}})]]
When the [[Eighth Doctor]] arrived in the fake Stockbridge, the Toymaker confronted him when he, Max and Izzy tried to retreat to his TARDIS. While the Doctor and Izzy were able to escape from his clutches, Max was captured, and taken to the Macro-Dimensional Linkage Device that the Toymaker had sealed the real Stockbridge in. When the Doctor and Izzy mounted a rescue from the Toyroom, the Toymaker had Marwood and his dolls capture them, and forced them to play games of [[snakes and ladders]] and [[hangman]] before the Toymaker unveiled his possession of the Imagineum. The Toymaker placed Izzy and Max in a game of [[mousetrap]] and created [[Eighth Doctor (Imagineum)|his duplicate]] of the Doctor, placing them in a game of [[gladiatorial chess]].  
The Mandarin began tracking [[Fenric|the Entity]] through the [[Arabian plains]], intending to challenge him to a game, but was unable to as the Entity was "hurled" into a [[non-world]], and so he had to travel to the non-world to challenge him there instead. After agreeing on the [[Stake (gambling)|stakes]] — the Mandarin would relinquish his body to the Entity if he lost or the Entity would become the Mandarin's [[toy]] if he were to lose instead — the Entity chose [[four dimensional chess]] as the [[The Mandarin-the Entity chess match|game of choice]]. After playing for an unknowable duration of time, the [[advantage]] swaying between them, the Mandarin realised, towards the [[endgame]], that he was going to lose, so, for the first time, he was able to comprehend the [[concept]] of a [[stalemate]]. After such an event happened, the Entity demanded a rematch, but the Mandarin declined, explaining they were equally matched, rendering a rematch pointless, and thus left the non-world, thanking the Entity for teaching him that "perhaps winning [wasn't] everything after all." ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Games (short story)|page=22}})


=== The Seventh Doctor's trap ===
Despite his duplicate being physically superior to him, the Doctor was able to convince his duplicate not to fight by explaining that he was merely just another one of the Toymaker's playthings. After seeing the Toymaker murder Marwood after growing bored of him, the duplicate of the Doctor was left with no doubt that he too would eventually befall the same fate, so he turned on the Toymaker, going to kill him, but the Doctor instead used the Imaginuem to create [[Celestial Toymaker (Imagineum)|a duplicate]] of the Toymaker, sending him and his duplicate to compete in a perpetual [[stalemate]] in the [[Dark Places]] where the Toymaker originated. As the Toyroom began to dissipate, the Doctor, Izzy, and Max fled, while the Doctor's duplicate remained so he could destroy the Imagineum, and the Doctor restored Stockbridge after Max took the "snowglobe" with him from the Toyroom. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Endgame (DWM comic story)}})
"Stirred up" by [[Fenric]] as part of a game among the [[Elder God]]s, ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Gods and Monsters (audio story)}}) the Toymaker lured several people into his domain, including the [[Seventh Doctor]] and his companions [[Ace]] and [[Hex]]. Working under the Doctor's leadership, the group of victims were apparently successful in defeating the Toymaker and imprisoning his essence in a doll. Each of them ate a piece of the doll, dividing the Toymaker so that he would no longer be capable of using his powers. The Doctor concocted an elaborate plan to keep control over the fragments of the Toymaker in the minds of each member of the group until the Toymaker withered away forever. As this plan involved the Doctor forgetting having made the plan in the first place, he wound up short-circuiting it. In the end, it was revealed that the Toymaker had been in control all along, allowing himself to be absorbed into humanity so that he could "feel what it was like to lose". Finally, one of the people involved, the chess master [[Swapnil Khan]], managed to trap the Toymaker in a seemingly-perpetual stalemate in his [[The Toymaker's domain|own dimension]], but not before the Toymaker had reduced everyone except the Doctor, Ace, Hex, and Khan's daughter, [[Queenie Glasscock]], to wooden dolls. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Magic Mousetrap (audio story)}})
 
=== Playing with the Tenth Doctor ===
[[File:The Toymaker poem.JPG|thumb|right|The Toymaker toys with the [[Tenth Doctor]]. ([[POEM]]: {{cs|The Toymaker (poem)|page=32}})]]
The Toymaker attempted to persuade a victim to play the [[Trilogic Game]], while speaking about his toys and their sadness, as he toyed with the [[Tenth Doctor]], [[The Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]], a [[Cybusman|Cyberman]], an [[Adipose]], and some [[Dalek]]s. ([[POEM]]: {{cs|The Toymaker (poem)|page=32-33}})
 
=== Encounter with the Twelfth Doctor ===
[[File:Toymaker wins.JPG|thumb|left|The [[Twelfth Doctor]] gives the Toymaker his TARDIS. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}})]]
In an account which ostensbly took place long after the [[Last Great Time War]] but depicted the Toymaker with the same appearance as during his seminal encounter with the [[First Doctor]], after the Toyroom began to break down due its ancient age, the Toymaker feared that he would be "loose in a wild, unforgiving universe", thus luring the [[Twelfth Doctor]] and [[Clara Oswald]] on the pretence of a party hosted by [[Susan Foreman (toy)|Susan]], wanting to steal the Doctor's TARDIS to keep the Toyroom contained. After the toy replicas of some of the Doctor's previous companions failed to capture him, the Toymaker flew a toy [[biplane]] towards him and Clara; as the Toymaker's power over the Toyroom was waning, the Doctor was able to take some control, causing the biplane to crash by hitting it with a giant [[bauble]].
 
The Doctor and the Toymaker then battled with toy armies until he realised they were equally matched, deciding to propose a game of [[Truth or Dare]]; it was in this game the Toymaker revealed his fears about the Toyroom's collapse and, thinking he was outsmarting the Doctor, dared him to give the TARDIS to him. As the TARDIS materialised around the Toyroom, the Doctor and Clara travelled to the control room, rebuilding the Toyroom with the [[Zero Room]] and ejecting it into space. The Doctor had felt compassion for the Toymaker, for they weren't so dissimilar: "a lonely god, drifting through time and space in his magical toy box." ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}})


=== Escape into the Doctor's universe ===
=== Facing the Fourteenth Doctor ===
[[File:Spice up your Toymaker.jpg|thumb|right|Adopting a new appearance, the Toymaker reveled in running amok in [[the Doctor's universe]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})]]
==== Escape into the Doctor's universe ====
After the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] called upon the [[superstition]] of salt warding off evil to hold back the [[Not-thing]]s while at the [[edge of the universe]], where "the walls [were] thin", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)}}) the fact that he had "played a game" resulted in the Toymaker being "let in", entering [[the Doctor's universe]] with "[[delight]]".
[[File:Spice up your Toymaker.jpg|thumb|right|Adopting a new appearance, the Toymaker reveled in running amok in the universe proper. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})]]After the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] called upon the [[superstition]] of salt warding off evil to hold back the [[Not-thing]]s while at the [[edge of the universe]], where "the walls [were] thin", ([[TV]]: {{cs|Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)}}) the fact that he had "played a game" resulted in the Toymaker being "let in", entering [[the Doctor's universe]] with "[[delight]]". By then, the Toymaker had adopted a new appearance, a tall, blond-haired man who affected a variety of outfits and accents.


Running amok, the Toymaker played games with players across the universe, including the [[Guardian of Time|Guardians of Time and Space]], whom he turned into [[voodoo doll]]s, and "[[God (mythology)|God]]", whom he turned into a [[jack-in-the-box]] after gambling with Him. He would go on to claim to have "made a [[The Doctor's early life|jigsaw]] out of [the Doctor's] [[The Doctor's history|history]]", a claim which shocked the Fourteenth Doctor, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) who was still distraught over what he had learned about apparently being the [[Timeless Child]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)}}) He encountered the [[Spy Master]], who was "dying", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) his body "failing" due his botched plan to [[The Master's Dalek Plan|hijack the Doctor's body]] through [[Forced regeneration|a forced regeneration]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Power of the Doctor (TV story)}}) The Master "begged for his life with one final game", but he lost, whereupon the Toymaker imprisoned him inside [[The Toymaker's gold tooth|his gold tooth]] "for all eternity". The only person the Toymaker avoided playing against was an entity he called "[[the One Who Waits]]", claiming to have "seen it hiding" and simply ran away. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})
Running amok, the Toymaker played games with players across the universe, including the [[Guardian of Time|Guardians of Time and Space]], whom he turned into [[voodoo doll]]s, and "[[God (mythology)|God]]", whom he turned into a [[jack-in-the-box]] after gambling with Him. He would go on to claim to have "made a [[The Doctor's early life|jigsaw]] out of [the Doctor's] [[The Doctor's history|history]]", a claim which shocked the Fourteenth Doctor, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) who was still distraught over what he had learned about apparently being the [[Timeless Child]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Wild Blue Yonder (TV story)}}) He encountered the [[Spy Master]], who was "dying", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) his body "failing" due his botched plan to [[The Master's Dalek Plan|hijack the Doctor's body]] through [[Forced regeneration|a forced regeneration]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Power of the Doctor (TV story)}}) The Master "begged for his life with one final game", but he lost, whereupon the Toymaker imprisoned him inside [[The Toymaker's gold tooth|his gold tooth]] "for all eternity". The only person the Toymaker avoided playing against was an entity he called "[[the One Who Waits]]", claiming to have "seen it hiding" and simply run away. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})


=== Using the Giggle ===
==== Planting the Giggle ====
[[File:Toymakergiggle4.jpg|thumb|left|The Toymaker in his shopkeeper outfit within [[the Toymaker's domain|his domain]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})]]
[[File:Toymakergiggle4.jpg|thumb|left|The Toymaker in his shopkeeper outfit within [[the Toymaker's domain|his domain]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})]]The Toymaker settled on [[Earth]] due to believing it and humanity were the "ultimate playground". In [[1925]], he set up a toy store and manipulated events which resulted in one of his dolls, [[Stooky Bill]], becoming the first image viewed on a television screen. He also trapped [[Charles Banerjee]] in his domain after the latter lost a game with him, turning him partially into a doll. The Toymaker animated and immortalised the sound of Stooky Bill's laugh to spread insanity in the [[21st century]], as by then technology and communication had reached a point where the giggle could be heard subliminally across all screens across the planet.
The Toymaker settled on [[Earth]] due to believing it and humanity were the "ultimate playground". In [[1925]], he set up a toy store and manipulated events which resulted in one of his dolls, [[Stooky Bill]], becoming the first image viewed on a television screen. He also trapped [[Charles Banerjee]] in his domain after the latter lost a game with him, turning him partially into a doll. The Toymaker animated and immortalised the sound of Stooky Bill's laugh to spread insanity in the [[21st century]], as by then technology and communication had reached a point where [[the Giggle]] of Stooky Bill could be heard subliminally across all screens across the planet.


The Toymaker soon met the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] and [[Donna Noble]], luring them into his domain. He taunted the Doctor with the number of people who had died because of him over the years, which enraged the Doctor enough to challenge him to [[Game between the Toymaker and the Fourteenth Doctor|a game]] of [[Cut (game)|Cut]] with his [[The Toymaker's cards|personal cards]]. The Toymaker won, however, he was stopped from claiming his prize when the Doctor pointed out that, as he had beaten the Toymaker once before, this only counted as [[one-all]] in a [[best of three]] match. The Toymaker then swiftly disappeared to [[2023]], crumpling his toyshop into a box, with the Doctor and Donna in hot pursuit. As he danced in the streets of 2023 [[London]], enjoying the chaos the Giggle had unleashed, the Toymaker briefly crossed paths with early versions of the Doctor and Donna, but they failed to recognise him as he watched them be taken to the local [[UNIT HQ, City of London|UNIT HQ]].
The Toymaker in 1925 soon met the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] and [[Donna Noble]], luring them into his domain. He taunted the Doctor with the number of people who had died because of him over the years, which enraged the Doctor enough to challenge him to [[Game between the Toymaker and the Fourteenth Doctor|a game]] of [[Cut (game)|Cut]] with his [[The Toymaker's cards|personal cards]]. The Toymaker won, however, he was stopped from claiming his prize when the Doctor pointed out that, as he had beaten the Toymaker once before, this only counted as [[one-all]] in a [[best of three]] match. The Toymaker then swiftly disappeared to [[2023]], crumpling his toyshop into a box, with the Doctor and Donna in hot pursuit. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})


==== The final game ====
[[File:Toymakergiggle7.png|thumb|right|The Toymaker and the [[galvanic beam]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})]]
[[File:Toymakergiggle7.png|thumb|right|The Toymaker and the [[galvanic beam]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})]]
The Toymaker soon arrived at UNIT HQ, entirely unthreatened by UNIT as he danced and lip-synced whilst slaughtering anybody who attempted to stop him. He took control of the galvanic beam UNIT had used to destroy the satellite broadcasting the Giggle, and fired on the Doctor and his friends. When the Doctor attempted to persuade him to leave Earth and take his games elsewhere, the Toymaker refused, and then shot the Doctor with the beam, stating that the rules of the game state that he should play the final round with the next Doctor. The Toymaker watched in glee as the Doctor began to [[regenerate]], but was dumbfounded when he instead [[bi-generation|bi-generated]].
The Toymaker arrived at [[UNIT HQ, City of London|UNIT HQ]], entirely unthreatened by UNIT as he danced and lip-synced whilst slaughtering anybody who attempted to stop him. He took control of the galvanic beam UNIT had used to destroy the satellite broadcasting the giggle, and fired on the Doctor and his friends. When the Doctor attempted to persuade him to leave Earth and take his games elsewhere, the Toymaker refused, and then shot the Doctor with the beam, stating that the rules of the game state that he should play the final round with the next Doctor. The Toymaker watched in glee as the Doctor began to [[regenerate]], but was dumbfounded when he instead [[bi-generation|bi-generated]].


After causing the [[Fourteenth Doctor's bi-generation]], the Toymaker engaged in an intense [[Game between the Toymaker and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Doctors|game of catch]] with the Fourteenth and [[Fifteenth Doctor]]s. Finally, the Toymaker failed to catch a throw from the Fifteenth Doctor, and he was defeated. As his prize, the Fourteenth Doctor banished the Toymaker from existence forever. The Toymaker folded up into a suit that was contained in the box that had been his toyshop after [[Mel Bush]] pushed at him. As he was trapped, the Toymaker warned that "[[The Toymaker's legions|[his] legions]] [we]re coming." [[Kate Lethbridge-Stewart]] took the box and ordered it to be taken to the deepest vault and binded in [[salt]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) while the Toymaker awaited within to start his next game. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Giggle (novelisation)}}) The Toymaker's domain lingered for a short time afterwards, which allowed the Fifteenth Doctor to cause a bi-generation of the TARDIS itself by claiming it as his own prize for defeating the Toymaker. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})
After causing the [[Fourteenth Doctor's bi-generation]], the Toymaker engaged in an intense [[Game between the Toymaker and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Doctors|game of catch]] with the Fourteenth and [[Fifteenth Doctor]]s. Finally, the Toymaker failed to catch a throw from the Fifteenth Doctor, and he was defeated. As his prize, the Fourteenth Doctor banished the Toymaker from existence forever. The Toymaker folded up into a suit that was contained in a box that [[Mel Bush]] pushed at him. As he was trapped, the Toymaker warned that "[[The Toymaker's legions|[his] legions]] [we]re coming." [[Kate Lethbridge-Stewart]] took the box and ordered [[UNIT United Kingdom|UNIT]] to take it to their deepest vault and bind it in [[salt]], ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) while the Toymaker awaited within to start his next game. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Giggle (novelisation)}}) The Toymaker's domain lingered for a short time afterwards which allowed the Fifteenth Doctor to cause a bi-generation of the TARDIS itself by claiming it as his own prize for defeating the Toymaker. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})


=== Undated events ===
=== Undated events ===
[[File:The Toymaker (Double Danger).jpg|thumb|left|The Toymaker faces the [[Fourteenth Doctor]]. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|Double Danger (game)|page=44}})]]
[[File:The Toymaker (Double Danger).jpg|thumb|left|The Toymaker faces the [[Fourteenth Doctor]]. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|Double Danger (game)|page=44}})]]
* [[Romana II]] once recalled an incident in which the Celestial Toymaker took over the [[BBC (in-universe)|BBC]]'s [[Light Entertainment Department]], greatly harming [[human]]ity but boosting sales figures. In order for her and the [[Fourth Doctor]] to defeat the Toymaker, Romana had to work at the BBC and produce a radio drama about cow owners. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Doctor Who and the Krikkitmen (novelisation)}})
*[[Romana II]] once recalled an incident in which the Celestial Toymaker took over the [[BBC (in-universe)|BBC]]'s [[Light Entertainment Department]], greatly harming [[human]]ity but boosting sales figures. In order for her and the [[Fourth Doctor]] to defeat the Toymaker, Romana had to work at the BBC and produce a radio drama about cow owners. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Doctor Who and the Krikkitmen (novelisation)}})
* For an indefinitely prolonged period, the Fourth Doctor and Romana II were trapped in [[The Doctor's reality (The Not-So-Sinister Sponge)|a hazy and simplistic reality in which they went on endless frivolous adventures, only occasionally having flashes of their true personalities]]. The Doctor once realised that he and Romana were dolls being played with until they fell apart, in the process seeing an "exquisitely carved Chinese mandarin doll" which he sensed was important. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Playing with Toys (short story)}})
*For an indefinitely prolonged period, the Fourth Doctor and Romana II were trapped in [[The Doctor's reality (The Not-So-Sinister Sponge)|a hazy and simplistic reality in which they went on endless frivolous adventures, only occasionally having flashes of their true personalities]]. The Doctor once realised that he and Romana were dolls being played with until they fell apart, in the process seeing an "exquisitely carved Chinese mandarin doll" which he sensed was important. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Playing with Toys (short story)}})
* An image of the Toymaker as he appeared during his "[[Stooky Bill]]" plot, in his street-mime disguise, ([[TV]]: {{cite source|The Giggle (TV story)}}) was the subject of the [[Fourteenth Doctor]]'s request of [[Human (Double Danger)|a human]] to figure out the differences between two versions of [[reality]] following a "[[rupture]] in [[time]]" by examining two pictures. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|Double Danger (game)|page=44}})
*An image of the Toymaker as he appeared during his "[[Stooky Bill]]" plot, in his street-mime disguise, ([[TV]]: {{cite source|The Giggle (TV story)}}) was the subject of the [[Fourteenth Doctor]]'s request of [[Human (Double Danger)|a human]] to figure out the differences between two versions of [[reality]] following a "[[rupture]] in [[time]]" by examining two pictures. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|Double Danger (game)|page=44}})


== References ==
=== Legacy ===
{{Section stub|Information from [[GAME]]: {{cs|The Saviour of Time (video game)}}, [[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Miniaturist (audio story)}}, {{cs|Black and White (audio story)}} and ''[[The Widow's Assassin (audio story)|The Widow's Assassin]]'' needs to be added.}}
{{Section stub|Information from [[GAME]]: {{cs|The Saviour of Time (video game)}}, [[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Miniaturist (audio story)}}, {{cs|Black and White (audio story)}} and ''[[The Widow's Assassin (audio story)|The Widow's Assassin]]'' needs to be added.}}
The [[Elder]]s, recording the [[First Doctor]]'s voyages using their [[instrument]]s and [[chart]]s, included how the Celestial Toymaker showed the Doctor how gods were most dangerous when they were [[boredom|bored]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Traveller From Beyond Time (short story)|page=20-21}})
The [[Elder]]s, recording the [[First Doctor]]'s voyages using their [[instrument]]s and [[chart]]s, included how the Celestial Toymaker showed the Doctor how gods were most dangerous when they were [[boredom|bored]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Traveller From Beyond Time (short story)|page=20-21}})
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On [[Siralos]], the [[Tremas Master]] used "what was once the Celestial Toymaker's favourite toy" to trap [[the Graak]]. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|Destiny of the Doctors (video game)}})
On [[Siralos]], the [[Tremas Master]] used "what was once the Celestial Toymaker's favourite toy" to trap [[the Graak]]. ([[GAME]]: {{cs|Destiny of the Doctors (video game)}})


During the Eighth Doctor's supposed [[Eighth Doctor's regeneration|regeneration]] into [[The Doctor (Party Animals)|a new incarnation]], ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Final Chapter (comic story)}}) secretly the shapeshifting construct [[Shayde]] who had switched places with the real Doctor, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Wormwood (comic story)}}) an image of the Celestial Toymaker was seen. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Final Chapter (comic story)}})
In the [[city-state]] [[Tor-Ka-Nom]] in [[2708]], after [[Izzy Sinclair]] retorted to the [[Eighth Doctor]] to "keep out of trouble", they both began citing trouble they got into, with the Doctor mentioning how she "almost got her neck stretched in a floating [[noose]]". ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|By Hook or By Crook (comic story)|part=One}})


Upon Izzy's return to [[Stockbridge]] on [[19 December]] [[1996]], her adoptive parentsasked her about her day and she reminisced to herself about her adventures with the Doctor, including her battle with the Toymaker. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Oblivion (comic story)}})
During the Eighth Doctor's supposed [[Eighth Doctor's regeneration|regeneration]] into [[the Doctor (Party Animals)|a new incarnation]], ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Final Chapter (comic story)|part=Four}}) secretly the shapeshifting construct [[Shayde]] who had switched places with the real Doctor, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Wormwood (comic story)}}) an image of the Celestial Toymaker was seen. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Final Chapter (comic story)|part=Four}})


In mid-[[December]] [[2008]], upon being reunited with [[Maxwell Edison]] in [[Stockbridge]], the [[Tenth Doctor]] reminisced about several of his adventures with Max, including how they defeated the Celestial Toymaker together. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Stockbridge Child (comic story)|page=24}})
Upon Izzy's return [[Redfern Inn|home]] to [[Stockbridge]] on [[19 December]] [[1996]], having felt guilty about how she treated her [[Sandra Sinclair|adoptive]] [[Les Sinclair|parents]], they asked her about her day and she reminisced to herself about her adventures with the Doctor, including her first with the Toymaker. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Oblivion (comic story)|part=Six}})


When the [[Trylonian]]s attempted to use their [[Trylonian brain drain machine|Brain Drain machine]] on the [[Eleventh Doctor]] to gain [[intelligence|intel]] on his many enemies, the Celestial Toymaker was one of the individuals in the resulting mental projection who asked the Doctor for his help. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Birthday Boy (comic story)}})
In mid-[[December]] [[2008]], upon being reunited with [[Maxwell Edison]] in [[Stockbridge]], the [[Tenth Doctor]] reminisced about several of his adventures with Max, including how they defeated the Celestial Toymaker. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Stockbridge Child (comic story)|part=One|page=24}})
 
When the [[Trylonian]]s attempted to use their [[Trylonian brain drain machine|Brain Drain machine]] on the [[Eleventh Doctor]] to gain [[intelligence|intel]] on their many enemies, the Celestial Toymaker was one of the individuals in the resulting mental projection who asked the Doctor for his help. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Birthday Boy (comic story)}})


While trapping the [[Thirteenth Doctor]] aboard [[Zellin's space platform|his space platform]], [[Zellin]] told the Doctor that [[the Doctor's universe|her dimension]] was like a [[board game]] for him of which "the Toymaker would approve". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Can You Hear Me? (TV story)}})
While trapping the [[Thirteenth Doctor]] aboard [[Zellin's space platform|his space platform]], [[Zellin]] told the Doctor that [[the Doctor's universe|her dimension]] was like a [[board game]] for him of which "the Toymaker would approve". ([[TV]]: {{cs|Can You Hear Me? (TV story)}})


The [[Fifteenth Doctor]], after he and [[Ruby Sunday]] escaped from the [[Goblin ship]], explained to her how the arrival of the [[Goblin]]s was part of the Toymaker's legacy, as they were part of [[The Toymaker's legions|the legions]] he brought with him into [[the universe]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Church on Ruby Road (novelisation)|chaptnum=Thirteen|page=100}})
The [[Fifteenth Doctor]], after he and [[Ruby Sunday]] escaped from the [[Goblin ship]], explained to her how the arrival of the [[Goblin]]s was part of the Toymaker's legacy, as they were part of [[the Toymaker's legions|the legions]] he brought with him into [[the universe]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Church on Ruby Road (novelisation)|chaptnum=Thirteen|page=100}})


== Other realities ==
=== Other realities ===
[[File:Celestial Toymaker Earth-33⅓.jpg|thumb|The Celestial Toymaker in [[Earth-33⅓]], receiving a career-changing birthday gift. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Doctor Who? (DWM 196 comic story)|''Doctor Who?'' 196}})]]
[[File:Celestial Toymaker Earth-33⅓.jpg|thumb|The Celestial Toymaker in [[Earth-33⅓]], receiving a career-changing birthday gift. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Doctor Who? (DWM 196 comic story)|''Doctor Who?'' 196}})]]
In [[Earth-33⅓]], the Celestial Toymaker  was a ''[[Doctor Who (Earth-33⅓)|Doctor Who]]'' villain. Early in his [[career]], he received an influential [[birthday present]] in the form of a [[Paul Daniel's Magic Set]], which he liked to an extent. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Doctor Who? (DWM 196 comic story)|''Doctor Who?'' 196}})
In [[Earth-33⅓]], the Celestial Toymaker  was a ''[[Doctor Who (Earth-33⅓)|Doctor Who]]'' villain. Early in his [[career]], he received an influential [[birthday present]] a [[Paul Daniel's Magic Set]] which he liked to an extent. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Doctor Who? (DWM 196 comic story)|''Doctor Who?'' 196}})


In [[Barusa's universe|one]] of the infinite [[parallel universe]]s of "[[Multiverse|possible space]]", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Fire and Brimstone (comic story)}}) [[The Doctor (Barusa's universe)|the Doctor]] once encountered "[[The Toymaker (Barusa's universe)|the Toymaker]]", described as an "evil force dominating a fantasy world", in [[2525]]. [[Barusa]] later discovered that the Toymaker was actually under the control of [[The Master (Barusa's universe)|the Master]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Chronicles of Doctor Who? (short story)}})
In [[Barusa's universe|one]] of the infinite [[parallel universe]]s of "[[Multiverse|possible space]]", ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Fire and Brimstone (comic story)}}) [[the Doctor (Barusa's universe)|the Doctor]] once encountered "[[the Toymaker (Barusa's universe)|the Toymaker]]", described as an "evil force dominating a fantasy world", in [[2525]]. [[Barusa]] later discovered that the Toymaker was actually under the control of [[the Master (Barusa's universe)|the Master]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Chronicles of Doctor Who? (short story)}})


== Appearance ==
== Appearance ==
According to one account, before his first match with the Doctor, the Toymaker [[Possession|possessed]] countless less malleable bodies, which wore out quickly under the strain. After three members of [[the Deca]] stumbled into his domain, he merged with the [[Time Lord]] [[Rallon]]. After stabilising in Rallon's body, the Toymaker was able to transform at will into other appearances. When he first greeted the [[First Doctor]], he had taken the appearance of a [[red]] [[dragon]], appearing as "a scaly, reptilian creature on four stumpy legs", "flame red all over" with "a big wide mouth, a scaly mane", "huge rolling eyes", and "a wisp of smoke curled out through one nostril". He then revealed his humanoid appearance, dressed in the later-typical [[China|Chinese]] outfit. Notwithstanding when he was calling on his full power, when his head would blur into a starry "ball of energy", he initially had the face of the [[incarnation]] of Rallon with whom he had merged, handsome and youthful with [[olive (colour)|olive]] [[skin]] and dark [[hair]]. However, after making the situation clear to the Doctor, he decided to alter it to better match his personality.  
According to one account, before his first match with the Doctor, the Toymaker [[Possession|possessed]] countless other, less malleable bodies which wore out quickly under the strain. After three members of [[the Deca]] stumbled into his domain, he merged with the [[Time Lord]] [[Rallon]]. After stabilising in this new body, he was able to transform at will into other appearances. When he first greeted [[the Doctor's early life|the young Doctor]], he had taken the appearance of a [[red]] [[dragon]], appearing as "a scaly, reptilian creature on four stumpy legs", "flame red all over" with "a big wide mouth, a scaly mane", "huge rolling eyes", and "a wisp of smoke curled out through one nostril".  
 
He then revealed his humanoid appearance, dressed in the later-typical [[China|Chinese]] outfit. Notwithstanding when he was calling on his full power, when his head would blur into a starry "ball of energy", he initially had the face of the [[incarnation]] of Rallon with whom he had merged, handsome and youthful with [[olive (colour)|olive]] [[skin]] and dark [[hair]]. However, after making the situation clear to the Doctor, he decided to alter it to better match his personality.  


This new face was "lined, but seemingly through years of smiling rather than age" and "not unpleasant" — ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) the same form he wore during his encounter with the [[First Doctor]], [[Steven Taylor]] and [[Dodo Chaplet]]. ([[TV]]: {{cite source|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) This definitive Toymaker was a tall and imposing man with deep-set, glittering [[Eye|eyes]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (novelisation)}}) He dressed as a [[Chinese]] [[Mandarin (bureaucrat)|mandarin]], wearing a round [[black]] hat with [[Gold (colour)|gold]] thread and a [[Silver (colour)|silver]], [[red]] and [[blue]] collar over a [[dragon]]-patterned black robe encrusted with [[ruby|rubies]], [[emerald]]s, [[diamond]]s and [[pearl]]s. Within the accounts of this particular encounter, the Toymaker was dressed in the theatrical Chinese outfit in the context of being the Doctor's opponent in the [[Trilogic Game]], much as his other living toys changed their outfits to match the theme of a given game. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}})
This new face was "lined, but seemingly through years of smiling rather than age" and "not unpleasant" — the form he wore ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) during his his encounter with the [[First Doctor]], [[Steven Taylor]] and [[Dodo Chaplet]]. ([[TV]]: {{cite source|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) This definitive Toymaker was a tall and imposing man with deep-set, glittering [[Eye|eyes]]. He dressed as a [[Chinese]] [[Mandarin (bureaucrat)|mandarin]], wearing a round [[black]] hat with [[Gold (colour)|gold]] thread and a [[Silver (colour)|silver]], [[red]] and [[blue]] collar over a [[dragon]]-patterned black robe encrusted with [[ruby|rubies]], [[emerald]]s, [[diamond]]s and [[pearl]]s. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (novelisation)}}) Within the accounts of this particular encounter, the Toymaker was dressed in the theatrical Chinese outfit in the context of being the Doctor's opponnt in the [[Trilogic Game]], much as his other living toys changed their outfits to match the theme of a given game; ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) however, later accounts showed the Toymaker wearing this outfit as his regular everyday wear. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}, {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)}}, [[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)}}, [[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}, etc.) A later account showed the Toymaker changing his costume frequently to match his current entertanment. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}, [[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Giggle (novelisation)}})


After Rallon managed to separate himself from the Toymaker, the Toymaker merged with [[The Observer (Divided Loyalties)|the Observer]], Rallon's semi-independent [[Watcher (Logopolis)|Watcher]], allowing him to effectively [[Regeneration|regenerate]] into a new physical body to replace Rallon's original one, with Rallon's mind no longer part of him, though his new body's personality would be influenced by the personality of Rallon's possible incarnations. The [[Fifth Doctor]] expected that the Toymaker would "look the same" despite the minor changes in demeanour; ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) by one account, he was proved correct when the [[Sixth Doctor]] met the Toymaker in [[Blackpool]], with him still possessing the same "aristocratic before". ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)}}) Another telling of the same encounter, however, depicted the Toymaker as now having a distinctly different voice and appearance, with a greying beard and soulful, melancholy eyes. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}})
After Rallon managed to separate himself from the Toymaker, the Toymaker merged with [[the Observer]], Rallon's semi-independent [[Watcher (Logopolis)|Watcher]]. This allowed him to effectively [[Regeneration|regenerate]] into a new physical body replacing Rallon's original one, with Rallon's mind was no longer part of him, though his new body's personality would be influenced by the personality of Rallon's possible incarnations. The [[Fifth Doctor]] expected that the Toymaker would "look the same" despite the minor changes in demeanour; ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) by one account, he was proved correct when the [[Sixth Doctor]] met the Toymaker in [[Blackpool]], with him still possessing the same "aristocratic before". ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)}}) Another telling of the same encounter, however, depicted the Toymaker as now having a distinctly different voice and appearance, with a graying beard and soulful, melancholy eyes. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cite source|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}})


In the form encountered by the [[Fourteenth Doctor]], the Toymaker appeared as a blond man. He wore a number of different outfits based on his whims and the current situation, such as wearing a black [[top hat]], [[tailcoat]] and [[trousers]] with an [[Alabaster (colour)|alabaster]] [[bow tie]] and [[waistcoat]] as well as a plain [[white]] [[shirt]] when he danced in the streets of [[21st century London]]. His outfit as a shop proprietor in [[1925]] was made up of a [[Caramel (colour)|caramel]] [[brown]] [[leather]] [[apron]], a single-breasted waistcoat of [[Plum (colour)|plum]] and [[Sapphire (colour)|sapphire]] [[tartan]] with a [[fob watch]], a white and [[Ebony (colour)|ebony]] [[pinstripe]] shirt, [[Tan (colour)|tan]] trousers, and white and brown [[spectator shoes]]. He also wore a [[shako]] and [[frock coat]] in [[scarlet]] and ivory with gold trims, [[beige]] [[breeches]] and ebony black [[boot]]s with [[crimson]] laces when he terrorized [[UNIT United Kingdom|UNIT]], and then a black [[leather jacket]] with a [[khaki]] uniform and an ivory [[scarf]] as well as [[goggles]] when he took control of the galvanic beam. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})
In the form encountered by the Fourteenth Doctor, the Toymaker appeared as a blond man. He wore a number of different outfits based on his whims and the current situation. When first met in 2023 he wore a black [[top hat]], [[tailcoat]] and [[trousers]] with an [[Alabaster (colour)|alabaster]] [[bow tie]] and [[waistcoat]] as well as a plain [[white]] [[shirt]]. His outfit in [[1925]] were made up of a [[Caramel (colour)|caramel]] [[brown]] [[leather]] [[apron]], a single-breasted waistcoat of [[Plum (colour)|plum]] and [[Sapphire (colour)|sapphire]] [[tartan]] with a [[fob watch]], a white and [[Ebony (colour)|ebony]] [[pinstripe]] shirt, [[Tan (colour)|tan]] trousers, and white and brown [[spectator shoes]]. He also wore a [[shako]] and [[frock coat]] in [[scarlet]] and ivory with gold trims, [[beige]] [[breeches]] and ebony black [[boot]]s with [[crimson]] laces when he terrorized [[UNIT United Kingdom|UNIT]], and then a black [[leather jacket]] with a [[khaki]] uniform and an ivory [[scarf]] as well as [[goggles]] when he took control of the galvanic beam; both events in [[21st century London|London]] during [[2023]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})


== Psychological profile ==
== Psychological profile ==
As the Toymaker was [[immortality|immortal]], he would otherwise be incredibly [[boredom|bored]] if it weren't for his games. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=41}}; [[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Traveller From Beyond Time (short story)|page=21}}) He lived for "times of [[chance]]", when both his [[skill]] and [[fortune]] were challenged, as it made [[eternity]] bearable. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Games (short story)|page=22}}) By one account, as he was isolated for so long, he had become [[Insanity|insane]]; ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Doctor Who Character Encyclopedia: Updated Edition (reference book)|page=35}}) indeed, the [[Twelfth Doctor]] was aware that people believed the Toymaker was insane, expressing that they were probably correct. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}}) According to the [[Sixth Doctor]], games were the Toymaker's "[[meat]] and [[drink]]". ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Trick or Treat (short story)|page=91}}) Holding that "good" and "bad" were "nothing" to a being of his scale, the Toymaker lived by the mantra that "all that exist[ed] [was] to win or to lose", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) losing all mirth if someone, even one of his servants, tried to plead or cheat their way out of suffering the consequences of "losing", ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}) though he himself was not averse to trying to talk his way out of a fair lose. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})
As the Toymaker was [[immortality|immortal]], he would otherwise be incredibly [[boredom|bored]] if it weren't for his games; ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=41}}, [[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Traveller From Beyond Time (short story)|page=21}}) he therefore lived for these "times of [[chance]]", when both his [[skill]] and [[fortune]] were challenged, as it made [[eternity]] bearable. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Games (short story)|page=22}}) By one account, as he was isolated for so long, he had become [[Insanity|insane]]; ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Doctor Who Character Encyclopedia: Updated Edition (reference book)|page=35}}) indeed, the [[Twelfth Doctor]] was aware that people believed the Toymaker was insane, expressing that they were probably correct. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}}) According to the [[Sixth Doctor]], games were the Toymaker's "[[meat]] and [[drink]]". ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Trick or Treat (short story)|page=91}})  


Several accounts showed that he had developed a particular affection for [[Earth]] and [[human]]ity due to their interest in [[game]]s, ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}; [[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) once declaring that he had "fallen in love with humanity". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) The [[Sixth Doctor]] believed that he had a specific "interest in matters Eastern", accounting for his habit of dressing up as a Chinese mandarin, ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}) although another account suggested that the Toymaker made a habit of dressing up in outlandish costumes on a whim, occasionally playing up stereotypes associated with the costume he had appropriated to a cartoonish degree, such as fliting between various fake [[accent]]s. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})
Holding that "good" and "bad" were "nothing" to a being of his scale, he lived by the mantra that "all that exists is to win or to lose", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) losing all mirth if someone, even one of his servants, tried to plead or cheat their way out of suffering the consequences of "losing". ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}) Several accounts showed that he had developed a particular affection for [[Earth]] and [[human]]ity due to their interest in [[game]]s, ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}, [[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) once declaring that he had "fallen in love with humanity". ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) The [[Sixth Doctor]] believed that he had a specific "interest in matters Eastern", accounting for ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}) his habit of dressing up as a Chinese mandarin, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}, [[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}, etc.) although another account suggested that the Toymaker made a habit of dressing up in outlandish costumes on a whim, occasionally playing up stereotypes associated with the costume he had appropriated to a cartoonish degree, such as fliting between various fake [[accent]]s. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})


The Toymaker once described himself as the "pan-dimensional" equivalent of [[Walt Disney]], [[Charles Darrow]], and [[Hiroshi Yamauchi]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) The [[First Doctor]] berated him for his "childish behaviour", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) and he was prone to flitting rapidly between moods and ideas as the whim took him. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}; [[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) Occasionally the Toymaker would show a more serious side, such as how he seemed truly disturbed by the notion of facing [[the One Who Waits]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})
The Toymaker once described himself as the "pan-dimensional" equivalent of [[Walt Disney]], [[Charles Darrow]], and [[Hiroshi Yamauchi]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Divided Loyalties (novel)}}) The [[First Doctor]] berated him for his "childish behaviour", ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) and he was prone to flitting rapidly between moods and ideas as the whim took him. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}, [[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (audio story)}}) Occasionally the Toymaker would show a more serious side; he seemed truly disturbed by the notion of facing [[the One Who Waits]], and showed anger and irritation during his confrontations with the Doctor. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})


Though "wily" ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=41}}) he denied that he would [[cheat]] in his games, seeming genuinely offended by the suggestion. While the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] confirmed it was "the one thing he won't do" as "the rules of the game" were the only rules he would follow, the Toymaker would try to work outside the rules, such as trying to best the Doctor in a game of catch by throwing the ball without warning to catch the Doctor off-guard. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) By the time of his encounter with the [[Fifth Doctor]], he took a dim view of the way the First Doctor tricked his way out of the [[Trilogic Game]], lightly chiding the Doctor for cheating — though not so dim as to try to invalidate the outcome of that game. ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Divided Loyalties (novel)}})
Though "wily" ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=41}}) he denied that he would [[cheat]] in his games, seeming genuinely offended by the suggestion. While the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] confirmed it was "the one thing he won't do" as "the rules of the game" were the only rules he would follow, the Toymaker would try to work outside the rules, such as trying to best the Doctor in a game of catch by throwing the ball without warning to catch the Doctor off-guard. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) By the time of his encounter with the [[Fifth Doctor]], he took a dim view of the way the First Doctor tricked his way out of the [[Trilogic Game]], lightly chiding the Doctor for cheating — though not so dim as to try to invalidate the outcome of that game. ([[PROSE]]: {{cite source|Divided Loyalties (novel)}})


The Toymaker also only wanted the Doctor's help if he could best him in a game, seemingly too proud to ask him directly. According to this account, the Toymaker was deathly afraid of the universe and could barely conceive the idea of being forced to leave the Toyroom. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}}) However, other accounts indicated he visited the outside universe without such fear. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)}}; [[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)}})
The Toymaker also only wanted the Doctor's help if he could best him in a game, seemingly too proud to ask him directly. According to this account, the Toymaker was deathly afraid of the universe and could barely conceive the idea of being forced to leave the Toyroom. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}}) However, other accounts indicated he visited the outside universe without such fear. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)}}, [[PROSE]]: {{cs|Games (short story)}}, etc.) The [[concept]]s of [[evil]] and, up until a point, a [[stalemate]] were beyond his comprehension. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Games (short story)|page=22}})


== Powers and abilities ==
== Powers and abilities ==
[[File:ToymakerSnapsFingers.jpg|thumb|left|The Toymaker in his realm. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}})]]
[[File:ToymakerSnapsFingers.jpg|thumb|left|The Toymaker in his realm. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}})]]
Within the [[Celestial Toyroom]], the Toymaker commanded immense powers, but they were limited by the rules he or his opponents set for any particular game. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) The [[Fourteenth Doctor]] stated the Toymaker was bound by the rules, so much so that he could not [[cheat]] to win, even if he wanted to. He also had to follow new rules he brought into the game, even if the new rule did not gain him the result he was expecting, like how his desire to face the [[Fifteenth Doctor]] accidentally meant he also had to face the Fourteenth Doctor at the same time. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) Although, he could bend these rules or "forget" to mention them to his opponents if he so chose, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) but he was not above cheating if his opponent also did so; on one occasion, he tauntingly claimed that he was just following a "new [[rule]]" his opponent had unwittingly introduced by cheating. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=42}})
Within the [[Celestial Toyroom]], the Toymaker commanded immense powers, but they were limited by the rules he or his opponents set for any particular game. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) The [[Fourteenth Doctor]] stated the Toymaker was bound by the rules, so much so that he could not [[cheat]] to win, even if he wanted to. He also had to follow new rules he brought into the game, even if the new rule did not gain him the result he was expecting, like how his desire to face the [[Fifteenth Doctor]] accidentally meant he also had to face the Fourteenth Doctor at the same time. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) Although, he could bend these rules or "forget" to mention them to his opponents if he so chose, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) although he was not above cheating if his opponent did also; on one occasion, he tauntingly claimed that he was just following a "new [[rule]]" his opponent had unwitingly introduced by cheating. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=42}})


The Toymaker was immortal and invulnerable, and appeared capable of space and time travel at will. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) The Toymaker could control the [[gravity]] of the Toyroom ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=42}}) was able to fly, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}}) animate toys and render people [[invisible]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Doctor Who Character Encyclopedia: Updated Edition (reference book)|page=35}}) and teleport across space and time. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) He seemed to be able to travel from the Toyroom to other locations, and back, with ease. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)}}; [[PROSE]]: {{cs|Games (short story)|page=22}}) Further more, he could change his clothes exceptionally fast, changing outfits when teleporting. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})  
He himself was immortal and invulnerable, and appeared capable of space and time travel at will. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) The Toymaker could control the [[gravity]] of the Toyroom ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=42}}) was able to fly, ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Relative Dimensions (comic story)}}) animate toys and render people [[invisible]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Doctor Who Character Encyclopedia: Updated Edition (reference book)|page=35}}) and teleport across space and time. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) He seemed to be able to travel from the Toyroom to other locations, and back, with ease. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)|page=40, 42}}, [[PROSE]]: {{cs|Games (short story)|page=22}}) Further more, he could change his clothes exceptionally fast, changing outfits when teleporting. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})  


During the course of a game, the Toymaker would gain total control over his player's lives and personalities, perpetually, if they lost the game or died outright. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) Apart from these children's games, the Toymaker sometimes played in person against his "guests", playing games such as [[playing card|cards]], able to conjure [[The Toymaker's cards|his own deck]] and [[The Toymaker's juggling balls|his own juggling balls]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) The Toymaker would be aware if his opponent cheated and would reverse their actions before declaring the game [[forfeit]] and would have to pay a hefty price: becoming another one of his many toys within the Toyroom. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)}}) The Toymaker also threatened the Doctors with "[his] [[The Toymaker's legions|legions]]", who would supposedly come for him after he was beaten in a [[Game between the Toymaker and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Doctors|game of catch]] by the Doctors. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})  
During the course of a game, the Toymaker would gain total control over his player's lives and personalities, perpetually, if they lost the game or died outright. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) Apart from these children's games, the Toymaker sometimes played in person against his "guests", playing games such as [[playing card|cards]], able to conjure [[The Toymaker's cards|his own deck]] and [[The Toymaker's juggling balls|his own juggling balls]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) The Toymaker would be aware of if his opponent cheated and would reverse their actions before declaring the game [[forfeit]] and would have to pay a hefty price: becoming another one of his many toys within the Toyroom. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Greatest Gamble (comic story)}}) The Toymaker also threatened the Doctor with "[his] [[The Toymaker's legions|legions]]", who would supposedly come for him after he was beaten by the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Doctors in a [[Game between the Toymaker and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Doctors|game of catch]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})  


He could manipulate reality at will, having been seen to convert ammunition into [[rose]] petals and humanoids into [[Ball|balls]], [[Puppet|puppets]], and [[Doll|dolls]]. However, if he lost a game, his powers to control reality were briefly granted to the opponent who beat him, meaning the winner could grant themselves a prize. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) This meant the First Doctor used his powers to destroy the Toymaker's domain, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) the Fourteenth Doctor outright banished him from existence and the Fifteenth Doctor granted himself a new version of his TARDIS so he could travel and enable the Fourteenth Doctor to retire concurrently in the same timeline. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})
He could manipulate reality at will, having been seen to convert ammunition into [[rose]] petals and humanoids into [[Ball|balls]], [[Puppet|puppets]], and [[Doll|dolls]]. However, if he lost the game, his powers to control reality were briefly granted to the opponent who beat him, meaning the winner could grant themselves a prize. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}}) This meant the First Doctor used his powers to destroy the Toymaker's domain in the under universe, ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)}}) the Fourteenth Doctor outright banished him from existence and the Fifteenth Doctor granted himself a future version of his TARDIS so he could travel and enable the Fourteenth Doctor to retire concurrently in the same timeline. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Giggle (TV story)}})


== Behind the scenes ==
== Behind the scenes==
=== Conflicting origins ===
According to [[Donald Tosh]], the commissioning [[script editor]] and (uncredited) co-author of ''[[The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)|The Celestial Toymaker]]'', the intention was that the Toymaker was, like [[the Monk]] who had predated him, a member of [[the Doctor's species|the Doctor's own race]]. ([[BBC DVD]]: ''[[The Time Meddler (TV story)|The Time Meddler]]'') In the [[The Celestial Toymaker (novelisation)|novelisation of ''The Celestial Toymaker'']], which was based in part on concepts for the original TV story which had to be abandoned due to a rushed production, the Doctor describes the Celestial Toymaker as native to the universe and several thousands of years old. Additionally, the Toymaker wields [[The Toymaker's ring|a sapphire ring]] reminiscent of [[the Doctor's signet ring]], which he uses when altering elements of his realm, such as shrinking toys to human size or making a wall vanish.
According to [[Donald Tosh]], the commissioning [[script editor]] and (uncredited) co-author of ''[[The Celestial Toymaker (TV story)|The Celestial Toymaker]]'', the intention was that the Toymaker was, like [[the Monk]] who had predated him, a member of [[the Doctor's species|the Doctor's own race]]. ([[BBC DVD]]: ''[[The Time Meddler (TV story)|The Time Meddler]]'') In the [[The Celestial Toymaker (novelisation)|novelisation of ''The Celestial Toymaker'']], which was based in part on concepts for the original TV story which had to be abandoned due to a rushed production, the Doctor describes the Celestial Toymaker as native to the universe and several thousands of years old. Additionally, the Toymaker wields [[The Toymaker's ring|a sapphire ring]] reminiscent of [[the Doctor's signet ring]], which he uses when altering elements of his realm, such as shrinking toys to human size or making a wall vanish.


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The audio story ''[[Faustian (audio story)|Faustian]]'' later described the Time Lords as "a celestial race". Subsequently, "Celestials" was cited in the short stories ''[[The Cactus and the Corpse (short story)|The Cactus and the Corpse]]'', ''[[The Two Auteurs (short story)|The Two Auteurs]]'' and ''[[Presents (short story)|Presents]]'' as an alias for the species.  
The audio story ''[[Faustian (audio story)|Faustian]]'' later described the Time Lords as "a celestial race". Subsequently, "Celestials" was cited in the short stories ''[[The Cactus and the Corpse (short story)|The Cactus and the Corpse]]'', ''[[The Two Auteurs (short story)|The Two Auteurs]]'' and ''[[Presents (short story)|Presents]]'' as an alias for the species.  


Eventually, two stories in the ''[[Coloth (series)|Coloth]]'' anthology ''[[The Book of the Snowstorm (anthology)|The Book of the Snowstorm]]'', ''[[The Two Auteurs (short story)|The Two Auteurs]]'' and [[The Book of the Snowstorm (short story)|the eponymous linking story]], suggested that the original Toymaker had indeed been an ancient [[Archon]], specifically [[Urizen's game-master]]; he is suggested to have participated in the [[anchoring of the thread]], thus implicitly equating his connection in ''[[The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)|The Nightmare Fair]]'' to "the [[Primeval Cauldron]] of Space-Time itself" with the power of ''[[Faction Paradox (series)|Faction Paradox]]''{{'}}s [[caldera]], the centre of the [[Web of Time]] created by the anchoring. His role in the anchoring was suggested to be the reason behind the [[First Doctor]]'s claim in the ''Celestial Toymaker'' novelisation that "the urge to create toys that are ultimately destructive is unfortunately part of [his] universe".  
Eventually, two stories in the ''[[Coloth (series)|Coloth]]'' anthology ''[[The Book of the Snowstorm (anthology)|The Book of the Snowstorm]]'', ''[[The Two Auteurs (short story)|The Two Auteurs]]'' and [[The Book of the Snowstorm (short story)|the eponymous linking story]], suggested that the original Toymaker had indeed been an ancient [[Archon]], specifically [[Urizen's game-master]]; he is suggested to have participated in the [[anchoring of the thread]], thus implicitly equating his connection in ''[[The Nightmare Fair (novelisation)|The Nightmare Fair]]'' to "the [[Primeval Cauldron]] of Space-Time itself" with the power of ''[[Faction Paradox (series)|Faction Paradox]]''{{'}}s [[caldera]], the centre of the [[Web of Time]] created by the anchoring. His role in the anchoring was suggested to be the reason behind the [[First Doctor]]'s claim in the ''Celestial Toymaker'' novelisation that "the urge to create toys that are ultimately destructive is unfortunately part of our universe".  


As it did not have the license to the character of the Toymaker, the character did not actually appear in person in ''The Book of the Snowstorm'', and he was not referenced directly by name. Instead, ''Book'' connected Urizen's game-master to the Toymaker indirectly by tying back to [[Mortimus]]'s description of the Toymaker in ''[[Divided Loyalties (novel)|Divided Loyalties]]'' — Mortimus being a character to whom ''Book'' did have the license. One line in ''The Two Auteurs'' also equated him with the public-domain character of the Wonderful Toymaker, a benevolent fairy character in the Victorian children's book ''All the Way to Fairyland'', though claiming that he was not actually a fairy and that both this and the ''Divided Loyalties'' claim of being a Great Old One were frivolous lies on his part.  
As it did not have the license to the character of the Toymaker, the character did not actually appear in person in ''The Book of the Snowstorm'', and he was not referenced directly by name. Instead, the ''Book'' connected Urizen's game-master to the Toymaker indirectly by tying back to [[Mortimus]]'s description of the Toymaker in ''[[Divided Loyalties (novel)|Divided Loyalties]]'' — Mortimus being a character to whom the ''Book'' did have the license. One line in ''The Two Auteurs'' also equated him with the public-domain character of the Wonderful Toymaker, a benevolent fairy character in the Victorian children's book ''All the Way to Fairyland'', though claiming that he was not actually a fairy and that both this and the ''Divided Loyalties'' claim of being a Great Old One were frivolous lies on his part.  


{{Toymaker sources}}
{{Toymaker sources}}
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