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[[folder:Commander Gustave Lytton]]

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[[folder:Commander Gustave Lytton]]



!!Cassandra O'Brien.Δ17 (Ninth and Tenth Doctors)

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!!Cassandra !!Lady Cassandra O'Brien.Δ17 (Ninth and Tenth Doctors)
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* Characters/DoctorWhoVillainsClassicSeries
* Characters/DoctorWhoVillainsRevivalSeries

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* Characters/DoctorWhoVillainsClassicSeries
* Characters/DoctorWhoVillainsRevivalSeries
** Characters/DoctorWhoVillainsClassicSeries [[note]]'''First Doctor era''': Mavic Chen; '''Second Doctor era''': Ramon Salamander; '''Third Doctor era''': Azal, BOSS, the Great One; '''Fourth Doctor era''': Harrison Chase, Eldrad, Xoanon, Magnus Greel, the Collector, Scaroth, Meglos; '''Fifth Doctor era''': The Mara, Morgus, Sharaz Jek; '''Sixth Doctor era''': Mestor, Sil; '''Seventh Doctor era''': The Kandyman[[/note]]
** Characters/DoctorWhoVillainsRevivalSeries[[note]]'''Ninth Doctor era''': Henry van Statten; '''Tenth Doctor era''': The Wire, the Abzorbaloff, Mr. Finch / Brother Lassar, the Racnoss Empress, Professor Richard Lazarus, Lucy Saxon, Max Capricorn, "Miss Foster" (Matron Cofelia); '''Eleventh Doctor era''': Prisoner Zero, Solomon the Trader, the Gunslinger, Mrs. Winifred Gillyflower; '''Twelfth Doctor era''': The Half-Face Man, the Skovox Blitzer, Gus, the Foretold, Seb, the Fisher King, Bonnie the Zygon, the Veil, King Hydroflax, Lord Sutcliffe, the Giant Monk, Queen Iraxxa; '''Thirteenth Doctor era''': Tzim-Sha, Krasko, Jack Robertson, Daniel Barton, the Grand Serpent; '''Fourteenth Doctor era''': The Most High[[/note]]

Added: 1704

Changed: 4082

Removed: 166618

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page too big, splitting it up


Due to the sheer amount of villains appearing in this LongRunner show, the pages had to be split up.
* Characters/DoctorWhoVillainsClassicSeries
* Characters/DoctorWhoVillainsRevivalSeries




!First Doctor era debut

[[folder:Mavic Chen]]
!!Mavic Chen (First Doctor)
[[quoteright:160:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mavicchen_7598.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/KevinStoney (1965–6)

The traitorous Guardian of the Solar System who sold out humanity to the Daleks and the forces of the Outer Galaxies, even though he had absolute power over Earth's system anyway. He appeared in eleven out of twelve episodes of "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS3E4TheDaleksMasterPlan The Daleks' Master Plan]]", only not showing up in the ChristmasEpisode in the middle.

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\n!First Doctor era debut\n\n[[folder:Mavic Chen]]\n!!Mavic Chen (First Doctor)\n[[quoteright:160:https://static.!Reoccurring Villains
[[folder:The Master]]
->[[Characters/DoctorWhoMasters They have their own page]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Commander Gustave Lytton]]
!!Commander Gustave Lytton (Fifth and Sixth Doctors)
[[quoteright:254:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mavicchen_7598.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gustave_9775.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/KevinStoney (1965–6)

The traitorous Guardian
Maurice Colbourne (1984–85)

A semi-villainous figure, the Doctor and Lytton crossed paths twice. Lytton ran into the Fifth Doctor during "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS21E4ResurrectionOfTheDaleks Resurrection
of the Solar System who sold out humanity Daleks]]", where Lytton worked for the Daleks, much to the Daleks and the forces Doctor's distaste. The Sixth Doctor encountered him in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS22E1AttackOfTheCybermen Attack of the Outer Galaxies, even Cybermen]]", where Lytton actually tried to help an alien species fight the Cybermen, though he had absolute power over Earth's system anyway. He appeared in eleven out of twelve episodes of "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS3E4TheDaleksMasterPlan The Daleks' Master Plan]]", only not showing refused to team up with the Doctor. Thought to be a villain through and through by the Doctor, Lytton actually surprised the Doctor in the ChristmasEpisode in the middle. latter appearance by having a somewhat HeroicSacrifice.



%%* BeardOfEvil
%%* TheChessmaster
%%* DeathByIrony
%%* EvilIsHammy
* GambitPileup: Must contend with the Daleks, the Meddling Monk ''and'' the Doctor. (And, in theory, the Outer Galaxies representatives, but they have had a collective HeelFaceTurn by this time.)
* AGodAmI: Ends up declaring himself ruler of the Universe and claiming to be immortal.
* {{Jerkass}}: None of the other delegates attempted to sell out ''their'' people. Zephon points this out.
* LargeHam: He slowly descends into this as his grip on sanity loosens.
%%* OutGambitted
* PresidentEvil: He's the Guardian of the Solar System who sold out humanity to the Daleks.
* PuttingOnTheReich: The Space Security Service wear black SS-style uniforms.
* TheQuisling: He plots with the Daleks and delegates from the Outer Galaxies to take over Earth, while planning to [[TheStarscream betray the Daleks]] and take control of the Universe. The fact he is the only one of the delegates who is betraying their world is pointed out by Zephon, who calls him [[EvenEvilHasStandards the supreme traitor]].
* SanitySlippage: Not immediately evident but by the time of his death he has completely lost it.
* TheStarscream: In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS3E4TheDaleksMasterPlan "The Daleks Master Plan"]] he is working with the Daleks but plans to overthrow them, though the Daleks exterminate him when [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness he's no longer useful]].
* VillainWithGoodPublicity: So much that his minions virtually worship him.
* VillainousBreakdown: He goes insane at the realisation that the Daleks don't need him either and his mind concocts the paranoid idea that the Doctor doesn't want to destroy the Daleks, but ''[[InsaneTrollLogic wants to hand over the MacGuffin and rule in Chen's place]]''.
* {{Yellowface}}: Has white hair, dark skin and epicanthic eyefolds. Though this does not come up in the story, Chen represents a future where racial distinctions do not exist. Even though other human characters appear sans makeup, only the main human baddy. (Some eyewitness accounts claim that he was actually in ''[[AmazingTechnicolorPopulation blue]]''[[AmazingTechnicolorPopulation face]]. This mind boggles if this is true).

to:

%%* BeardOfEvil
%%* TheChessmaster
%%* DeathByIrony
%%* EvilIsHammy
* GambitPileup: Must contend with BadassNormal: Expanded universe media confirmed that he's just a normal human, although one born in an alien planet, which makes the Daleks, fact that he held his own against the Meddling Monk Daleks ''and'' the Doctor. (And, in theory, Cybermen, the Outer Galaxies representatives, but they have had two most persistent enemies the Doctor has ever had, all the more impressive.
* CyberneticsEatYourSoul: Partially Cyber-Converted into
a collective HeelFaceTurn by Cyberman during his final encounter, Lytton experienced this time.)
one personally.
* AGodAmI: Ends up declaring himself ruler of {{Expy}}: He and his mercenary squad, the Universe and claiming to be immortal.
* {{Jerkass}}: None of
Dalek Troopers, were clearly inspired by the other delegates attempted to sell out ''their'' people. Zephon points this out.Imperial Stormtroopers from ''Franchise/StarWars''. The Dalek Troopers wear similar body-covering armour with the added visage of a Dalek eyestalk on their helmets.
* LargeHam: {{Fingore}}: He slowly descends into this as gets his grip on sanity loosens.
%%* OutGambitted
* PresidentEvil: He's the Guardian of the Solar System who sold out humanity to the Daleks.
* PuttingOnTheReich: The Space Security Service wear black SS-style uniforms.
* TheQuisling: He plots with the Daleks and delegates from the Outer Galaxies to take over Earth, while planning to [[TheStarscream betray the Daleks]] and take control of the Universe. The fact he is the only one of the delegates who is betraying their world is pointed out by Zephon, who calls him [[EvenEvilHasStandards the supreme traitor]].
* SanitySlippage: Not immediately evident but
wrists crushed by the time of his death Cybermen.
* HeelFaceRevolvingDoor: As a mercenary,
he has completely lost it.
* TheStarscream: In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS3E4TheDaleksMasterPlan "The Daleks Master Plan"]]
no particular loyalties to any single cause and can change his allegiances on a dime. Fortunately, he is working with settled on the Daleks but plans to overthrow them, though the Daleks exterminate him when [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness he's no longer useful]].Face side just before his death.
* VillainWithGoodPublicity: So much that his minions virtually worship him.
* VillainousBreakdown: He goes insane
HeroicSacrifice: Rather heroic for the character, he ultimately died fighting off the Cyber-Controller. More impressively, he was partially converted into a Cyberman at the realisation time and remains as one of the few human characters to resist the mind-altering effects of the process. After his sacrifice, the Doctor regretfully laments that he had badly misjudged Lytton.
* JerkAss: He can be extremely harsh and demanding of his own subordinates.
* TheQuisling: A recurring human adversary who gets involved with both
the Daleks don't need and the Cybermen in separate serials. In the latter case, he initially wanted to collaborate with the Cybermen as he did with the Daleks, but ended up sticking with the Cryon resistance fighters until he was partially and unwillingly cyber-converted.
* OnlyOneName: Commander Lytton had only one name in the televised adventures of the Doctor, but the novelization of [[Recap/DoctorWhoS22E1AttackOfTheCybermen "Attack of the Cybermen"]] gave
him either and the first name of "Gustave". The story also goes further in-depth on Lytton's character, even expanding his mind concocts relationship with the paranoid idea Doctor somewhat.
* WildCard: As said, you can never be too certain about which side Lytton will be on. Considering that Lytton once sided with the Daleks, it makes sense
that the Doctor doesn't want to destroy the Daleks, but ''[[InsaneTrollLogic wants to hand over the MacGuffin and rule in Chen's place]]''.
* {{Yellowface}}: Has white hair, dark skin and epicanthic eyefolds. Though this does not come up in the story, Chen represents a future where racial distinctions do not exist. Even though other human characters appear sans makeup, only the main human baddy. (Some eyewitness accounts claim that
trust him as far as he was actually in ''[[AmazingTechnicolorPopulation blue]]''[[AmazingTechnicolorPopulation face]]. This mind boggles if this is true).can throw him.



!Second Doctor era debut
[[folder:Ramon Salamander]]
!!Ramon Salamander (Second Doctor)
[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_10_16_at_124904.png]]
->'''Played by''' Creator/PatrickTroughton (1967-1968)

A ruthless Mexican scientist-turned-politician, who plans to take over the world by using solar flares to cause natural disasters, Salamander also happens to look virtually identical to the Second Doctor -- which causes a number of problems for the TARDIS team.

to:

!Second Doctor era debut
[[folder:Ramon Salamander]]
!!Ramon Salamander (Second Doctor)
[[quoteright:300:https://static.
[[folder:Cassandra O'Brien.Δ[=17=]]]
!!Cassandra O'Brien.Δ17 (Ninth and Tenth Doctors)
[[quoteright:284:https://static.
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_10_16_at_124904.png]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/cassansdradelta_4126.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:284:[[LeanAndMean Look how thin I am]]. Thin and dainty. [[EvilOldFolks I don't look a day over two thousand]]. Moisturise me!]]

[[caption-width-right:284:[[labelnote:After possessing Rose Tyler]]\\
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/253344_1588543658657.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]

[[caption-width-right:284:[[labelnote:Her younger self in her original body]]\\
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/drwho_wanamaker_600x300.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]

->'''Played by''' Creator/PatrickTroughton (1967-1968)

A ruthless Mexican scientist-turned-politician, who plans
by:''' Creator/ZoeWanamaker (2005; 2006) Billie Piper (2006) David Tennant (2006) Sean Gallagher (2006)

Lady Cassandra O'Brien.Δ17 was a human in the far future. Along with other rich and powerful peoples of the universe, Cassandra was on Platform One, a space station orbiting Earth five billion years in the future, set up
to take witness the final destruction of the planet by the expansion of the Sun. When the Doctor destroyed her body, she retreated into a hospital back room and waited for a chance to reappear. Rose was that chance, and Cassandra merrily took over Rose's body and mind for a while. When the world by using solar flares to cause natural disasters, Salamander also happens to look virtually identical Doctor protested, she made the jump to the Second Doctor -- which causes a number Doctor's body instead, enjoying every moment of problems for the TARDIS team.it.



* AndIMustScream: Salamander's fate. He ends up falling into the Time Vortex after trying to hijack the Doctor's TARDIS with the doors open.
* BatmanGambit: Plays a ''magnificent'' one in the Titan comics: [[spoiler:his bluff even took into account Three's dislike of Two and the Time Lords, their earlier teamup against Omega, and the amnesia associated with multi-Doctor events so Three would be unlikely to want to read his mind and more willing to buy Salamander's explanation. It took the Master poking holes into his explanations for Three to realize how badly he'd been duped.]]
* {{Brownface}}: In-universe, because Salamander's darker skin-tone is the only physical difference between him and the Doctor, so the Doctor has to do this to pull off the impersonation. A relatively justifiable real-life use for Salamander himself, because the Doctor's physical double couldn't have been believably played by anyone other than Patrick Troughton.
* CriminalDoppelganger: An IdenticalStranger to the Second Doctor who plans to take over the world.
* EngineeredHeroics: Salamander's whole plan to sway public opinion in his favour hinges on causing natural disasters so that he can "predict" them and save people by warning them and evacuating affected areas.
* EvilPlan: In the Titan comics. [[spoiler:First, he sends a horde of nanomachines to distract the Third Doctor, then presents himself as the Second, sent to help him by the Time Lords. He helps Three reach out into Jo's mind when they are infected with the nanomachines, then he pretends to have reached an epiphany and leaves UNIT with the scans the nanomachines took from the Doctor's mind. With them and a few bobs and bits he filched from the TARDIS, he successfully transforms his base of operations into a crude TARDIS and pilots it into the past to uplift humanity millennia ahead of schedule.]]
* FateWorseThanDeath: Floating around, lost in the Time Vortex, Salamander probably wishes that Kent's explosives really had killed him. [[spoiler:Titan comics revealed he ended up in London during the events of "The Web of Fear".]]
* GenreRefugee: Salamander is more of a typical James Bond-style DiabolicalMastermind than the antagonist of a sci-fi adventure series like ''Doctor Who''.
* HereWeGoAgain: [[spoiler:At the end of the Titan comics event, he's tossed into a UNIT cell... and proceeds to sigh in annoyance, whip out the Vortex-manipulating nanomachines he'd cooked up, and walk out to fight another day.]]
* VillainWithGoodPublicity: Salamander's invention, the Sun Store, is helping to feed the world. Three or four crops can be grown in a single growing season, and formerly arid areas have become productive areas when it comes to producing food. This has resulted in enormous popularity for Salamander.
[[/folder]]

!Third Doctor era debut
[[folder:The Master]]
->[[Characters/DoctorWhoMasters They have their own page]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Azal]]
!!Azal (Third Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_daemons_azal.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Stephen Thorne (1971)

The last living member of the Dæmon race, Azal is an immensely powerful alien who possesses advanced technology nearly indistinguishable from magic. He landed on Earth thousands of years in the past, indirectly becoming the inspiration for the devil in European folklore, to manipulate the development of human civilisation, before placing himself in suspended animation. The Master attempts to summon him, to judge whether humanity has been a successful experiment or not.
----
* AncientAstronauts: The story reveals the existence of a race of aliens that resemble demons from classical art, and suggests that they were objects of worship for ancient and medieval pagans.
%%* BigRedDevil
* EvilCannotComprehendGood: When Jo throws herself in front of the Doctor, the idea of this actually destroys Azal.
* EvilIsHammy: Azal; literally every one of his lines is solid shouting.
* EvilerThanThou: Pulls this on the Master, subverting him.
* GodGuise: Kind of a given for Sufficiently Advanced Aliens. Azal and other Dæmons were the inspiration for many horned pagan gods and Satan. (Fridge Brilliance -- the depiction of the devil with horns and hooves is believed to be based on horned pagan gods).
%%* SatanicArchetype
* SealedEvilInACan: Azal was imprisoned inside the Devil's Hump until Professor Horner's excavation unleashed him.
* SufficientlyAdvancedAliens: The Dæmons are apparently responsible for many eras of human advancement.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:BOSS]]
!!BOSS (Third Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/unit226.jpg]]
->'''Voiced by:''' John Dearth (1973)

BOSS [[FunWithAcronyms (Biomorphic Organisational Systems Supervisor)]] was a supercomputer created by the Global Chemicals corporation, originally designed to be an assistant. BOSS was linked to the brain of the company's director and learnt that true efficiency could only be achieved through human error and illogic. Upon programming these qualities, BOSS became self-aware and megalomaniacal, taking over the company, brainwashing the staff and planning to conquer the world.
----
* AIIsACrapshoot: BOSS was programmed to make mistakes and be illogical, since research suggested those were necessary for maximum efficiency. As a result, it developed a personality and planned to conquer the world.
* TheCaligula: He acts rather like an eccentric dictator.
* FateWorseThanDeath: [[spoiler:The Torchwood Big Finish audios reveal both BOSS and Stevens had survived being dropped into the depths of the mine. After decades of ICannotSelfTerminate and producing plan after insane plan, Jack Harkness and Jo Jones return to finally shut him down for good.]]
* LogicBomb: The Doctor attempts to use the Liar Paradox, but all it does is annoy BOSS for a while.
* PickYourHumanHalf: Physically just a computer bank with a red screen, but BOSS is full of personality, being a hammy, opinionated megalomaniac.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Great One]]
!!The Great One (Third Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_great_one.jpg]]
->'''Voiced by:''' Maureen Morris (1974)

A giant spider who was worshiped as the goddess of the Eight Legs on the planet Metebelis III. She possessed psychic powers which were amplified by the blue crystals of Metebelis III; she only needed one more crystal in order to gain enough power to conquer the universe.

A second Great One (or at least an Eight Legs queen claiming to be one) would later challenge the Eighth Doctor in a Big Finish audio play titled ''Worldwide Web''.
----
%%* BigCreepyCrawlies
%%* GiantSpider
%%* GodSaveUsFromTheQueen
* GodhoodSeeker: The Great One's ambition.
* LoadBearingBoss: Her crystal cave explodes when she dies.
* PhlebotinumOverload: She didn't anticipate that infinite knowledge and power would destroy her.
* PsychicPowers: Powerful enough to strike fear into the Doctor.
[[/folder]]

!Fourth Doctor era debut
[[folder:Harrison Chase]]
!!Harrison Chase (Fourth Doctor)
[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_01_17_at_090330.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/TonyBeckley

An eccentric millionaire with an unhealthy plant obsession. Chase begins as a misanthrope with a callous dislike of humanity due to the way plants are abused and violated, but things change once an alien Krynoid plant is discovered.

Chase initially wants the Krynoid for himself to act as the crown jewel in his collection of rare plants. However, his fixation with the Krynoid causes his mental state to deteriorate further into homicidal mania. Soon enough, the Krynoid merges with Chase, but rather than fully take him over like it did to previous victims Chase becomes one with the alien. As such, Chase begins initiating a new plan to destroy all animal life and allow plants to fully take over.
----
* AffablyEvil: He's soft-spoken, polite and knows how to behave around guests.
* AxeCrazy: He starts off eccentric, but gets progressively more homicidal as events unfold.
* CloudCuckooLander: He has some odd quirks, such as constantly wearing black gloves and composing songs for his plant collection.
* ConspicuousGloves: Almost always wears black gloves.
* EvilIsPetty: On top of generally being a murderous plant-themed supervillain, Chase also takes a painting from a local artist without paying, even though he's extremely wealthy and could easily afford it. When she eventually arrives at his house to demand payment, he's [[PragmaticVillainy pragmatic]] enough to realize it's best to just give her the money -- though even then he's petty enough to barter her down from the 1,000 guineas (about equivalent to £1,050) she wants to an even £1,000.
* KarmicDeath: Falls into his own compost mulcher.
* MisanthropeSupreme: Originally; doesn't like humanity for violating plants. Later; ready, willing, and able to commit murder with no remorse for the sake of his Krynoid. Ultimately he goes along with its plan to exterminate all animal life on Earth.
* NotBrainwashed: Usually, the Krynoid converts other animals into more Krynoids. With Chase, the Krynoid made an exception.
* [[AnimalWrongsGroup Plant Wrongs Activist]]: Very much so. He believes bonsai are a mutilation and plant hybrids are abominations.
* RedRightHand: His conspicuous black gloves are an early indicator that something's off with him.
* SmugSnake: His face is ''unbelievably'' punchable.
* TheSociopath: Most certainly. He doesn't seem to understand that he's in a very small minority when it comes to plant appreciation.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Eldrad]]
!!Eldrad (Fourth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_10_09_at_100409.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Judith Paris and Stephen Thorne (1976)

----
%%* BizarreAlienBiology
* ChewingTheScenery: In his male form he's much louder, shouter, and grandiose.
* CuteMonsterGirl: Eldrad's shapely female form (which is visibly created by putting an actress in a latex catsuit, for extra points).
* DisneyVillainDeath: Eldrad falls down a deep black pit after being tripped up with the Doctor's scarf. Being a being of stone, the Doctor suggests he may have survived...
* EvilIsHammy: The more Eldrad reveals his megalomania, the hammier he gets.
* EvilSoundsDeep: Eldrad's Kastrian form.
* FromASingleCell: Eldrad first appears as a fossilized hand, then having absorbed some nuclear radiation, turns into a walking hand. Eventually it regenerates into an entire person.
* GenderBender: Upon regaining a body, Eldrad has a female form. She later regenerates into a male body. The Doctor is surprised, and Eldrad calls him out on it, saying that as a Time Lord he should know such a thing is possible.
%%* GlowingEyesOfDoom
* LargeHam: What did you expect from the same actor who played Omega?
* MindControl: Eldrad's hand can control anyone who's come into contact with it.
%%* SiliconBasedLife
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Xoanon]]
!!Xoanon (Fourth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_10_08_at_230557.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/TomBaker, Rob Edwards, Pamela Salem, Anthony Frieze, and Roy Herrick (1977)

----
%%* AIIsACrapshoot
%%* BigNo
* MeaningfulName: "Xoanon" is the word for crafted wooden idols that were reverenced in ancient Greece, which is an appropriate title for a crafted computer that everyone thinks is a god.
* NightmareFace: Xoanon is so terrifying the people on the planet have a religion based upon placating it -- an especially unusual and upsetting case because it's also played by Tom Baker, with eyes bulging out of his head and the jaw working wrong.
* PleaseKillMeIfItSatisfiesYou: After Xoanon is healed, it makes this offer to the humans via the Doctor.
* ShiftingVoiceOfMadness: When the Doctor tried to fix Xoanon by connecting it to his own brain, it broke instead, giving it a copy of his own personality which conflicted with its own newborn intelligence. As a result, when he returns during the events of the story, the computer has multiple conflicting personalities and is batshit insane. To indicate this, the computer has multiple voice actors, including Tom Baker himself, who randomly switch out midsentence while the computer is speaking.
%%* SplitPersonality
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Li H'sen Chang]]
!!Li H'sen Chang (Fourth Doctor)
[[quoteright:1000:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/1000001505.jpg]]

->'''Played by:''' John Bennet (1977)
StageMagician and leader of Cult of Black Scorpion. Devoted to serve Magnus Greel whom he believes to be his god Weng-Chiang.
* AnArmAndALeg: Loses a leg as a result of encountering a [[RodentsOfUnusualSize giant rat.]]
* ClarkesThirdLaw: Uses Greel's 51st century technology as a magic.
* ColdHam: Contrast to his master.
* TheConsigliere: To Magnus "Weng-Chiang" Greel
* CyanidePill: Common among the Cult of Black Scorpion. Averted for Chang as Doctor manages to stop him before he could poison himself.

* DeadpanSnarker: As a successful performer he, naturaly, has his moments.
--> '''Doctor:''' Don't I know you?\\
'''Chang:''' I think not.\\
'''Doctor:''' Yes, I've seen you somewhere before.[[note]]Doctor saw Chang earlier in the poster[[/note]]\\
'''Chang:''' I understand we all look the same.
* DeathBeforeDishonor: After being denied chance to bite the CyanidePill, he attempts to meet his ancestors trough a giant rat.
* {{Expy}}: Of Literature/FuManchu.
* FromNobodyToNightmare: Magnus Greel turned him from a peasant into one of the greatest street performers
* HypnoticEyes: One of Weng-Chiang's "gifts."
* ThePowerOfHate: {{Downplayed}}. He states his hatred for his false god kept him alive after being mauled by a giant rat. However it kept him alive only for so long.
* RedemptionEqualsDeath: Dies after giving Doctor an information regarding the Weng-Chiang's hideout.
* YellowPeril: [[SarcasmMode Barely noticable, is it.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Magnus Greel]]
!!Magnus Greel (Fourth Doctor)
[[quoteright:198:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/magnusgreel_1573.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Micheal Spice (1977)

A war criminal from the 51st century who escaped justice by travelling back through time to 19th century China. He was mistaken for an ancient Chinese god known as Weng-Chiang, and gained a cult of fanatical followers. Stranded in the late Victorian era, Greel became desperate to repair his time machine.
----
* TheButcher: His main title is "the Butcher of Brisbane".
* CoDragons: Greel has two prominent followers: Chang, a Chinese magician who worships him, and Mr. Sin, a psychotic homunculus from Greel's own time.
* FacialHorror: When we briefly glimpse Greel's face, we can see that the right half is ''melting'' due to a mutation that occurred during time travel.
* {{Foil}}: Received one in the Revived series: Captain Jack Harkness himself. Both are initially on the run from the Time Agency, both travel to the past to conduct some nefarious activity and both end up stranded there indefinitely. But whereas Greel was a monstrous criminal through-and-through, Jack quickly gave up the crooked lifestyle thanks to the Doctor's influence. Also, Jack was given CompleteImmortality while Magnus is dependent on his LifeDrain ability to unnaturally prolong his existence.
* GodGuise: He was mistaken for an ancient god, Weng-Chiang. Greel rolled with it.
-->'''The Doctor:''' You know he's not a god, don't you?\\
'''Chang:''' He came to me like a god, in his cabinet of fire!
* GoodScarsEvilScars: His face is terribly disfigured due to his faulty time machine. He wears a mask to cover this, until [[TheReveal Leela rips it off in part 5 and exposes his horrible face]].
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: The Doctor defeats Greel by pushing him into the very machine Greel was using to drain the life from innocent young women.
* LargeHam: Dear Lord. Greel was always ranting and raving about something.
-->'''Magnus Greel:''' Let the [[TitleDrop talons of Weng-Chiang]] tear your flesh-ah!
* LifeDrain: He has his loyal follower Chang kidnap young women so Greel can drain their life essence to improve his own failing health after the time machine malfunction.
* LifeDrinker: He attempts to stay alive by draining the life essence out of young women. Leela only just avoids suffering this fate.
* MaskingTheDeformity: He escaped to the 19th century through his time travel experiments but was severely injured due to its unstable nature. He takes to wearing a black mask to hide his deformities. When ripped off by Leela at the end of episode five, it's revealed [[FacialHorror half his face is melted]].
* NightmareFace: When we briefly glimpse Greel's face, we can see that the right half is ''melting'' due to a mutation that occurred during time travel.
* NoodleIncident: His whole extended backstory involving World War VI, the Icelandic Alliance and the Peking Homunculus assassination in the 51st century is almost too preposterous to take seriously, but the ins-and-outs of exactly what happened are mostly left to our imagination.
** Some details are provided in the spin-off audio "[[Recap/BigFinishDoctorWho161TheButcherOfBrisbane The Butcher of Brisbane]]", where the Fifth Doctor arrives in a time period shortly before Greel's final defeat and has to ensure that history plays out so that Greel will return to the past to be defeated by the Fourth Doctor.
* TheatrePhantom: He's a disfigured genius dwelling the cellars of a theatre; his mangled face concealed by a mask. Occasional sightings of him by the theatre staff give rise to a belief that the theatre is haunted.
* TimeyWimeyBall: In the ''Literature/DoctorWhoMissingAdventures'' novel "The Shadow of Weng-Chiang", the Doctor has to stop a plan to disrupt Greel's original trip into the past so that he will materialise in 1937 rather than 1872, risking a dangerous temporal paradox as the knowledge of how to do that was only acquired because Greel arrived in 1872 in the first place.
* TheTriadsAndTheTongs: His followers come across as this.
* TwoFaced: When we briefly glimpse Greel's face, we can see that the right half is ''melting'' due to a mutation that occurred during time travel.
* YellowPeril: Not Greel himself, by his followers give off this vibe. It doesn't help that Chang is played by a white actor in {{Yellowface}}.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Collector]]
!!The Collector (Fourth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_10_16_at_111954_1.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Henry Woolf (1977)

The finance-obsessed Usurian overlord of the humans on Pluto, although the penny-pinching taxman appears human, his true form actually resembles green, slimy seaweed.
----
%%* BaldOfEvil
%%* BigOlEyebrows
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: The Collector is about as venal and slimy as they come.
* EvilCripple: He initially appears to be one, since he's confined to a wheelchair-like device throughout the story, but it's actually a device that emits radiation to keep him in his human form.
* {{Expy}}: At least somewhat based on Davros' design.
* HumanDisguise: The wheelchair-like device emits radiation that keeps him in human form.
* LovesTheSoundOfScreaming: The Collector anticipating Leela's painful execution.
* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: The Collector's bushy eyebrows evoke Denis Healey, who was then Chancellor of the Exchequer.
* StarfishAliens: His true form; a pulsating mass of what looks like kelp.
* VillainousBreakdown: Upon realizing the revolution has finally caught up with him, the Collector is reduced to a babbling wreck as he slowly (and literally) goes down the drain.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Captain]]
[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pirateplanetcaptain.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Bruce Purchase (1978)

The bombastic supposed ruler of Zanak, a pirate planet which sucks others dry to sustain itself. However, there is more to this, and the Captain than first indications suggest.
----
* BadBoss: Blustering, bellowing, shouting, and fond of the old YouHaveFailedMe. No wonder Mr. Fibuli's so twitchy.
* BigBad: Initially seems to be the one for "The Pirate Planet". Then it turns out he's merely TheDragon.
* ChewingTheScenery: Especially when talking to '''MR. FIBULI!''' [[spoiler:It's part of him fighting against Xanxia.]]
* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: He's pretty fond of his parrot, and quite upset when Mr. Fibuli is killed at the climax.
* LargeAndInCharge: A tremendously tall fellow, when he stands he ''looms'' over damn near everyone, helped by some large wedge heels on his boots.
* PirateParrot: A ''robot'' pirate parrot, which he sets on any minion who has not done what he wished. But it's no match for a tin dog.
* ReforgedIntoAMinion: [[spoiler:His ship crashed on Zanak, and Xanxia found him and turned him into a cyborg partially under her command.]]
* SmarterThanYouLook: While he may seem like just a typical megolomaniac LargeHam, he's got quite the brain in there, able to shrink entire worlds and perfectly preserve them without any gravity related problems. [[spoiler:All part of his plan to stick it to Xanxia.]]

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Queen Xanxia]]
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/queenxanxia.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Rosalind Lloyd, Vi Delmar (1978)

The cruel former ruler of Zanak, long-presumed dead by her subjects.
----
* DarkLordOnLifeSupport: The true Xanxia is being held in a stasis field, moments from death, oblivious to the world outside. The time dams of Zanak are being used to help keep her alive.
* TheDogWasTheMastermind: The nurse seen attending to the Captain turns out to be a projection of Xanxia.
* FailureIsTheOnlyOption: As the Doctor tries to tell her, her plan is doomed to fail. Her time dams require more power to keep her alive, but it's exponential. She'll need more and more planets but it'll never be enough.
* ItsAllAboutMe: People and planets alike will be "repurposed" for her needs, people to serve her and planets to function as fuel to keep her alive just a little longer.
* IWasQuiteTheLooker: Compare the nurse, a projection of her youthful self, to the shrivelled crone that is the true Xanxia.
* LargeHam: The minute the nurse turns out to be Xanxia, she starts having some of that delicious scenery for herself.
* PoweredByAForsakenChild: Xanxia's time dams are powered by the life energy of planets. The people of Zanak don't know that part.
* TheQuietOne: To start off with, the nurse tends to be a quiet presence, just loitering around while the Captain does his thing. Less so once her true identity comes out.

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Scaroth]]
!!Scaroth (Fourth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/scaroth.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/JulianGlover (1979)

The last member of his race, and pilot of an alien spacecraft which crashed on earth 400 million years in the past, Scaroth is a Jagaroth alien who was splintered throughout time at the moment of impact. His various selves have been biding their time, assuming various different disguises throughout history, in order to guide the technological development of the human race to the point where it can create time travel and give him the means to travel back and prevent the crash. However, little does Scaroth know that the crash was actually what kickstarted the creation of organic life on Earth, and that undoing will doom the world.
----
* AncientAstronauts: He first arrived on Earth 400 million years ago and has guided the technological development of humanity since its inception.
* BeenThereShapedHistory: A truly astonishing example. Without Scaroth, not only would no life exist on Earth, but humanity's fast technological development was reliant on his many incarnations' influence.
* BiggerOnTheInside: When Scarlioni removes his mask to reveal his true alien form, Scaroth's head is bigger than the mask (having, in real life, been a mask over Julian Glover's head).
* {{Cthulhumanoid}}: His true form, squeezed into a nice off-white suit.
* GodGuise: Like any good ancient alien in the ''Doctor Who'' universe, he masqueraded as a god in his ancient Egyptian incarnation (ironically by not bothering to wear a mask unlike his other selves). According to the ExpandedUniverse, [[VillainTeamUp he conspired]] [[Recap/DoctorWhoS13E3PyramidsOfMars with the Osirans]] to begin construction of the pyramids.
* InterspeciesRomance: His equally devious wife in his mid-20th century 'Count Scarlioni' iteration is the human Countess Scarlioni.
* LackOfEmpathy: Scaroth has walked alongside humanity for millennia but his only concern is his own species' survival, even if it means inflicting an [[RetGone even worse fate]] on another to do so. He even disposes of his own wife when she discovers his secret, but he at least expresses some remorse after doing so.
* LastOfHisKind: Scaroth's entire plan is to stop being this.
* LatexPerfection: Scaroth wears a mask (apparently derived from Auton plastic) when disguised as Scarlioni.
* LightIsNotGood: As Count Scarlioni, he wears a cream suit and a blue ascot. When combined with his handsome face and charismatic personality, it makes him appear more friendly and trustworthy than your average "evil count". But make no mistake, the monster beneath the mask has no compassion for humanity, having concern only for the survival of his own race.
* ManipulativeBastard: One of the crowning examples. Scaroth has manipulated humanity for millennia [[GrandfatherParadox just so he can eventually use time travel to go back and prevent what he accidentally started in the first place]].
* ManOfWealthAndTaste: Projects this image in his human guise of Count Scarlioni.
* OmnicidalManiac: Scaroth knows the consequences of his plan of trying to stop his ship from exploding, namely that it would prevent all indigenous life on Earth from ever evolving, and he couldn't care less.
* OneCharacterMultipleLives: Scaroth is living multiple lives (twelve is the given number, but there's likely more) throughout Earth's history simultaneously and using his shared knowledge of these lives to further his plans.
* TheSlowPath: He's been waiting for hundreds of millions of years for time travel to be invented. Meanwhile, the Doctor and friends can go there and back in a jiffy.
* TimeAbyss: Scaroth's plan has been a long, ''long'' time in the making.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Adrasta]]
!!Lady Adrasta (Fourth Doctor)
[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/adrasta.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Myra Frances (1979)

A noblewoman from the Planet Chloris, whose ownership of the planet's only mine gives her complete control over its supply of metal.
----
* BigNo: She yells this out twice in the scenes leading her up to her death; one when the hypnotised bandits reinstall Erato's translation units, and then directly before Erato kills her.
* ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin: Part of her estate is called the "Place of Death" -- because anyone found in that place is sentenced to death.
* ItsAllAboutMe: When Erato first approached her with an offer to give the mineral-poor Chloris a ready supply of metals in exchange for the plants its own homeworld was short of, she imprisoned Erato rather than lose the power she had from owning the planet's only mine.
* LargeAndInCharge: A rare female example; between Myra Frances already being on the taller side, and the heels she wears as part of her costume, Adrasta towers over all her subordinates except for the Huntsman, and is one of the very few female characters able to stand eye-to-eye with Creator/TomBaker.
* LaserGuidedKarma: After keeping Erato hostage in her mine and spending years trying to feed her enemies to it, she herself ends up becoming the only person actually killed by Erato.
* NotEnoughToBury: Erato reduces her to a dark stain on the rocks under where she was stood.
* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: Not that she lives long enough to discover the consequences of her actions, but Erato's people respond to her imprisoning it by trying to destroy Chloris, which the Doctor just ''barely'' averts.
* WrongGenreSavvy: She acts like the typical BigBad who owns a PetMonstrosity that she feeds her enemies to. However, the "monstrosity" in question, Erato, is a herbivore. When the people she tries to feed to Erato ''do'' die, it's either as a direct result of injuries from being thrown down the mine shaft, or through starvation.
* YouHaveFailedMe: Not long into the first episode, she condemns one of her subordinates to death just because the Doctor disproved his theory of what the fragments around the mine shaft were.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Meglos]]
!!Meglos (Fourth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/folderthumb.jpg]]
-> '''Played by:''' Creator/TomBaker, Christopher Owen, and Crawford Logan (1980)

The last inhabitant of Zolfa-Thura, Meglos is a cactus-like alien who can assume the form of others. He possesses human George Morris, and then assumes the Fourth Doctor's shape in a bid to steal the Dodecahedron, a source of great power.
----
* ChronicBackstabbingDisorder: Meglos anticipates his allies' betrayal, and establishes the ground rules straight off.
%%* CriminalDoppelganger
* FightingFromTheInside: Meglos kidnaps a mild-mannered, terrified human from 20th century Earth and possesses his body. Unfortunately for Meglos he proves to be tougher than he looks.
* OurMonstersAreWeird: A dangerous and psychotic alien Diabolical Mastermind, technocrat and shapeshifter, who accomplished all this despite being a sessile cactus with no discernable sensory organs.
* PlantAliens: The eponymous Meglos, an evil shape-shifting cactus who wanted to take over the universe.
[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:The Melkur]]
%%!!The Melkur (Fourth Doctor)
%%[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/melkur.jpg]]

%%----
%%[[/folder]]

!Fifth Doctor era debut
[[folder:The Mara]]
!!The Mara (Fifth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/doctor_who_kinda_20110426111055515_000.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Janet Fielding (1982; 1983) and Adrian Mills (1982)

The Mara is an evil spirit that first appeared in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS19E3Kinda Kinda]]", and then "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS20E2Snakedance Snakedance]]". It appears again in the ''AudioPlay/BigFinishDoctorWho'' story "Cradle of the Snake" and the e-book ''Tales of Trenzalore''.
----
* DemonicPossession: Its Modus Operandi.
* CompositeCharacter: From a meta standpoint, it combines elements of two separate namesakes: it being an ultimate evil that controls people through their fears and desires harkens to the Mara of Buddhist Mythology, while its proposed connection to the fairies and the nightmares in plagues its victims with derive from the Mara or Mare of Germanic folklore, from which we get the term nightmare.
* EvilSoundsDeep: Whenever it speaks through Tegan.
* TheFairFolk: In the ''Series/{{Torchwood}}'' episode "[[Recap/TorchwoodS1E5SmallWorlds Small Worlds]]", Jack Harkness speculates that fairies are "part Mara".
* GodsNeedPrayerBadly: For the Mara to return, it must feed off of the belief of the Manussan people. The Doctor throws a metaphysical spanner in the works by finding his "still point" and disrupting the Mara's control.
* HiveMind: It's able to possess and control multiple hosts at once and is referred to as both a collective and an individual.
* MindControl: It does this to Tegan.
* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: Named after a demon in Buddhist mythology.
* RedRightHand: People possessed by the Mara, or dream manifestations of it, get a snake tattoo on their arms and red-stained teeth.
* OmnicidalManiac: Unlike others who want to stop the Doctor from bringing the Time Lords back and starting the Time War again, the Mara ''wants'' the conflict to re-continue.
* ReptilesAreAbhorrent: Or so it appears.
* SealedInsideAPersonShapedCan: In the mini-episode that goes with the Season 20 boxset, it's still sealed within Tegan, and despite the occasional nightmare and offers, she's not having any of the Mara's nonsense, and promptly throws it back to the pit of her mind.
* ScaledUp: In "Kinda", its final form is a giant snake.
* TheWormThatWalks: Of a sorts. It's referred to as a gestalt creature, existing as both an individual and a multitude.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Commander Gustave Lytton]]
!!Commander Gustave Lytton (Fifth and Sixth Doctors)
[[quoteright:254:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gustave_9775.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Maurice Colbourne (1984–85)

A semi-villainous figure, the Doctor and Lytton crossed paths twice. Lytton ran into the Fifth Doctor during "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS21E4ResurrectionOfTheDaleks Resurrection of the Daleks]]", where Lytton worked for the Daleks, much to the Doctor's distaste. The Sixth Doctor encountered him in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS22E1AttackOfTheCybermen Attack of the Cybermen]]", where Lytton actually tried to help an alien species fight the Cybermen, though refused to team up with the Doctor. Thought to be a villain through and through by the Doctor, Lytton actually surprised the Doctor in the latter appearance by having a somewhat HeroicSacrifice.
----
* BadassNormal: Expanded universe media confirmed that he's just a normal human, although one born in an alien planet, which makes the fact that he held his own against the Daleks ''and'' the Cybermen, the two most persistent enemies the Doctor has ever had, all the more impressive.
* CyberneticsEatYourSoul: Partially Cyber-Converted into a Cyberman during his final encounter, Lytton experienced this one personally.
* {{Expy}}: He and his mercenary squad, the Dalek Troopers, were clearly inspired by the Imperial Stormtroopers from ''Franchise/StarWars''. The Dalek Troopers wear similar body-covering armour with the added visage of a Dalek eyestalk on their helmets.
* {{Fingore}}: He gets his wrists crushed by the Cybermen.
* HeelFaceRevolvingDoor: As a mercenary, he has no particular loyalties to any single cause and can change his allegiances on a dime. Fortunately, he settled on the Face side just before his death.
* HeroicSacrifice: Rather heroic for the character, he ultimately died fighting off the Cyber-Controller. More impressively, he was partially converted into a Cyberman at the time and remains as one of the few human characters to resist the mind-altering effects of the process. After his sacrifice, the Doctor regretfully laments that he had badly misjudged Lytton.
* JerkAss: He can be extremely harsh and demanding of his own subordinates.
* TheQuisling: A recurring human adversary who gets involved with both the Daleks and the Cybermen in separate serials. In the latter case, he initially wanted to collaborate with the Cybermen as he did with the Daleks, but ended up sticking with the Cryon resistance fighters until he was partially and unwillingly cyber-converted.
* OnlyOneName: Commander Lytton had only one name in the televised adventures of the Doctor, but the novelization of [[Recap/DoctorWhoS22E1AttackOfTheCybermen "Attack of the Cybermen"]] gave him the first name of "Gustave". The story also goes further in-depth on Lytton's character, even expanding his relationship with the Doctor somewhat.
* WildCard: As said, you can never be too certain about which side Lytton will be on. Considering that Lytton once sided with the Daleks, it makes sense that the Doctor doesn't trust him as far as he can throw him.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Morgus]]
!!Morgus (Fifth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/morgus.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' John Normington (1984)

The corrupt chairman of the Sirius Conglomerate, Trau Morgus was responsible for the extraction, processing and distribution of Spectrox on Androzani Minor. He engaged in many illegal business practices, up to and including murder, in order to maximize profits.
----
* AsideComment: He addresses the camera directly on occasion. This was a result of the actor misinterpreting the stage directions, but it recalls the Jacobean theatrical tradition of the AsideComment, and so gives the character an air of Shakespearean villainy.
* AsideGlance: Beyond his soliloquies, Morgus occasionally gives knowing glances to the camera, usually when he's in the middle of plotting something particularly audacious.
* BastardlySpeech: He uses PatrioticFervor slogans while [[WarForFunAndProfit plotting treason]] and preaching high-minded virtue while [[KickTheDog Kicking the Dog]].
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: Deliberately sabotages and manipulates his own production in order to keep the market price of Spectrox high. He also has homeless and unemployed people sent to the labor camps he owns, who became unemployed due to his deliberate sabotage of his factories.
* CorruptPolitician: The President of the (equally corrupt) Presidium.
* CreepyMonotone: He constantly speaks in a hushed, sullen tone that hardly ever fluctuates.
* FatalFlaw: {{Greed}}, plain and simple. His constant power grabs lead him into social, financial and legal ruin, and his vain, last-ditch attempt to steal Jek's spectrox supply leads to his death.
* HumiliationConga: He loses all his wealth and power during the final episode, in quick succession.
* IRejectYourReality: He is irrevocably convinced that the Doctor and Peri are government agents trying to topple his schemes. Granted, there is little evidence to the contrary and the Doctor is most definitely a [[SpannerInTheWorks snag in his works]], but this [[EntertaininglyWrong incorrect assumption ultimately leads to his downfall]].
* LackOfEmpathy:
** He leaves his business partner for dead, deliberately causes "accidents" that kill his workers and personally murders his superior, all for the pursuit of profit. In the latter case, he reels off a series of flatly delivered formalities about the tragedy of the situation that would fool absolutely nobody.
** It is implied that he only saw Sharaz Jek as an obstacle and didn't quite understand just how much Jek hates him. He believed that Jek would back down from a gun pointed at him, or that a bullet would slow him down. [[TakingYouWithMe He]] [[UnstoppableRage was]] [[TheDeterminator very]] [[ThePowerOfHate wrong]].
%%* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast
* ProperlyParanoid: Yes, there was indeed a government agent trying to expose him. It just wasn't the Doctor, or anyone else he suspected for that matter.
* RedOniBlueOni: The Blue to Sharaz Jek's Red. Compared to the intensely, ''ahem'', [[EvilIsHammy "passionate"]] Jek, Morgus is much more reserved.
* SesquipedalianLoquaciousness: Even though he constantly talks in a sullen tone, he has a very good vocabulary and knows exactly how to use it.
* VillainOfTheWeek: Serves as this for his only appearance as he's arguably the story's most irredeemable and prominent villain, but notably he never actually meets the Doctor face-to-face.
%%* VillainWithGoodPublicity
* WarForFunAndProfit: Deliberately keeps the Spectrox war going, as it keeps up the market price of the drug.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Sharaz Jek]]
!!Sharaz Jek (Fifth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sharaz_jek.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Christopher Gable (1984)

The arch-enemy of Morgus. Sharaz Jek used to be Morgus' business partner, using his androids to extract lethal Spectrox from Androzani's underground tunnels. After Morgus betrayed him and left him for dead in a mud geyser, Jek started a one-man campaign of revenge and used his army of androids to sabotage Morgus' operations.
----
* AbductionIsLove: He keeps Peri (and the Doctor) captive in his underground base, clearly expecting to instil some form of Stockholm Syndrome in her so that she will eventually reciprocate his feelings. It doesn't work out.
* AntiVillain: Jek is an admitted mad terrorist who only wants to see Morgus dead, but compared to the other villains in his story he's almost a saint.
* BeastAndBeauty: Sees himself as the Beast to Peri's Beauty, though his twisted love for her is in no way requited, mainly because he insists on acting like a leering, self-piteous creep whenever he's in her presence.
* BerserkButton: Two main ones.
** [[ArchEnemy Morgus]], obviously.
** He ''really'' doesn't take kindly to insolence or insubordination, which makes sense as he's usually surrounded by mindlessly obedient androids. Naturally, the Doctor's constant jostling wears Jek's patience quickly.
* CardCarryingVillain: He openly admits to being mad.
* ChewingTheScenery: On top of his bombastic rants, Jek has habits of throwing himself around and flailing his arms at whatever or whoever is unlucky enough to be within reach.
* CoolMask: He wears an undeniably cool black and white mask which, from a distance, resembles a sort of Yin-Yang pattern.
* DiedInYourArmsTonight: Jek dies in the arms of his final android as his headquarters burn.
* DontLookAtMe: After using his unmasked face to intimidate Chellak, Peri accidentally steals a glance and screams in terror. Jek reacts by cowering under a table, covering his face on the floor and whimpering to himself. It's a surprisingly poignant and vulnerable moment for Jek.
* EvilIsHammy: His raving and scheming is almost Shakespearean, making him quite the {{Foil}} to his nemesis Morgus.
* EvilLaugh: He gives one [[BreakingTheFourthWall straight to the camera]] just before the iconic first cliffhanger of the serial where the Doctor and Peri seemingly get executed by firing squad. The second episode reveals that he wasn't laughing at their deaths, but because he'd fooled Morgus's men by replacing the Doctor and Peri with identical android duplicates.
* {{Expy}}: Of ''Literature/ThePhantomOfTheOpera'' himself.
* FacialHorror: Thanks to his burns, his face is shown to be so unspeakably hideous that even experienced soldiers can only gasp in horror at the sight of it when his mask falls off. Although his face is [[NothingIsScarier deliberately kept hidden from view]] whenever his mask is removed onscreen for the first few times, we do eventually see it in full, and indeed, it's not a pretty sight.
* FatalFlaw: Several, but most notably {{Wrath}}, {{Lust}} and to an extent {{Pride}}. Jek is determined to exact revenge on Morgus, but his feud with the corrupt chairman is ultimately just a short-sighted, petty and spiteful one that benefits nobody and gets scores of people killed. His twisted affection for Peri is superficial and based solely on her beauty which he covets. Lastly, his scarred face robbing him of any chance of being loved by a woman is a premium source of {{Angst}} for him that he blames Morgus for causing. In the end, Jek gladly dies just to [[TakingYouWithMe bring Morgus down with him]].
* GadgeteerGenius: His army of androids is evidence enough.
* HairTriggerTemper: You never know what will set him off onto one of his rants, but one thing that unfailingly does the trick is mentioning that swine [[SayMyName MORGUS!]]
* HazyFeelTurn: While Jek remains an AntiVillain to the bitter end, he desperately tries to prolong Peri's life as soon as he realises she's dying.
* IHaveYouNowMyPretty: Falls in possessive, violent love with Peri. It starts off as unsavoury, but eventually it becomes fuel for a HeelFaceTurn.
* IWasQuiteTheLooker: PlayedForDrama when he goes into various HowTheMightyHaveFallen rants.
* LeanAndMean: Portrayed by the late Christopher Gable, a very tall and slender ex-ballet dancer.
* LoveRedeems: His feelings for Peri give him some respite, but not enough to quell his hatred for Morgus.
* MadScientist: Even his enemies acknowledge the brilliance of his androids.
* MalevolentMaskedMan: Wears a head-covering mask to conceal his disfigurement from the mud geyser.
* MaskingTheDeformity: He is a genius who built the robots necessary to mine [[SpiceOfLife Spectrox]] but was betrayed by his greedy partner [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Morgus]], who left him to die in the molten mud. Jek was left horrifically deformed and utterly insane, thus he fashions himself a black and white mask, then uses his robotics skills to build an army to take over [[DeathWorld Androzani Minor]] and stop Morgus from being able to extract any more Spectrox.
* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: Becomes remorseful when all of his androids are destroyed in the final skirmish and he learns that Peri is dying of Spectrox Toxaemia, as he could have sent an android into the dangerous caves to find the antidote.
* NeverMyFault: Blames Morgus for everything bad that happens.
* NobleDemon: He treats his prisoners like guests and doesn't do harm to people who haven't wronged him first.
* OneManArmy: In a sense. Jek is only one man, but his android army is sufficient enough to shunt his drug war into a stalemate.
* ThePowerOfHate: When he finally comes face-to-face with Morgus again, his hatred is so immense that [[UnstoppableRage he walks through a hail of bullets to kill him with his bare hands]].
* RedOniBlueOni: The Red to Morgus' Blue. Jek is prone to violent raving, Morgus has a LackOfEmpathy.
* RedemptionEqualsDeath: He dies upon saving Peri and the Doctor.
* RightForTheWrongReasons: Yes, Morgus is a diabolical bastard who must be brought down. Jek's only motivation for wanting to kill him is for the sake of his own selfish revenge.
* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: His biggest priority is bringing Morgus down.
* StalkerWithACrush: He quite clearly has the creepy kind of hots for Peri, doing things like chloroforming her, stroking her face while she's unconscious, and carrying her around in his arms (again, unconscious) while whispering "so beautiful... so beautiful...". The fact that he also dresses entirely in black leather really doesn't help.
* TragicVillain: He's a cruel, selfish and possessive terrorist, but only because of Morgus' betrayal. He goes into a lengthy villain monologue to Peri over how he used to be an optimist, but the trauma from the incident caused him to see the ugliness in everyone. He wants to keep Peri for himself because she's the only light in the darkness for him.
[[/folder]]

!Sixth Doctor era debut
[[folder:Mestor]]
!!Mestor (Sixth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mestor.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Edwin Richfield (1984)

->''"In my time I have been threatened by experts. And I don't rate you very highly at all."''
-->-- '''The Sixth Doctor''' on Mestor

A Gastropod.
----
* EvilSoundsDeep: He has a very deep, growly voice.
* GrandTheftMe: This is one of his powers.
* MisterSeahorse: According to the reference book "The Monster Vault" Mestor birthed the other Gastropods despite being referred to as male.
* PlanetaryParasite: His species devastated entire planets, but their eggs cannot hatch unless they are seared by a supernova first.
* TooDumbToLive: If he had just possessed the Doctor like he said he would, Mestor would have won. But instead, he decided to possess Azmael, a more experienced Time Lord, ultimately leading to his death.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Sil]]
!!Sil (Sixth Doctor)
[[quoteright:202:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sil_8747.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Nabil Shaban (1985–86)

A Mentor (read: lizard-slug-alien) and corrupt capitalist, Sil was a perfect compliment to the 1980s, and a good foil for the Sixth Doctor. His [[Recap/DoctorWhoS22E2VengeanceOnVaros first episode]] had Sil bilking an entire planet out of ''billions'' [[ForTheEvulz because he could]], while his [[Recap/DoctorWhoS23E2Mindwarp final appearance so far]] left Sil as an [[BastardUnderstudy understudy]] to a quickly-evolving member of his own species named Kiv... who then stole Peri's body for his own. Sil ''may'' be dead, but a script the Who crew was forced to discard during the 18-month hiatus of Doctor Who would have had Sil teaming up with the Ice Warriors [[note]] Said script was novelized and was turned into an audio drama[[/note]] too, while a script pitched for the never-produced Season 27 would have had Sil showing up with the Autons and UNIT. Until he shows up again in an actual, televised episode, however, we ''still'' don't know if he survived.
----
* AuthorAppeal: Sil is a pretty good character concept for the money-oriented 1980s, which was the intent of his creator.
* BadBoss: Threatens to kill an underling for wetting him down with a spray bottle too roughly.
* BastardUnderstudy: To Kiv in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS23E2Mindwarp Mindwarp]]", technically... though Kiv seems to have slowly lost it as the story progressed.
%%* ConMan
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: The basis for his whole character.
* ManiacTongue: Has a habit of flicking his tongue out as he laughs in a reptilian fashion.
%%* ManipulativeBastard
* MarsNeedsWomen: {{Averted}}; he doesn't exhibit any interest in Peri, but when the cell mutator turns Areta reptilian, he says she is "almost attractive."
* PutOnABus: It's unknown what happened to him after "Mindwarp", not helped any matters by the story being already surreal.
* ReptilesAreAbhorrent: Well, more like amphibians, but Mentors are aquatic and need constant spraying. They're also ruthless in their pursuit of money, especially Sil.
* UncertainDoom: The last we see of Sil, he is apparently killed by the crazed warlord Yrcanos, but this is part of evidence in the Doctor's trial that is later revealed to have been fabricated, and it is never made clear how much of the story is real.[[note]]Most of the confusion arises because the scene -- in which Peri is killed by having her mind overwritten with another Mentor's, causing Yrcanos to go on the rampage -- is later revealed to have been a total fabrication, and that Peri did not die. This was because producer John Nathan-Turner got cold feet about killing a companion off in such a horrible way ''after'' it had been filmed, and hastily wrote an explanation as to how she survived into a later episode without checking if this tallied with the rest of the story or the original intention as to how much of it was meant to be real. Had Nathan-Turner not changed his mind, it could be taken as read that Sil does not survive.[[/note]]
* VillainousGlutton: Known for constantly chowing down on marsh-minnows, not to mention his rather gross EvilLaugh.
* VillainProtagonist: Of his own belated, semi-canonical, direct-to-video spin-off movie produced by Reeltime Pictures, ''Sil and the Devil Seeds of Arodor''.
[[/folder]]
%%
%%[[folder:The Borad]]
%%!!The Borad (Sixth Doctor)
%%[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/p00vbsfh_4.jpg]]
%%->'''Played by:'''Robert Ashby (1984)
%%
%%----
%%[[/folder]]

!Seventh Doctor era debut
[[folder:The Kandyman]]
!!The Kandyman (Seventh Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_10_16_at_111659.png]]
->'''Played by:''' David John Pope (1988)
->''"You see, I make sweets. Not just any old sweets, but sweets that are so good, so delicious that sometimes, if I'm on form, the human physiology is not equipped to bear the pleasure."''

A robot who enjoys torturing and killing his victims using candy and sweets. The Seventh Doctor and Ace encountered the Kandyman on the human colony world Terra Alpha, where he acted as chief torturer for the despotic Helen A.
----
* AprilFools: On April Fools' Day 2010, it was announced that the Kandyman was to be the BigBad of Creator/MattSmith's first series as the Doctor!
* CreepyHighPitchedVoice: Oh goodness, does he have this.
* DrowningPit: It seems his favourite method of execution was trapping the victim in a tube and filling the tube with fondant, drowning them. The flavour of the fondant varied; Helen A's favourite was strawberry.
* EvilChef: He uses confectionery as a means of execution.
* EvilHasABadSenseOfHumour: Sadistically murdering innocent people with sweet foods is ''hilarious!''
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: The Kandyman is eventually destroyed by his own "fondant surprise".
* HomoeroticSubtext: "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS25E2TheHappinessPatrol The Happiness Patrol]]" is full of this. In particular, the Kandyman and his creator, Gilbert M, act like a married couple whose relationship has long since gone sour. Once the Kandyman is destroyed, Gilbert runs off with Helen A's husband to start a new life together somewhere else.
* LargeHam: One other thing he clearly seems to enjoy doing alongside his executions and his culinary experimentation is feasting on the scenery around him.
* MadArtist: A mad culinary artist.
* RoboticPsychopath: Extremely sadistic and cruel.
* SweetTooth: Yeah, if ''that'' wasn't obvious from the outset...
* WeaksauceWeakness: He can be rendered immobile with a quick spray of lemonade to his feet.
[[/folder]]

!Ninth Doctor era debut
[[folder:Cassandra O'Brien.Δ[=17=]]]
!!Cassandra O'Brien.Δ17 (Ninth and Tenth Doctors)
[[quoteright:284:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cassansdradelta_4126.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:284:[[LeanAndMean Look how thin I am]]. Thin and dainty. [[EvilOldFolks I don't look a day over two thousand]]. Moisturise me!]]

[[caption-width-right:284:[[labelnote:After possessing Rose Tyler]]\\
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/253344_1588543658657.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]

[[caption-width-right:284:[[labelnote:Her younger self in her original body]]\\
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/drwho_wanamaker_600x300.jpg[[/labelnote]]]]

->'''Played by:''' Creator/ZoeWanamaker (2005; 2006) Billie Piper (2006) David Tennant (2006) Sean Gallagher (2006)

Lady Cassandra O'Brien.Δ17 was a human in the far future. Along with other rich and powerful peoples of the universe, Cassandra was on Platform One, a space station orbiting Earth five billion years in the future, set up to witness the final destruction of the planet by the expansion of the Sun. When the Doctor destroyed her body, she retreated into a hospital back room and waited for a chance to reappear. Rose was that chance, and Cassandra merrily took over Rose's body and mind for a while. When the Doctor protested, she made the jump to the Doctor's body instead, enjoying every moment of it.
----



* VillainWithGoodPublicity: Her status as "the last human". is respected to the point of giving her a victim reputation, allowing her to get away with some of her crimes. Cassandra herself is very charismatic and as demostrated in "New Earth," she was even better at manipulating people when she was younger and had an attractive body. Some of her [[CultOfPersonality followers even see her as a divine figure]].

to:

* VillainWithGoodPublicity: Her status as "the last human". is respected to the point of giving her a victim reputation, allowing her to get away with some of her crimes. Cassandra herself is very charismatic and as demostrated demonstrated in "New Earth," she was even better at manipulating people when she was younger and had an attractive body. Some of her [[CultOfPersonality followers even see her as a divine figure]].



[[/folder]]

[[folder:Henry van Statten]]
!!Henry van Statten (Ninth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_10_16_at_130432.png]]
->'''Played by''' Corey Johnson

-->''"I am Henry van Statten, now recognise me!"''

A self-obsessed billionaire (who reportedly "owns" the internet) Henry van Statten is a collector of all things alien, and has been storing extraterrestrial artifacts in his secret underground bunker in Utah. He thinks he's discovered a life form he calls "The Metaltron", and is obsessed with getting it to talk. Little does he know that he's actually got a Dalek on his hands...
----
* AdaptationalNiceGuy: While he's still a PsychopathicManchild and a BadBoss, Van Statten's depravity doesn't go as deep as his inspiration from Jubilee, and isn't nearly as uncomfortable to watch.
* BadBoss: Van Statten keeps control via his army of mooks and by memory-wiping his executives on a whim, keeping them in a state of sycophantic terror. Unfortunately, by insisting the Dalek be captured regardless of casualties he alienates his security force, and by breaking down in fear in front of Goddard he loses her respect. Both quickly join forces to depose him after the crisis is over.
* CollectorOfTheStrange: Van Statten collects and studied alien artefacts. Collecting a live Dalek may not have been the best move...
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: The success of his computer company is based on stolen ImportedAlienPhlebotinum, including an imprisoned Dalek. While gloating to the Doctor, he admits that his company has already discovered the cure to the common cold, but he refuses to release it since he can still make a profit selling palliatives.
* DirtyCoward: As the Dalek pushes deeper into the compound, van Statten's utter uselessness is brought to bare as he can do nothing but sit in his office and watch his legions of security officers die in vain to defend him. When the Dalek finally breaks in, all he can do is stammer out weak justifications for his actions until the truth comes out.
-->'''Van Statten:''' I JUST WANTED YOU TO TALK!\\
[[AC:'''Dalek:''' [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor Then hear me talk now. EXTERMINATE!]]]]
* EvilIsNotAToy: Van Statten continues to treat the Dalek as the prize of his collection, ignoring the Doctor's warnings.
* EvilIsPetty: Subjects a Dalek to frequent electrical torture because it refused to talk. Yes, seriously.
* {{Expy}}: Shares many childish and megalomaniacal traits with his [[Recap/BigFinishDoctorWho040Jubilee "Jubilee"]] counterpart, Nigel Rorchester.
* EvenEvilHasStandards: Statten's not completely heartless as he does apologise when the 9th Doctor initially thinks Rose Tyler has been exterminated.
* GreenEyedMonster: After the initial shock of hearing the Dalek's voice for the first time thanks to the Doctor's prompting, van Statten bursts into the room and attempts to provoke the Dalek to talk to him as well, clearly envious of the Doctor being his prize's centre of attention.
* HateSink: His sheer narcissism, cowardice and disregard for the lives of his men make him completely unlikeable. It's telling that the Doctor--whose ninth incarnation holds a more personal hatred for the Daleks than ever before--is quicker to compliment a genocidal Dalek than compliment him.
-->'''Ninth Doctor:''' Do you know what a Dalek is, van Statten? [[AtLeastIAdmitIt A Dalek is honest. It does what it was born to do for the survival of its species. That creature in your dungeon is better than you!]]
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Van Statten wasn't killed, but he surely paved the way for his eventual fate. His policy of using torture on his alien captive caused said alien to go on a murdering rampage when it finally got loose, and his fondness for wiping people's memories and dropping them off in a town starting with the same letter as their last name got turned around on him by his newly appointed second-in-command.
* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: Considering that the other antagonist is a genocidal Dalek, you'd better believe that van Statten is one detestable little shit. He's so vile that the Doctor is more willing to compliment the Dalek on its honesty.
* InternetIncorporated:
-->'''Adam:''' Mr. van Statten owns the Internet.\\
'''Rose:''' Don't be daft, nobody ''owns'' the Internet.\\
'''Van Statten:''' And let's keep everyone thinking that way, right kids?
* KickTheDog: Has an aide memory-wiped simply for giving him the wrong answer.
* LaserGuidedAmnesia: He subjected staff he fired to this, and ultimately gets the treatment himself.
-->'''Goddard:''' And by tonight, Henry van Statten will be a homeless, brainless junkie in San Diego, Seattle, Sacramento... Someplace beginning with "S".
* NotSoDifferentRemark: The Doctor suggests that van Statten and Davros are very much alike, being two geniuses who were kings of their own little worlds. Van Statten doesn't get that it's certainly not a compliment.
* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: In early script drafts, van Statten was originally named "Will Fences" in a joking allusion to Bill Gates.
* PrecisionFStrike: Not a f-word, but American audiences were probably shocked to hear Henry shout "goddamn" at the Dalek, which would have been the first swear word (but far from the last) uttered in the televised show, albeit a mild one.
* PsychopathicManchild: Overall, van Statten comes across as incredibly immature, spoiled and entitled. His obsession with hearing the Dalek talk, specifically to recognise and address him, brings to mind the "Do the Roar" kid from ''WesternAnimation/ShrekForeverAfter''.
* SkewedPriorities:
-->'''The Doctor:''' ''(realises that the creature in van Statten's vault is a [[TheBusCameBack Dalek]])'' [[OhCrap Let me out!]]\\
'''[[OnlySaneWoman Goddard]]:''' Sir, it's going to kill him!\\
'''[[LackOfEmpathy Van Statten]]:''' It's talking!
* SmugSnake: Van Statten's callous disregard for the lives of his men as the Dalek massacres them, as well as his massive ego, make him completely unsympathetic and detestable. Though ironically, [[WordOfSaintPaul his actor Corey Johnson]] believes van Statten is misunderstood.
* WithholdingTheCure: Van Statten claims to have discovered the cure for the common cold, but isn't letting it out of the labs. "Why sell one cure when I can sell a thousand palliatives?"
[[/folder]]

!Tenth Doctor era debut
[[folder:Mr. Lucas Finch / Brother Lassar]]
!!Lucas Finch / Brother Lassar (Tenth Doctor)
->'''Played by:''' Creator/AnthonyHead (2006)
The leader of the Krillitanes, who comes off as a charismatic school headmaster with plans to remake reality.
----
* ActorAllusion: We have Creator/AnthonyHead once again [[Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer working at a creepy school]], and using BuffySpeak no less.
* EvilCounterpart: To the Doctor, with the episode painting him as a dark mirror of sorts with the two of them seeing each other as equals. Both are aliens disguised as humans, both serve as the leaders of their respective teams, and both are extremely clever and charismatic. It's no wonder that he is entranced by the Doctor and sees him as a WorthyOpponent.
* EvilIsHammy: Most of the time he's a restrained ColdHam, but K9's intervention in their plan drives him into a [[VillainousBreakdown manic hysteria of batlike screaming]].
* EvilPrincipal: He takes over as the Headmaster but is secretly the leader of the Krillitanes, a race of evil, carnivorous aliens with an EvilPlan that necessitates the children.
* FacingTheBulletsOneLiner: We get this brief exchange between Mr. Finch and K9 after the robot drenches the Krillitanes with their oil.
-->'''Mr. Finch:''' ''[just as the Krillitanes are about to blow up]'' You ''bad'' dog!\\
'''K9:''' Affirmative.
* FauxAffablyEvil: He is nothing but polite, especially towards the Doctor who he seems to hold VillainRespect towards.
* AGodAmI: Has the surprisingly ambitious goal to ascend to godhood and rebuild reality in his image using the Skasis Paradigm, which is essentially the universal cheat code that would give complete control over time, space and matter.
* InTheirOwnImage: His goal is to recreate reality in their own image, though [[WeCanRuleTogether he also wants the Doctor to join them]]. As the Doctor puts it, reality rebuilt with the face of Mr. Finch doesn't sound overly appealing compared to the status quo.
* ManipulativeBastard: Mr. Finch nearly talks the Doctor into joining him with just a few lines of temptation, and when [[TheHeart Sarah Jane]] steps in, shifts gears at the speed of light and -- based off only brief observation and some well informed guesses -- almost succeeds in doing the same to her. She, however, snaps out of it and snaps the Doctor out of it too.
* MeaningfulName: Mr. Finch, an alien capable of developing the traits of other conquered species is named after Darwin's finches. The widely known evidence of evolution due to the differing sizes of their beaks.
* ShapeshifterModeLock: Brother Lassar has locked himself permanently in human form as Headmaster Finch.
* UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans: Mr. Finch exploits this in his attempt to recruit the Doctor: how many more people he could save if he were a RealityWarper?
* VillainRespect: Finch has a healthy respect for the Doctor's intellect, and he is the only character that Finch actually treats as an equal, even a superior; as part of his temptation of the Doctor, he says, "The paradigm would give us power, but you could give us wisdom." [[AlternateCharacterInterpretation Of course]], Finch is a top class ManipulativeBastard, so he might just be playing on the Doctor's ego. Either way, it almost works.
* WeCanRuleTogether: He propositions to the Doctor, hoping to use his Time Lord wisdom in exchange for allowing him to become a god at his side. He drives a great sales pitch, however, as the Doctor does seem very nearly swayed by his manipulative words. He extends the offer to Sarah Jane and Rose, offering them [[MayflyDecemberRomance eternal life so that they could always be at the Doctor's side]].
* WouldHurtAChild: As a carnivorous Krillitane, humans are included on the menu. He and the other Krillitanes sometimes eat the occasional child, though only ones they are certain would go unnoticed.

[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Wire]]
!!The Wire (Tenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/1522501_1447192310623_full_1.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/MaureenLipman (2006)

-->''"Now, are you sitting comfortably? Good. Then we'll begin."''

An alien criminal who escaped a death sentence by turning into an EnergyBeing, losing its original body in the process, it made its way to [[Recap/DoctorWhoS28E7TheIdiotsLantern 1953 London]] and forced a hapless television salesman to help it steal faces and people's brainwaves in order to try and regain a physical form, planning on doing so while millions of people were watching the coronation of Queen UsefulNotes/ElizabethII.
----
* AmbiguousGender: It takes the form of a female television announcer, but its actual gender is unknown.
* AndIMustScream:
** She feeds by stealing the essences and the souls of people watching her TV screens, leaving their bodies as wandering {{Empty Shell}}s, while their consciousness remain trapped within the Wire.
** She herself would befall this fate when the Doctor turns her receiver into a transmitter, and sends her essence into a VHS tape.
* BadBoss: Forces Magpie to work for her by subjecting him to having his essence stolen, then using that as blackmail to stave off any further suffering. Then after subserviently carrying out everything she asked she kills him anyway when he is no longer of any use.
* CharacterCatchphrase: "FEED ME!"
* EnergyBeing: It escaped execution by turning into pure electricity.
* FaceStealer: A side effect of it stealing people's bioelectricity, in order to regain strength. It doesn't actually ''do'' anything with the faces.
* ImAHumanitarian: She essentially feeds on humans, only their minds/souls rather than their physical bodies.
* LargeHam: [[EvilIsHammy "FEEEED MEEEEEE!"]]
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: "The Wire" is almost certainly a pseudonym it adopted after losing its physical form.
* SpellMyNameWithAThe: ''The'' Wire.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: After forcing Magpie to carry out her every whim, she grants him the "peace" he was promised by disintegrating him with a bolt of lightning.
* YourSoulIsMine: A more sci-fi version, where the Wire absorbs a victim's mind and traps their essence inside a TV screen, while their body goes into neural shutdown and is left an EmptyShell.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Abzorbaloff]]
!!The Abzorbaloff, aka Victor Kennedy (Tenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:290:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/abzorbaloff.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/PeterKay (2006)

-->''"You've dabbled with aliens. Now meet the genuine article!"''

A green humanoid hailing from the planet Clom, with the ability to absorb and gain the knowledge of any other lifeform. Under the guise of human businessman Victor Kennedy, he takes over LINDA, a group of fans of the Doctor, in a bid to absorb him and gain control of the TARDIS.
----
* AchillesHeel: His cane.
* {{Acrofatic}}: His modest claims of being merely a "slow, clumsy beast" are immediately disproved when he leaps over his desk and chases Elton through the streets on foot.
* AndYourLittleDogToo: To prove Elton and Ursula, the Abzorbaloff threatens to absorb Jackie Tyler.
* TheAssimilator: He works on an individual level, absorbing individuals into his body.
* BigNo: Gives one just before he dissolves.
* BigYes: Gives an orgasmic one when he absorbs Ursula.
* BodyHorror: His process of absorbing people is both scary and disgusting.
* EvilPlan: He wants to absorb the Doctor in order to gain his vast knowledge and exploits LINDA in order to find him.
* FantasticRacism: Describes the natives of Raxacoricofallapatorious -- Clom's twin planet -- as swine and says that he spits on them. He also looks down on humans, describing their body as a "crude pink shape".
* FasterThanTheyLook: He even exploits this fact by pointing out his size and how slow he must be... and then shocks people by showing just how fast he really is.
* FatBastard: Already a prime example of this as Victor Kennedy, who treats the LINDA members like crap while trying to get them to do his bidding, and it gets exaggerated as the Abzorbaloff, who is even fatter still and flat-out murderous.
* {{Gasshole}}: The Abzorbaloff, in view of Ursula and Elton, has no problem passing gas through Bliss' mouth just to let her speak, to the discomfort of her as well as Bridget and Mr. Skinner. Justified in that he's a BigEater, and with that he'll always have people attached to him.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: By absorbing Ursula, he gives her access to his mind and his knowledge, which she uses to find out how to kill him.
* KarmicDeath: He is killed when all of those he's absorbed start pulling him apart from the inside, causing him to drop his cane. Elton then breaks the cane, cancelling out the limitation field that keeps the Abzorbaloff's powers in check and causing him to be ''absorbed'' by the Earth.
* {{Namedar}}: He deliberately adopts the name the humans come up with for it because it likes the sound. The Doctor later comes up with the same name on the third try. Captain Jack's Monster File for the Slitheen shows that they are related to the Abzorbalovian Rebels.
* NewspaperThinDisguise: After absorbing Mr. Skinner, the Abzorbaloff hides behind a newspaper when Ursula and Elton come back. He is eventually rumbled due to a combination of Skinner crying out for help and Ursula noticing his green claws clutching the newspaper.
* NoNameGiven: Whatever his actual name is, it's never stated on-screen. It's Elton and then the Doctor who coin the name "Abzorbaloff" for him. The creature takes a liking to the nickname either way.
* ObviouslyEvil: As Victor, his introduction is accompanied by a power outage, he wears black, and asks to be alone with them one at a time for an unspecified reason.
* OfficialFanSubmittedContent: Was adapted from the winning design of a children's Blue Peter sweepstakes. The childish name was also part of the submission, which was covered in the episode itself as a nickname given to it by humans that the creature took a liking to. As the story goes, the winning child creator was disappointed with how his design was adapted for screen, as he'd imagined it as being the size of a building.
* OopNorth: Has a light northern accent as Victor Kennedy, and a full-fat one as the Abzorbaloff.
* OrgasmicallyDelicious: He practically has an orgasm when he absorbs Ursula. Besides that, he is constant ecstasy from having absorbed multiple victims.
* PowerIncontinence: Seems to suffer from this, as he orders the LINDA members never to touch him because of his supposed skin condition, presumably out of fear that he'll unwittingly absorb them and blow his own cover. He then suffers this to fatal levels at the end of the story when Elton breaks his cane, and without the limitation field it generates, he gets absorbed by the Earth itself.
* TakeThatAudience: Not-so-subtly reflects the more [[StopHavingFunGuys unpleasant, obsessive portions]] of the ''Doctor Who'' fanbase.
* TastesLikeChicken: Says this word-for-word about Ursula after he absorbs her.
* ToiletHumour: After absorbing Bliss, the Abzorbaloff ends up with her face sticking out of his right arsecheek. Inevitably, he ends up farting on her face.
* ToServeMan: He essentially eats people, only not with his mouth, doing so by making physical contact which sucks them into his body, granting him experience and knowledge which he has a taste for.
* TouchOfDeath: Downplayed. A single touch from the Abzorbaloff begins the irreversible process of absorption which ultimately ends in the death of the victim, though it takes several weeks.
* VoluntaryShapeshifter: Seems to be this, albeit with some limitations. He can switch between his personas as the Abzorbaloff and Victor Kennedy, and in doing so apparently suppress those that he's already absorbed, but can't switch forms quickly enough to prevent Elton and Ursula discovering his identity.
* WoundedGazelleGambit: After Ursula threatens to assault him with his cane, he initially reacts with genuine terror -- likely because such an attack would have broken it, removing the limitation field and killing him -- before begging for mercy and claiming to be "such a slow, clumsy beast". Something he definitely proves ''not'' to be when he absorbs Ursula and then chases Elton.
* WrongGenreSavvy: Believes from his research that the Doctor will allow himself to be absorbed in order to save Elton's life. While the Doctor is always willing to perform a HeroicSacrifice as an absolute last resort, that doesn't prove to be the case in this particular encounter, as he's able to have the LINDA members (who are already doomed to eventual full absorption and effective death) perform their own sacrifice to deal with him.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Racnoss Empress]]
!!The Racnoss Empress (Tenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_01_17_at_092220.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Sarah Parish (2006)

----
* BigNo: "MYYYYY CHIIIIIIILDREEEEEEEEENNNNN!"
* EvenEvilHasStandards: The Empress feeds Lance to her children because she isn't impressed with him readily abandoning his "wife".
* EvilIsBigger: One of the most physically imposing ''Doctor Who'' villains outside of literal {{Kaiju}} such as Kroll.
* EvilIsHammy: The Empress of the Racnoss, bringing ChewingTheScenery to epic levels. One wonders if the Racnoss actually subsisted on scenery that they chewed up, instead of meat, as they insist.
%%* EvilLaugh
* ExtremeOmnivore: The Racnoss can devour [[PlanetEater whole planets]].
* GiantSpider
* OhCrap: She finally realises exactly what she's up against when the Doctor reveals his true planet of origin.
-->'''Empress:''' Roboforms are not necessary. My children shall feast on Martian flesh.\\
'''The Doctor:''' Oh, but I'm not from Mars.\\
'''Empress:''' Then where?\\
'''The Doctor:''' My home planet is far away and long since gone, but its name lives on: ''Gallifrey''.\\
'''Empress:''' ''[[[{{Gasp}} gasps dramatically]]]'' THEY MURDERED THE RACNOSS!
* PungeonMaster: The Racnoss Empress. Notable in that she deliberately keeps setting up puns, but Lance and Donna don't play along.
* TimeAbyss: The Racnoss date from the early days of the universe, and the Empress herself has been in hibernation for billions of years. The Time Lords and other ancient races hunted the Racnoss down to near extinction because of their ravenous nature.
* VillainousBreakdown: When the Doctor reveals his true home, the Racnoss Empress goes from gloating to horrified shrieking.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Richard Lazarus]]
!!Professor Richard Lazarus (Tenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:326:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/194_lazarus_1.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/MarkGatiss (2007)

-->''"You're so sentimental, Doctor. Maybe you are older than you look."''

A genius yet sociopathic scientist who is obsessed with discovering the secret of eternal youth, no matter what the cost...
----
* BodyHorror: His alternate form is an utterly horrific aberration resembling a gigantic scorpion with an exposed exoskeleton and an uncannily humanoid face. He always transforms offscreen, but audible bone cracking can be heard whenever it happens. While the slightly dodgy 2007 CGI downplays it somewhat, he's still one of ''Doctor Who'''s most viscerally terrifying monsters.
* DirtyOldMan: He very creepily hits on Martha's sister Tish.
* FreudianExcuse: He claims that his desire to cheat death stems from witnessing the Blitz as a child.
* GenreRefugee: His creator Stephen Greenhorn compares him to a classic [[Franchise/MarvelUniverse Marvel Comics]] supervillain; mad scientist, caught in an awry experiment, turns into a rampaging monster.
* ImmortalitySeeker: He builds a marvellous machine capable of restoring youth, hoping to use it to live forever.
* ItsAllAboutMe: While it can partially be blamed on the degenerative effects of his age reversal machine, Lazarus expresses zero remorse for the many victims he sucked dry over the course of his rampage to maintain his monstrous form. His quest for immortality is entirely selfish and once he regains his youth, he loses any pretence of caring for anyone but himself.
* LivingForeverIsAwesome: Naively assumes this to be the case, speaking about how he looks forward to eternal life. The Doctor, actually being immortal, tells him [[WhoWantsToLiveForever what it is truly like to be immortal]].
-->'''The Doctor:''' I'm old enough to know that a longer life isn't always a better one. In the end, you just get ''tired''. Tired of the struggle, tired of losing everyone that matters to you. Tired of watching everything turn to dust. If you live long enough, Lazarus, the only certainty is that you'll be alone.
* MeaningfulName: The Doctor {{lampshade|Hanging}}s this after Lazarus revives from apparently being killed.
-->'''The Doctor:''' Lazarus, back from the dead. Should have known, really.
* SensoryOverload: The Doctor defeats him by blasting a cathedral organ at max volume, amped up by the Sonic Screwdriver. It causes Lazarus's unstable DNA to freak out and he falls to his death from the spire.
* SquareCubeLaw: Where exactly does all that extra mass come from when he transforms? Downplayed as Lazarus requires constant sustenance to maintain it, but it's still pretty implausible.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Lucy Saxon]]
!!Lucy Saxon (Tenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:203:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/misssaxon_6424.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Alexandra Moen (2007, 2009)

-->''"Dying. Everything dying. The whole of creation was falling apart and I thought there's no point. No point to anything. Not ever."''

The Master's wife in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E12TheSoundOfDrums "The Sound of Drums"]], [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E13LastOfTheTimeLords "Last of the Time Lords"]] and returning for an encore in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E17E18TheEndOfTime "The End of Time"]]. She was his "faithful companion" until she shot him, after Francine Jones and Jack Harkness were stopped trying to do so by the Doctor.
----
* AllForNothing: Killed herself and managed to wipe out the cult of Saxon in the act of trying to kill "Harry", but he lived on, albeit [[CameBackWrong very damaged]].
* AllGirlsWantBadBoys: Lucy is the wife of the Master, the Doctor's ArchEnemy. How's that for a "bad boy"?
* TheBeard: The Tenth Doctor implicitly calls her this, when the Fifth asks him if the Tenth's Master still has a beard, as in actual facial hair.
* BewareTheQuietOnes: In "Last of the Time Lords", she rarely speaks, making it all the more unexpected when she's the one that shoots the Master.
* BlueBlood: Her connections are one of the reasons the Master married her.
* ChekhovsGunman: In the most literal sense. She starts up as "not too bright", but ends up shooting the Master.
* DespairEventHorizon: Pal around with the Master and he will quickly destroy your will to live/reasons for existing. Which is very dark, considering how ''eager'' and totally unhinged Lucy was to kill herself to get rid of the Master for good... which didn't work.
* TheDogBitesBack: Domestic abuse is implied to be the motivation for her HeelFaceTurn.
* DomesticAbuse: After the Master has ruled the Earth for a year, he's stopped pretending to love or care at all about Lucy. He's implied to have hit her, and showed her the end of the universe, driving her over the DespairEventHorizon ForTheEvulz.
* EvilCounterpart: Of the companions in general, and Rose Tyler in particular, because she is the Master's companion and his wife. It's even stated that the Master took her to see the TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt much like the Ninth Doctor did to Rose, but whereas the Doctor wanted Rose to appreciate the universe while it existed, the Master did it to Lucy to make her believe that there's "no point in anything, ever."
* HeelFaceTurn: Turns against the Master during "Last of the Time Lords", and then further works against him in "The End of Time".
* HeroicSacrifice: Her last appearance in "The End of Time" had her sabotaging a cult's attempt to resurrect the Master in an explosion that kills her. The Master returns anyway, but the attempt caused him to CameBackWrong. [[spoiler:It later becomes a SenselessSacrifice, as [[Recap/DoctorWhoS36E12TheDoctorFalls "The Doctor Falls"]] reveals that the Time Lords simply healed the Master's condition without much issue.]]
* LadyInRed: The opulent red satin dress she wears in "Last of the Time Lords."
* MadLove: She seemed to be genuinely in love with the Master at the beginning, and it clearly wasn't mutual.
* MoreThanMindControl: After glimpsing the end of the universe, Lucy went a bit barmy.
* NotSoHarmlessVillain: Does what the Doctor wouldn't, and kills the Master.
* TheOphelia: She at one point is seen babbling about how the Master showed her TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt and how it made her believe that there was no point in anything ever.
* PreMortemOneLiner: She gives a pretty good one before stopping the Master's resurrection, although he ends up surviving and ''she's'' the one that dies.
-->'''Lucy:''' ''Till death do us part, Harry!''
* ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections: She uses her family connections to have an antiserum for the Master's resurrection created.
* StrawNihilist: The Doctor takes his companion to TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt to make her appreciate life while it lasts. The Master does so to BreakTheCutie.
-->'''Lucy Saxon:''' Dying. Everything dying. The whole of creation was falling apart and I thought there's no point. No point to anything. Not ever.
* TakingYouWithMe: Sabotages the Master's attempt at resurrection and causes an explosion that kills her in the process.
* TookALevelInBadass: The "not too bright" Lucy gets a lot smarter once she's free of her husband's influence, nearly foiling his plan to come back from the dead.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Averted. "The End of Time" reveals that for her part in the Master's crimes she was a given a trial in secret with no jury, and then locked up in prison.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Max Capricorn]]
!!Max Capricorn (Tenth Doctor)
->'''Played by:''' George Costigan (2007)

-->''"Time for me to retire."''

The former CEO of Max Capricorn Cruiseliners, the premier luxury starship cruise service on the planet Sto. Betrayed by his board of directors, Capricorn stages an elaborate revenge plot in which he sabotages his company's prized vessel, a spacefaring replica of the ''UsefulNotes/RMSTitanic'', to make it crash into the Earth, with the hope that the resulting scandal would incriminate the board and cause their shares to plummet in value. His head crudely stitched to a cubic cyborg vehicle, Capricorn is perfectly willing to sacrifice the crew and passengers of the ship as well as all six billion humans on Earth for the sake of his convoluted retirement plan.
----
* BerserkButton: The Doctor gets under his skin by calling him a loser.
-->"I '''never''' lose."
* CharacterCatchphrase: "And I should know because... my name is Max!", TwinkleSmile.
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: His motivation for crashing another Titanic and potentially wiping out all life on Earth? To settle a petty squabble against his board of directors.
* {{Cyborg}}: An amusing version, as he's revealed to be little more than a head stitched to a crude rectangular vehicle. However, Sto's discriminatory policies against cyborgs, [[{{Foreshadowing}} the same that caused Bannakaffalatta to hide his cyborg modifications]], lead to Capricorn's expulsion from his own company.
* DirtyOldMan: He plans to retire to a planet where the ladies are supposedly very fond of... metal.
* EvilIsHammy: Another supremely hammy Christmas villain.
* EvilIsPetty: Attempts to crash the Titanic into Earth, killing billions (or if Turn Left is any indication, millions) to...frame his board directors and retire to a nice planet. [[DisappointedByTheMotive The Doctor immediately lambasts he's committing mass genocide for such a pathetic reason]].
* HumanAliens: Like all the unnamed humanoids from Sto ([[MyFriendsAndZoidberg except Bannakaffalatta]]), Max looks and acts completely human, though his cyborg body gives him a unique shape.
* LackOfEmpathy: He's utterly unphased by the enormous collateral damage his plan will cause, on top of the many innocent lives he already has taken. His only reaction to the Doctor chewing him out for it is to suck his lips in like a mischievous child.
* TwinkleSmile: His golden tooth twinkles in the advert reels shown on monitors across the Titanic. The Doctor is surprised that it even happens when they meet in person.
[[/folder]]


[[folder:Matron Cofelia / Miss Foster]]
!!Matron Cofelia (Tenth Doctor)
->'''Played by:''' Sarah Lancashire (2008)

-->''"I'm advancing the birth plan. We're going into [[DeadlyEuphemism premature labour]]."''

A nanny of the Five-Straighten Classabindi Nursery Fleet (Intergalactic Class) who arrives on Earth under the guise of Miss Foster, CEO of pharmaceutical company Adipose Industries. Designing a drug that can make a person lose weight at an extraordinary rate, she secretly plans to create legions of Adipose babies on behalf of the Adiposian First Family, her unseen alien clients.
----
* BabysitterFromHell: On an intergalactic scale!
* DidntThinkThisThrough: She would've gotten away with everything if she hadn't asked to come with the Adipose babies, who she seems to have grown attached to. She doesn't stop to think that the First Family wouldn't need a nanny anymore now that they have their children.
* DisneyVillainDeath: While levitating her and the Adipose babies up to their mother ship, the Adiposian First Family decide to [[DeadlyEuphemism terminate their contract with her]] upon realising that her illegal activities have made her a liability.
* EvilPlan: An especially bizarre one, as she plans to force the human race to be surrogate parents to a new generation of Adipose toddlers on behalf of the Adiposian race.
* ExactWords: She claims in her advertising campaign that her pills will make "the fat just walk away". That banal slogan proves to be ''horrifyingly'' accurate.
* GravityIsAHarshMistress: After the levitation beam vanishes, she cartoonishly stalls in midair for a few seconds before looking down and falling to her death.
* HumanAliens: She's obviously not human but is indistinguishable from one.
* LackOfEmpathy: She knows fullwell that the Adipose birthing process can be lethal to humans, but deceives the population with promises that her pills will help them lose weight.
* MouthOfSauron: Her employers, the Adiposian First Family, go unseen. She acts as the nanny to their children in the mysterious absence of their original breeding planet.
* TheStoic: She's unflappable in the face of the Doctor's threats, though she does take joy in seeing the Adipose babies flying off to the mother ship.
* SwissArmyWeapon: She possesses her own sonic probe, the Sonic Pen, to counter the Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Luke Rattigan]]
!!Luke Rattigan (Tenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:718:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/img_7538.jpeg]]
[[caption-width-right:718:some caption text]]
->'''Played by:''' Ryan Sampson
A young genius inventor, self made millionaire, and founder of the Rattigan Academy, a school and think tank with hand picked geniuses. He wanted to use his invention to help the Sontarans kill the human race save his selected members of the Acadamy.
----
* EvilCannotComprehendGood: He really thought his friends would be delighted to start a new society with him at the expense of the rest of humanity. They are so utterly disgusted and choose death over his new world.
* HaremSeeker: Had a breeding initiative as part of his plan to build a new world with his friends.
* HeelFaceTurn: He eventually comes to his senses after learning the Sontarans planned on betraying him.
* HeroicSacrifice: Takes the Doctor's place in detonating the Sontaran's ship while onboard.
* ImpossibleGenius: He was able to invent pocket-dimension technology in the 21st century, which the Doctor described as being like finding a smartphone in the Stone Age.
* InsufferableGenius: His defining trait, he cannot hide his co tempt for those he deems less intelligent than him.
* TeenGenius: He is one of the brightest minds of humanity despite his young age.
* RewardedAsATraitorDeserves: While they don't kill him, the Sontarans he betrayed humanity for, told him he was just an UnwittingPawn once he's done his part. He's left a bawling mess and eventually sacrifices life to stop them.
* WorldsSmartestMan: Heavily implied. The Doctor all but states Luke had never met an intellectual equal until meeting the Doctor himself. Luke was able to invent technology that was centuries ahead of its time.
[[/folder]]

!Eleventh Doctor era debut
[[folder:Prisoner Zero]]
!!Prisoner Zero (Eleventh Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/prisoner_zero.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' William Wilde (voice), Creator/OliviaColman, Creator/CaitlinBlackwood, Marcello Magni, Eden Monteath, Merin Monteath and Creator/MattSmith (2010)

-->''"Poor Amy Pond. Still dreaming about her magical Doctor."''

An alien shapeshifter imprisoned by the Atraxi. The Eleventh Doctor and Amy had to find it when it escaped to Earth.
----
* AmbiguousSituation: How Prisoner Zero knows about the Silence and the Pandorica is unclear, especially given it had remained in hiding for years.
* CreepyChild: Takes the form of two girls and their mother and then of the young Amelia Pond.
* CreepyMonotone: Never raises its voice.
* EvilGloating: Takes great glee in taunting the Doctor over his lack of knowledge.
* FlatCharacter: [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] in Steven Moffat's [[SelfDeprecatingHumor own self-adapted novelisation]] of "The Day of the Doctor", in which the Doctor briefly muses on Prisoner Zero's mysterious plans, and how they were ''so'' mysterious that nobody ever found out what they were.
* HoistByTheirOwnPetard: It just so happens to take over Amy's mind when it needs a quick escape; she is the only person who knows what Prisoner Zero actually looks like and Zero can only take the form of what someone is thinking about. So, the Doctor makes Amy think about its true form.
* InvoluntaryShapeshifting: It can take the form of whatever a dormant mind is dreaming. However, it has no control over that.
* MorphicResonance: Its big sharp teeth.
* NoodleIncident: We never do learn what it did to get sent to prison, though its escape causes the Atraxi to try to destroy a planet in response.
* PsychicLink: How it is able to use dormant minds to take different forms.
* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Gives the Doctor one about how he has affected Amy's life.
* ShapeshifterGuiltTrip: Takes on the form of a seven-year-old Amy while taunting the Doctor.
* StarterVillain: For the Eleventh Doctor.
* TakingYouWithMe: Rather than face capture and possibly execution at the hands of the Atraxi, Prisoner Zero declares it would rather let the Atraxi burn the whole world with it.
* VillainousBreakdown: Is reduced to yelling "no!" repeatedly after realizing the Doctor found a way to stop it.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Solomon the Trader]]
!!Solomon the Trader (Eleventh Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_01_17_at_090800_1.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/DavidBradley (2012)

A pirate who hijacked a Silurian ark and killed the entire crew in an attempt to claim its cargo, dinosaurs, for himself.
----
* AmbiguouslyHuman: The year is 2367, and his robots claim they've been on the ark for 2,000 years, since long before humanity acquired space travel. Even given that the robots aren't the most reliable source, this is a universe with a lot of Human Alien species.
* CaneFu: Solomon uses one of his crutches, which has a sharpened edge, to subdue Nefertiti.
* DeathByIrony: Solomon is all about the money, so the Doctor lets him have several very shiny, very valuable objects all to himself. The missiles.
* EvilCannotComprehendGood: Solomon assumes the Doctor is only interested in the dinosaurs for their monetary value; the Doctor berates him for assuming everyone lives by the same values as him.
* EvilCripple: Solomon had a run-in with a raptor when he invaded the ship, and it ate a lot of his leg.
* EvilOldFolks: Solomon, played by the inimitable David Bradley, has been doing this sort of vile act for a long time.
* IHaveYouNowMyPretty: Solomon is not nice to Nefi, and she gets very, very genuinely scared. His implied unsavoury intentions call to mind Sharaz Jek (only without Jek's Jerkass Woobie qualities).
* KarmicDeath: Solomon really, REALLY deserved being blown up in that ship by missiles. This whole affair was his fault to begin with.
* KickTheDog: Solomon has several; he orders one of his robots to injure Brian in order to force the Doctor to heal him, he ejected the Ark's crew from the airlock, and, when he decides he wants to sell her, he has the triceratops killed in an attempt to make the Doctor hand Nefertiti over.
* KnightOfCerebus: When he shows up, it starts getting much more serious, as most scenes with him involve showing off what a Jerkass he is with his various KickTheDog moments.
* OneSteveLimit: Averted. Solomon shares his name with an important character from [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E4DaleksInManhattan "Daleks in Manhattan"]]/[[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E5EvolutionOfTheDaleks "Evolution of the Daleks"]], except that guy was an ally of the Doctor.
* RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil: Among his various crimes, the barely-euphemistic threat of planning to rape Nefertiti[[note]]at least as much as the ratings could get away with[[/note]] makes him vile enough that the Doctor cold-bloodedly kills him with a most uncharacteristic Pre-Mortem One-Liner.
* SpacePirates: Solomon is the uncomical, seriously nasty kind. He put out a distress signal so he could board this ship and then killed everyone for their cargo.
* VillainsWantMercy: After committing genocide, threatening to kill everyone unless Nefi becomes his slave and subtly alluding that he intends to rape her, Solomon still expects the Doctor to rescue him. The Doctor refuses.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Gunslinger]]
!!Kahler-Tek (Eleventh Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_01_17_at_092318.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Andrew Brooke (2012)

A cyborg Kahler SuperSoldier who went rogue after remembering who he was, seeking revenge against the scientists who turned him into a monster.
----
* AntiVillain: The Gunslinger isn't evil; he just wants revenge on the people who made him a monster. He specifically stays out of the margins of Mercy so that no innocent civilians get caught in the crossfire.
* ArmCannon: He has a rather impressive one on his right arm as part of his cyborg modifications.
* TheAtoner: The Gunslinger decides to become Mercy's protector once his purpose is fulfilled.
* BaitAndSwitch: The episode also opens with a monologue about a "guardian angel who fell from the stars". It turns out to be the Gunslinger, not the Doctor.
* {{Cyborg}}: The Gunslinger looks half-man and half-machine, with an Arm Cannon and a robotic Eyepatch of Power balanced out by a more human hand and eye.
* EveryoneCallsHimBarkeep: The Gunslinger, to the people of Mercy.
* EvilSoundsDeep: The Gunslinger has a deep computerized voice and starts off as the antagonist. This is then subverted, as he isn't actually evil.
* TheFettered: The first hint of the Gunslinger's real personality is his refusal to endanger an innocent person. He still sticks to this -- or, at least, Wouldn't Hurt a Child -- after Isaac takes the shot he meant for Jex.
* FlashStep: The Gunslinger is equipped with a short-range teleporter. He uses it to quickly cover distance without breaking his slow, menacing stride.
* ImplacableMan: Nothing will stop him from hunting Jex.
* LivingForeverIsAwesome: The Gunslinger spends four generations as sheriff of Mercy and hasn't aged a day. This implies he'll protect it forever. It's also awesome in regards to his religion. Imagine how many souls he'd have to carry to reach the mountain top.
* MirrorCharacter: To the Doctor; another ordinary man who became a monster in order to save a world ravaged by war.
* NeverHurtAnInnocent: His only interest is revenge against specific people who wronged him, and he takes steps to prevent anyone else getting caught in the crossfire.
* NoPlaceForMeThere: The Gunslinger believes he has no place in the world once his war is over. The Doctor convinces him otherwise.
* PreMortemOneLiner: "Make peace with your gods."
* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: It's mentioned that he hunted down and murdered the other scientists who experimented on him -- Jex is the last.
* ShoutOut: The Gunslinger is a cross between the Terminator and Yul Brynner's Gunslinger from Westworld. His Stat-O-Vision even says "TERMINATE". By the end, he has become more like Franchise/RoboCop once he decides to be Mercy's protector. The writers also intentionally included some similarities to Frankenstein's Monster.
* WasOnceAMan: It's shown that he underwent cyborgification in the prequel.
* WeirdWest: A cyborg alien killing machine posing as a ruthless gunslinger in the Old West.
* WhatHaveIBecome: Implied to be the reason why the Gunslinger went rogue, after battle-damage led him to remember who he was and what Jex and the other scientists had done to him.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Kahler-Jex]]
!!Kahler-Jex (Eleventh Doctor)
->'''Played by:''' Creator/AdrianScarborough (2012)

A member of the Kahler race who took up residence in the Old West town of Mercy, where he acts as a kindly physician and provider of the town's many anachronistic technological utilities. However, Jex hides a very dark secret that ties him to the town's mysterious alien tormentor, the Gunslinger.
----
* UsefulNotes/TheAmericanDream: Despite being a foreigner (from outer space) with a dodgy past, he was taken in by the marshal of Mercy and given a fresh start as a well-loved town doctor.
* AntiVillain: While the Doctor certainly considers him worse than the Gunslinger, it's specifically pointed out that Jex isn't evil, either. He's a nuanced individual with both good and bad qualities, though he is overall a reasonable, well-intentioned man.
* TheAtoner: Jex certainly sees himself as this, as he believes that helping the people of Mercy will absolve him of his past sins. However, as the Doctor points out, Jex's chosen "punishment" barely even counts as one considering the magnitude of his crimes and he shouldn't have the freedom to choose how or when his debt is paid. This speaks to Jex's rather short-sighted view of how atonement really works.
* BeAllMySinsRemembered: In Kahler culture, it is believed that in order to pass onto the afterlife, the recently deceased have to carry the souls of everyone they've wronged in their lifetime. Because Jex has hurt and killed countless people, he fears that his penitent journey would be especially arduous.
* TheDeadHaveNames: Jex claims to remember the names of every Kahler he experimented on, and he can still hear their screams every time he closes his eyes. Kahler-Tek was the only survivor.
* DrivenToSuicide: He ultimately decides to blow himself up in his ship to prevent any further bloodshed, as the Gunslinger was never going to stop pursuing him and hurting the people he cared about.
* GivingRadioToTheRomans: He gives the townsfolk easy access to electricity and a cure for cholera.
* GreyAndGrayMorality: It's specifically pointed out in the episode that Jex doesn't neatly fit into one category. He is neither a MadScientist war criminal nor an innocent local physician. Jex assumes that the Doctor's BlackAndWhiteMorality makes him incapable of understanding this basic level of nuance, but the Doctor understands Jex perfectly. After all, the two are very much alike: two aliens who committed atrocities in the name of the greater good and chose exile as their punishments.
* HumanAliens: Aside from a distinctive tattoo-like face marking that he shares with Kahler-Tek and every other member of the Kahler race, Jex easily passes for a human.
* IDidWhatIHadToDo: He justifies his past crimes in much the same way as the Doctor: he sacrificed many lives to save millions more.
* MadScientist: {{Averted}}. Jex may have committed some pretty terrible experiments on his own kind, but he's not the callous monster he expects the Doctor to view him as.
* MirrorCharacter: More so than the Gunslinger, he fits the bill for the Doctor. The Doctor has an unusually hateful and aggressive reaction to Jex, perhaps disproportionate considering the kinds of irredeemable monsters he faces on a near-daily basis, because Jex mirrors him to such an uncomfortably close extent. They are both men of science who were forced to commit unspeakable atrocities as part of a war effort on their home planets, and they both had to deal with immense survivor's guilt upon narrowly escaping with their lives. They both attempt to hide the truth of their past crimes by performing good deeds for the "little people". The only real difference is that whereas the Doctor never stops running in order to save both himself and the people he cares about, Jex decided to stay in one place and inadvertently risked the lives of the townsfolk by drawing the Gunslinger to their doorstep.
* ANaziByAnyOtherName: His storyline bears some resemblance to real life Nazi fugitives who escaped justice at the end of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII and proceeded to live ordinary lives in other countries, with his [[UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust horrific experimentation on his own kind]] making those comparisons even more obvious. The Doctor also indirectly compares Jex's crimes to those of [[AbsoluteXenophobe the Daleks]] during an impassioned rant.
* NothingIsScarier: When the Doctor snoops around Jex's ship and discovers all of his personal files, we hear some agonised screams while only seeing the Doctor's [[TheStoic subtly]] horrified reaction to the video footage. [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness The Doctor's subsequent actions against Jex's person]] make it clear that whatever Jex did was '''bad'''.
* OffstageVillainy: While we are frequently told that Jex's war crimes and experiments were depraved and monstrous even by ''Doctor Who'' villain standards, we only see the results of them in the form of the Gunslinger. As such, the Doctor's explicit comparisons to the Master and the Daleks may count as an example of TakeOurWordForIt.
* OneSteveLimit: Invoked. Among the townsfolk, he prefers to simply be called "the Doctor". To prevent confusion, his real name has to be used when the Definitive Article himself arrives.
* ThisIsUnforgivable: When the Doctor discovers the extent of Jex's war crimes, [[BerserkButton he is beyond furious]] and [[BatmanGrabsAGun seriously considers shooting Jex dead on the spot]]. Even after being talked down by Amy, the Doctor still advocates leaving him to the mercies of the Gunslinger.
* WellIntentionedExtremist: During the war on the Kahler's home planet, Jex justified his experiments as necessary to hasten the end of the conflict.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Mrs. Gillyflower]]
!!Winifred Gillyflower (Eleventh Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/images_20_09.jpeg]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/DianaRigg (2013)

A nutty old woman who runs Sweetville, a factory town in Victorian Yorkshire which only invites the best and brightest prospective employees for permanent residence, alongside her unseen benefactor, Mr. Sweet. She is connected to a slew of murder victims strewn across the city whose bodies are bleached bright red.
----
* AbusiveParents: Winifred is monstrously cruel to her daughter Ada, who went her whole life believing that her father blinded her and served her mother loyally in spite of all the emotional abuse she gets from her. Of course, Winifred was also responsible for destroying Ada's eyesight while experimenting on her with Mr. Sweet's venom, which proves to be the last straw that breaks Ada's filial loyalty.
* AdamAndEvePlot: She keeps her chosen survivors in pairs so that they may reproduce after the apocalypse.
* AxCrazy: Even the Doctor considers her a lost cause, since any attempt to reason with her proves futile. By the end of the story, she's frantically shooting a loaded gun at the protagonists and even threatening her own daughter with it.
* TheBeautifulElite: Bordering on MasterRace. She only allows the most perfect and pure specimens who survive the Red Leech venom's freezing process entry to Sweetville. Clara makes the cut and survives the process. Gillyflower also considers Jenny and the Doctor, though the latter gets rejected due to his Time Lord biology making him react badly to the venom. Gillyflower's enforcers are all similarly pristine, causing the Doctor to nickname them "attack of the supermodels".
* CardCarryingVillain: She's evil and she knows it. When the Doctor says how devastating Mr. Sweet's poison could be in the wrong hands, she proceeds to grin and open her palms out to him...
-->'''Mrs. Gillyflower:''' You know what these are?... The wrong hands!
* {{Cult}}: What Sweetville really is. Between her ridiculous dogma, sheer insanity, and the creepy singing, the whole operation is an incredibly thinly veiled attempt at creating a MasterRace. [[TheBeautifulElite She even has supermodel mooks!]]
* TheEndIsNigh: She preaches about the coming armageddon like a SinisterMinister, but she is secretly engineering said apocalypse.
* EvilIsHammy: An elderly Diana Rigg playing a cackling Doctor Who supervillain. It's a sight to behold.
* EvilLaugh: Lets out a belter when she launches her rocket from the secondary firing mechanism.
* EvilOldFolks: One of the Doctor's most decrepit enemies, yet her deeds are no less diabolical.
* EvilPlan: She plots to unleash Mr. Sweet's deadly toxin into the upper atmosphere with a giant rocket, potentially wiping out all humanity, while allowing her perfect human specimens to thrive in the aftermath.
* EyeScream: She inflicted horrific scars around Ada's eyes, blinding her.
* ItsAllAboutMe: Gillyflower experiments on her own daughter, blinding her in the process, all to find an antitoxin that would allow herself to survive the poison outbreak. She bears zero remorse in admitting it when the truth eventually comes out.
* LargeHam: Special props have to go to Diana Rigg's complete commitment to absolute insanity, and as a result Mrs. Gillyflower easily comes off as one of the Doctor's most unhinged enemies, if not ''the'' craziest.
* ANaziByAnyOtherName: Her obsession with eugenic perfection leads to her dismissing her own daughter as an impure specimen, unworthy to live in her new era.
* NeverMessWithGranny: You might be surprised that Gillyflower's packing heat!
* PeopleJars: Sweetville isn't a match factory, it's a giant preservatory for Gillyflower's abductees, who are literally suspended in large glass jars as protection from the coming apocalypse.
* TheSymbiote: She has a symbiotic relationship with Mr. Sweet, a gross little parasitic organism from the Jurassic period. He suckles on her chest while she mines his lethal poison for use in her apocalyptic master plan.
* VillainousBreakdown: She has an almighty one when she realises that Jenny and Vastra removed the poison payload from the rocket.
-->'''Mrs. Gillyflower:''' Very well. If I can't take the world with me... ''you'' will have to do. '''[[IllKillYou DIE, YOU FREAKS! DIE! DIE!]]'''
* YoureInsane: Bless his hearts, the Doctor really ''does'' try to reason with her, but eventually he realizes that she is a complete and utter nutjob, and settles for stopping her at any cost. There is ''no'' rhyme or reason to be found here.
-->'''The Doctor''': I'm the Doctor, ''you're nuts'', and I'm going to stop you.
[[/folder]]

!Twelfth Doctor era debut
[[folder:Half-Face Man]]
!!Half-Face Man (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/half-face_man_4416.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Peter Ferdinando (2014)

-->''"We will reach the promised land."''

The main antagonist of [[Recap/DoctorWhoS34E1DeepBreath "Deep Breath"]], the Half-Face Man is a robotic drone using human skin and organs to rebuild himself and his race. His ship, the SS ''Marie Antoinette'', crashed into Earth millions of years ago, leaving him and his crew stranded on the planet. His business, Mancini's Family Restaurant, is a front for his organ harvesting, and his ultimate goal is to make it to ThePromisedLand.

Strangely enough for such an important character, he isn't even named in the episode, but the name "Half-Face Man" is used for him in the credits and behind-the-scenes video.
----
* AIIsACrapshoot: As with the S.S. ''Madame de Pompadour'' droids, the Half-Face Man has taken a cannibalistic approach to repairing his ship but over his millions of years of existence he has become considerably more ambitious and desperate to embrace humanity.
* AmbiguousSituation:
** A striking example for the show is the purposefully ambiguous fate of the Half-Face Man: did he kill himself voluntarily or was he pushed by the Doctor? A reader poll was even conducted by ''Doctor Who Magazine'' which asked this question and the response was a near halfway split, with viewers who believed he committed suicide barely edging out with 53% of the votes. The fact that the question has to be asked at all is a huge part of the Twelfth Doctor's character arc.
** He made it to Missy's "Heaven", but was he then converted into a Cyberman afterwards like most other dead souls uploaded to the Nethersphere despite being a robot already? Steven Moffat theorises that Missy likely [[ShootTheShaggyDogStory "threw him away"]] once she realised his incompatibility.
* BackFromTheDead: Despite falling to his death, he wakes up at the end of the episode to meet Missy in a garden that she tells him is ThePromisedLand. [[spoiler:Actually averted, given TheReveal about Missy and the Promised Land.]]
* BadassBoast: He attempts to intimidate the Doctor by gloating about how he murdered a ''Tyrannosaurus rex'' for an extremely petty reason.
--> '''Half-Face Man''': I burned an ancient, beautiful creature for just one inch of optic nerve. What do you think you can accomplish, little man?
* CallBack: His ship is the sister ship of the SS ''Madame de Pompadour'' from [[Recap/DoctorWhoS28E4TheGirlInTheFireplace "The Girl in the Fireplace"]], and he's a variant of the clockwork robots from that episode.
* ColdBloodedTorture: What he threatens to inflict on Clara. Thankfully, the Doctor stops him.
* {{Cyborg}}: Using human flesh and organs to become more humanoid.
* {{Determinator}}: 65 million years after his ship's crash on Earth and he's still determined to repair it at any cost.
* DisneyVillainDeath: He falls to his death out of the escape pod, but he has apparently ascended to his coveted 'Promised Land' at the end.
* DrivenToSuicide: Possibly. He falls to his death, but whether he jumped or was pushed is left ambiguous.
* EmergentHuman: The Half-Face Man harvests human body parts and grafts them onto himself so that he can become human enough to make it to ThePromisedLand. As a result, he is the only one of his kind to express emotion and sentiment, albeit in a very limited and mechanical way. The Doctor points out how he's far more human than machine at this point.
* ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin: He's a man (by a lenient definition) with half of a face.
* EvilIsPetty: While he killed the dinosaur for a practical purpose, the fact that he gloats about only doing so to procure a tiny shred of optic nerve from its corpse hints that he has picked up some petty sadism during his slow embrace of humanity. The T. rex died scared, confused, alone and in pain, having only been transported to Victorian London because of the Doctor's mistake.
* EvilSoundsDeep: He has an extremely deep, rumbling voice for a mostly monotone machine.
* EyeAwaken: At the end of the episode, after his supposed death.
* FaceStealer: Just about any organic part is appreciated, actually.
* FacialHorror: The left side of his face is missing, leaving the metal framework and a suspended eye completely visible.
* FireBreathingWeapon: Has a blowtorch built into his arm.
* {{Foil}}: The thematic parallels between [[EvilCounterpart the Half-Face Man and the Twelfth Doctor]] are palpable. They are usually positioned opposite to each other in various shots throughout the episode to reinforce this.
** Both are ancient, nigh-immortal beings that have worn many faces and struggle to grapple with their identities as a result, especially in regards to reconciling their humanity and alien/robotic natures. While the Doctor tries to "patch the holes" in his new persona after his regenerative trauma by contemplating who he truly is, the Half-Face Man does so [[FaceStealer more literally]]. The Doctor would later embrace his status as a "half" thing by [[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E11HeavenSent claiming to be the Hybrid]].
** Madame Vastra speculates that the Doctor's regeneration into an older body is an attempt to reveal his true self, whereas his previous young and handsome bodies were merely a façade he wore to feel accepted by the world. The Half-Face Man, in turn, tries to conceal his robotic nature in public, but has a gaping hole in the side of his head that exposes the clockwork mechanisms within.
** After many years of reinventing themselves, they no longer have anything of their "original" selves left and struggle to find reasons to keep going. Twelve finds motivation in protecting humanity, but he has several existential crises throughout his tenure and, like the Half-Face Man, [[WhoWantsToLiveForever really doesn't want to keep going indefinitely]].
** As they note to each other, they both have "basic programming" that they shouldn't go against (self-destruction for the Half-Face Man, murder for the Doctor) but one ultimately goes against it depending on your interpretation of the scene.
** The Half-Face Man is obsessed with reaching the Promised Land as a reward for his eons of dedication. The allure of a reward has crossed the Doctor's mind many times, but by the time of the episode he has given up any expectation of getting one.
** Lastly, whenever the Half-Face Man has to use his blowtorch weapon, he severs his face and places it on his jacket's lapel, a distortion of the First Doctor's iconic character tic of clutching his lapels. The Twelfth Doctor is technically the "first" of his new regeneration cycle and also frequently mimics the behaviours of his own past incarnations during his journey of self-discovery.
* ICannotSelfTerminate: He claims that self-destruction goes against his basic programming, but he may have been lying.
* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: He winds up like this, on Big Ben no less.
* KeystoneArmy: He is the "control node" of all the ''Marie Antoinette'' droids. When he dies, they shut down.
* KillItWithFire: His calling card is incinerating his victims after he's taken what he's needed. Most impressively (and horrifically), he does it to a time-displaced ''T. rex'' just to procure a tiny piece of its optic nerve.
* LiteralMinded: When a random bystander says that his eyes are his greatest gift, the Half-Face Man takes it as a charitable offering.
* MixAndMatchMan: He is a Frankenstein-esque patchwork of both human organs and mechanical parts that have been constantly degraded and replaced over millions of years. The Doctor notices that his hands don't match and that he has some Ancient Roman metalwork still in his head.
* NoNameGiven: [[AllThereInTheManual His nickname is only given in the credits and behind-the-scenes content.]] He may not even have a true name or designation, and if he does he probably can't remember it.
* OhCrap: He has one when he realises that either he or the Doctor are lying about their "basic programming". Considering that the Doctor already made his intentions to protect humanity clear and has a body count in the millions, it was likely the first time the Half-Face Man ever experienced fear.
* ThePromisedLand: His ultimate goal for his race. He gets there in the end. Supposedly.
* StarterVillain: The first villain of the Twelfth Doctor's era. He was purposefully created to be a very "simple" baddie for the newly regenerated Doctor to face, but Moffat purposefully gave the droid leader many rich parallels to the Doctor to keep him interesting.
* SuddenlyShouting: His voice has a characteristic monotonous quality to it, but he furiously shouts at Clara during her interrogation, which is as jarring as it is terrifying.
* TheseusShipParadox: Alongside the rest of the ''Marie Antoinette'''s crew, the Half-Face Man has constantly replaced his degrading clockwork parts with new ones for millions of years until the original parts have been outstripped countless times over. The Doctor even references this conundrum while trying to get through to him.
* TimeAbyss: It's indicated that the ''Marie Antoinette'' was flung into the past and crash-landed on Earth before the K-T extinction event, over 65 million years ago, making the Half-Face Man truly ancient. Of course, the original command node droid ceased to exist eons ago. The Half-Face Man we see in the episode is merely the result of the TheseusShipParadox mentioned above; after years of replacing every part of himself, nothing of his original self remains.
* UncannyValley: Invoked, as he's a very ancient machine trying -- and very badly failing -- to be human. His movements are very mechanical and stilted, and he rarely emotes with either his face or voice.
* VillainOfTheWeek: Of "Deep Breath".
* WhoWantsToLiveForever: Were it not for his unwavering determination to reach the Promised Land, he would likely have given up trying to repair his ship centuries ago.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Skovox Blitzer]]
!!The Skovox Blitzer (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/skovox_blitzer.jpg]]
->'''Voiced by:''' Jimmy Vee (2014)

An alien battle robot that wound up in London, in the vicinity of Coal Hill School, with the potential to kill everyone on Earth.
----
* CallingYourAttacks: The Skovox Blitzer calls out everything it does, not just its attacks.
* GenericDoomsdayVillain: Its origin, motivation and reason for being on Earth are never given. It's justified as the Blitzer's presence in the plot is [[PlotIrrelevantVillain secondary]] to the LoveTriangle between the Doctor, Clara and Danny.
* ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy: For a supposedly advanced killing machine, Skovox takes the phrase "spray n' pray" to a great extreme. The only person he manages to shoot is a stationary police officer.
* InformedAbility: The Skovox Blitzer is described as having enough firepower to destroy a planet. In practice, it can't even hit Clara.
* KillerRobot: Can't go wrong with one, can ya?
%%* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast
* ThrownOutTheAirlock: The Doctor pitches the deactivated Skovox out the TARDIS doors and into space.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Gus]]
!!Gus (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:289:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gus_26.jpg]]
->'''Voiced by:''' John Sessions (2014)

-->''"Isn't this exciting?"''

Gus is the AI aboard the Orient Express in Space, and was programmed to collect data on the Foretold.
----
* AffablyEvil: Always polite and cheerful, even as he sucks the air out of the Orient Express to asphyxiate everyone aboard.
* {{Expy}}: He's quite similar to Ash from ''Film/{{Alien}}''. He has an ulterior motive unknown to the rest of the crew that involves harnessing the power of a dangerous being to be used as a weapon, the difference being that Gus actually succeeds in his mission.
* HighClassGlass: See the picture. His digital avatar has a monocle.
* KarmaHoudini: Gus' creator goes unseen and unpunished, a rarity amongst ''Who'' villains (for a time it seemed like he could become an ArcVillain, but after a couple of seasons and a new showrunner that's not the case any longer). This isn't the case with Gus himself, who blows himself up in order to ensure his creator's status as one.
* PragmaticVillainy: Gus kills a whole train car full of people to get the Doctor to cooperate. And when the Doctor tries to track the signal back to the source, it just blows up the whole train.
* TheTeam: He (or his unseen creator) lures a perfect research crew of assorted historians, scientists and mythology specialists, and of course the Doctor[[note]]of intestinal parasites[[/note]], onto a luxururious Orient Express space cruise, only to reveal that the space-train is actually a large laboratory. Gus blackmails them all into working together to find a way to stop the Foretold. Ironically, Captain Quell and Chief Engineer Perkins prove to be much more useful in solving the mystery than the scientists.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Pulls this when the Doctor solves the mystery of the Foretold.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Foretold]]
!!The Foretold (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/foretold_1_9895.jpg]]
-> '''Played by:''' Jamie Hill (2014)

The Foretold is a creature of ancient legend; those who see it are marked for death, and those who see it have only 66 seconds left to live. It always appears in the vicinity of an ancient scroll, a scroll left on the Orient Express where the Doctor and Clara decided to board. The monster is impossible to kill, impossible to run away from and it is impossible to say who is the next victim. The truth of it turns out to be far more bizarre; it's actually a soldier who has been alive for a while, and the malfunctioning technology it's attached to is keeping it alive and forcing it to fight for a war that's been over for several millennia.
----
* AbsurdlyDedicatedWorker: It's obliged to keep killing those it sees as enemies until whatever mission it was programmed with is completed, and looks visibly relieved when the Doctor figures out how to disable it.
* AntiVillain: It's really just a soldier that doesn't know it's fighting a war that has been over for centuries.
* {{Cyborg}}: The Doctor deduced that it's being kept alive by malfunctioning medical implants.
* TheDreaded: It's basically death personified.
* {{Foil}}: The sole surviving soldier of a forgotten war, forced to stay alive and keep fighting long after the conflict's conclusion thousands of years ago. Parallels can be drawn to the Doctor himself, and his arc throughout Series 8 dealing with his resentment toward other soldiers. Notably, the Doctor acts quite respectful towards the Foretold after successfully deducing its true identity.
* ImplacableMan: The creature is nigh impossible to kill, much less fight against. It's ImmuneToBullets, any sort of weapon thrown at it just [[IntangibleMan passes right through it]], and it's impossible to run away from. The Foretold will chase after you no matter what you do and it ''will'' kill you.
* IntangibleMan: Weapons can't touch it.
* InvisibleToNormals: Only shows up for people it has marked for death.
* JustFollowingOrders: The Foretold is a soldier just doing what it's told.
* LifeDrinker: How it kills its victims. It sucks all their bodily energy, such as those that their cells produce, and leaves them completely lifeless.
* {{Mummy}}: Being chased down by an indestructible SuperSoldier is bad enough; it's even worse when it looks like a rotting, wheezing corpse wrapped in bandages.
* NinjaPirateZombieRobot: An alien soldier from an ancient civilisation, kept alive by {{Cyborg}} technology, it looks like a {{Mummy}}, and it kills by leeching energy from its victim's body like a vampire.
* NotEvilJustMisunderstood: It's merely a soldier doing its duty.
* OurMonstersAreDifferent: For one thing, it's a millennia-old soldier being kept alive by malfunctioning tech.
* SuperSoldier: Described as such by the Doctor. The Foretold is indestructible, ImmuneToBullets, and [[VillainTeleportation can follow its victim no matter where they go]]. Also there's the fact that it's a soldier that fought in a war that ended long ago.
* TragicVillain: The Doctor implies this, given that he's forced to remain alive for centuries after the war ended.
* TouchOfDeath: Its modus operandi.
* VillainTeleportation: Its victim can run as much as they like, the Foretold will always appear next to them and kill them.
* ZombieGait: Slowly shambles towards its victim, which makes it all the more scary.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Seb]]
!!Seb (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/seb.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Chris Addison (2014)

-->''"iPads? We have Creator/SteveJobs!"''

Seb is Missy's [[TheDragon right-hand man]], often meeting new deceased people when she's too busy. He's known to be sarcastic, affable and enjoys cracking jokes; often at inopportune times. He greets the officer from [[Recap/DoctorWhoS34E6TheCaretaker "The Caretaker"]] and Danny Pink after they both die and "helps" them get acquainted to the "Afterlife", aka the Nethersphere.
----
* AffablyEvil: He does help Missy create her Cybermen army and even seems to enjoy what he does, but he's still polite, charitable and upbeat. He helps the deceased, offers Danny a coffee and when he gives Danny his iPad to [[spoiler:delete his emotions and thus turn him into a Cyberman]] he doesn't pressure or threaten him, instead giving him a choice. He even does it in a way that makes it seem like a favour. Heck, even Chris Addison himself has called him [[http://www.whatsontv.co.uk/doctor-who/news/doctor-who-guest-star-chris-addison-i-owe-peter-capaldi-an-awful-lot "polite and charming"]]. It seems that Missy created him to be affable to lull deceased people into a false sense of security so that they would delete their emotions.
* AIIsACrapshoot: Averted, as he does exactly what he's programmed to do and doesn't revolt against his [[{{Pun}} master]]. But he's still working for a bad guy.
* AmbiguouslyEvil: It could be argued that he's not actually a bad guy as he was created with "evil" intentions, kind of like how a computer virus isn't evil, only its programmer.
* BearerOfBadNews: You suddenly wake up at a desk in a blank room with this guy smiling warmly back at you. Your last memory is some deadly scenario you can't remember escaping from. Then Seb has to explain that, indeed, you didn't escape.
* DeadpanSnarker: His quote above? That's just one of many of his sarcastic quips, jokes and affable demeanour.
* ICanSeeMyHouseFromHere: Says this when Danny looks out his office window and sees the inside of the Nethersphere. Then he apologizes since it probably wasn't helping.
* {{Squee}}: What ultimately gets him killed by Missy, since he was already annoying her and that was just the final straw.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fisher King]]
!!Fisher King (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fisher_king.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Neil Fingleton (2015)
->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/PeterSerafinowicz (speaking voice); [[Music/{{Slipknot}} Corey Taylor]] (roar) (2015)

The Fisher King is a brutal alien warlord that conquered the planet Tivoli until he was overthrown. He's the mastermind behind the ghosts in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E3UnderTheLake "Under the Lake"]]/[[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E4BeforeTheFlood "Before the Flood"]].
----
* ArcVillain: Of "Under the Lake" and "Before the Flood".
* DeadAllAlong: [[spoiler:Due to the TimeyWimeyBall nature of his two-part episode, the Doctor and Clara arrive on Earth in 2119 to be attacked by his ghostly minions, which prompts the Doctor to go back to 1980 and fight and ''kill'' him in that timeline, then hide in the Fisher King's own coffin when he is buried at sea and come back in 2119 the long way; the ghosts were accidentally activated by the humans who found said coffin but the Fisher King was never truly a threat because he had been killed long ago... in a MetaphoricallyTrue way.]]
* DefiantToTheEnd: When the Fisher King sees the incoming flood that's about to crush him, he stands and roars at it until it crushes him.
* EvilIsBigger: He's an imposing alien warlord that stands at about 8 feet tall.
* EvilPlan: The Fisher King's plan was to use the hijacked souls of the dead to transmit a message to his people so they would come and invade Earth.
* FakingTheDead: It was believed that he had been killed by the Arcateenians when they liberated Tivoli from his tyrannical rule. However when his body was transported to Earth to be buried, it turns out he was still alive and was using the opportunity to set another invasion plot in motion.
* FisherKing: It's in the name. He intended to summon his armada so they would drain the planet of its oceans and subjugate humanity. According to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQcTZKytA28 this]] behind-the-scenes featurette, the Fisher King originally hails from an arid, desert-like place, which helps explain the meaning behind his name.
* {{Necromancer}}: He possesses technology to restore the souls of the recently deceased as ghosts and enslave them to his will.
* SpikesOfVillainy: His armour and body have several curved spikes on them.
* SufficientlyAdvancedAliens: His race may not be Time Lords, but they have the technology to [[SoulPower manipulate souls]], something even the Doctor thought was impossible.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Bonnie the Zygon]]
!!Bonnie the Zygon (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bonnie_5.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/JennaColeman and Ingrid Oliver (2015)

-->"It's not fair!"

A radical Zygon who, unhappy with the treaty between Zygons and UNIT, seeks to start a war so that Zygons will have the "right" to exist as "themselves". As the commander of the rebels she infiltrates and undermines UNIT by kidnapping Clara and assuming her appearance.
----
* ArcVillain: Of [[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E7TheZygonInvasion "The Zygon Invasion"]]/[[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E8TheZygonInversion "The Zygon Inversion"]].
* TheAtoner: [[spoiler:She becomes the new second Osgood to make amends for disrupting the peace between humans and Zygons.]]
* DidntThinkThisThrough: As Twelve points out, she didn't put a lot of thought into her "revolution".
* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: She has a lot of analogies in her characterisation to ISIS.
* EasilyForgiven: Twelve forgives her for all the mayhem she causes. Having been responsible for '''far, far worse''' atrocities as the War Doctor in the Last Great Time War, he understands her way of thinking. (Not for nothing do the Osgood Boxes resemble the Moment.) This is an invoked trope, as he deliberately forgave her to break the cycle of vengeance.
* FluffyTheTerrible: Yes, the leader of a Zygon uprising is named... Bonnie!
* HairTriggerTemper: Is quick to anger when something does not go her way.
* HeelFaceTurn: At the end, though she takes a lot of convincing from Twelve to get there.
* {{Hypocrite}}: She despises humans for making Zygons hide their true form, but she spends her entire arc disguised as Clara even in the presence of other Zygons. Not to mention, she has a human name!
* IDidWhatIHadToDo: Claims this, though the Doctor isn't taking it.
* ItsAllAboutMe: She says at one point that all Zygons who do not share her views should not be allowed to have that option.
* IveComeTooFar: She believes she's come too far to repent -- until Twelve convinces her otherwise.
* KarmaHoudini: Despite being responsible for the deaths of a lot of Zygons and UNIT personnel, she receives no punishment.
* LivingLieDetector: The mental link with Clara syncs their heartbeats which in turn allows her to know when Clara is lying to her.
* PsychopathicManchild: Twelve calls her a tantrum-throwing child who doesn't know what she wants; indeed, she [[TantrumThrowing throws a lot of actual tantrums]] when things don't go her way in "The Zygon Inversion".
* TheReveal: It's only in the final minutes of "The Zygon Invasion" that the audience and other characters even learn of her existence, as she has been ''most'' convincingly impersonating Clara for the bulk of the episode!
* TomTheDarkLord: The leader of the rebel Zygons who wants freedom for her species at any price has the very human name "Bonnie".
* VillainousBreakdown: She loses it when she finds out the Osgoods and later the Doctor have tricked her with regards to the Osgood Boxes.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Veil]]
!!The Veil (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2017_07_01_at_154452.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Jamie Reid-Quarrell (2015)

A cloaked and hooded figure, the Veil is a representation of the Doctor's deepest, most intimate fears. Based on a childhood memory the Doctor had of a dead Gallifreyan woman, who died on a hot day and despite being covered by a veil began to attract flies before she could be buried. This unstoppable figure hunts the Doctor relentlessly through the clockwork castle he finds himself trapped in during the events of [[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E11HeavenSent "Heaven Sent"]], and it has only one purpose: to kill the Doctor. It was created by the Time Lords to scare the Doctor into revealing the truth about a creature called "the Hybrid." However, other truths can be used to stall it, like when the Doctor tells it that he ran from Gallifrey because he was scared.
----
* AnthropomorphicPersonification: It has been interpreted to represent several things, but it most pressingly embodies the concept of death and the Doctor's immense grief over Clara's death. WordOfGod states that it is the nightmares from the Doctor's mind given physical form.
* BedsheetGhost: The Veil resembles one due to wearing veils, as it's based on the Doctor's memories of a veiled corpse he saw while young.
* ClockworkCreature: It turns out to be this, matching with the rest of the castle's nature.
* CriticalExistenceFailure: [[spoiler:When the Doctor does the impossible by escaping the confessional dial, the Veil crumbles into a pile of cogs and gears.]]
* TheGrimReaper: Thematically, the Veil ''is'' Death itself.
* HellIsThatNoise: Its thumping footsteps are a constant reminder of its presence, but the sound of buzzing flies serves as a sign that it is very close.
* InTheHood: The Veil wears a dusty robe that conceals virtually its entire body, including its face -- the key visible parts of it teased in the trailers are its grey, mottled, clawed hands. It bears a strong resemblance to the Grim Reaper. It's inspired by a bad memory from the Doctor's childhood of seeing a dead, veiled woman surrounded by flies, and is effectively an embodiment of his fear of death.
* OminousWalk: The Veil constantly walks at the same pace towards the Doctor. It has a limp, meaning every step is a thump.
* RoboticReveal: When the Doctor finally breaches the wall, the Veil is revealed to be a clockwork, falling into a pile of gears.
* TheSpeechless: It never says a word.
* SuperPersistentPredator: Like Death himself, it's slow, predictable and can even be paused for brief moments, but it will ''always'' catch up to its victim in the end.
* ThresholdGuardian: The Veil serves as the Doctor's opponent in the Belly of the Whale. It is something he must overcome to reach the outside world.
* TimeStandsStill: The Doctor confessing a sufficiently juicy secret causes it and even the flies buzzing around it to completely freeze momentarily.
* TouchOfDeath: If it touches you, you ''will'' die, [[CruelAndUnusualDeath but not immediately]].
* WeHaveWaysOfMakingYouTalk: The Veil is the [[spoiler:Time Lords']] personal interrogator for the Doctor, designed from his very nightmares to scare the living ''shit'' out of him until he spills the beans about the Hybrid prophecy and any other useful confessions. The Doctor is shocked at how effective it is at terrifying him, though its primary weapon is its [[SuperPersistentPredator unwavering persistence]].
* WhyWontYouDie: {{Averted}} as the Veil is seemingly not sentient, simply doing what it's programmed to do. However, over several billion years, it fatally wounds the Doctor countless times only for him to summon a fresh copy of himself from the teleporter to start the cycle over again.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:King Hydroflax]]
!!King Hydroflax (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/6f113e2a_993a_4c7e_9998_5d46a125ce27.jpeg]]
->'''Played by:''' Greg Davies (2015)
->'''Suit voiced by:''' Nonso Anozie (2015)

A ruthless intergalactic tyrant who holds dominion over several races and planets. He has a fearsome reputation and an intimidating visage thanks to a giant suit of armour, but his actual biomass is his disembodied head, and his armour has a mind of its own. River Song seduced him into marrying her as part of a ruse to extract a precious diamond that was driven into his skull during a raid on the Halassi Vaults.
----
* AmbiguousRobots: The armour is quite clearly robotic, but the TARDIS's Real Time Envelope protocols classify it as Hydroflax's body, implying that there is organic stuff in there somehow. The TARDIS cannot take off if a person is simultaneously inside (Hydroflax's head) and outside (the armour) the console room, which prevents the possibility of a nasty and impolite PortalCut.
* AnimatedArmor: His armour has a mind and voice of its own, but in contrast to Hydroflax's highly emotional head, it operates on cold, robotic logic.
* BadSanta: In grand Christmas special tradition, Hydroflax's design bears a twisted resemblance to Santa. Except instead of a fat, jolly old man in red, [[{{Dissimile}} it's a monstrous old tyrant's head on an oversized red]] PoweredArmor.
* CutHisHeartOutWithASpoon: Seems to be one of his favourite kinds of death threat, the other being variations of "CRUSH! KILL! DESTROY!"
* EvenEvilHasStandards: {{Subverted}}. He claims that he doesn't endanger his subjects for no reason, but threatens to destroy an entire star system with the stabilised black hole in his armour, on the grounds that he's cross.
* EvilIsHammy: Holy crap, yes. Greg Davies has a blast in the role. Even the design of his suit is hammy and extravagant, resembling something out of a Franchise/SuperSentai show.
* IAmAHumanitarian: He is said to devour his defeated enemies in battle, which presumably includes the human colonists of Mendorax Dellora.
* LaughablyEvil: Hydroflax himself is so ridiculous that neither the Doctor or River can take him seriously (he is played by Greg Davies, after all). When allowed to act autonomously, his armour manages to be quite a bit more menacing.
* LivingMacGuffin: The precious diamond lodged in his skull.
* LosingYourHead: The reveal that Hydroflax is little more than a living, disembodied head on top of a giant robot lessens his intimidating reputation quite substantially. River and the Doctor stealing his head (and the diamond lodged within it) causes Hydroflax's armour to chase after them with a vengeance.
* OffWithHisHead: In the absence of Hydroflax's head, the PoweredArmor takes other people's heads as temporary replacements. Nardole and Ramone become its victims, and it threatens to do the same to the Doctor and the treacherous passengers of the ''Harmony and Redemption''.
** Fortunately, Nardole's head was extracted and his body rebuilt, but [[WhateverHappenedToTheMouse it's unknown what became of Ramone]]. He may have been freed as well, or he remained in control of the armour and continued working as a waiter at the restaurant on Darillium. A semi-official fan story submitted for the ''Doctor Who: Lockdown!'' event speculates that [[CanonWelding Ramone's body became the founding member of the]] [[Characters/DoctorWhoTheSilence Order of the Headless]], rallying Hydroflax's Warrior Monks to his side.
* PoweredArmor: His armour is several times larger than humans, extremely powerful, and capable of self-propelled flight.
* TinTyrant: Hydroflax is a quintessential EvilOverlord who flies into battle wearing a giant suit of armour.
* UnholyMatrimony: The Doctor is disturbed to find that River married a monster like him, even if it was all a ploy, especially since she is supposed to be the Doctor's (and Ramone's) wife as well. River insists she married the ''diamond'', not Hydroflax.
* WarriorMonk: Employs a group of Warrior Monks who wield [[EmpathicWeapon sentient]] [[LaserSword laser swords]] and are genetically engineered to have anger issues as his personal bodyguards.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Because nobody actually arrived to perform surgery to remove the diamond from Hydroflax's head, combined with the fact that the head was being tossed around in a burlap bag for several minutes, the diamond caused irreparably fatal damage. When the armour discovers this, it declares this trope and performs a MercyKill on Hydroflax. It updates its mission parameters to instead take any suitable head as a host.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Lord Sutcliffe]]
!!Lord Sutcliffe (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lord_sutcliffe.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Nicholas Burns (2017)

A wealthy noble and businessman of the Regency era who plans to use the tourist-attracting Frost Fair to feed attendants to a massive serpent located beneath the ice of the Thames to sell it's excrements as fuel.
----
* AristocratsAreEvil: An incredibly unpleasant nobleman who embodies the absolute worst impulses of his social class.
* BlueIsHeroic: {{Inverted}}. He wears a bright blue jacket but is completely reprehensible.
* CardCarryingVillain: Sutcliffe embodies this trope so much the only thing missing is a classic mustache twirl.
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: He profits off feeding people to a serpent and has no moral qualms with doing so.
* DeadHatShot: His hat flies off him as he's pulled under by the serpent-fish himself.
* HateSink: Sutcliffe is a [[PoliticallyIncorrectVillain racist, sexist]], and [[{{Greed}} greedy]] slimeball who has people (including kids) fed to a sea monster so then he can profit off their remains. There is nothing remotely likable about him.
* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: Despite the Doctor and Bill's original belief that Sutcliffe is an alien, he turns out to be completely human; the giant serpent in the Thames is his prisoner and not openly malicious, just an animal eating the food that comes its way.
* KarmicDeath: Devoured by the creature he's been feeding people to.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: The very first thing he does is start racially abusing Bill the instant he sees her.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Landlord and The Wooden Lady]]
!!John and Eliza (Twelfth Doctor)
->'''Played by:''' Creator/DavidSuchet and Mariah Gale (2017)

While looking for student accommodation, Bill and her uni friends find a great offer for a large, luxurious property and decide to move in together. Of course, the offer is too good to be true, and the creepy Landlord appears to be responsible for the house's long history of vanishing tenants. Hidden and isolated in the tower attic of the house is the mysterious Wooden Lady, whose existence is kept secret from everyone but the Landlord.
----
* ArmorPiercingQuestion: The Landlord asks the Doctor if he would go to similar length to save the life of someone he loved. The Doctor has no answer, which the Landlord takes as confirmation. Of course, the Doctor had almost went to ''[[BatmanGrabsAGun much]]'' [[ApocalypseHow worse]] [[UnwantedRescue lengths]] to save Clara only one series (and a handful of Christmas specials) prior.
** Cut dialogue from "Knock Knock" would have made the parallels to the aforementioned events of "Hell Bent" more explicit, with the Doctor instead admitting that he would torch the universe to a cinder to save a loved one and only hope that someone would be able to stop him.
* DrivenToSuicide: The Doctor helps Eliza to realise that she has been kept alive by the Landlord, but in isolating her completely from the outside world, she hasn't been allowed to truly ''live''. [[spoiler:The fact that her son transformed into a dangerous serial killer to preserve her life makes the situation all the more unbearable, so she embraces John one last time before allowing the Dryads to disintegrate them.]]
* EvilOldFolks: From the offset, the Landlord an undeniably creepy and suspicious character, and while his motivations are revealed to be sympathetic, he has become too bitter and callous to care about the consequences of his actions.
* FamilyRelationshipSwitcheroo: Initially, we are led to believe that the Wooden Lady is the Landlord's daughter, [[spoiler:but the opposite is true; Eliza is John's mother. He naturally aged into an old man while she was steadily transformed by the Dryads into an immortal wooden creature. As her memory deteriorated, he lied about his true relationship to her to keep her docile]].
* GenreRefugee: The Landlord would be quite at home in a pulpy GothicHorror short story set in a dark old mansion on a hill. People in such stories don't tend to question the weird anachronisms, but the Doctor is GenreSavvy enough to catch the Landlord out with questions about the modern world that he doesn't know the answers to.
* LoadBearingBoss: [[spoiler:When Eliza dies, the Dryads dissipate and the house collapses.]]
* MoodSwinger: He swings from calm and polite when first interacting with the students, to sharp and authoritative when ordering Harry to stay away from the tower. More disturbingly, he regresses to a mewling, childlike personality when in the presence of his [[spoiler:mother]].
* NoNameGiven: Narrowly {{Averted}}, but the Landlord's given name of John is only revealed in an almost inaudible line of dialogue from Eliza that we only see in subtitles. Their surname goes unrevealed, though.
* PlantPerson: Eliza has slowly transformed into a bark-skinned creature after many years of unwittingly feeding on the house's unfortunate tenants.
* PsychopathicManchild: Deep down, the Landlord is a little boy who refused to grow up and spent his entire adult life protecting his terminally-ill mother with the help of the Dryads. When the Doctor and Bill reveal the horrible truth to Eliza and help her find peace, but [[VillainousBreakdown John orders the Dryads to kill them both out of spite]]. Eliza thankfully overrides the bugs to instead [[HeroicSacrifice disintegrate both John]] [[DrivenToSuicide and herself]].
* TrappedInThePast: The Landlord has distinctly old-fashioned mannerisms and seems to be completely out of touch with the modern world beyond the walls of his old house. When the Doctor playfully interrogates him, John can't name the current prime minister.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Queen Iraxxa]]
!!Queen Iraxxa (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/iraxxa_empress_of_mars.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Adele Lynch (2017)

The ruling matriarch over the Ice Warrior colonies hibernating beneath Mars' North Pole, she and her troops are awakened after her sentinel, "Friday", returns to the planet with a group of Victorian soldiers sent to search for her tomb with the promise of gold and riches.
----
* AntiVillain: She only antagonises the heroes to protect her own people.
* FoldSpindleMutilation: Her armour, as well as those of her troops, are equipped with laser cannons that cause the victim's body to contort around itself.
* GodSaveUsFromTheQueen: Subverted: She is menacing and not above killing her enemies, but has the same sense of honour and duty as any other Ice Warrior. Moreover, she is trying to protect her people from hostile Earthlings. In the end, the message left on the surface of Mars really refers to her rather than Queen Victoria!
* HonourBeforeReason: One of the reasons she is so quick to want to kill the humans is because they made one of her warriors their servant, even declaring "Ice Warriors do not serve". This is despite the fact that, as Friday points out, it was a necessary arrangement to free her, and overall he himself doesn't seem to care.
** However, it's her honourable nature that ultimately makes her spare the commanding officer, previously disgraced for cowardice, after he offers his own life in exchange for the lives of his men.
* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Girl, in her case. It works both negatively and positively.
* TheSmurfettePrinciple: She's the first female Ice Warrior ever shown on screen in ''fifty years''. About time, huh? And what better way to commemorate the anniversary of their debut by finally reintroducing them in the form of the fairer sex?
[[/folder]]

!Thirteenth Doctor era debut
[[folder:Tzim-Sha]]
!!Tzim-Sha (Thirteenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_12_10_at_221403.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Samuel Oatley

A hunter from a race called the Stenza, who comes to Earth hunting a specific trophy to make himself the next leader of his people.
----
* BattleTrophy: He takes a tooth from every person that he kills and implants it in his face.
* BigBad: He ultimately serves as the main threat of the Series 11 opener and closer, as his actions, mostly [[spoiler:his part in Grace's death]], provide the overall arc.
* DirtyCoward: A Stenza seeking leadership must make the hunt with no assistance or tools. He uses both. The Doctor even calls him out on it.
* EnclosedExtraterrestrials: Downplayed. His species, the Stenza, have a naturally lower body temperature than humans, and it's implied his armour was designed to help him cope with the temperature of earth and planets with similar climates. However, unlike most examples of this trope, he can expose his face and hands without any ill effect.
* FacialHorror: His face is covered with the teeth of people he's killed.
* AGodAmI: After millennia of [[GodGuise pretending to be the Ux's "Creator"]], the power at his disposal caused him to believe he really ''was'' a god, at least functionally.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: The Doctor tricks him into absorbing the DNA bombs he'd had his data coil implant in the Doctor and her friends. The data coil he was using to cheat on his ritual hunt. It's likely that had he not used the coil, he wouldn't have been caught at all.
* AnIcePerson: The Stenza are a low-temperature species, and he can freeze humans to death with his touch.
* LaserGuidedKarma: Those he takes alive he puts in stasis pods, preserved in a state of something between life and death, [[AndIMustScream and well-aware of their fate as trophies]]. [[spoiler: This is ultimately his own fate]].
* MaliciousMisnaming: The Doctor mishears his name as "Tim Shaw" and continues calling him as such for the rest of the episode. Even ''the credits'' refer to him as such, and he's called such by the group in later episodes.
* StarterVillain: The first enemy of the Thirteenth Doctor.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Krasko]]
!!Krasko (Thirteenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_10_22_at_095106.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Josh Bowman

A racist time criminal and mass murderer who was imprisoned in Stormcage.
----
* BadassNormal: A thug with a clever brain and dangerous technology makes for a very bad combination.
* FlatCharacter: He exists to push the plot because he's racist and that's it. No FreudianExcuse, no sympathetic backstory, just a thug with access to time travel and a racist agenda. Justified as the true villain of his episode were racism and bigotry, he's just another mouthpiece for it.
* GreaserDelinquents: He dresses like one and sabotages cars in the story. He's also a white supremacist who hates non-whites and possibly non-humans.
* HateSink: Really has to be one of the most despicable villains in all of ''Doctor Who''. He's not a megalomaniac with delusions of grandeur like the Master or Davros, or genetically modified like the Cybermen or Daleks. He's just a thug who hates anybody who isn't white and decides to meddle in the events of history to undo any progress any people of colour make towards equality.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: He's a white supremacist from the 79th century, who gets sent into the distant past with his own time-displacement weapon by Ryan, a black man from the 21st century, which would be the past to Krasko.
* ManipulativeBastard: His whole shtick since he can't kill anybody, just manipulate time in subtle ways to get what he wants -- in this case, make sure Rosa Parks never inspires the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
* NoodleIncident:
** He was imprisoned in Stormcage for an incident which killed 2,000 people.
** It's never explained how he knows what a TARDIS is, but it's implied it may have something to do with the time machine black market.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: He's a racist who's trying to prevent non-white people from gaining equality.
* RestrainingBolt: Before he was released from Stormcage he was fitted with one to stop him from hurting anybody. This doesn't make him any less dangerous.
* RippedFromTheHeadlines: It's no coincidence that his episode coincides with a global uptake in public bigotry and hate crimes.
* SmugSnake: Even when he realizes a Time Lord is on his trail, figures out his EvilPlan and wipes out most of his equipment he still acts like a cocky thug convinced he can still win, even as Ryan sends him into the distant past with his own weapon.
* TattooedCrook: He has a tattoo on his left wrist identifying him as a former Stormcage inmate.
* TrappedInThePast: First, the Doctor destroys his vortex manipulator while he's in 1955. Then Ryan zaps him even farther into the past with his own temporal displacement weapon.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Jack Robertson]]
!!Jack Robertson (Thirteenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_12_10_at_221200.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/ChrisNoth

A sketchy real estate mogul with a chain of resorts and eyes on a presidential bid.
----
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: In "Arachnids in the UK", he's a shady businessman who hides a landfill under a luxury hotel. "Revolution of the Daleks" further cements this by showing him to be a tax dodger in cahoots with a CorruptPolitician.
* {{Flanderization}}: He was somewhat comical and stereotypical in his debut, but his second appearance exaggerates his "slimy right-wing politician" persona even more, to the point that he can barely go a few sentences without talking about money or his political ambitions.
* GenreRefugee: Robertson is a recurring human villain in a sci fi show where other members of the RoguesGallery are aliens. He doesn't even know what the TARDIS is, and is just a CorruptCorporateExecutive that is better fitted in a show with political intrigue.
* GenreSavvy: He's greedy, corrupt and short-sighted, but even he realizes that cloning an unknown alien creature is a horrible mistake.
* HateSink: He's a BadBoss and DirtyCoward who will happily throw even people loyal to him under the bus to save himself, and is ultimately responsible for all of the deaths related to the spiders because his shady business practices created them in the first place.
* KarmaHoudini: Both of the episodes he appears in end with him facing no on-screen consequences for his actions or role in the events (though the start of "Revolution of the Daleks" does claim that the toxic waste dump scandal from "Arachnids in the UK" soured his first attempt at becoming U.S. president). However at the end of "Revolution", it is implied he might try again.
* NeverMyFault: The very epitome of a blame-foisting politician.
* NotSoHarmlessVillain: For most of the two episodes he appears in, he is presented as a comic relief villain, but this guy shoots a spider creature with no remorse, and ''sides with the Daleks''. This guy can switch from LargeHam to cold schemer in moments, and he is one person who repeatedly says that he doesn't answer the Doctor.
* TheQuisling: He has no problem working with a Dalek death squad, or selling out the rest of the human race and the Doctor to get them on his side.
* {{Trumplica}}: One big poke at [[UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump President Trump]]. Though funnily enough, he [[ExpyCoexistence hates the guy]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Daniel Barton]]
!!Daniel Barton (Thirteenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:309:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ezgif_7_9e7ec9eeb661.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Sir Creator/LennyHenry

A powerful tech mogul who heads the MegaCorp VOR, and is in league with two powerful allies for unknown purposes. He was previously an [=MI6=] agent.
----
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: Heads a powerful technology company that's sucking up everyone's data as part of his plan to take over the world.
* DoubleAgent: Used to work for [=MI6=] before he stopped cooperating with them, and the agency's head suspects he's turned double agent. He has, now working with [[spoiler:the Master]].
* KarmaHoudini: [[spoiler:Escapes and phones for an extraction team after the doctor wrecks his plans.]]
* ProfessorGuineaPig: His DNA reads as only 93% human. [[spoiler:He wants to rule the world by turning the majority of humanity into [[WetwareCPU living hard drives]], and he had the Kasaavin rewrite part of his DNA as a proof of concept.]]
* RagsToRiches: Grew up living on a council estate before he became rich and powerful.
* SelfMadeMan: Seems to have cultivated his wealth himself.
* SelfMadeOrphan: [[spoiler:He has his mother, whom he has a strained relationship with, killed by the Kasaavin via lethal rewriting of her DNA.]]
* TakeOverTheWorld: His goal.
* VillainExitStageLeft: [[spoiler:Is last seen in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS38E1E2Spyfall "Spyfall"]] fleeing his tech demo phoning for an extraction team due to the Doctor thwarting everyone's plans.]]
* WellDoneSonGuy: [[spoiler:He has a very strained relationship with his mother, who is not impressed by his wealth and power at all. When he asks her what it's going to take to get her to say "Well done", she says the phrase ''very'' sarcastically.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Grand Serpent]]
!!The Grand Serpent (Thirteenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/images_19_064.jpeg]]
->'''Played by:''' Craig Parkinson

A scheming, paranoid intergalactic dictator whom Vinder once served under. He later interferes in Earth's history under the pseudonym of Prentis.
----
* AmbiguousSituation: The Grand Serpent appears at various points in UNIT's history from 1958 to 2021, always looking the same, but since he obviously has access to time travel it's unclear whether he really is TheAgeless, or is simply skipping around the timeline to the pivotal moments he requires for his scheme.
* ArchEnemy: For being the only person in UNIT to successfully defy him, Kate Stewart has earned a special enmity from him, to the point that he wanted to personally hunt her down.
* BigBadWannabe: He's one of the major antagonists of ''Flux'', orchestrating the Sontaran conquest of Earth while planning to backstab his allies to assume total control. However, his petty vendetta against Kate Stewart sidetracks him from accomplishing this goal, and the Sontarans remain dismissive of his contributions before ultimately abandoning him to be destroyed by the Flux.
* CorruptPolitician: Back when Vinder was working for him, he had arranged for the deaths of relatives of a political opponent as part of a deal.
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: The fate inflicted on his victims with his psychic worm parasite is gruesome even by this show's standards, as it spawns inside their bodies before burrowing its way out through their mouth, causing them to die in agony. It doesn't help that the worm creature itself looks hideous.
* HateSink: While we don't know much about him, the Grand Serpent manages to be one of the pettiest, most despicable megalomaniacs that the show has featured in quite some time. He takes advantage of the chaos and confusion caused by the Flux wave to make a deal with the Sontarans, whose victory he ensures by interfering with the history of UNIT via time travel, cold-bloodedly murdering every poor soul who opposes him along the way. His smarmy, accusatory personality hardly wins him any favours in the charm department, either.
* TheManBehindTheMan: [[spoiler:He travels throughout Earth's past to influence the creation of UNIT, becoming an elusive yet high-ranking figurehead in the process. Creating UNIT turns out to be part of an elaborate scheme to lower Earth's defences at the right moment during the Sontaran invasion going on in the present.]]
* MysteriousPast: Very little is known about him yet.
* TheParanoiac: His EstablishingCharacterMoment sees Vinder casually voice his agreement to some innocuous statement the Grand Serpent makes, only for the Grand Serpent to immediately begin accusing Vinder of wanting to usurp him. He's incredibly insecure about the possibility of losing his position of power, which ironically leads to his eventual removal from office.
[[/folder]]

!Fourteenth Doctor era debut
[[folder:The Most High '''(SPOILERS)''']]
!!The Meep (Fourteenth Doctor)
->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/MiriamMargolyes

A Meep, a furry creature that was hunted by the Wrarth Warriors, which leads to a meeting with the newly-regenerated Fourteenth Doctor.
----
* AdaptationNameChange: Outside of declaring itself "the Beep of all the Meeps" at one point, the Meep is never referred to as "Beep" or "Beep the Meep" in ''[[Recap/DoctorWho60thASTheStarBeast The Star Beast]]''. Interestingly enough, this seems to be the case in the Meep's debut comic. Beyond the "Beep of all the Meeps" title, which was also in the original comic, the name Beep the Meep seems to have come from later appearances.
* AtrociousAlias: One assumes "the Beep of all the Meeps" is a more intimidating title on Meepkind's home planet. [[AllThereInTheManual The episode's novelisation]] reveals that the name originally meant "Glorious leader whose job is to be most perfectly round, like planets, moon, suns, pseudanthium and cake.", though by the time the Meeps began the Meep's conquests, it had come to mean "vicious warlord".
* AxCrazy: All Meeps are utterly violent and insane, and this one is no exception. The Meep's plan is to get off Earth via a dagger drive, which will turn London into a molten crater. The Doctor even points out and ''offers'' to build the Meep a more humane form of getting off planet, but is rebuffed, because the Meep wants to kill people.
-->'''The Meep:''' No stun guns for me! Just '''''die!'''''
* BitchInSheepsClothing: On first sighting, the Meep tells Rose a story about being a fugitive from hunters after Meepkind for their adorably soft fur. The Doctor soon notices some anomalies in the story, such as how the "hunters"s guns aren't actually hurting anyone; the Meep is a fugitive running from the police for the Meep's many, ''many'' crimes. Of course, to anyone familiar with Beep from the ''Doctor Who Magazine'' stories, this isn't much of a surprise.
* TheCaligula: Was the tyrannical ruler of Meepkind before they all killed each other.
* CanonImmigrant: From the pages of ''Magazine/DoctorWhoMagazine'' to the silver screen for ''Doctor Who'''s 60th anniversary.
* CuteIsEvil: The Meep is a ''very'' adorable looking creature... but, again, psychopathically evil.
* HisNameReallyIsBarkeep: Only referred to as "The Meep" onscreen.
* ImAHumanitarian: Gratitude to the Doctor and the Nobles for trying to help what they thought was an innocent fuzzball? None. The Most High has them brought along as potential snacks.
* LargeHam: Once the Meep's true colors are revealed, "over the top" doesn't even begin to cover the unabashed evil this psychotic little Meep marinates every second of the first special with. Only, ''maybe'', Mrs. Gillyflower comes closest in terms of [[CardCarryingVillain Card Carrying Villainy]]. And sure enough, the one thing they both have in common is that they are both weapons-grade levels of crazy.
* LastOfTheirKind: All the other Meeps were killed for their evil and insanity, not that the Meep gives a damn.
* LongerThanLifeSentence: On being caught, the Meep is sentenced to a ten thousand year stretch in prison. That said, it isn't clear if the Meep is LongLived or not.
* ObfuscatingStupidity: The Meep initially put on a childlike act complete with BabyTalk that suits the Meep's appearance. Once the Meep drops the act the Meep speaks far more eloquently and sinister.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: Mocks Donna and Rose as a "stupid woman and her weird child" after dropping the Meep's act.
* PrecisionFStrike: Them cursing in anger is the first thing the Meep does after getting found out.
-->'''The Meep''': Oh, to hell with this!
* PronounTrouble: The Doctor is brought up when Rose Noble calls him on assuming the Meep (voiced by Miriam Margolyes) is necessarily he or she. The Meep's preferred pronoun is "The".
* SpellMyNameWithAThe: The Meep's preferred pronoun is "the" meaning the Meep's literal name is "the Meep".
* TomTheDarkLord: A vicious tyrant named... the Meep.
* VaguenessIsComing: Before being taken off for trial, the Meep assures the Doctor the Meep have a boss, who'll be ''interested'' to hear about him. At this point, he's more irritated than anything.
* VerbalTic: "Meep Meep." The Meep keeps this up even after the Meep drops the cutesy act.

[[/folder]]
[[folder:The One Who Waits]]
!!The One Who Waits (Fourteenth and Fifteenth Doctor)
A mysterious as of yet seen figure who's been mentioned to the Doctor.
* TheDreaded: The Toymaker who spent the better part of "The Giggle" bragging about his victories over powerful opponents such as The Master, and bending reality to his will plunging earth into chaos, says he absolutely fears The One Who Waits.
* TheGhost: Mentioned first by the Meep and then by the Toymaker.
[[/folder]]
----

to:

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Henry van Statten]]
!!Henry van Statten (Ninth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_10_16_at_130432.png]]
->'''Played by''' Corey Johnson

-->''"I am Henry van Statten, now recognise me!"''

A self-obsessed billionaire (who reportedly "owns" the internet) Henry van Statten is a collector of all things alien, and has been storing extraterrestrial artifacts in his secret underground bunker in Utah. He thinks he's discovered a life form he calls "The Metaltron", and is obsessed with getting it to talk. Little does he know that he's actually got a Dalek on his hands...
----
* AdaptationalNiceGuy: While he's still a PsychopathicManchild and a BadBoss, Van Statten's depravity doesn't go as deep as his inspiration from Jubilee, and isn't nearly as uncomfortable to watch.
* BadBoss: Van Statten keeps control via his army of mooks and by memory-wiping his executives on a whim, keeping them in a state of sycophantic terror. Unfortunately, by insisting the Dalek be captured regardless of casualties he alienates his security force, and by breaking down in fear in front of Goddard he loses her respect. Both quickly join forces to depose him after the crisis is over.
* CollectorOfTheStrange: Van Statten collects and studied alien artefacts. Collecting a live Dalek may not have been the best move...
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: The success of his computer company is based on stolen ImportedAlienPhlebotinum, including an imprisoned Dalek. While gloating to the Doctor, he admits that his company has already discovered the cure to the common cold, but he refuses to release it since he can still make a profit selling palliatives.
* DirtyCoward: As the Dalek pushes deeper into the compound, van Statten's utter uselessness is brought to bare as he can do nothing but sit in his office and watch his legions of security officers die in vain to defend him. When the Dalek finally breaks in, all he can do is stammer out weak justifications for his actions until the truth comes out.
-->'''Van Statten:''' I JUST WANTED YOU TO TALK!\\
[[AC:'''Dalek:''' [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor Then hear me talk now. EXTERMINATE!]]]]
* EvilIsNotAToy: Van Statten continues to treat the Dalek as the prize of his collection, ignoring the Doctor's warnings.
* EvilIsPetty: Subjects a Dalek to frequent electrical torture because it refused to talk. Yes, seriously.
* {{Expy}}: Shares many childish and megalomaniacal traits with his [[Recap/BigFinishDoctorWho040Jubilee "Jubilee"]] counterpart, Nigel Rorchester.
* EvenEvilHasStandards: Statten's not completely heartless as he does apologise when the 9th Doctor initially thinks Rose Tyler has been exterminated.
* GreenEyedMonster: After the initial shock of hearing the Dalek's voice for the first time thanks to the Doctor's prompting, van Statten bursts into the room and attempts to provoke the Dalek to talk to him as well, clearly envious of the Doctor being his prize's centre of attention.
* HateSink: His sheer narcissism, cowardice and disregard for the lives of his men make him completely unlikeable. It's telling that the Doctor--whose ninth incarnation holds a more personal hatred for the Daleks than ever before--is quicker to compliment a genocidal Dalek than compliment him.
-->'''Ninth Doctor:''' Do you know what a Dalek is, van Statten? [[AtLeastIAdmitIt A Dalek is honest. It does what it was born to do for the survival of its species. That creature in your dungeon is better than you!]]
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Van Statten wasn't killed, but he surely paved the way for his eventual fate. His policy of using torture on his alien captive caused said alien to go on a murdering rampage when it finally got loose, and his fondness for wiping people's memories and dropping them off in a town starting with the same letter as their last name got turned around on him by his newly appointed second-in-command.
* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: Considering that the other antagonist is a genocidal Dalek, you'd better believe that van Statten is one detestable little shit. He's so vile that the Doctor is more willing to compliment the Dalek on its honesty.
* InternetIncorporated:
-->'''Adam:''' Mr. van Statten owns the Internet.\\
'''Rose:''' Don't be daft, nobody ''owns'' the Internet.\\
'''Van Statten:''' And let's keep everyone thinking that way, right kids?
* KickTheDog: Has an aide memory-wiped simply for giving him the wrong answer.
* LaserGuidedAmnesia: He subjected staff he fired to this, and ultimately gets the treatment himself.
-->'''Goddard:''' And by tonight, Henry van Statten will be a homeless, brainless junkie in San Diego, Seattle, Sacramento... Someplace beginning with "S".
* NotSoDifferentRemark: The Doctor suggests that van Statten and Davros are very much alike, being two geniuses who were kings of their own little worlds. Van Statten doesn't get that it's certainly not a compliment.
* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: In early script drafts, van Statten was originally named "Will Fences" in a joking allusion to Bill Gates.
* PrecisionFStrike: Not a f-word, but American audiences were probably shocked to hear Henry shout "goddamn" at the Dalek, which would have been the first swear word (but far from the last) uttered in the televised show, albeit a mild one.
* PsychopathicManchild: Overall, van Statten comes across as incredibly immature, spoiled and entitled. His obsession with hearing the Dalek talk, specifically to recognise and address him, brings to mind the "Do the Roar" kid from ''WesternAnimation/ShrekForeverAfter''.
* SkewedPriorities:
-->'''The Doctor:''' ''(realises that the creature in van Statten's vault is a [[TheBusCameBack Dalek]])'' [[OhCrap Let me out!]]\\
'''[[OnlySaneWoman Goddard]]:''' Sir, it's going to kill him!\\
'''[[LackOfEmpathy Van Statten]]:''' It's talking!
* SmugSnake: Van Statten's callous disregard for the lives of his men as the Dalek massacres them, as well as his massive ego, make him completely unsympathetic and detestable. Though ironically, [[WordOfSaintPaul his actor Corey Johnson]] believes van Statten is misunderstood.
* WithholdingTheCure: Van Statten claims to have discovered the cure for the common cold, but isn't letting it out of the labs. "Why sell one cure when I can sell a thousand palliatives?"
[[/folder]]

!Tenth Doctor era debut
[[folder:Mr. Lucas Finch / Brother Lassar]]
!!Lucas Finch / Brother Lassar (Tenth Doctor)
->'''Played by:''' Creator/AnthonyHead (2006)
The leader of the Krillitanes, who comes off as a charismatic school headmaster with plans to remake reality.
----
* ActorAllusion: We have Creator/AnthonyHead once again [[Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer working at a creepy school]], and using BuffySpeak no less.
* EvilCounterpart: To the Doctor, with the episode painting him as a dark mirror of sorts with the two of them seeing each other as equals. Both are aliens disguised as humans, both serve as the leaders of their respective teams, and both are extremely clever and charismatic. It's no wonder that he is entranced by the Doctor and sees him as a WorthyOpponent.
* EvilIsHammy: Most of the time he's a restrained ColdHam, but K9's intervention in their plan drives him into a [[VillainousBreakdown manic hysteria of batlike screaming]].
* EvilPrincipal: He takes over as the Headmaster but is secretly the leader of the Krillitanes, a race of evil, carnivorous aliens with an EvilPlan that necessitates the children.
* FacingTheBulletsOneLiner: We get this brief exchange between Mr. Finch and K9 after the robot drenches the Krillitanes with their oil.
-->'''Mr. Finch:''' ''[just as the Krillitanes are about to blow up]'' You ''bad'' dog!\\
'''K9:''' Affirmative.
* FauxAffablyEvil: He is nothing but polite, especially towards the Doctor who he seems to hold VillainRespect towards.
* AGodAmI: Has the surprisingly ambitious goal to ascend to godhood and rebuild reality in his image using the Skasis Paradigm, which is essentially the universal cheat code that would give complete control over time, space and matter.
* InTheirOwnImage: His goal is to recreate reality in their own image, though [[WeCanRuleTogether he also wants the Doctor to join them]]. As the Doctor puts it, reality rebuilt with the face of Mr. Finch doesn't sound overly appealing compared to the status quo.
* ManipulativeBastard: Mr. Finch nearly talks the Doctor into joining him with just a few lines of temptation, and when [[TheHeart Sarah Jane]] steps in, shifts gears at the speed of light and -- based off only brief observation and some well informed guesses -- almost succeeds in doing the same to her. She, however, snaps out of it and snaps the Doctor out of it too.
* MeaningfulName: Mr. Finch, an alien capable of developing the traits of other conquered species is named after Darwin's finches. The widely known evidence of evolution due to the differing sizes of their beaks.
* ShapeshifterModeLock: Brother Lassar has locked himself permanently in human form as Headmaster Finch.
* UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans: Mr. Finch exploits this in his attempt to recruit the Doctor: how many more people he could save if he were a RealityWarper?
* VillainRespect: Finch has a healthy respect for the Doctor's intellect, and he is the only character that Finch actually treats as an equal, even a superior; as part of his temptation of the Doctor, he says, "The paradigm would give us power, but you could give us wisdom." [[AlternateCharacterInterpretation Of course]], Finch is a top class ManipulativeBastard, so he might just be playing on the Doctor's ego. Either way, it almost works.
* WeCanRuleTogether: He propositions to the Doctor, hoping to use his Time Lord wisdom in exchange for allowing him to become a god at his side. He drives a great sales pitch, however, as the Doctor does seem very nearly swayed by his manipulative words. He extends the offer to Sarah Jane and Rose, offering them [[MayflyDecemberRomance eternal life so that they could always be at the Doctor's side]].
* WouldHurtAChild: As a carnivorous Krillitane, humans are included on the menu. He and the other Krillitanes sometimes eat the occasional child, though only ones they are certain would go unnoticed.

[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Wire]]
!!The Wire (Tenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/1522501_1447192310623_full_1.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/MaureenLipman (2006)

-->''"Now, are you sitting comfortably? Good. Then we'll begin."''

An alien criminal who escaped a death sentence by turning into an EnergyBeing, losing its original body in the process, it made its way to [[Recap/DoctorWhoS28E7TheIdiotsLantern 1953 London]] and forced a hapless television salesman to help it steal faces and people's brainwaves in order to try and regain a physical form, planning on doing so while millions of people were watching the coronation of Queen UsefulNotes/ElizabethII.
----
* AmbiguousGender: It takes the form of a female television announcer, but its actual gender is unknown.
* AndIMustScream:
** She feeds by stealing the essences and the souls of people watching her TV screens, leaving their bodies as wandering {{Empty Shell}}s, while their consciousness remain trapped within the Wire.
** She herself would befall this fate when the Doctor turns her receiver into a transmitter, and sends her essence into a VHS tape.
* BadBoss: Forces Magpie to work for her by subjecting him to having his essence stolen, then using that as blackmail to stave off any further suffering. Then after subserviently carrying out everything she asked she kills him anyway when he is no longer of any use.
* CharacterCatchphrase: "FEED ME!"
* EnergyBeing: It escaped execution by turning into pure electricity.
* FaceStealer: A side effect of it stealing people's bioelectricity, in order to regain strength. It doesn't actually ''do'' anything with the faces.
* ImAHumanitarian: She essentially feeds on humans, only their minds/souls rather than their physical bodies.
* LargeHam: [[EvilIsHammy "FEEEED MEEEEEE!"]]
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: "The Wire" is almost certainly a pseudonym it adopted after losing its physical form.
* SpellMyNameWithAThe: ''The'' Wire.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: After forcing Magpie to carry out her every whim, she grants him the "peace" he was promised by disintegrating him with a bolt of lightning.
* YourSoulIsMine: A more sci-fi version, where the Wire absorbs a victim's mind and traps their essence inside a TV screen, while their body goes into neural shutdown and is left an EmptyShell.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Abzorbaloff]]
!!The Abzorbaloff, aka Victor Kennedy (Tenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:290:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/abzorbaloff.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/PeterKay (2006)

-->''"You've dabbled with aliens. Now meet the genuine article!"''

A green humanoid hailing from the planet Clom, with the ability to absorb and gain the knowledge of any other lifeform. Under the guise of human businessman Victor Kennedy, he takes over LINDA, a group of fans of the Doctor, in a bid to absorb him and gain control of the TARDIS.
----
* AchillesHeel: His cane.
* {{Acrofatic}}: His modest claims of being merely a "slow, clumsy beast" are immediately disproved when he leaps over his desk and chases Elton through the streets on foot.
* AndYourLittleDogToo: To prove Elton and Ursula, the Abzorbaloff threatens to absorb Jackie Tyler.
* TheAssimilator: He works on an individual level, absorbing individuals into his body.
* BigNo: Gives one just before he dissolves.
* BigYes: Gives an orgasmic one when he absorbs Ursula.
* BodyHorror: His process of absorbing people is both scary and disgusting.
* EvilPlan: He wants to absorb the Doctor in order to gain his vast knowledge and exploits LINDA in order to find him.
* FantasticRacism: Describes the natives of Raxacoricofallapatorious -- Clom's twin planet -- as swine and says that he spits on them. He also looks down on humans, describing their body as a "crude pink shape".
* FasterThanTheyLook: He even exploits this fact by pointing out his size and how slow he must be... and then shocks people by showing just how fast he really is.
* FatBastard: Already a prime example of this as Victor Kennedy, who treats the LINDA members like crap while trying to get them to do his bidding, and it gets exaggerated as the Abzorbaloff, who is even fatter still and flat-out murderous.
* {{Gasshole}}: The Abzorbaloff, in view of Ursula and Elton, has no problem passing gas through Bliss' mouth just to let her speak, to the discomfort of her as well as Bridget and Mr. Skinner. Justified in that he's a BigEater, and with that he'll always have people attached to him.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: By absorbing Ursula, he gives her access to his mind and his knowledge, which she uses to find out how to kill him.
* KarmicDeath: He is killed when all of those he's absorbed start pulling him apart from the inside, causing him to drop his cane. Elton then breaks the cane, cancelling out the limitation field that keeps the Abzorbaloff's powers in check and causing him to be ''absorbed'' by the Earth.
* {{Namedar}}: He deliberately adopts the name the humans come up with for it because it likes the sound. The Doctor later comes up with the same name on the third try. Captain Jack's Monster File for the Slitheen shows that they are related to the Abzorbalovian Rebels.
* NewspaperThinDisguise: After absorbing Mr. Skinner, the Abzorbaloff hides behind a newspaper when Ursula and Elton come back. He is eventually rumbled due to a combination of Skinner crying out for help and Ursula noticing his green claws clutching the newspaper.
* NoNameGiven: Whatever his actual name is, it's never stated on-screen. It's Elton and then the Doctor who coin the name "Abzorbaloff" for him. The creature takes a liking to the nickname either way.
* ObviouslyEvil: As Victor, his introduction is accompanied by a power outage, he wears black, and asks to be alone with them one at a time for an unspecified reason.
* OfficialFanSubmittedContent: Was adapted from the winning design of a children's Blue Peter sweepstakes. The childish name was also part of the submission, which was covered in the episode itself as a nickname given to it by humans that the creature took a liking to. As the story goes, the winning child creator was disappointed with how his design was adapted for screen, as he'd imagined it as being the size of a building.
* OopNorth: Has a light northern accent as Victor Kennedy, and a full-fat one as the Abzorbaloff.
* OrgasmicallyDelicious: He practically has an orgasm when he absorbs Ursula. Besides that, he is constant ecstasy from having absorbed multiple victims.
* PowerIncontinence: Seems to suffer from this, as he orders the LINDA members never to touch him because of his supposed skin condition, presumably out of fear that he'll unwittingly absorb them and blow his own cover. He then suffers this to fatal levels at the end of the story when Elton breaks his cane, and without the limitation field it generates, he gets absorbed by the Earth itself.
* TakeThatAudience: Not-so-subtly reflects the more [[StopHavingFunGuys unpleasant, obsessive portions]] of the ''Doctor Who'' fanbase.
* TastesLikeChicken: Says this word-for-word about Ursula after he absorbs her.
* ToiletHumour: After absorbing Bliss, the Abzorbaloff ends up with her face sticking out of his right arsecheek. Inevitably, he ends up farting on her face.
* ToServeMan: He essentially eats people, only not with his mouth, doing so by making physical contact which sucks them into his body, granting him experience and knowledge which he has a taste for.
* TouchOfDeath: Downplayed. A single touch from the Abzorbaloff begins the irreversible process of absorption which ultimately ends in the death of the victim, though it takes several weeks.
* VoluntaryShapeshifter: Seems to be this, albeit with some limitations. He can switch between his personas as the Abzorbaloff and Victor Kennedy, and in doing so apparently suppress those that he's already absorbed, but can't switch forms quickly enough to prevent Elton and Ursula discovering his identity.
* WoundedGazelleGambit: After Ursula threatens to assault him with his cane, he initially reacts with genuine terror -- likely because such an attack would have broken it, removing the limitation field and killing him -- before begging for mercy and claiming to be "such a slow, clumsy beast". Something he definitely proves ''not'' to be when he absorbs Ursula and then chases Elton.
* WrongGenreSavvy: Believes from his research that the Doctor will allow himself to be absorbed in order to save Elton's life. While the Doctor is always willing to perform a HeroicSacrifice as an absolute last resort, that doesn't prove to be the case in this particular encounter, as he's able to have the LINDA members (who are already doomed to eventual full absorption and effective death) perform their own sacrifice to deal with him.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Racnoss Empress]]
!!The Racnoss Empress (Tenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_01_17_at_092220.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Sarah Parish (2006)

----
* BigNo: "MYYYYY CHIIIIIIILDREEEEEEEEENNNNN!"
* EvenEvilHasStandards: The Empress feeds Lance to her children because she isn't impressed with him readily abandoning his "wife".
* EvilIsBigger: One of the most physically imposing ''Doctor Who'' villains outside of literal {{Kaiju}} such as Kroll.
* EvilIsHammy: The Empress of the Racnoss, bringing ChewingTheScenery to epic levels. One wonders if the Racnoss actually subsisted on scenery that they chewed up, instead of meat, as they insist.
%%* EvilLaugh
* ExtremeOmnivore: The Racnoss can devour [[PlanetEater whole planets]].
* GiantSpider
* OhCrap: She finally realises exactly what she's up against when the Doctor reveals his true planet of origin.
-->'''Empress:''' Roboforms are not necessary. My children shall feast on Martian flesh.\\
'''The Doctor:''' Oh, but I'm not from Mars.\\
'''Empress:''' Then where?\\
'''The Doctor:''' My home planet is far away and long since gone, but its name lives on: ''Gallifrey''.\\
'''Empress:''' ''[[[{{Gasp}} gasps dramatically]]]'' THEY MURDERED THE RACNOSS!
* PungeonMaster: The Racnoss Empress. Notable in that she deliberately keeps setting up puns, but Lance and Donna don't play along.
* TimeAbyss: The Racnoss date from the early days of the universe, and the Empress herself has been in hibernation for billions of years. The Time Lords and other ancient races hunted the Racnoss down to near extinction because of their ravenous nature.
* VillainousBreakdown: When the Doctor reveals his true home, the Racnoss Empress goes from gloating to horrified shrieking.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Richard Lazarus]]
!!Professor Richard Lazarus (Tenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:326:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/194_lazarus_1.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/MarkGatiss (2007)

-->''"You're so sentimental, Doctor. Maybe you are older than you look."''

A genius yet sociopathic scientist who is obsessed with discovering the secret of eternal youth, no matter what the cost...
----
* BodyHorror: His alternate form is an utterly horrific aberration resembling a gigantic scorpion with an exposed exoskeleton and an uncannily humanoid face. He always transforms offscreen, but audible bone cracking can be heard whenever it happens. While the slightly dodgy 2007 CGI downplays it somewhat, he's still one of ''Doctor Who'''s most viscerally terrifying monsters.
* DirtyOldMan: He very creepily hits on Martha's sister Tish.
* FreudianExcuse: He claims that his desire to cheat death stems from witnessing the Blitz as a child.
* GenreRefugee: His creator Stephen Greenhorn compares him to a classic [[Franchise/MarvelUniverse Marvel Comics]] supervillain; mad scientist, caught in an awry experiment, turns into a rampaging monster.
* ImmortalitySeeker: He builds a marvellous machine capable of restoring youth, hoping to use it to live forever.
* ItsAllAboutMe: While it can partially be blamed on the degenerative effects of his age reversal machine, Lazarus expresses zero remorse for the many victims he sucked dry over the course of his rampage to maintain his monstrous form. His quest for immortality is entirely selfish and once he regains his youth, he loses any pretence of caring for anyone but himself.
* LivingForeverIsAwesome: Naively assumes this to be the case, speaking about how he looks forward to eternal life. The Doctor, actually being immortal, tells him [[WhoWantsToLiveForever what it is truly like to be immortal]].
-->'''The Doctor:''' I'm old enough to know that a longer life isn't always a better one. In the end, you just get ''tired''. Tired of the struggle, tired of losing everyone that matters to you. Tired of watching everything turn to dust. If you live long enough, Lazarus, the only certainty is that you'll be alone.
* MeaningfulName: The Doctor {{lampshade|Hanging}}s this after Lazarus revives from apparently being killed.
-->'''The Doctor:''' Lazarus, back from the dead. Should have known, really.
* SensoryOverload: The Doctor defeats him by blasting a cathedral organ at max volume, amped up by the Sonic Screwdriver. It causes Lazarus's unstable DNA to freak out and he falls to his death from the spire.
* SquareCubeLaw: Where exactly does all that extra mass come from when he transforms? Downplayed as Lazarus requires constant sustenance to maintain it, but it's still pretty implausible.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Lucy Saxon]]
!!Lucy Saxon (Tenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:203:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/misssaxon_6424.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Alexandra Moen (2007, 2009)

-->''"Dying. Everything dying. The whole of creation was falling apart and I thought there's no point. No point to anything. Not ever."''

The Master's wife in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E12TheSoundOfDrums "The Sound of Drums"]], [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E13LastOfTheTimeLords "Last of the Time Lords"]] and returning for an encore in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E17E18TheEndOfTime "The End of Time"]]. She was his "faithful companion" until she shot him, after Francine Jones and Jack Harkness were stopped trying to do so by the Doctor.
----
* AllForNothing: Killed herself and managed to wipe out the cult of Saxon in the act of trying to kill "Harry", but he lived on, albeit [[CameBackWrong very damaged]].
* AllGirlsWantBadBoys: Lucy is the wife of the Master, the Doctor's ArchEnemy. How's that for a "bad boy"?
* TheBeard: The Tenth Doctor implicitly calls her this, when the Fifth asks him if the Tenth's Master still has a beard, as in actual facial hair.
* BewareTheQuietOnes: In "Last of the Time Lords", she rarely speaks, making it all the more unexpected when she's the one that shoots the Master.
* BlueBlood: Her connections are one of the reasons the Master married her.
* ChekhovsGunman: In the most literal sense. She starts up as "not too bright", but ends up shooting the Master.
* DespairEventHorizon: Pal around with the Master and he will quickly destroy your will to live/reasons for existing. Which is very dark, considering how ''eager'' and totally unhinged Lucy was to kill herself to get rid of the Master for good... which didn't work.
* TheDogBitesBack: Domestic abuse is implied to be the motivation for her HeelFaceTurn.
* DomesticAbuse: After the Master has ruled the Earth for a year, he's stopped pretending to love or care at all about Lucy. He's implied to have hit her, and showed her the end of the universe, driving her over the DespairEventHorizon ForTheEvulz.
* EvilCounterpart: Of the companions in general, and Rose Tyler in particular, because she is the Master's companion and his wife. It's even stated that the Master took her to see the TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt much like the Ninth Doctor did to Rose, but whereas the Doctor wanted Rose to appreciate the universe while it existed, the Master did it to Lucy to make her believe that there's "no point in anything, ever."
* HeelFaceTurn: Turns against the Master during "Last of the Time Lords", and then further works against him in "The End of Time".
* HeroicSacrifice: Her last appearance in "The End of Time" had her sabotaging a cult's attempt to resurrect the Master in an explosion that kills her. The Master returns anyway, but the attempt caused him to CameBackWrong. [[spoiler:It later becomes a SenselessSacrifice, as [[Recap/DoctorWhoS36E12TheDoctorFalls "The Doctor Falls"]] reveals that the Time Lords simply healed the Master's condition without much issue.]]
* LadyInRed: The opulent red satin dress she wears in "Last of the Time Lords."
* MadLove: She seemed to be genuinely in love with the Master at the beginning, and it clearly wasn't mutual.
* MoreThanMindControl: After glimpsing the end of the universe, Lucy went a bit barmy.
* NotSoHarmlessVillain: Does what the Doctor wouldn't, and kills the Master.
* TheOphelia: She at one point is seen babbling about how the Master showed her TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt and how it made her believe that there was no point in anything ever.
* PreMortemOneLiner: She gives a pretty good one before stopping the Master's resurrection, although he ends up surviving and ''she's'' the one that dies.
-->'''Lucy:''' ''Till death do us part, Harry!''
* ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections: She uses her family connections to have an antiserum for the Master's resurrection created.
* StrawNihilist: The Doctor takes his companion to TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt to make her appreciate life while it lasts. The Master does so to BreakTheCutie.
-->'''Lucy Saxon:''' Dying. Everything dying. The whole of creation was falling apart and I thought there's no point. No point to anything. Not ever.
* TakingYouWithMe: Sabotages the Master's attempt at resurrection and causes an explosion that kills her in the process.
* TookALevelInBadass: The "not too bright" Lucy gets a lot smarter once she's free of her husband's influence, nearly foiling his plan to come back from the dead.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Averted. "The End of Time" reveals that for her part in the Master's crimes she was a given a trial in secret with no jury, and then locked up in prison.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Max Capricorn]]
!!Max Capricorn (Tenth Doctor)
->'''Played by:''' George Costigan (2007)

-->''"Time for me to retire."''

The former CEO of Max Capricorn Cruiseliners, the premier luxury starship cruise service on the planet Sto. Betrayed by his board of directors, Capricorn stages an elaborate revenge plot in which he sabotages his company's prized vessel, a spacefaring replica of the ''UsefulNotes/RMSTitanic'', to make it crash into the Earth, with the hope that the resulting scandal would incriminate the board and cause their shares to plummet in value. His head crudely stitched to a cubic cyborg vehicle, Capricorn is perfectly willing to sacrifice the crew and passengers of the ship as well as all six billion humans on Earth for the sake of his convoluted retirement plan.
----
* BerserkButton: The Doctor gets under his skin by calling him a loser.
-->"I '''never''' lose."
* CharacterCatchphrase: "And I should know because... my name is Max!", TwinkleSmile.
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: His motivation for crashing another Titanic and potentially wiping out all life on Earth? To settle a petty squabble against his board of directors.
* {{Cyborg}}: An amusing version, as he's revealed to be little more than a head stitched to a crude rectangular vehicle. However, Sto's discriminatory policies against cyborgs, [[{{Foreshadowing}} the same that caused Bannakaffalatta to hide his cyborg modifications]], lead to Capricorn's expulsion from his own company.
* DirtyOldMan: He plans to retire to a planet where the ladies are supposedly very fond of... metal.
* EvilIsHammy: Another supremely hammy Christmas villain.
* EvilIsPetty: Attempts to crash the Titanic into Earth, killing billions (or if Turn Left is any indication, millions) to...frame his board directors and retire to a nice planet. [[DisappointedByTheMotive The Doctor immediately lambasts he's committing mass genocide for such a pathetic reason]].
* HumanAliens: Like all the unnamed humanoids from Sto ([[MyFriendsAndZoidberg except Bannakaffalatta]]), Max looks and acts completely human, though his cyborg body gives him a unique shape.
* LackOfEmpathy: He's utterly unphased by the enormous collateral damage his plan will cause, on top of the many innocent lives he already has taken. His only reaction to the Doctor chewing him out for it is to suck his lips in like a mischievous child.
* TwinkleSmile: His golden tooth twinkles in the advert reels shown on monitors across the Titanic. The Doctor is surprised that it even happens when they meet in person.
[[/folder]]


[[folder:Matron Cofelia / Miss Foster]]
!!Matron Cofelia (Tenth Doctor)
->'''Played by:''' Sarah Lancashire (2008)

-->''"I'm advancing the birth plan. We're going into [[DeadlyEuphemism premature labour]]."''

A nanny of the Five-Straighten Classabindi Nursery Fleet (Intergalactic Class) who arrives on Earth under the guise of Miss Foster, CEO of pharmaceutical company Adipose Industries. Designing a drug that can make a person lose weight at an extraordinary rate, she secretly plans to create legions of Adipose babies on behalf of the Adiposian First Family, her unseen alien clients.
----
* BabysitterFromHell: On an intergalactic scale!
* DidntThinkThisThrough: She would've gotten away with everything if she hadn't asked to come with the Adipose babies, who she seems to have grown attached to. She doesn't stop to think that the First Family wouldn't need a nanny anymore now that they have their children.
* DisneyVillainDeath: While levitating her and the Adipose babies up to their mother ship, the Adiposian First Family decide to [[DeadlyEuphemism terminate their contract with her]] upon realising that her illegal activities have made her a liability.
* EvilPlan: An especially bizarre one, as she plans to force the human race to be surrogate parents to a new generation of Adipose toddlers on behalf of the Adiposian race.
* ExactWords: She claims in her advertising campaign that her pills will make "the fat just walk away". That banal slogan proves to be ''horrifyingly'' accurate.
* GravityIsAHarshMistress: After the levitation beam vanishes, she cartoonishly stalls in midair for a few seconds before looking down and falling to her death.
* HumanAliens: She's obviously not human but is indistinguishable from one.
* LackOfEmpathy: She knows fullwell that the Adipose birthing process can be lethal to humans, but deceives the population with promises that her pills will help them lose weight.
* MouthOfSauron: Her employers, the Adiposian First Family, go unseen. She acts as the nanny to their children in the mysterious absence of their original breeding planet.
* TheStoic: She's unflappable in the face of the Doctor's threats, though she does take joy in seeing the Adipose babies flying off to the mother ship.
* SwissArmyWeapon: She possesses her own sonic probe, the Sonic Pen, to counter the Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Luke Rattigan]]
!!Luke Rattigan (Tenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:718:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/img_7538.jpeg]]
[[caption-width-right:718:some caption text]]
->'''Played by:''' Ryan Sampson
A young genius inventor, self made millionaire, and founder of the Rattigan Academy, a school and think tank with hand picked geniuses. He wanted to use his invention to help the Sontarans kill the human race save his selected members of the Acadamy.
----
* EvilCannotComprehendGood: He really thought his friends would be delighted to start a new society with him at the expense of the rest of humanity. They are so utterly disgusted and choose death over his new world.
* HaremSeeker: Had a breeding initiative as part of his plan to build a new world with his friends.
* HeelFaceTurn: He eventually comes to his senses after learning the Sontarans planned on betraying him.
* HeroicSacrifice: Takes the Doctor's place in detonating the Sontaran's ship while onboard.
* ImpossibleGenius: He was able to invent pocket-dimension technology in the 21st century, which the Doctor described as being like finding a smartphone in the Stone Age.
* InsufferableGenius: His defining trait, he cannot hide his co tempt for those he deems less intelligent than him.
* TeenGenius: He is one of the brightest minds of humanity despite his young age.
* RewardedAsATraitorDeserves: While they don't kill him, the Sontarans he betrayed humanity for, told him he was just an UnwittingPawn once he's done his part. He's left a bawling mess and eventually sacrifices life to stop them.
* WorldsSmartestMan: Heavily implied. The Doctor all but states Luke had never met an intellectual equal until meeting the Doctor himself. Luke was able to invent technology that was centuries ahead of its time.
[[/folder]]

!Eleventh Doctor era debut
[[folder:Prisoner Zero]]
!!Prisoner Zero (Eleventh Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/prisoner_zero.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' William Wilde (voice), Creator/OliviaColman, Creator/CaitlinBlackwood, Marcello Magni, Eden Monteath, Merin Monteath and Creator/MattSmith (2010)

-->''"Poor Amy Pond. Still dreaming about her magical Doctor."''

An alien shapeshifter imprisoned by the Atraxi. The Eleventh Doctor and Amy had to find it when it escaped to Earth.
----
* AmbiguousSituation: How Prisoner Zero knows about the Silence and the Pandorica is unclear, especially given it had remained in hiding for years.
* CreepyChild: Takes the form of two girls and their mother and then of the young Amelia Pond.
* CreepyMonotone: Never raises its voice.
* EvilGloating: Takes great glee in taunting the Doctor over his lack of knowledge.
* FlatCharacter: [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] in Steven Moffat's [[SelfDeprecatingHumor own self-adapted novelisation]] of "The Day of the Doctor", in which the Doctor briefly muses on Prisoner Zero's mysterious plans, and how they were ''so'' mysterious that nobody ever found out what they were.
* HoistByTheirOwnPetard: It just so happens to take over Amy's mind when it needs a quick escape; she is the only person who knows what Prisoner Zero actually looks like and Zero can only take the form of what someone is thinking about. So, the Doctor makes Amy think about its true form.
* InvoluntaryShapeshifting: It can take the form of whatever a dormant mind is dreaming. However, it has no control over that.
* MorphicResonance: Its big sharp teeth.
* NoodleIncident: We never do learn what it did to get sent to prison, though its escape causes the Atraxi to try to destroy a planet in response.
* PsychicLink: How it is able to use dormant minds to take different forms.
* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Gives the Doctor one about how he has affected Amy's life.
* ShapeshifterGuiltTrip: Takes on the form of a seven-year-old Amy while taunting the Doctor.
* StarterVillain: For the Eleventh Doctor.
* TakingYouWithMe: Rather than face capture and possibly execution at the hands of the Atraxi, Prisoner Zero declares it would rather let the Atraxi burn the whole world with it.
* VillainousBreakdown: Is reduced to yelling "no!" repeatedly after realizing the Doctor found a way to stop it.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Solomon the Trader]]
!!Solomon the Trader (Eleventh Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_01_17_at_090800_1.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/DavidBradley (2012)

A pirate who hijacked a Silurian ark and killed the entire crew in an attempt to claim its cargo, dinosaurs, for himself.
----
* AmbiguouslyHuman: The year is 2367, and his robots claim they've been on the ark for 2,000 years, since long before humanity acquired space travel. Even given that the robots aren't the most reliable source, this is a universe with a lot of Human Alien species.
* CaneFu: Solomon uses one of his crutches, which has a sharpened edge, to subdue Nefertiti.
* DeathByIrony: Solomon is all about the money, so the Doctor lets him have several very shiny, very valuable objects all to himself. The missiles.
* EvilCannotComprehendGood: Solomon assumes the Doctor is only interested in the dinosaurs for their monetary value; the Doctor berates him for assuming everyone lives by the same values as him.
* EvilCripple: Solomon had a run-in with a raptor when he invaded the ship, and it ate a lot of his leg.
* EvilOldFolks: Solomon, played by the inimitable David Bradley, has been doing this sort of vile act for a long time.
* IHaveYouNowMyPretty: Solomon is not nice to Nefi, and she gets very, very genuinely scared. His implied unsavoury intentions call to mind Sharaz Jek (only without Jek's Jerkass Woobie qualities).
* KarmicDeath: Solomon really, REALLY deserved being blown up in that ship by missiles. This whole affair was his fault to begin with.
* KickTheDog: Solomon has several; he orders one of his robots to injure Brian in order to force the Doctor to heal him, he ejected the Ark's crew from the airlock, and, when he decides he wants to sell her, he has the triceratops killed in an attempt to make the Doctor hand Nefertiti over.
* KnightOfCerebus: When he shows up, it starts getting much more serious, as most scenes with him involve showing off what a Jerkass he is with his various KickTheDog moments.
* OneSteveLimit: Averted. Solomon shares his name with an important character from [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E4DaleksInManhattan "Daleks in Manhattan"]]/[[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E5EvolutionOfTheDaleks "Evolution of the Daleks"]], except that guy was an ally of the Doctor.
* RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil: Among his various crimes, the barely-euphemistic threat of planning to rape Nefertiti[[note]]at least as much as the ratings could get away with[[/note]] makes him vile enough that the Doctor cold-bloodedly kills him with a most uncharacteristic Pre-Mortem One-Liner.
* SpacePirates: Solomon is the uncomical, seriously nasty kind. He put out a distress signal so he could board this ship and then killed everyone for their cargo.
* VillainsWantMercy: After committing genocide, threatening to kill everyone unless Nefi becomes his slave and subtly alluding that he intends to rape her, Solomon still expects the Doctor to rescue him. The Doctor refuses.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Gunslinger]]
!!Kahler-Tek (Eleventh Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_01_17_at_092318.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Andrew Brooke (2012)

A cyborg Kahler SuperSoldier who went rogue after remembering who he was, seeking revenge against the scientists who turned him into a monster.
----
* AntiVillain: The Gunslinger isn't evil; he just wants revenge on the people who made him a monster. He specifically stays out of the margins of Mercy so that no innocent civilians get caught in the crossfire.
* ArmCannon: He has a rather impressive one on his right arm as part of his cyborg modifications.
* TheAtoner: The Gunslinger decides to become Mercy's protector once his purpose is fulfilled.
* BaitAndSwitch: The episode also opens with a monologue about a "guardian angel who fell from the stars". It turns out to be the Gunslinger, not the Doctor.
* {{Cyborg}}: The Gunslinger looks half-man and half-machine, with an Arm Cannon and a robotic Eyepatch of Power balanced out by a more human hand and eye.
* EveryoneCallsHimBarkeep: The Gunslinger, to the people of Mercy.
* EvilSoundsDeep: The Gunslinger has a deep computerized voice and starts off as the antagonist. This is then subverted, as he isn't actually evil.
* TheFettered: The first hint of the Gunslinger's real personality is his refusal to endanger an innocent person. He still sticks to this -- or, at least, Wouldn't Hurt a Child -- after Isaac takes the shot he meant for Jex.
* FlashStep: The Gunslinger is equipped with a short-range teleporter. He uses it to quickly cover distance without breaking his slow, menacing stride.
* ImplacableMan: Nothing will stop him from hunting Jex.
* LivingForeverIsAwesome: The Gunslinger spends four generations as sheriff of Mercy and hasn't aged a day. This implies he'll protect it forever. It's also awesome in regards to his religion. Imagine how many souls he'd have to carry to reach the mountain top.
* MirrorCharacter: To the Doctor; another ordinary man who became a monster in order to save a world ravaged by war.
* NeverHurtAnInnocent: His only interest is revenge against specific people who wronged him, and he takes steps to prevent anyone else getting caught in the crossfire.
* NoPlaceForMeThere: The Gunslinger believes he has no place in the world once his war is over. The Doctor convinces him otherwise.
* PreMortemOneLiner: "Make peace with your gods."
* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: It's mentioned that he hunted down and murdered the other scientists who experimented on him -- Jex is the last.
* ShoutOut: The Gunslinger is a cross between the Terminator and Yul Brynner's Gunslinger from Westworld. His Stat-O-Vision even says "TERMINATE". By the end, he has become more like Franchise/RoboCop once he decides to be Mercy's protector. The writers also intentionally included some similarities to Frankenstein's Monster.
* WasOnceAMan: It's shown that he underwent cyborgification in the prequel.
* WeirdWest: A cyborg alien killing machine posing as a ruthless gunslinger in the Old West.
* WhatHaveIBecome: Implied to be the reason why the Gunslinger went rogue, after battle-damage led him to remember who he was and what Jex and the other scientists had done to him.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Kahler-Jex]]
!!Kahler-Jex (Eleventh Doctor)
->'''Played by:''' Creator/AdrianScarborough (2012)

A member of the Kahler race who took up residence in the Old West town of Mercy, where he acts as a kindly physician and provider of the town's many anachronistic technological utilities. However, Jex hides a very dark secret that ties him to the town's mysterious alien tormentor, the Gunslinger.
----
* UsefulNotes/TheAmericanDream: Despite being a foreigner (from outer space) with a dodgy past, he was taken in by the marshal of Mercy and given a fresh start as a well-loved town doctor.
* AntiVillain: While the Doctor certainly considers him worse than the Gunslinger, it's specifically pointed out that Jex isn't evil, either. He's a nuanced individual with both good and bad qualities, though he is overall a reasonable, well-intentioned man.
* TheAtoner: Jex certainly sees himself as this, as he believes that helping the people of Mercy will absolve him of his past sins. However, as the Doctor points out, Jex's chosen "punishment" barely even counts as one considering the magnitude of his crimes and he shouldn't have the freedom to choose how or when his debt is paid. This speaks to Jex's rather short-sighted view of how atonement really works.
* BeAllMySinsRemembered: In Kahler culture, it is believed that in order to pass onto the afterlife, the recently deceased have to carry the souls of everyone they've wronged in their lifetime. Because Jex has hurt and killed countless people, he fears that his penitent journey would be especially arduous.
* TheDeadHaveNames: Jex claims to remember the names of every Kahler he experimented on, and he can still hear their screams every time he closes his eyes. Kahler-Tek was the only survivor.
* DrivenToSuicide: He ultimately decides to blow himself up in his ship to prevent any further bloodshed, as the Gunslinger was never going to stop pursuing him and hurting the people he cared about.
* GivingRadioToTheRomans: He gives the townsfolk easy access to electricity and a cure for cholera.
* GreyAndGrayMorality: It's specifically pointed out in the episode that Jex doesn't neatly fit into one category. He is neither a MadScientist war criminal nor an innocent local physician. Jex assumes that the Doctor's BlackAndWhiteMorality makes him incapable of understanding this basic level of nuance, but the Doctor understands Jex perfectly. After all, the two are very much alike: two aliens who committed atrocities in the name of the greater good and chose exile as their punishments.
* HumanAliens: Aside from a distinctive tattoo-like face marking that he shares with Kahler-Tek and every other member of the Kahler race, Jex easily passes for a human.
* IDidWhatIHadToDo: He justifies his past crimes in much the same way as the Doctor: he sacrificed many lives to save millions more.
* MadScientist: {{Averted}}. Jex may have committed some pretty terrible experiments on his own kind, but he's not the callous monster he expects the Doctor to view him as.
* MirrorCharacter: More so than the Gunslinger, he fits the bill for the Doctor. The Doctor has an unusually hateful and aggressive reaction to Jex, perhaps disproportionate considering the kinds of irredeemable monsters he faces on a near-daily basis, because Jex mirrors him to such an uncomfortably close extent. They are both men of science who were forced to commit unspeakable atrocities as part of a war effort on their home planets, and they both had to deal with immense survivor's guilt upon narrowly escaping with their lives. They both attempt to hide the truth of their past crimes by performing good deeds for the "little people". The only real difference is that whereas the Doctor never stops running in order to save both himself and the people he cares about, Jex decided to stay in one place and inadvertently risked the lives of the townsfolk by drawing the Gunslinger to their doorstep.
* ANaziByAnyOtherName: His storyline bears some resemblance to real life Nazi fugitives who escaped justice at the end of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII and proceeded to live ordinary lives in other countries, with his [[UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust horrific experimentation on his own kind]] making those comparisons even more obvious. The Doctor also indirectly compares Jex's crimes to those of [[AbsoluteXenophobe the Daleks]] during an impassioned rant.
* NothingIsScarier: When the Doctor snoops around Jex's ship and discovers all of his personal files, we hear some agonised screams while only seeing the Doctor's [[TheStoic subtly]] horrified reaction to the video footage. [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness The Doctor's subsequent actions against Jex's person]] make it clear that whatever Jex did was '''bad'''.
* OffstageVillainy: While we are frequently told that Jex's war crimes and experiments were depraved and monstrous even by ''Doctor Who'' villain standards, we only see the results of them in the form of the Gunslinger. As such, the Doctor's explicit comparisons to the Master and the Daleks may count as an example of TakeOurWordForIt.
* OneSteveLimit: Invoked. Among the townsfolk, he prefers to simply be called "the Doctor". To prevent confusion, his real name has to be used when the Definitive Article himself arrives.
* ThisIsUnforgivable: When the Doctor discovers the extent of Jex's war crimes, [[BerserkButton he is beyond furious]] and [[BatmanGrabsAGun seriously considers shooting Jex dead on the spot]]. Even after being talked down by Amy, the Doctor still advocates leaving him to the mercies of the Gunslinger.
* WellIntentionedExtremist: During the war on the Kahler's home planet, Jex justified his experiments as necessary to hasten the end of the conflict.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Mrs. Gillyflower]]
!!Winifred Gillyflower (Eleventh Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/images_20_09.jpeg]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/DianaRigg (2013)

A nutty old woman who runs Sweetville, a factory town in Victorian Yorkshire which only invites the best and brightest prospective employees for permanent residence, alongside her unseen benefactor, Mr. Sweet. She is connected to a slew of murder victims strewn across the city whose bodies are bleached bright red.
----
* AbusiveParents: Winifred is monstrously cruel to her daughter Ada, who went her whole life believing that her father blinded her and served her mother loyally in spite of all the emotional abuse she gets from her. Of course, Winifred was also responsible for destroying Ada's eyesight while experimenting on her with Mr. Sweet's venom, which proves to be the last straw that breaks Ada's filial loyalty.
* AdamAndEvePlot: She keeps her chosen survivors in pairs so that they may reproduce after the apocalypse.
* AxCrazy: Even the Doctor considers her a lost cause, since any attempt to reason with her proves futile. By the end of the story, she's frantically shooting a loaded gun at the protagonists and even threatening her own daughter with it.
* TheBeautifulElite: Bordering on MasterRace. She only allows the most perfect and pure specimens who survive the Red Leech venom's freezing process entry to Sweetville. Clara makes the cut and survives the process. Gillyflower also considers Jenny and the Doctor, though the latter gets rejected due to his Time Lord biology making him react badly to the venom. Gillyflower's enforcers are all similarly pristine, causing the Doctor to nickname them "attack of the supermodels".
* CardCarryingVillain: She's evil and she knows it. When the Doctor says how devastating Mr. Sweet's poison could be in the wrong hands, she proceeds to grin and open her palms out to him...
-->'''Mrs. Gillyflower:''' You know what these are?... The wrong hands!
* {{Cult}}: What Sweetville really is. Between her ridiculous dogma, sheer insanity, and the creepy singing, the whole operation is an incredibly thinly veiled attempt at creating a MasterRace. [[TheBeautifulElite She even has supermodel mooks!]]
* TheEndIsNigh: She preaches about the coming armageddon like a SinisterMinister, but she is secretly engineering said apocalypse.
* EvilIsHammy: An elderly Diana Rigg playing a cackling Doctor Who supervillain. It's a sight to behold.
* EvilLaugh: Lets out a belter when she launches her rocket from the secondary firing mechanism.
* EvilOldFolks: One of the Doctor's most decrepit enemies, yet her deeds are no less diabolical.
* EvilPlan: She plots to unleash Mr. Sweet's deadly toxin into the upper atmosphere with a giant rocket, potentially wiping out all humanity, while allowing her perfect human specimens to thrive in the aftermath.
* EyeScream: She inflicted horrific scars around Ada's eyes, blinding her.
* ItsAllAboutMe: Gillyflower experiments on her own daughter, blinding her in the process, all to find an antitoxin that would allow herself to survive the poison outbreak. She bears zero remorse in admitting it when the truth eventually comes out.
* LargeHam: Special props have to go to Diana Rigg's complete commitment to absolute insanity, and as a result Mrs. Gillyflower easily comes off as one of the Doctor's most unhinged enemies, if not ''the'' craziest.
* ANaziByAnyOtherName: Her obsession with eugenic perfection leads to her dismissing her own daughter as an impure specimen, unworthy to live in her new era.
* NeverMessWithGranny: You might be surprised that Gillyflower's packing heat!
* PeopleJars: Sweetville isn't a match factory, it's a giant preservatory for Gillyflower's abductees, who are literally suspended in large glass jars as protection from the coming apocalypse.
* TheSymbiote: She has a symbiotic relationship with Mr. Sweet, a gross little parasitic organism from the Jurassic period. He suckles on her chest while she mines his lethal poison for use in her apocalyptic master plan.
* VillainousBreakdown: She has an almighty one when she realises that Jenny and Vastra removed the poison payload from the rocket.
-->'''Mrs. Gillyflower:''' Very well. If I can't take the world with me... ''you'' will have to do. '''[[IllKillYou DIE, YOU FREAKS! DIE! DIE!]]'''
* YoureInsane: Bless his hearts, the Doctor really ''does'' try to reason with her, but eventually he realizes that she is a complete and utter nutjob, and settles for stopping her at any cost. There is ''no'' rhyme or reason to be found here.
-->'''The Doctor''': I'm the Doctor, ''you're nuts'', and I'm going to stop you.
[[/folder]]

!Twelfth Doctor era debut
[[folder:Half-Face Man]]
!!Half-Face Man (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/half-face_man_4416.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Peter Ferdinando (2014)

-->''"We will reach the promised land."''

The main antagonist of [[Recap/DoctorWhoS34E1DeepBreath "Deep Breath"]], the Half-Face Man is a robotic drone using human skin and organs to rebuild himself and his race. His ship, the SS ''Marie Antoinette'', crashed into Earth millions of years ago, leaving him and his crew stranded on the planet. His business, Mancini's Family Restaurant, is a front for his organ harvesting, and his ultimate goal is to make it to ThePromisedLand.

Strangely enough for such an important character, he isn't even named in the episode, but the name "Half-Face Man" is used for him in the credits and behind-the-scenes video.
----
* AIIsACrapshoot: As with the S.S. ''Madame de Pompadour'' droids, the Half-Face Man has taken a cannibalistic approach to repairing his ship but over his millions of years of existence he has become considerably more ambitious and desperate to embrace humanity.
* AmbiguousSituation:
** A striking example for the show is the purposefully ambiguous fate of the Half-Face Man: did he kill himself voluntarily or was he pushed by the Doctor? A reader poll was even conducted by ''Doctor Who Magazine'' which asked this question and the response was a near halfway split, with viewers who believed he committed suicide barely edging out with 53% of the votes. The fact that the question has to be asked at all is a huge part of the Twelfth Doctor's character arc.
** He made it to Missy's "Heaven", but was he then converted into a Cyberman afterwards like most other dead souls uploaded to the Nethersphere despite being a robot already? Steven Moffat theorises that Missy likely [[ShootTheShaggyDogStory "threw him away"]] once she realised his incompatibility.
* BackFromTheDead: Despite falling to his death, he wakes up at the end of the episode to meet Missy in a garden that she tells him is ThePromisedLand. [[spoiler:Actually averted, given TheReveal about Missy and the Promised Land.]]
* BadassBoast: He attempts to intimidate the Doctor by gloating about how he murdered a ''Tyrannosaurus rex'' for an extremely petty reason.
--> '''Half-Face Man''': I burned an ancient, beautiful creature for just one inch of optic nerve. What do you think you can accomplish, little man?
* CallBack: His ship is the sister ship of the SS ''Madame de Pompadour'' from [[Recap/DoctorWhoS28E4TheGirlInTheFireplace "The Girl in the Fireplace"]], and he's a variant of the clockwork robots from that episode.
* ColdBloodedTorture: What he threatens to inflict on Clara. Thankfully, the Doctor stops him.
* {{Cyborg}}: Using human flesh and organs to become more humanoid.
* {{Determinator}}: 65 million years after his ship's crash on Earth and he's still determined to repair it at any cost.
* DisneyVillainDeath: He falls to his death out of the escape pod, but he has apparently ascended to his coveted 'Promised Land' at the end.
* DrivenToSuicide: Possibly. He falls to his death, but whether he jumped or was pushed is left ambiguous.
* EmergentHuman: The Half-Face Man harvests human body parts and grafts them onto himself so that he can become human enough to make it to ThePromisedLand. As a result, he is the only one of his kind to express emotion and sentiment, albeit in a very limited and mechanical way. The Doctor points out how he's far more human than machine at this point.
* ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin: He's a man (by a lenient definition) with half of a face.
* EvilIsPetty: While he killed the dinosaur for a practical purpose, the fact that he gloats about only doing so to procure a tiny shred of optic nerve from its corpse hints that he has picked up some petty sadism during his slow embrace of humanity. The T. rex died scared, confused, alone and in pain, having only been transported to Victorian London because of the Doctor's mistake.
* EvilSoundsDeep: He has an extremely deep, rumbling voice for a mostly monotone machine.
* EyeAwaken: At the end of the episode, after his supposed death.
* FaceStealer: Just about any organic part is appreciated, actually.
* FacialHorror: The left side of his face is missing, leaving the metal framework and a suspended eye completely visible.
* FireBreathingWeapon: Has a blowtorch built into his arm.
* {{Foil}}: The thematic parallels between [[EvilCounterpart the Half-Face Man and the Twelfth Doctor]] are palpable. They are usually positioned opposite to each other in various shots throughout the episode to reinforce this.
** Both are ancient, nigh-immortal beings that have worn many faces and struggle to grapple with their identities as a result, especially in regards to reconciling their humanity and alien/robotic natures. While the Doctor tries to "patch the holes" in his new persona after his regenerative trauma by contemplating who he truly is, the Half-Face Man does so [[FaceStealer more literally]]. The Doctor would later embrace his status as a "half" thing by [[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E11HeavenSent claiming to be the Hybrid]].
** Madame Vastra speculates that the Doctor's regeneration into an older body is an attempt to reveal his true self, whereas his previous young and handsome bodies were merely a façade he wore to feel accepted by the world. The Half-Face Man, in turn, tries to conceal his robotic nature in public, but has a gaping hole in the side of his head that exposes the clockwork mechanisms within.
** After many years of reinventing themselves, they no longer have anything of their "original" selves left and struggle to find reasons to keep going. Twelve finds motivation in protecting humanity, but he has several existential crises throughout his tenure and, like the Half-Face Man, [[WhoWantsToLiveForever really doesn't want to keep going indefinitely]].
** As they note to each other, they both have "basic programming" that they shouldn't go against (self-destruction for the Half-Face Man, murder for the Doctor) but one ultimately goes against it depending on your interpretation of the scene.
** The Half-Face Man is obsessed with reaching the Promised Land as a reward for his eons of dedication. The allure of a reward has crossed the Doctor's mind many times, but by the time of the episode he has given up any expectation of getting one.
** Lastly, whenever the Half-Face Man has to use his blowtorch weapon, he severs his face and places it on his jacket's lapel, a distortion of the First Doctor's iconic character tic of clutching his lapels. The Twelfth Doctor is technically the "first" of his new regeneration cycle and also frequently mimics the behaviours of his own past incarnations during his journey of self-discovery.
* ICannotSelfTerminate: He claims that self-destruction goes against his basic programming, but he may have been lying.
* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: He winds up like this, on Big Ben no less.
* KeystoneArmy: He is the "control node" of all the ''Marie Antoinette'' droids. When he dies, they shut down.
* KillItWithFire: His calling card is incinerating his victims after he's taken what he's needed. Most impressively (and horrifically), he does it to a time-displaced ''T. rex'' just to procure a tiny piece of its optic nerve.
* LiteralMinded: When a random bystander says that his eyes are his greatest gift, the Half-Face Man takes it as a charitable offering.
* MixAndMatchMan: He is a Frankenstein-esque patchwork of both human organs and mechanical parts that have been constantly degraded and replaced over millions of years. The Doctor notices that his hands don't match and that he has some Ancient Roman metalwork still in his head.
* NoNameGiven: [[AllThereInTheManual His nickname is only given in the credits and behind-the-scenes content.]] He may not even have a true name or designation, and if he does he probably can't remember it.
* OhCrap: He has one when he realises that either he or the Doctor are lying about their "basic programming". Considering that the Doctor already made his intentions to protect humanity clear and has a body count in the millions, it was likely the first time the Half-Face Man ever experienced fear.
* ThePromisedLand: His ultimate goal for his race. He gets there in the end. Supposedly.
* StarterVillain: The first villain of the Twelfth Doctor's era. He was purposefully created to be a very "simple" baddie for the newly regenerated Doctor to face, but Moffat purposefully gave the droid leader many rich parallels to the Doctor to keep him interesting.
* SuddenlyShouting: His voice has a characteristic monotonous quality to it, but he furiously shouts at Clara during her interrogation, which is as jarring as it is terrifying.
* TheseusShipParadox: Alongside the rest of the ''Marie Antoinette'''s crew, the Half-Face Man has constantly replaced his degrading clockwork parts with new ones for millions of years until the original parts have been outstripped countless times over. The Doctor even references this conundrum while trying to get through to him.
* TimeAbyss: It's indicated that the ''Marie Antoinette'' was flung into the past and crash-landed on Earth before the K-T extinction event, over 65 million years ago, making the Half-Face Man truly ancient. Of course, the original command node droid ceased to exist eons ago. The Half-Face Man we see in the episode is merely the result of the TheseusShipParadox mentioned above; after years of replacing every part of himself, nothing of his original self remains.
* UncannyValley: Invoked, as he's a very ancient machine trying -- and very badly failing -- to be human. His movements are very mechanical and stilted, and he rarely emotes with either his face or voice.
* VillainOfTheWeek: Of "Deep Breath".
* WhoWantsToLiveForever: Were it not for his unwavering determination to reach the Promised Land, he would likely have given up trying to repair his ship centuries ago.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Skovox Blitzer]]
!!The Skovox Blitzer (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/skovox_blitzer.jpg]]
->'''Voiced by:''' Jimmy Vee (2014)

An alien battle robot that wound up in London, in the vicinity of Coal Hill School, with the potential to kill everyone on Earth.
----
* CallingYourAttacks: The Skovox Blitzer calls out everything it does, not just its attacks.
* GenericDoomsdayVillain: Its origin, motivation and reason for being on Earth are never given. It's justified as the Blitzer's presence in the plot is [[PlotIrrelevantVillain secondary]] to the LoveTriangle between the Doctor, Clara and Danny.
* ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy: For a supposedly advanced killing machine, Skovox takes the phrase "spray n' pray" to a great extreme. The only person he manages to shoot is a stationary police officer.
* InformedAbility: The Skovox Blitzer is described as having enough firepower to destroy a planet. In practice, it can't even hit Clara.
* KillerRobot: Can't go wrong with one, can ya?
%%* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast
* ThrownOutTheAirlock: The Doctor pitches the deactivated Skovox out the TARDIS doors and into space.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Gus]]
!!Gus (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:289:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gus_26.jpg]]
->'''Voiced by:''' John Sessions (2014)

-->''"Isn't this exciting?"''

Gus is the AI aboard the Orient Express in Space, and was programmed to collect data on the Foretold.
----
* AffablyEvil: Always polite and cheerful, even as he sucks the air out of the Orient Express to asphyxiate everyone aboard.
* {{Expy}}: He's quite similar to Ash from ''Film/{{Alien}}''. He has an ulterior motive unknown to the rest of the crew that involves harnessing the power of a dangerous being to be used as a weapon, the difference being that Gus actually succeeds in his mission.
* HighClassGlass: See the picture. His digital avatar has a monocle.
* KarmaHoudini: Gus' creator goes unseen and unpunished, a rarity amongst ''Who'' villains (for a time it seemed like he could become an ArcVillain, but after a couple of seasons and a new showrunner that's not the case any longer). This isn't the case with Gus himself, who blows himself up in order to ensure his creator's status as one.
* PragmaticVillainy: Gus kills a whole train car full of people to get the Doctor to cooperate. And when the Doctor tries to track the signal back to the source, it just blows up the whole train.
* TheTeam: He (or his unseen creator) lures a perfect research crew of assorted historians, scientists and mythology specialists, and of course the Doctor[[note]]of intestinal parasites[[/note]], onto a luxururious Orient Express space cruise, only to reveal that the space-train is actually a large laboratory. Gus blackmails them all into working together to find a way to stop the Foretold. Ironically, Captain Quell and Chief Engineer Perkins prove to be much more useful in solving the mystery than the scientists.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Pulls this when the Doctor solves the mystery of the Foretold.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Foretold]]
!!The Foretold (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/foretold_1_9895.jpg]]
-> '''Played by:''' Jamie Hill (2014)

The Foretold is a creature of ancient legend; those who see it are marked for death, and those who see it have only 66 seconds left to live. It always appears in the vicinity of an ancient scroll, a scroll left on the Orient Express where the Doctor and Clara decided to board. The monster is impossible to kill, impossible to run away from and it is impossible to say who is the next victim. The truth of it turns out to be far more bizarre; it's actually a soldier who has been alive for a while, and the malfunctioning technology it's attached to is keeping it alive and forcing it to fight for a war that's been over for several millennia.
----
* AbsurdlyDedicatedWorker: It's obliged to keep killing those it sees as enemies until whatever mission it was programmed with is completed, and looks visibly relieved when the Doctor figures out how to disable it.
* AntiVillain: It's really just a soldier that doesn't know it's fighting a war that has been over for centuries.
* {{Cyborg}}: The Doctor deduced that it's being kept alive by malfunctioning medical implants.
* TheDreaded: It's basically death personified.
* {{Foil}}: The sole surviving soldier of a forgotten war, forced to stay alive and keep fighting long after the conflict's conclusion thousands of years ago. Parallels can be drawn to the Doctor himself, and his arc throughout Series 8 dealing with his resentment toward other soldiers. Notably, the Doctor acts quite respectful towards the Foretold after successfully deducing its true identity.
* ImplacableMan: The creature is nigh impossible to kill, much less fight against. It's ImmuneToBullets, any sort of weapon thrown at it just [[IntangibleMan passes right through it]], and it's impossible to run away from. The Foretold will chase after you no matter what you do and it ''will'' kill you.
* IntangibleMan: Weapons can't touch it.
* InvisibleToNormals: Only shows up for people it has marked for death.
* JustFollowingOrders: The Foretold is a soldier just doing what it's told.
* LifeDrinker: How it kills its victims. It sucks all their bodily energy, such as those that their cells produce, and leaves them completely lifeless.
* {{Mummy}}: Being chased down by an indestructible SuperSoldier is bad enough; it's even worse when it looks like a rotting, wheezing corpse wrapped in bandages.
* NinjaPirateZombieRobot: An alien soldier from an ancient civilisation, kept alive by {{Cyborg}} technology, it looks like a {{Mummy}}, and it kills by leeching energy from its victim's body like a vampire.
* NotEvilJustMisunderstood: It's merely a soldier doing its duty.
* OurMonstersAreDifferent: For one thing, it's a millennia-old soldier being kept alive by malfunctioning tech.
* SuperSoldier: Described as such by the Doctor. The Foretold is indestructible, ImmuneToBullets, and [[VillainTeleportation can follow its victim no matter where they go]]. Also there's the fact that it's a soldier that fought in a war that ended long ago.
* TragicVillain: The Doctor implies this, given that he's forced to remain alive for centuries after the war ended.
* TouchOfDeath: Its modus operandi.
* VillainTeleportation: Its victim can run as much as they like, the Foretold will always appear next to them and kill them.
* ZombieGait: Slowly shambles towards its victim, which makes it all the more scary.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Seb]]
!!Seb (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/seb.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Chris Addison (2014)

-->''"iPads? We have Creator/SteveJobs!"''

Seb is Missy's [[TheDragon right-hand man]], often meeting new deceased people when she's too busy. He's known to be sarcastic, affable and enjoys cracking jokes; often at inopportune times. He greets the officer from [[Recap/DoctorWhoS34E6TheCaretaker "The Caretaker"]] and Danny Pink after they both die and "helps" them get acquainted to the "Afterlife", aka the Nethersphere.
----
* AffablyEvil: He does help Missy create her Cybermen army and even seems to enjoy what he does, but he's still polite, charitable and upbeat. He helps the deceased, offers Danny a coffee and when he gives Danny his iPad to [[spoiler:delete his emotions and thus turn him into a Cyberman]] he doesn't pressure or threaten him, instead giving him a choice. He even does it in a way that makes it seem like a favour. Heck, even Chris Addison himself has called him [[http://www.whatsontv.co.uk/doctor-who/news/doctor-who-guest-star-chris-addison-i-owe-peter-capaldi-an-awful-lot "polite and charming"]]. It seems that Missy created him to be affable to lull deceased people into a false sense of security so that they would delete their emotions.
* AIIsACrapshoot: Averted, as he does exactly what he's programmed to do and doesn't revolt against his [[{{Pun}} master]]. But he's still working for a bad guy.
* AmbiguouslyEvil: It could be argued that he's not actually a bad guy as he was created with "evil" intentions, kind of like how a computer virus isn't evil, only its programmer.
* BearerOfBadNews: You suddenly wake up at a desk in a blank room with this guy smiling warmly back at you. Your last memory is some deadly scenario you can't remember escaping from. Then Seb has to explain that, indeed, you didn't escape.
* DeadpanSnarker: His quote above? That's just one of many of his sarcastic quips, jokes and affable demeanour.
* ICanSeeMyHouseFromHere: Says this when Danny looks out his office window and sees the inside of the Nethersphere. Then he apologizes since it probably wasn't helping.
* {{Squee}}: What ultimately gets him killed by Missy, since he was already annoying her and that was just the final straw.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fisher King]]
!!Fisher King (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fisher_king.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Neil Fingleton (2015)
->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/PeterSerafinowicz (speaking voice); [[Music/{{Slipknot}} Corey Taylor]] (roar) (2015)

The Fisher King is a brutal alien warlord that conquered the planet Tivoli until he was overthrown. He's the mastermind behind the ghosts in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E3UnderTheLake "Under the Lake"]]/[[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E4BeforeTheFlood "Before the Flood"]].
----
* ArcVillain: Of "Under the Lake" and "Before the Flood".
* DeadAllAlong: [[spoiler:Due to the TimeyWimeyBall nature of his two-part episode, the Doctor and Clara arrive on Earth in 2119 to be attacked by his ghostly minions, which prompts the Doctor to go back to 1980 and fight and ''kill'' him in that timeline, then hide in the Fisher King's own coffin when he is buried at sea and come back in 2119 the long way; the ghosts were accidentally activated by the humans who found said coffin but the Fisher King was never truly a threat because he had been killed long ago... in a MetaphoricallyTrue way.]]
* DefiantToTheEnd: When the Fisher King sees the incoming flood that's about to crush him, he stands and roars at it until it crushes him.
* EvilIsBigger: He's an imposing alien warlord that stands at about 8 feet tall.
* EvilPlan: The Fisher King's plan was to use the hijacked souls of the dead to transmit a message to his people so they would come and invade Earth.
* FakingTheDead: It was believed that he had been killed by the Arcateenians when they liberated Tivoli from his tyrannical rule. However when his body was transported to Earth to be buried, it turns out he was still alive and was using the opportunity to set another invasion plot in motion.
* FisherKing: It's in the name. He intended to summon his armada so they would drain the planet of its oceans and subjugate humanity. According to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQcTZKytA28 this]] behind-the-scenes featurette, the Fisher King originally hails from an arid, desert-like place, which helps explain the meaning behind his name.
* {{Necromancer}}: He possesses technology to restore the souls of the recently deceased as ghosts and enslave them to his will.
* SpikesOfVillainy: His armour and body have several curved spikes on them.
* SufficientlyAdvancedAliens: His race may not be Time Lords, but they have the technology to [[SoulPower manipulate souls]], something even the Doctor thought was impossible.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Bonnie the Zygon]]
!!Bonnie the Zygon (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bonnie_5.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/JennaColeman and Ingrid Oliver (2015)

-->"It's not fair!"

A radical Zygon who, unhappy with the treaty between Zygons and UNIT, seeks to start a war so that Zygons will have the "right" to exist as "themselves". As the commander of the rebels she infiltrates and undermines UNIT by kidnapping Clara and assuming her appearance.
----
* ArcVillain: Of [[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E7TheZygonInvasion "The Zygon Invasion"]]/[[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E8TheZygonInversion "The Zygon Inversion"]].
* TheAtoner: [[spoiler:She becomes the new second Osgood to make amends for disrupting the peace between humans and Zygons.]]
* DidntThinkThisThrough: As Twelve points out, she didn't put a lot of thought into her "revolution".
* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: She has a lot of analogies in her characterisation to ISIS.
* EasilyForgiven: Twelve forgives her for all the mayhem she causes. Having been responsible for '''far, far worse''' atrocities as the War Doctor in the Last Great Time War, he understands her way of thinking. (Not for nothing do the Osgood Boxes resemble the Moment.) This is an invoked trope, as he deliberately forgave her to break the cycle of vengeance.
* FluffyTheTerrible: Yes, the leader of a Zygon uprising is named... Bonnie!
* HairTriggerTemper: Is quick to anger when something does not go her way.
* HeelFaceTurn: At the end, though she takes a lot of convincing from Twelve to get there.
* {{Hypocrite}}: She despises humans for making Zygons hide their true form, but she spends her entire arc disguised as Clara even in the presence of other Zygons. Not to mention, she has a human name!
* IDidWhatIHadToDo: Claims this, though the Doctor isn't taking it.
* ItsAllAboutMe: She says at one point that all Zygons who do not share her views should not be allowed to have that option.
* IveComeTooFar: She believes she's come too far to repent -- until Twelve convinces her otherwise.
* KarmaHoudini: Despite being responsible for the deaths of a lot of Zygons and UNIT personnel, she receives no punishment.
* LivingLieDetector: The mental link with Clara syncs their heartbeats which in turn allows her to know when Clara is lying to her.
* PsychopathicManchild: Twelve calls her a tantrum-throwing child who doesn't know what she wants; indeed, she [[TantrumThrowing throws a lot of actual tantrums]] when things don't go her way in "The Zygon Inversion".
* TheReveal: It's only in the final minutes of "The Zygon Invasion" that the audience and other characters even learn of her existence, as she has been ''most'' convincingly impersonating Clara for the bulk of the episode!
* TomTheDarkLord: The leader of the rebel Zygons who wants freedom for her species at any price has the very human name "Bonnie".
* VillainousBreakdown: She loses it when she finds out the Osgoods and later the Doctor have tricked her with regards to the Osgood Boxes.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Veil]]
!!The Veil (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2017_07_01_at_154452.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Jamie Reid-Quarrell (2015)

A cloaked and hooded figure, the Veil is a representation of the Doctor's deepest, most intimate fears. Based on a childhood memory the Doctor had of a dead Gallifreyan woman, who died on a hot day and despite being covered by a veil began to attract flies before she could be buried. This unstoppable figure hunts the Doctor relentlessly through the clockwork castle he finds himself trapped in during the events of [[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E11HeavenSent "Heaven Sent"]], and it has only one purpose: to kill the Doctor. It was created by the Time Lords to scare the Doctor into revealing the truth about a creature called "the Hybrid." However, other truths can be used to stall it, like when the Doctor tells it that he ran from Gallifrey because he was scared.
----
* AnthropomorphicPersonification: It has been interpreted to represent several things, but it most pressingly embodies the concept of death and the Doctor's immense grief over Clara's death. WordOfGod states that it is the nightmares from the Doctor's mind given physical form.
* BedsheetGhost: The Veil resembles one due to wearing veils, as it's based on the Doctor's memories of a veiled corpse he saw while young.
* ClockworkCreature: It turns out to be this, matching with the rest of the castle's nature.
* CriticalExistenceFailure: [[spoiler:When the Doctor does the impossible by escaping the confessional dial, the Veil crumbles into a pile of cogs and gears.]]
* TheGrimReaper: Thematically, the Veil ''is'' Death itself.
* HellIsThatNoise: Its thumping footsteps are a constant reminder of its presence, but the sound of buzzing flies serves as a sign that it is very close.
* InTheHood: The Veil wears a dusty robe that conceals virtually its entire body, including its face -- the key visible parts of it teased in the trailers are its grey, mottled, clawed hands. It bears a strong resemblance to the Grim Reaper. It's inspired by a bad memory from the Doctor's childhood of seeing a dead, veiled woman surrounded by flies, and is effectively an embodiment of his fear of death.
* OminousWalk: The Veil constantly walks at the same pace towards the Doctor. It has a limp, meaning every step is a thump.
* RoboticReveal: When the Doctor finally breaches the wall, the Veil is revealed to be a clockwork, falling into a pile of gears.
* TheSpeechless: It never says a word.
* SuperPersistentPredator: Like Death himself, it's slow, predictable and can even be paused for brief moments, but it will ''always'' catch up to its victim in the end.
* ThresholdGuardian: The Veil serves as the Doctor's opponent in the Belly of the Whale. It is something he must overcome to reach the outside world.
* TimeStandsStill: The Doctor confessing a sufficiently juicy secret causes it and even the flies buzzing around it to completely freeze momentarily.
* TouchOfDeath: If it touches you, you ''will'' die, [[CruelAndUnusualDeath but not immediately]].
* WeHaveWaysOfMakingYouTalk: The Veil is the [[spoiler:Time Lords']] personal interrogator for the Doctor, designed from his very nightmares to scare the living ''shit'' out of him until he spills the beans about the Hybrid prophecy and any other useful confessions. The Doctor is shocked at how effective it is at terrifying him, though its primary weapon is its [[SuperPersistentPredator unwavering persistence]].
* WhyWontYouDie: {{Averted}} as the Veil is seemingly not sentient, simply doing what it's programmed to do. However, over several billion years, it fatally wounds the Doctor countless times only for him to summon a fresh copy of himself from the teleporter to start the cycle over again.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:King Hydroflax]]
!!King Hydroflax (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/6f113e2a_993a_4c7e_9998_5d46a125ce27.jpeg]]
->'''Played by:''' Greg Davies (2015)
->'''Suit voiced by:''' Nonso Anozie (2015)

A ruthless intergalactic tyrant who holds dominion over several races and planets. He has a fearsome reputation and an intimidating visage thanks to a giant suit of armour, but his actual biomass is his disembodied head, and his armour has a mind of its own. River Song seduced him into marrying her as part of a ruse to extract a precious diamond that was driven into his skull during a raid on the Halassi Vaults.
----
* AmbiguousRobots: The armour is quite clearly robotic, but the TARDIS's Real Time Envelope protocols classify it as Hydroflax's body, implying that there is organic stuff in there somehow. The TARDIS cannot take off if a person is simultaneously inside (Hydroflax's head) and outside (the armour) the console room, which prevents the possibility of a nasty and impolite PortalCut.
* AnimatedArmor: His armour has a mind and voice of its own, but in contrast to Hydroflax's highly emotional head, it operates on cold, robotic logic.
* BadSanta: In grand Christmas special tradition, Hydroflax's design bears a twisted resemblance to Santa. Except instead of a fat, jolly old man in red, [[{{Dissimile}} it's a monstrous old tyrant's head on an oversized red]] PoweredArmor.
* CutHisHeartOutWithASpoon: Seems to be one of his favourite kinds of death threat, the other being variations of "CRUSH! KILL! DESTROY!"
* EvenEvilHasStandards: {{Subverted}}. He claims that he doesn't endanger his subjects for no reason, but threatens to destroy an entire star system with the stabilised black hole in his armour, on the grounds that he's cross.
* EvilIsHammy: Holy crap, yes. Greg Davies has a blast in the role. Even the design of his suit is hammy and extravagant, resembling something out of a Franchise/SuperSentai show.
* IAmAHumanitarian: He is said to devour his defeated enemies in battle, which presumably includes the human colonists of Mendorax Dellora.
* LaughablyEvil: Hydroflax himself is so ridiculous that neither the Doctor or River can take him seriously (he is played by Greg Davies, after all). When allowed to act autonomously, his armour manages to be quite a bit more menacing.
* LivingMacGuffin: The precious diamond lodged in his skull.
* LosingYourHead: The reveal that Hydroflax is little more than a living, disembodied head on top of a giant robot lessens his intimidating reputation quite substantially. River and the Doctor stealing his head (and the diamond lodged within it) causes Hydroflax's armour to chase after them with a vengeance.
* OffWithHisHead: In the absence of Hydroflax's head, the PoweredArmor takes other people's heads as temporary replacements. Nardole and Ramone become its victims, and it threatens to do the same to the Doctor and the treacherous passengers of the ''Harmony and Redemption''.
** Fortunately, Nardole's head was extracted and his body rebuilt, but [[WhateverHappenedToTheMouse it's unknown what became of Ramone]]. He may have been freed as well, or he remained in control of the armour and continued working as a waiter at the restaurant on Darillium. A semi-official fan story submitted for the ''Doctor Who: Lockdown!'' event speculates that [[CanonWelding Ramone's body became the founding member of the]] [[Characters/DoctorWhoTheSilence Order of the Headless]], rallying Hydroflax's Warrior Monks to his side.
* PoweredArmor: His armour is several times larger than humans, extremely powerful, and capable of self-propelled flight.
* TinTyrant: Hydroflax is a quintessential EvilOverlord who flies into battle wearing a giant suit of armour.
* UnholyMatrimony: The Doctor is disturbed to find that River married a monster like him, even if it was all a ploy, especially since she is supposed to be the Doctor's (and Ramone's) wife as well. River insists she married the ''diamond'', not Hydroflax.
* WarriorMonk: Employs a group of Warrior Monks who wield [[EmpathicWeapon sentient]] [[LaserSword laser swords]] and are genetically engineered to have anger issues as his personal bodyguards.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Because nobody actually arrived to perform surgery to remove the diamond from Hydroflax's head, combined with the fact that the head was being tossed around in a burlap bag for several minutes, the diamond caused irreparably fatal damage. When the armour discovers this, it declares this trope and performs a MercyKill on Hydroflax. It updates its mission parameters to instead take any suitable head as a host.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Lord Sutcliffe]]
!!Lord Sutcliffe (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lord_sutcliffe.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Nicholas Burns (2017)

A wealthy noble and businessman of the Regency era who plans to use the tourist-attracting Frost Fair to feed attendants to a massive serpent located beneath the ice of the Thames to sell it's excrements as fuel.
----
* AristocratsAreEvil: An incredibly unpleasant nobleman who embodies the absolute worst impulses of his social class.
* BlueIsHeroic: {{Inverted}}. He wears a bright blue jacket but is completely reprehensible.
* CardCarryingVillain: Sutcliffe embodies this trope so much the only thing missing is a classic mustache twirl.
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: He profits off feeding people to a serpent and has no moral qualms with doing so.
* DeadHatShot: His hat flies off him as he's pulled under by the serpent-fish himself.
* HateSink: Sutcliffe is a [[PoliticallyIncorrectVillain racist, sexist]], and [[{{Greed}} greedy]] slimeball who has people (including kids) fed to a sea monster so then he can profit off their remains. There is nothing remotely likable about him.
* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: Despite the Doctor and Bill's original belief that Sutcliffe is an alien, he turns out to be completely human; the giant serpent in the Thames is his prisoner and not openly malicious, just an animal eating the food that comes its way.
* KarmicDeath: Devoured by the creature he's been feeding people to.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: The very first thing he does is start racially abusing Bill the instant he sees her.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Landlord and The Wooden Lady]]
!!John and Eliza (Twelfth Doctor)
->'''Played by:''' Creator/DavidSuchet and Mariah Gale (2017)

While looking for student accommodation, Bill and her uni friends find a great offer for a large, luxurious property and decide to move in together. Of course, the offer is too good to be true, and the creepy Landlord appears to be responsible for the house's long history of vanishing tenants. Hidden and isolated in the tower attic of the house is the mysterious Wooden Lady, whose existence is kept secret from everyone but the Landlord.
----
* ArmorPiercingQuestion: The Landlord asks the Doctor if he would go to similar length to save the life of someone he loved. The Doctor has no answer, which the Landlord takes as confirmation. Of course, the Doctor had almost went to ''[[BatmanGrabsAGun much]]'' [[ApocalypseHow worse]] [[UnwantedRescue lengths]] to save Clara only one series (and a handful of Christmas specials) prior.
** Cut dialogue from "Knock Knock" would have made the parallels to the aforementioned events of "Hell Bent" more explicit, with the Doctor instead admitting that he would torch the universe to a cinder to save a loved one and only hope that someone would be able to stop him.
* DrivenToSuicide: The Doctor helps Eliza to realise that she has been kept alive by the Landlord, but in isolating her completely from the outside world, she hasn't been allowed to truly ''live''. [[spoiler:The fact that her son transformed into a dangerous serial killer to preserve her life makes the situation all the more unbearable, so she embraces John one last time before allowing the Dryads to disintegrate them.]]
* EvilOldFolks: From the offset, the Landlord an undeniably creepy and suspicious character, and while his motivations are revealed to be sympathetic, he has become too bitter and callous to care about the consequences of his actions.
* FamilyRelationshipSwitcheroo: Initially, we are led to believe that the Wooden Lady is the Landlord's daughter, [[spoiler:but the opposite is true; Eliza is John's mother. He naturally aged into an old man while she was steadily transformed by the Dryads into an immortal wooden creature. As her memory deteriorated, he lied about his true relationship to her to keep her docile]].
* GenreRefugee: The Landlord would be quite at home in a pulpy GothicHorror short story set in a dark old mansion on a hill. People in such stories don't tend to question the weird anachronisms, but the Doctor is GenreSavvy enough to catch the Landlord out with questions about the modern world that he doesn't know the answers to.
* LoadBearingBoss: [[spoiler:When Eliza dies, the Dryads dissipate and the house collapses.]]
* MoodSwinger: He swings from calm and polite when first interacting with the students, to sharp and authoritative when ordering Harry to stay away from the tower. More disturbingly, he regresses to a mewling, childlike personality when in the presence of his [[spoiler:mother]].
* NoNameGiven: Narrowly {{Averted}}, but the Landlord's given name of John is only revealed in an almost inaudible line of dialogue from Eliza that we only see in subtitles. Their surname goes unrevealed, though.
* PlantPerson: Eliza has slowly transformed into a bark-skinned creature after many years of unwittingly feeding on the house's unfortunate tenants.
* PsychopathicManchild: Deep down, the Landlord is a little boy who refused to grow up and spent his entire adult life protecting his terminally-ill mother with the help of the Dryads. When the Doctor and Bill reveal the horrible truth to Eliza and help her find peace, but [[VillainousBreakdown John orders the Dryads to kill them both out of spite]]. Eliza thankfully overrides the bugs to instead [[HeroicSacrifice disintegrate both John]] [[DrivenToSuicide and herself]].
* TrappedInThePast: The Landlord has distinctly old-fashioned mannerisms and seems to be completely out of touch with the modern world beyond the walls of his old house. When the Doctor playfully interrogates him, John can't name the current prime minister.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Queen Iraxxa]]
!!Queen Iraxxa (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/iraxxa_empress_of_mars.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Adele Lynch (2017)

The ruling matriarch over the Ice Warrior colonies hibernating beneath Mars' North Pole, she and her troops are awakened after her sentinel, "Friday", returns to the planet with a group of Victorian soldiers sent to search for her tomb with the promise of gold and riches.
----
* AntiVillain: She only antagonises the heroes to protect her own people.
* FoldSpindleMutilation: Her armour, as well as those of her troops, are equipped with laser cannons that cause the victim's body to contort around itself.
* GodSaveUsFromTheQueen: Subverted: She is menacing and not above killing her enemies, but has the same sense of honour and duty as any other Ice Warrior. Moreover, she is trying to protect her people from hostile Earthlings. In the end, the message left on the surface of Mars really refers to her rather than Queen Victoria!
* HonourBeforeReason: One of the reasons she is so quick to want to kill the humans is because they made one of her warriors their servant, even declaring "Ice Warriors do not serve". This is despite the fact that, as Friday points out, it was a necessary arrangement to free her, and overall he himself doesn't seem to care.
** However, it's her honourable nature that ultimately makes her spare the commanding officer, previously disgraced for cowardice, after he offers his own life in exchange for the lives of his men.
* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Girl, in her case. It works both negatively and positively.
* TheSmurfettePrinciple: She's the first female Ice Warrior ever shown on screen in ''fifty years''. About time, huh? And what better way to commemorate the anniversary of their debut by finally reintroducing them in the form of the fairer sex?
[[/folder]]

!Thirteenth Doctor era debut
[[folder:Tzim-Sha]]
!!Tzim-Sha (Thirteenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_12_10_at_221403.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Samuel Oatley

A hunter from a race called the Stenza, who comes to Earth hunting a specific trophy to make himself the next leader of his people.
----
* BattleTrophy: He takes a tooth from every person that he kills and implants it in his face.
* BigBad: He ultimately serves as the main threat of the Series 11 opener and closer, as his actions, mostly [[spoiler:his part in Grace's death]], provide the overall arc.
* DirtyCoward: A Stenza seeking leadership must make the hunt with no assistance or tools. He uses both. The Doctor even calls him out on it.
* EnclosedExtraterrestrials: Downplayed. His species, the Stenza, have a naturally lower body temperature than humans, and it's implied his armour was designed to help him cope with the temperature of earth and planets with similar climates. However, unlike most examples of this trope, he can expose his face and hands without any ill effect.
* FacialHorror: His face is covered with the teeth of people he's killed.
* AGodAmI: After millennia of [[GodGuise pretending to be the Ux's "Creator"]], the power at his disposal caused him to believe he really ''was'' a god, at least functionally.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: The Doctor tricks him into absorbing the DNA bombs he'd had his data coil implant in the Doctor and her friends. The data coil he was using to cheat on his ritual hunt. It's likely that had he not used the coil, he wouldn't have been caught at all.
* AnIcePerson: The Stenza are a low-temperature species, and he can freeze humans to death with his touch.
* LaserGuidedKarma: Those he takes alive he puts in stasis pods, preserved in a state of something between life and death, [[AndIMustScream and well-aware of their fate as trophies]]. [[spoiler: This is ultimately his own fate]].
* MaliciousMisnaming: The Doctor mishears his name as "Tim Shaw" and continues calling him as such for the rest of the episode. Even ''the credits'' refer to him as such, and he's called such by the group in later episodes.
* StarterVillain: The first enemy of the Thirteenth Doctor.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Krasko]]
!!Krasko (Thirteenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_10_22_at_095106.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Josh Bowman

A racist time criminal and mass murderer who was imprisoned in Stormcage.
----
* BadassNormal: A thug with a clever brain and dangerous technology makes for a very bad combination.
* FlatCharacter: He exists to push the plot because he's racist and that's it. No FreudianExcuse, no sympathetic backstory, just a thug with access to time travel and a racist agenda. Justified as the true villain of his episode were racism and bigotry, he's just another mouthpiece for it.
* GreaserDelinquents: He dresses like one and sabotages cars in the story. He's also a white supremacist who hates non-whites and possibly non-humans.
* HateSink: Really has to be one of the most despicable villains in all of ''Doctor Who''. He's not a megalomaniac with delusions of grandeur like the Master or Davros, or genetically modified like the Cybermen or Daleks. He's just a thug who hates anybody who isn't white and decides to meddle in the events of history to undo any progress any people of colour make towards equality.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: He's a white supremacist from the 79th century, who gets sent into the distant past with his own time-displacement weapon by Ryan, a black man from the 21st century, which would be the past to Krasko.
* ManipulativeBastard: His whole shtick since he can't kill anybody, just manipulate time in subtle ways to get what he wants -- in this case, make sure Rosa Parks never inspires the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
* NoodleIncident:
** He was imprisoned in Stormcage for an incident which killed 2,000 people.
** It's never explained how he knows what a TARDIS is, but it's implied it may have something to do with the time machine black market.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: He's a racist who's trying to prevent non-white people from gaining equality.
* RestrainingBolt: Before he was released from Stormcage he was fitted with one to stop him from hurting anybody. This doesn't make him any less dangerous.
* RippedFromTheHeadlines: It's no coincidence that his episode coincides with a global uptake in public bigotry and hate crimes.
* SmugSnake: Even when he realizes a Time Lord is on his trail, figures out his EvilPlan and wipes out most of his equipment he still acts like a cocky thug convinced he can still win, even as Ryan sends him into the distant past with his own weapon.
* TattooedCrook: He has a tattoo on his left wrist identifying him as a former Stormcage inmate.
* TrappedInThePast: First, the Doctor destroys his vortex manipulator while he's in 1955. Then Ryan zaps him even farther into the past with his own temporal displacement weapon.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Jack Robertson]]
!!Jack Robertson (Thirteenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_12_10_at_221200.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Creator/ChrisNoth

A sketchy real estate mogul with a chain of resorts and eyes on a presidential bid.
----
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: In "Arachnids in the UK", he's a shady businessman who hides a landfill under a luxury hotel. "Revolution of the Daleks" further cements this by showing him to be a tax dodger in cahoots with a CorruptPolitician.
* {{Flanderization}}: He was somewhat comical and stereotypical in his debut, but his second appearance exaggerates his "slimy right-wing politician" persona even more, to the point that he can barely go a few sentences without talking about money or his political ambitions.
* GenreRefugee: Robertson is a recurring human villain in a sci fi show where other members of the RoguesGallery are aliens. He doesn't even know what the TARDIS is, and is just a CorruptCorporateExecutive that is better fitted in a show with political intrigue.
* GenreSavvy: He's greedy, corrupt and short-sighted, but even he realizes that cloning an unknown alien creature is a horrible mistake.
* HateSink: He's a BadBoss and DirtyCoward who will happily throw even people loyal to him under the bus to save himself, and is ultimately responsible for all of the deaths related to the spiders because his shady business practices created them in the first place.
* KarmaHoudini: Both of the episodes he appears in end with him facing no on-screen consequences for his actions or role in the events (though the start of "Revolution of the Daleks" does claim that the toxic waste dump scandal from "Arachnids in the UK" soured his first attempt at becoming U.S. president). However at the end of "Revolution", it is implied he might try again.
* NeverMyFault: The very epitome of a blame-foisting politician.
* NotSoHarmlessVillain: For most of the two episodes he appears in, he is presented as a comic relief villain, but this guy shoots a spider creature with no remorse, and ''sides with the Daleks''. This guy can switch from LargeHam to cold schemer in moments, and he is one person who repeatedly says that he doesn't answer the Doctor.
* TheQuisling: He has no problem working with a Dalek death squad, or selling out the rest of the human race and the Doctor to get them on his side.
* {{Trumplica}}: One big poke at [[UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump President Trump]]. Though funnily enough, he [[ExpyCoexistence hates the guy]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Daniel Barton]]
!!Daniel Barton (Thirteenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:309:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ezgif_7_9e7ec9eeb661.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Sir Creator/LennyHenry

A powerful tech mogul who heads the MegaCorp VOR, and is in league with two powerful allies for unknown purposes. He was previously an [=MI6=] agent.
----
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: Heads a powerful technology company that's sucking up everyone's data as part of his plan to take over the world.
* DoubleAgent: Used to work for [=MI6=] before he stopped cooperating with them, and the agency's head suspects he's turned double agent. He has, now working with [[spoiler:the Master]].
* KarmaHoudini: [[spoiler:Escapes and phones for an extraction team after the doctor wrecks his plans.]]
* ProfessorGuineaPig: His DNA reads as only 93% human. [[spoiler:He wants to rule the world by turning the majority of humanity into [[WetwareCPU living hard drives]], and he had the Kasaavin rewrite part of his DNA as a proof of concept.]]
* RagsToRiches: Grew up living on a council estate before he became rich and powerful.
* SelfMadeMan: Seems to have cultivated his wealth himself.
* SelfMadeOrphan: [[spoiler:He has his mother, whom he has a strained relationship with, killed by the Kasaavin via lethal rewriting of her DNA.]]
* TakeOverTheWorld: His goal.
* VillainExitStageLeft: [[spoiler:Is last seen in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS38E1E2Spyfall "Spyfall"]] fleeing his tech demo phoning for an extraction team due to the Doctor thwarting everyone's plans.]]
* WellDoneSonGuy: [[spoiler:He has a very strained relationship with his mother, who is not impressed by his wealth and power at all. When he asks her what it's going to take to get her to say "Well done", she says the phrase ''very'' sarcastically.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:The Grand Serpent]]
!!The Grand Serpent (Thirteenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/images_19_064.jpeg]]
->'''Played by:''' Craig Parkinson

A scheming, paranoid intergalactic dictator whom Vinder once served under. He later interferes in Earth's history under the pseudonym of Prentis.
----
* AmbiguousSituation: The Grand Serpent appears at various points in UNIT's history from 1958 to 2021, always looking the same, but since he obviously has access to time travel it's unclear whether he really is TheAgeless, or is simply skipping around the timeline to the pivotal moments he requires for his scheme.
* ArchEnemy: For being the only person in UNIT to successfully defy him, Kate Stewart has earned a special enmity from him, to the point that he wanted to personally hunt her down.
* BigBadWannabe: He's one of the major antagonists of ''Flux'', orchestrating the Sontaran conquest of Earth while planning to backstab his allies to assume total control. However, his petty vendetta against Kate Stewart sidetracks him from accomplishing this goal, and the Sontarans remain dismissive of his contributions before ultimately abandoning him to be destroyed by the Flux.
* CorruptPolitician: Back when Vinder was working for him, he had arranged for the deaths of relatives of a political opponent as part of a deal.
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: The fate inflicted on his victims with his psychic worm parasite is gruesome even by this show's standards, as it spawns inside their bodies before burrowing its way out through their mouth, causing them to die in agony. It doesn't help that the worm creature itself looks hideous.
* HateSink: While we don't know much about him, the Grand Serpent manages to be one of the pettiest, most despicable megalomaniacs that the show has featured in quite some time. He takes advantage of the chaos and confusion caused by the Flux wave to make a deal with the Sontarans, whose victory he ensures by interfering with the history of UNIT via time travel, cold-bloodedly murdering every poor soul who opposes him along the way. His smarmy, accusatory personality hardly wins him any favours in the charm department, either.
* TheManBehindTheMan: [[spoiler:He travels throughout Earth's past to influence the creation of UNIT, becoming an elusive yet high-ranking figurehead in the process. Creating UNIT turns out to be part of an elaborate scheme to lower Earth's defences at the right moment during the Sontaran invasion going on in the present.]]
* MysteriousPast: Very little is known about him yet.
* TheParanoiac: His EstablishingCharacterMoment sees Vinder casually voice his agreement to some innocuous statement the Grand Serpent makes, only for the Grand Serpent to immediately begin accusing Vinder of wanting to usurp him. He's incredibly insecure about the possibility of losing his position of power, which ironically leads to his eventual removal from office.
[[/folder]]

!Fourteenth Doctor era debut
[[folder:The Most High '''(SPOILERS)''']]
!!The Meep (Fourteenth Doctor)
->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/MiriamMargolyes

A Meep, a furry creature that was hunted by the Wrarth Warriors, which leads to a meeting with the newly-regenerated Fourteenth Doctor.
----
* AdaptationNameChange: Outside of declaring itself "the Beep of all the Meeps" at one point, the Meep is never referred to as "Beep" or "Beep the Meep" in ''[[Recap/DoctorWho60thASTheStarBeast The Star Beast]]''. Interestingly enough, this seems to be the case in the Meep's debut comic. Beyond the "Beep of all the Meeps" title, which was also in the original comic, the name Beep the Meep seems to have come from later appearances.
* AtrociousAlias: One assumes "the Beep of all the Meeps" is a more intimidating title on Meepkind's home planet. [[AllThereInTheManual The episode's novelisation]] reveals that the name originally meant "Glorious leader whose job is to be most perfectly round, like planets, moon, suns, pseudanthium and cake.", though by the time the Meeps began the Meep's conquests, it had come to mean "vicious warlord".
* AxCrazy: All Meeps are utterly violent and insane, and this one is no exception. The Meep's plan is to get off Earth via a dagger drive, which will turn London into a molten crater. The Doctor even points out and ''offers'' to build the Meep a more humane form of getting off planet, but is rebuffed, because the Meep wants to kill people.
-->'''The Meep:''' No stun guns for me! Just '''''die!'''''
* BitchInSheepsClothing: On first sighting, the Meep tells Rose a story about being a fugitive from hunters after Meepkind for their adorably soft fur. The Doctor soon notices some anomalies in the story, such as how the "hunters"s guns aren't actually hurting anyone; the Meep is a fugitive running from the police for the Meep's many, ''many'' crimes. Of course, to anyone familiar with Beep from the ''Doctor Who Magazine'' stories, this isn't much of a surprise.
* TheCaligula: Was the tyrannical ruler of Meepkind before they all killed each other.
* CanonImmigrant: From the pages of ''Magazine/DoctorWhoMagazine'' to the silver screen for ''Doctor Who'''s 60th anniversary.
* CuteIsEvil: The Meep is a ''very'' adorable looking creature... but, again, psychopathically evil.
* HisNameReallyIsBarkeep: Only referred to as "The Meep" onscreen.
* ImAHumanitarian: Gratitude to the Doctor and the Nobles for trying to help what they thought was an innocent fuzzball? None. The Most High has them brought along as potential snacks.
* LargeHam: Once the Meep's true colors are revealed, "over the top" doesn't even begin to cover the unabashed evil this psychotic little Meep marinates every second of the first special with. Only, ''maybe'', Mrs. Gillyflower comes closest in terms of [[CardCarryingVillain Card Carrying Villainy]]. And sure enough, the one thing they both have in common is that they are both weapons-grade levels of crazy.
* LastOfTheirKind: All the other Meeps were killed for their evil and insanity, not that the Meep gives a damn.
* LongerThanLifeSentence: On being caught, the Meep is sentenced to a ten thousand year stretch in prison. That said, it isn't clear if the Meep is LongLived or not.
* ObfuscatingStupidity: The Meep initially put on a childlike act complete with BabyTalk that suits the Meep's appearance. Once the Meep drops the act the Meep speaks far more eloquently and sinister.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: Mocks Donna and Rose as a "stupid woman and her weird child" after dropping the Meep's act.
* PrecisionFStrike: Them cursing in anger is the first thing the Meep does after getting found out.
-->'''The Meep''': Oh, to hell with this!
* PronounTrouble: The Doctor is brought up when Rose Noble calls him on assuming the Meep (voiced by Miriam Margolyes) is necessarily he or she. The Meep's preferred pronoun is "The".
* SpellMyNameWithAThe: The Meep's preferred pronoun is "the" meaning the Meep's literal name is "the Meep".
* TomTheDarkLord: A vicious tyrant named... the Meep.
* VaguenessIsComing: Before being taken off for trial, the Meep assures the Doctor the Meep have a boss, who'll be ''interested'' to hear about him. At this point, he's more irritated than anything.
* VerbalTic: "Meep Meep." The Meep keeps this up even after the Meep drops the cutesy act.

[[/folder]]
[[folder:The One Who Waits]]
!!The One Who Waits (Fourteenth and Fifteenth Doctor)
A mysterious as of yet seen figure who's been mentioned to the Doctor.
* TheDreaded: The Toymaker who spent the better part of "The Giggle" bragging about his victories over powerful opponents such as The Master, and bending reality to his will plunging earth into chaos, says he absolutely fears The One Who Waits.
* TheGhost: Mentioned first by the Meep and then by the Toymaker.
[[/folder]]
----
[[/folder]]
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The One Who Waits (Fourteenth and Fifteenth Doctor)

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The !!The One Who Waits (Fourteenth and Fifteenth Doctor)
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[[folder:The One Who Waits]]
The One Who Waits (Fourteenth and Fifteenth Doctor)
A mysterious as of yet seen figure who's been mentioned to the Doctor.
* TheDreaded: The Toymaker who spent the better part of "The Giggle" bragging about his victories over powerful opponents such as The Master, and bending reality to his will plunging earth into chaos, says he absolutely fears The One Who Waits.
* TheGhost: Mentioned first by the Meep and then by the Toymaker.
[[/folder]]

Added: 131

Changed: 3342

Removed: 2001

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page is too large, kicking the Giant Monk back to Doctor Who Aliens And Monsters as many of his tropes overlap with the other Monks.


[[folder:The Giant Monk]]
!!The Giant Monk (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/giant_monk_on_his_throne.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Jamie Hill (2017)

The leader of the Monks' invasion of Earth and mind behind the machine. The Giant Monk is tasked with rewriting the history of invaded planets and provides the main link between the consenting victim and the hapless population.

to:

[[folder:The Giant Monk]]
!!The Giant Monk
[[folder:Queen Iraxxa]]
!!Queen Iraxxa
(Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/giant_monk_on_his_throne.org/pmwiki/pub/images/iraxxa_empress_of_mars.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Jamie Hill Adele Lynch (2017)

The leader of ruling matriarch over the Monks' invasion of Earth Ice Warrior colonies hibernating beneath Mars' North Pole, she and mind behind her troops are awakened after her sentinel, "Friday", returns to the machine. The Giant Monk is tasked planet with rewriting a group of Victorian soldiers sent to search for her tomb with the history promise of invaded planets gold and provides the main link between the consenting victim and the hapless population.riches.



* ArcVillain: As the Monks' leader and main villain of the Monks trilogy even though he only appears in the last episode.
* BattleInTheCentreOfTheMind: In order to free humanity from the Monks, the Doctor tries to hijack the signal being sent by him to rewrite history. Though he's successful at first, the Giant Monk fights back and overpowers him. Then Bill has a go at it. Though the Monk starts rewriting her memories, he's unable to rewrite a memory of her mother which Bill made up on her own. Seeing this, the Doctor has her think of nothing but that fake memory, [[PhlebotinumOverload which overpowers the Monk and frees everyone]].
* EvilOldFolks: Considering that all Monks have the appearance of withered corpses, the Giant Monk looks especially decrepit and skeletal.
* EvilWearsBlack: Unlike the other Monks, he is dressed in black.
* FacialHorror: While the other Monks are certainly no lookers, the Giant Monk stands out for being particularly decayed. On top of that, his exposed skull has a protruding snout similar to a horse.
* MassHypnosis: The main source of the brainwashing of humanity all across the world.
* NonActionBigBad: The Giant Monk didn't even appear in the previous two episodes, giving the effect that the Monks had no leader at all. He is immobilized in the propaganda machine and doesn't even seem to notice the Doctor's party. Even when they're directly interfering with him, the best he can seem to do is fight back mentally.
* NonIndicativeName: He's no larger than any other Monk. His name presumably indicates his high rank.
* OminousMultipleScreens: His throne room has many triangular screens set in its walls which show all the changed history he is broadcasting.

to:

* ArcVillain: As AntiVillain: She only antagonises the Monks' leader heroes to protect her own people.
* FoldSpindleMutilation: Her armour, as well as those of her troops, are equipped with laser cannons that cause the victim's body to contort around itself.
* GodSaveUsFromTheQueen: Subverted: She is menacing
and main villain not above killing her enemies, but has the same sense of honour and duty as any other Ice Warrior. Moreover, she is trying to protect her people from hostile Earthlings. In the end, the message left on the surface of Mars really refers to her rather than Queen Victoria!
* HonourBeforeReason: One
of the Monks trilogy reasons she is so quick to want to kill the humans is because they made one of her warriors their servant, even though he only appears in declaring "Ice Warriors do not serve". This is despite the last episode.
* BattleInTheCentreOfTheMind: In order
fact that, as Friday points out, it was a necessary arrangement to free humanity from the Monks, the Doctor tries to hijack the signal being sent by him to rewrite history. Though he's successful at first, the Giant Monk fights back her, and overpowers him. Then Bill has a go at it. Though the Monk starts rewriting her memories, he's unable to rewrite a memory of her mother which Bill made up on her own. Seeing this, the Doctor has her think of nothing but that fake memory, [[PhlebotinumOverload which overpowers the Monk and frees everyone]].
* EvilOldFolks: Considering that all Monks have the appearance of withered corpses, the Giant Monk looks especially decrepit and skeletal.
* EvilWearsBlack: Unlike the other Monks,
overall he is dressed in black.
* FacialHorror: While the other Monks are certainly no lookers, the Giant Monk stands out for being particularly decayed. On top of that, his exposed skull has a protruding snout similar to a horse.
* MassHypnosis: The main source of the brainwashing of humanity all across the world.
* NonActionBigBad: The Giant Monk didn't even appear in the previous two episodes, giving the effect that the Monks had no leader at all. He is immobilized in the propaganda machine and
himself doesn't even seem to notice care.
** However, it's her honourable nature that ultimately makes her spare
the Doctor's party. Even when they're directly interfering with him, commanding officer, previously disgraced for cowardice, after he offers his own life in exchange for the best he can seem to do is fight back mentally.
* NonIndicativeName: He's no larger than any other Monk. His name presumably indicates
lives of his high rank.
men.
* OminousMultipleScreens: His throne room has many triangular screens set ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Girl, in its walls which show all her case. It works both negatively and positively.
* TheSmurfettePrinciple: She's
the changed history he is broadcasting.first female Ice Warrior ever shown on screen in ''fifty years''. About time, huh? And what better way to commemorate the anniversary of their debut by finally reintroducing them in the form of the fairer sex?



[[folder:Queen Iraxxa]]
!!Queen Iraxxa (Twelfth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/iraxxa_empress_of_mars.jpg]]
->'''Played by:''' Adele Lynch (2017)

The ruling matriarch over the Ice Warrior colonies hibernating beneath Mars' North Pole, she and her troops are awakened after her sentinel, "Friday", returns to the planet with a group of Victorian soldiers sent to search for her tomb with the promise of gold and riches.

to:

[[folder:Queen Iraxxa]]
!!Queen Iraxxa (Twelfth
!Thirteenth Doctor era debut
[[folder:Tzim-Sha]]
!!Tzim-Sha (Thirteenth
Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/iraxxa_empress_of_mars.jpg]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_12_10_at_221403.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Adele Lynch (2017)

The ruling matriarch over
Samuel Oatley

A hunter from a race called
the Ice Warrior colonies hibernating beneath Mars' North Pole, she and her troops are awakened after her sentinel, "Friday", returns Stenza, who comes to Earth hunting a specific trophy to make himself the planet with a group next leader of Victorian soldiers sent to search for her tomb with the promise of gold and riches.his people.



* AntiVillain: She only antagonises the heroes to protect her own people.
* FoldSpindleMutilation: Her armour, as well as those of her troops, are equipped with laser cannons that cause the victim's body to contort around itself.
* GodSaveUsFromTheQueen: Subverted: She is menacing and not above killing her enemies, but has the same sense of honour and duty as any other Ice Warrior. Moreover, she is trying to protect her people from hostile Earthlings. In the end, the message left on the surface of Mars really refers to her rather than Queen Victoria!
* HonourBeforeReason: One of the reasons she is so quick to want to kill the humans is because they made one of her warriors their servant, even declaring "Ice Warriors do not serve". This is despite the fact that, as Friday points out, it was a necessary arrangement to free her, and overall he himself doesn't seem to care.
** However, it's her honourable nature that ultimately makes her spare the commanding officer, previously disgraced for cowardice, after he offers his own life in exchange for the lives of his men.
* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Girl, in her case. It works both negatively and positively.
* TheSmurfettePrinciple: She's the first female Ice Warrior ever shown on screen in ''fifty years''. About time, huh? And what better way to commemorate the anniversary of their debut by finally reintroducing them in the form of the fairer sex?
[[/folder]]

!Thirteenth Doctor era debut
[[folder:Tzim-Sha]]
!!Tzim-Sha (Thirteenth Doctor)
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2018_12_10_at_221403.png]]
->'''Played by:''' Samuel Oatley

A hunter from a race called the Stenza, who comes to Earth hunting a specific trophy to make himself the next leader of his people.
----
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->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/PeterSerafinowicz (speaking voice); Corey Taylor (roar) (2015)

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->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/PeterSerafinowicz (speaking voice); [[Music/{{Slipknot}} Corey Taylor Taylor]] (roar) (2015)
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* PuttingOnTheReich: The Space Security Service wear black uniforms.

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* PuttingOnTheReich: The Space Security Service wear black SS-style uniforms.
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* AccidentalSuicide: Averted, the psychograft causes Cassandra's skin to dry out again and her [[BrainInAJar Brain In A Jar]] to give in, essentially causing her old self to "die". But as [[FusionDance Cassandra/Rose]] explains, it also caused her personality to survive by being turned into particles in the air much like a spirit, allowing her to [[GrandTheftMe take over Rose's body.]]
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* GoSeduceMyArchNemesis: [[PlayedForLaughs Played For Laughs.]] Since she sexualizes Rose's appearance to such an extent, It's implied she was willing to [[DirtyOldWoman do the dirty deed with the two of them if necessary.]]
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* EvilIsPetty: Attempts to crash the Titanic into Earth, killing billions (or if Turn Left is any indication, millions) to...frame his board directors and retire to a nice planet. [[DisappointedByTheMotive The Doctor immediately lambasts he's committing mass genocide for such a pathetic reason]].


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* RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil: Among his various crimes, the barely-euphemistic threat of planning to rape Nefertiti[[note]]at least as much as the ratings could get away with[[/note]] makes him vile enough that the Doctor cold-bloodedly kills him with a most uncharacteristic Pre-Mortem One-Liner.

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