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1%% NOTE - TV Tropes does not trope content leaks. That includes WMG.
2%%
3%% Please don't add any theories or responses based on leaked information.
4%%
5%% If an edit doesn't mention leaks but is clearly *based* on a leak, it will be treated the same way (and cut).
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7
8!!Beware of unmarked spoilers - WMG pages are always Administrivia/SpoilersOff
9
10For guesses specific to the Classic Series, see [[AC:WMG/DoctorWhoClassicSeries]].
11
12For guesses not specific to either era, see [[AC:WMG/DoctorWho]]
13
14For guesses specific to series 5, see [[AC:WMG/DoctorWhoSeries5]]
15
16For guesses specific to the currently airing series, see [[AC:WMG/DoctorWhoWithSpoilers]]
17
18For archived confirmed/{{jossed}} speculation on Tennant's final years see [[AC:WMG/DoctorWhoSeries4]]
19
20For all other guesses see [[AC:WMG/DoctorWhoWholeSeries]]
21
22----
23
24[[foldercontrol]]
25
26[[folder:The Doctor]]
27
28[[WMG:The Tenth Doctor is The Tenth Doctor.]]
29As most commercials explain, Main/NineOutOfTenDoctorsAgree that the product they're selling is best. The tenth doctor doesn't, because he's too busy fighting Daleks and saving the universe.
30* Alternatively, the Doctor himself is, and has always been, this Tenth Doctor. Which would make this his 20th incarnation (or more).
31* Yet another possibility is that The Doctor is '''all ten''' of these doctors. Which means one of them is in constant disagreement with the others... could it be one of them is secretly the Valeyard?
32** This is doubtful. You'd be hard pressed to find ''anything'' that nine of them agree on.
33*** Daleks are evil? Cardiff is an awesome place to hang out? Humans aren't that bad? I know at least the first one.
34*** Valeyard, One, One.
35*** That's the brilliance! There are twelve doctors (counting the Valeyard). Two through Eleven, excluding Nine, could be the ones agreeing, whereas One, Nine, and the Valeyard could all be the tenth doctor!
36* Or maybe it's the first 8 doctors and 9-12 who like the product,and the War Doctor is the one who doesn't like it because he sees using human made products under him and uses time lord materials only.
37* Or maybe it's ''only'' Nine who agrees, out of the first ten Doctors, and the commercial is just taking advantage of the name.
38
39[[WMG: The Tenth Doctor is not The Tenth Doctor]]
40
41He regenerated several times during the Time War, making the Tenth (onscreen) Doctor, the Thirteenth Doctor. He did not think that he could regenerate again, and that is why he was so scared of dying during The End of Time.
42* Jossed by WordOfGod and the show itself- in School Reunion, Ten explicitly tells Sarah Jane that he has "regenerated half a dozen times since we last met," which was when he was the Fourth Doctor.
43** And no, the Fifth Doctor doesn't count' [[{{Fanwank}} Everyone]] [[{{Fanon}} knows]] that the companions memories gets erased after the [=MultiDoctor=] Adventures.
44*** Now that we know about the War Doctor, it seems he was including her meeting the Fifth Doctor after all!
45** Not necessarily: that's a common and ''imprecise'' figure of speech.
46* [[spoiler:The basis of this theory is confirmed, in a way. The Tenth Doctor had regenerated one more than he claimed, [[IHatePastMe and for good reason]]-he wasn't ''the Doctor'' then.]]
47
48[[WMG: The Doctor heard the Drums.]]
49The Drums were intended for the young Master, but the young Doctor heard them too. However, they didn't control him, instead inspiring him to fight evil, which he realized was their source. This is because one of the beats was missing when the Doctor heard them. Dun dun-dun, dun dun-dun, dun dun-dun, dun dun-dun...
50
51* So the Doctor created the show's tune?
52
53[[WMG: The Doctor's Real Name]]
54* Eyjafjallajökull
55* Muriel. There's no great mystery, he's just too embarrassed to admit it.
56* A very LONG sequence of random numbers, letters, and symbols. Which is why it's unpronoucable to humans, it's so long and convoluded we're bound to get it wrong. The name he told River was the only part of it that humans can make out easily:Who.
57* Sweety, or the Gallifreyan version of it.
58* Guys. Supposedly unpronounceable by humans? So named by Davros as the Destroyer of Worlds? The Doctor's name is ''Cthulhu.''
59* Unpronounceable to humans, you say? Webcomic/{{Xkcd}}
60* [[Franchise/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy 42]]
61* The Other
62* Theo Stephen (Anglicised from Θεοκριτος Στεφανος)
63* Basil. He told Osgood the truth.
64* [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Asclepius]]. We do have at least one other Time Lord based off an Ancient Greek concept. And [[MeaningfulName Asclepius was the god of physicians among other things]] (physician being a fancy word for "Doctor"). The Ancient Greeks based the god off him.
65* Zagreus.
66
67[[WMG: The Doctor gets more than 12 regenerations]]
68Because River gave the rest of her regenerations to the Doctor, he gets 10 more because she has only used 2.
69* Confirmed that he gets more [[spoiler: But River wasn't the cause; her energy got used up reviving him from a poison regeneration usually can't cure. He got new regenerations from the Time Lords, at Clara's urging]].
70
71[[WMG: The Doctor's regenerations are becoming more and more explosive because he is going closer and closer to his final regeneration]]
72It's a countdown to the end. Thus, Eleven's regeneration will do even more damage to the surrounding area than Ten's.
73* Partially confirmed: Eleven blows up a Dalek fleet and most of a village when he finally regenerates. However, we don't know why - maybe the regenerations aren't becoming more destructive due to the limit; maybe the Time Lords set the limit ''because'' the regenerations would become ever more destructive.
74* Possibly further confirmed by Twelve regenerating into Thirteen -- the TARDIS was so badly damaged the Time Rotor itself exploded, and the TARDIS had to eject her to save her from it.
75
76[[WMG: The Doctor lies about his age so he's not accused of being a pedophile.]]
77The [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doctor_%28Doctor_Who%29#Age Wikipedia page]] points out that the Doctor claims to be only 900 years in the new series, while he's claimed to be older in the original series and the Expanded Universe. Also in the new series, the Doctor starts having relationships with humans who seem to be around 20ish. Maybe because of some Galactic/Time Lord law, a thousand year old man can't be doing it with someone that young, but a 900 year old one ''can''. Alternatively, he could just be trying to delude himself, since he thinks a couple hundred years is less squicky.
78* Thanks to the Time War, this becomes just a bit more complicated. Firstly, being a ''Time'' War, it's inevitable (and sometimes stated) that timelines all over the universe would become messed up, especially for those "on the front lines," which the Doctor was. Therefore, it doesn't beggar too much belief that a year here or a decade there for an individual would simply cease to exist, which would also explain both the Ninth and Tenth Doctor's manic personlaities; large chunks of their memories are gone. Secondly, as mentioned in Main/SanDimasTime, Time Lords and [=TARDISes=] are based around Gallifreyan time, but with Gallifrey destroyed, the implications for the Doctor's timeline would have been significant.
79* Accused by who? All his people are DEAD.
80** If it's Ten, accused by anyone. [[spoiler: He even cares about what Davros thinks of him.]] If it's Nine - there are still a few ancient beings out there that he respects.
81* Nah, it's nothing so {{squick}}y. Let's see: being vague about one's age, chasing after much younger women, a sudden fondness for leather jackets; [[http://comics.shipsinker.com/?id=23 there's a term for ''that'' sort of behaviour.]]
82
83[[WMG: The Doctor's age doesn't include his time on Gallifrey.]]
84Due to the timey-wimeyness of the Time War, the Doctor no longer counts any of his time on Gallifrey as part of his age. All the time from when he gave his age as 953 to when he says his age as 900~ in the new series adds up to 400 of the years before he left Gallifrey. This fits with him saying that he's spent 900 years travelling in the TARDIS as well as that being his age: because it is now.
85
86[[WMG: The number of years that pass for a particular incarnation is proportionate to the number of years that incarnation was the "incumbent" Doctor on television.]]
87The incarnation might live 100 years per season, give or take, allowing for continuity gaps between seasons or while the Doctor is between companions on his own.
88
89By this logic, the First Doctor could have had several centuries' worth of off-screen time, while Tom Baker's Fourth Doctor would have been exceptionally long-lived. The Sixth Doctor had a year or two worth of hiatus to make up for lost time in the above example. If we include ExpandedUniverse time while the series was off the air, both the Seventh and Eighth Doctors would have been the longest-lived of the incarnations. Using the above example of the Seventh using his time as the Sixth as his age, it's possible that the Ninth Doctor, freshly regenerated for maybe a matter of weeks or months, still settling into his new incarnation, would have given Rose an age of 900 years, which would have been his total tenure in previous self (1996-2005 = Nine ExpandedUniverse "seasons" = 900 years)...
90* ...The formula doesn't quite fit when the Tenth Doctor claims an age of 903 in ''Voyage of the Damned'', and since that episode follows right at the end of Series 3, the only real companionless gap would have been at the end of Series 2. Which is a bit of a stretch, considering that over 900 years would have had to pass between seasons. However, given that the writers have milked the Doctor and Rose's quasi-romantic angst for every drip it's worth, it's not ''totally'' out of the question that only after 900 years is the Doctor even willing to allow for the possibility of another female companion. That doesn't exclude the possibility of centuries' worth of adventures with tin dogs or companions in a totally platonic relationship.
91** My personal opinion is that the Doctor views the idea of his age being counted in objective 'years' as kinda meaningless, and thus, when asked, just gives a number that sounds about right. The Doctor's life is one in which his personal timeline is being constantly adjusted, so rather than his age having a solid numerical value, it's more of a range, with an margin of error of up to a few hundred years. As with all this timey wimey stuff, especially the stuff that makes absolutely no sense, I find it best to just assume the Doctor knows what he's talking about, and that even a relatively simple question like, "how old are you", is so complex a question that a human mind couldn't even comprehend the answer.
92
93[[WMG: The Variations in the Doctor's Age are due to the Regenerations]]
94The Regenerations screw with the Doctor's memory quite severely. It's possible that he doesn't know his own age and has to reconstruct his age from the TARDIS's logs, his diaries (we see him keep them in several episodes) and any other clues he can find.
95
96One wonders if he can remember his own name either; it's not as if he's told many other people or written it down.
97
98[[WMG: The actor of the next Doctor will have some link to the 'number' of their Doctor.]]
99
100'Eccleston' is nine letters long. He played the Ninth Doctor. David [=TENnant=] played the Tenth Doctor. Matt Smith is the eleventh Matt Smith listed on IMDB. He plays Eleven. Therefore Twelve and Thirteen's actors will have relevance to their respective Doctor's regeneration.
101* [[spoiler:P-E-T-E-R C-A-P-A-L-D-I: twelve letters!]]
102* Seemingly averted with Thirteen
103** Or perhaps technically not averted. The ‘I’ and ‘E’ in Jodie can be twisted to be 13.
104
105[[WMG: When a Time Lord regenerates, he borrows DNA from whatever life form happens to be nearby.]]
106Well, think about it. DNA is incredibly complex and it would take a lot of work to rewrite an entire genome in the few seconds regeneration takes. Wouldn't it be easier to just borrow bits and pieces from whatever beings you find around you?
107
108And later, when the Master regenerated in the Doctor's TARDIS, he ended up looking, sounding, and acting like Ten. This would presumably be because the control room is littered with shed skin, hairs, and other things due to the Doctor spending so much of his time in there. The Master didn't regenerate into a Martha or Jack look-a-like because his regenerative powers latched on to the closest thing to Time Lord DNA they could find... which was other Time Lord DNA.
109
110As for the Time Lords who have been shown to be able to control their regenerations (like Romana) they had the benefit of not having to regenerate under extreme stress like the Doctor always does. Romana, for example, spent quite a bit of time and even tried out different bodies before regenerating, something she wouldn't have had the luxury of doing if she had been stabbed in the gut with only seconds to live or something equally dire. (And even then, she eventually settles on becoming an exact duplicate of someone else! No new DNA-writing required.) Since the Doctor almost always regenerates after having been nearly killed, he never bothers trying to come up with an original genome and just borrows from those around him.
111
112List of regenerations and who they might have nicked DNA from:
113* One - His parents (he was born in this body.)
114* Two - Ben Jackson and Polly Wright (took the looks from Ben, and the quirky personality from Polly.)
115* Three - N/A (the Time Lords decided for him, since he refused to choose his new face.)
116* Four - Sarah Jane Smith (took her general looks, hair colour, and personality. Then promptly turned the nuttiness up to 11.)
117* Five - Had the choice between Adric, Tegan, and Nyssa. Though it looks like he mostly chose Nyssa. (Blue eyes, and her kind and gentle personality.)
118* Six - Peri Brown (Though since he died of a powerful poison, any DNA he might have borrowed likely got a bit scrambled, leading to this incarnation's general... er.. uniqueness.)
119* Seven - Melanie Bush (her super-genius intelligence, leading Seven to become the most manipulative and strategy-loving of the regenerations.)
120* Eight - Grace Holloway (complicated by the anesthesia in his system, though he did end up looking like a girl. (Zing.))
121** Given how much he's wanted to be ginger, though, he should have picked that up from her.
122* War - Mix of Cass (determined enough to die for her beliefs) and Ohila (truly believed that the Doctor ''had'' to intervene at that point).
123* Nine - Last person War saw other than himself was Clara, a dark-haired thrill-seeker to the point of near self-destructiveness.
124* Ten - Rose Tyler.
125* Eleven - [[spoiler: Ten. He regenerated in his own TARDIS, and pretty much ended up looking and acting like a funhouse-mirror version of his previous self.]]
126
127So anyway we can now see that, clearly, if the Doctor ever ''really'' wants to be ginger, he's going to have to go to Ireland, surround himself with a crowd of redheads, and then die/regenerate. ... Who's up for a St. Paddy's Day special!?
128** Perhaps that's why he picked Amy Pond for a companion? There's not actually that many redheads in Ireland anyway.
129** Wait...So does this mean Handy and Rose are related? [[{{Squick}} Eeeeeewwwwwwwww...]]
130
131* This is an excellent theory. It totally makes sense as maybe all Time Lords borrow DNA [[spoiler: as it completely works for River Song/Melody Pond who has regenerated twice, once being around a homeless man picking up looks from him and again around The Doctor and her parents, picking up traits and looks from them]].
132
133[[WMG:The Thirteenth Doctor's final story will end with a ReallyDeadMontage...]]
134...starting with footage from ''An Unearthly Child'' and going through every season of Classic and New, including the TV Movie. And it will be heart-wrenching.
135
136[[WMG:... However, the ReallyDeadMontage will be subverted.]]
137For all that it's gone to some truly heart-wrenching places at times, ''Doctor Who'' on balance is a fundamentally optimistic and life-affirming show, more generally inclined to ultimately leave matters on a positive note -- that life will continue, that good will ultimately triumph, that the Doctor ultimately has something under up his sleeve to get him out of his latest jam and save the day. Furthermore, one of the strengths of ''Doctor Who'' is that the mechanics of the show mean that the narrative can theoretically run forever in some way, shape or form, and killing off the hero for good is contrary to that; take it off TV, it'll run as a series of novels somewhere, or audio plays, or any number of different formats. If nothing else, the fans will be falling over themselves to undo it at the first possible opportunity. The Thirteenth Doctor may die, and we may be tricked momentarily into thinking that this is the end, but it's almost assured that the Fourteenth Doctor will somehow rise to take his place in some way, shape or form.
138
139(Besides which, if there's anyone truly believes at this stage that anyone at the BBC's going to end the show for good and [[KilledOffForReal Kill Off The Doctor For Real]] and end the story for good solely because a single piece of canon from 1976 orders them to, then I have a very desirable bridge property in Brooklyn for sale for them at a very generous price...)
140
141[[WMG: The next Doctor will be [[Creator/StephenMerchant Stephen Merchant]].]]
142Because why not?
143
144[[WMG: The last incarnation of the Doctor will be ginger]]
145And his BerserkButton will be anyone who messes with his long sought after red hair.
146* Or, he will ''never'' be ginger, which will turn him into the Valeyard, and prompt him to try and steal his past selves' regenerations. Yes, his insistence on having a certain hair color for once in his lives will turn him evil.
147** Seems to have already happened. Is Amy Pond not the Twelfth Doctor?
148** No.
149
150[[WMG: The Doctor's name will be TheUnreveal]]
151When the time comes for the Doctor to answer the first question, it will be revealed that, at some point, he had his name legally changed to "The Doctor".
152
153[[WMG: The Thirteenth Doctor will be a woman.]]
154Steven Moffat seems to be bringing the show toward this direction, as much as I dislike it. If it does happen, however, the Twelfth Doctor's last words will be, "I am not a good man; I am a good...woman!"
155* Gender confirmed, last lines jossed.
156** Technically the fourteenth incarnation, but close enough.
157
158[[WMG: The Doctor has never regenerated.]]
159He fakes his death with advanced technology and passes on the role. Furthermore, all Time Lords do this, to pass themselves off as being an offshoot of a long-dead species that we've never seen, which I will call the True Gallifreyans, who actually regenerate thirteen times, live more consistent life-spans, and who were the first to invent time travel. The Time Lords we've seen are actually a mutant race of humans who live to some random age between eighty and a thousand, and age erratically over the course of their lifespans. The Doctor is a succession of at least thirteen individuals by now, none of whom actually know that much about the others.
160
161[[WMG: An Untitled Theory About Regeneration]]
162By his former selves. The reason for the call backs to the previous Doctors is because they'll all help, if only off screen for some, create a device to give him more regenerations. Perhaps the Master will try to use it and 9, 10, 11 and maybe 12 (and previous ones, if they can get them) will work together to stop perhaps the Simm Master and a new one. As for how Rose won't be with 9, it could take place after he left but before he came back and picked her up. 10 could be between companions.
163** {{Jossed}}? In one episode of [[Recap/TheSarahJaneAdventuresS4E5E6DeathOfTheDoctor the Sarah Jane Adventures]], the Doctor says he can change 507 times. Then again, he lies.
164*** Probably jossed. [[Franchise/{{Highlander}} Supposedly, if a Time Lord killed another Time Lord, they would get the dead Time Lord's regenerations.]] The Doctor killed a whole bunch of Time Lords and has their regenerations. Or, since the regeneration limit was artificial and enforced by Rassilon, with the Time Lords gone the limit on regenerations is nonexistent.
165*** Also, supporting the 507 thing, we have to remember that the Time War led to huge changes in Time Lord society, to the point of literally reviving their KingInTheMountain. It's quite possible that the increase in regenerations has to do with this. Either removing all limits to support the war effort, or artificially supercharging everyone's ability.
166*** I doubt the 13 Lives was a legal limit considering the lengths the Master went to in getting a new body. He hardly seems like the sort of Time Lord who would obey this rule.
167** Alternately, we'll learn that the thirteen lives cap is a physical limit ... on ''ordinary'' Time Lords. During the Seven/Davros confrontation in ''Remembrance of the Daleks'', there's a couple lines cut [[note]] see the deleted scenes on the DVD [[/note]]:
168--->'''Doctor:''' Every time our paths have crossed, I have defeated you.\
169'''Davros:''' ''laughs'' You flatter yourself, Doctor. In the end, you are merely another Time Lord.\
170'''Doctor:''' Oh, Davros, I am far more than just another Time Lord.
171So, whatever the Doctor was referring to here includes not being subject to the normal regeneration cap.
172** Jossed by "The Time of the Doctor". The Doctor has only 12 regenerations but Time Lords can get another regeneration cycle.
173
174[[WMG: The Doctor will eventually die.]]
175The Doctor will die either because he runs out of regenerations, or he becomes too world-weary to carry on. When that happens, the TARDIS will lock onto the only other Time Lord in existence: Jenny. She will succeed her father as the Saviour of the Universe, in a sort of pseudo-{{Spinoff}}.
176
177[[WMG: The Doctor can't speak horse ''or'' baby.]]
178He's just [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} weird enough]] that he ''thinks'' he can. Whatever they might be "telling" him, it's all in his head.
179* Jossed by the baby in Ashildr's village giving him critical information he had no other way of knowing.
180
181[[WMG: The Doctor has been counting his age from regeneration no. 8.]]
182The War Doctor decided he wasn't worthy of his past selves, so started counting his age from 0. After lasting just over eight hundred years, he'd forgotten what his age was before. This explains how he got the 400 number from Eleven saying 1200. Since Ten apparently only lasted five years, it can be deduced that Nine lasted about 90 years.
183
184[[WMG: The Doctor's inaccurate age refers to his age as "The Doctor".]]
185"The Name of the Doctor" shows that the Doctor doesn't acknowledge incarnations that don't act like a "doctor." We don't know when the First Doctor decided to become "the Doctor", so he could also discount that time. The reason why the New Series Doctor has an age younger than the Seventh Doctor(7 said he's 953, 9 says he's 900) is that after the Time War he's only counting his tenure as The Doctor. The reason why he does this now is because [[IHatePastMe War disgusted him so much]] that his regenerations refuse to acknowledge any time when they ''weren't'' the Doctor.
186
187[[WMG: The Doctor's name is *literally* "Who" or some variant spelling of it.]]
188* That explains WOTAN calling the doctor "doctor who" in the war machines. WOTAN knew his name the whole time being the computer with all the knowledge that it is!
189
190[[WMG: The Thirteenth Doctor will spend most of his life on Gallifrey.]]
191The Twelfth Doctor will spend his entire life searching for Gallifrey. When he finds Gallifrey, he will regenerate into the Thirteenth Doctor. While The Doctor has wanted to have adventures away from Gallifrey in the past, the Thirteenth Doctor will embrace having a long stay on Gallifrey after losing it and finding it. His stay on Gallifrey would mirror the Third Doctor's stay on Earth; while The Doctor will be grounded for the most part, he will have offworld missions whenever he needs to.
192
193The Thirteenth Doctor may even consider becoming Lord President. While The Doctor has neglected his duties as Lord President in the past, this incarnation will want to take such responsibilities. With Gallifrey back, he may run a campaign against Rassilon if he returns. Maybe even a new incarnation of The Master would be thrown into the mix, provoking references to The Master's actions as a Prime Minister. The Doctor's opponents' slander would be replete with references to times during which The Doctor stayed away from Gallifrey. Somehow, The Doctor would win the election. The Thirteenth Doctor would turn out to be a great Lord President.
194
195He may, however, regenerate into the Fourteenth Doctor, who may be erratic and unpredictable, thus mirroring the Fourth Doctor in a way. He would commit actions that would put his leadership skills into question. He would either get impeached or resign. Afterward, he would leave Gallifrey once he was sure that Gallifrey was in the hands of a good president. Though he would leave off to more adventures in time and space, he would visit Gallifrey every now and then, perhaps once per series.
196* Looking jossed as ''she'' hasn't so much as mentioned what her species is actually called to her companions yet, let alone where she's from.
197
198[[WMG:The Doctor is NOT a Time Lord.]]
199As WMG has cleverly pointed out, everyone is a Time Lord... except the Doctor.
200
201[[WMG: The Ninth Doctor has a Lancashire accent because [[spoiler: The War Doctor liked Clara]]]]
202What accent did she speak with? A Lancashire one. He imprinted on her the same way Ten's Estuary accent is based off Rose's accent
203* By the same logic, Twelve could have a Scottish accent because Eleven was thinking about Amy when he regenerated.
204** That makes perfect sense. Who would 12 emulate? Well, likely the next companion or another one after that, I guess. Or the first woman President of The United States of America, at some point where they got rid of that "you gotta be born here" crap.
205* Whose accent was Eleven's based on? Rose? Ood Sigma? Matt's accent is somewhere between RP and Estuary.
206** Maybe a mishmash of everyone Ten went back and said goodbye to in his last moments, plus a few life-flashed-before-your-eyes memories of Joan Redfern and Jenny.
207
208[[WMG: The Doctor is now on his twelfth incarnation]]
209He might not have changed looks, but he still spent one regeneration creating Other Ten and Doctor-Donna. That means his next regeneration could be the final, and the Valeyard approaches...
210* The doctor should be on his NINTH incarnation - the one forced from him by the Time Lords probably doesn't really count against him. He was asked to choose a face, but one had been chosen for him for starters, but also take into account that he didn't NEED to regenerate, nor is it implied that he did so.
211* It would be hard to imply that, given that the term "regeneration" hadn't been invented yet. First into Second was called a "renewal", which led DWM to spend years insisting it hadn't been a real regeneration either...
212* I had always asumed his regeneration from 2>3 was supposed to be a punishment, rather than inprison or execute the Doctor they made literarly loose roughly 500 years of his life. And that's terrible.
213* [[spoiler:You were on to something. Though Creator/DavidTennant is the Tenth "Doctor", he was the 11th version of TheHero [[Unperson because he didn't count the one who ended the Time War.]] The regeneration in Journey's End does count, so you're right FromACertainPointOfView.]]
214
215[[WMG:The Tenth Doctor is in the process of becoming the Valeyard.]]
216As the Doctor has gradually used up his remaining regenerations, he's becoming far more grim and emotionally distant in persona. Despite showing an aversion to killing, the Tenth Doctor has described himself as giving "no second chances", and passionlessly metes out a Main/FateWorseThanDeath to the Family of Blood after defeating them, as well as to the millions of Daleks and Cybermen whom he "sentences" to eternal entrapment in the Void. Of course, he has a couple of regenerations left until the Valeyard is "supposed" to appear, but it may be a long-term process, or it may just be that the tragedies of the Time War sped it up.
217
218[[WMG:The Doctor is ''trying'' to become the Valeyard]]
219Or an equivalent. This ties in with the theory about the Doctor committing a slow form of suicide, but with a twist - he's not trying to die, just reach the point of his final regeneration when the Valeyard will be created and travel back to the time of "The Trial of a Time Lord". As far as he knows, this is his only way into Gallifrey's time-locked past (due to a combination of predestination and other [[Main/TimeyWimeyBall timey wimey things]]). The {{plan}} to either create a different potential entity who can go back and change things or to follow the Valeyard through when he goes and avert the Time War that way.
220
221[[WMG: The Tenth Doctor had to die because he kept BREAKING TOO MUCH STUFF ]]
222First off, I like Ten, lots of us do, so don't mistake this for some kind of bitter grudge. That being said, we know he was responsible for a lot of bad things (* cough* harriet Jones! * cough* ) only now have I started thinking of one particular thing he did that has led to many, many deaths. The time lords implanted the sound of the Drums in the Masters head, which lead to every horrible thing he ever did. But why did he do these things? Because they wanted to escape the Time war before the Doctor wiped them out. In other words, The Doctor is responsible for the existence of the Master, which makes he statement about the Master being his responsibility in The Last Of The Time Lords especially ironic. Now technically he wasn't Ten yet when he did this, but the Universe is a vindictive being, and decided to still take it it out on him.
223
224[[WMG: The Tenth Doctor trying to spare the Master and Davros wasn't as crazy as it seemed]]
225It WAS crazy mind you, but not that crazy. Why would it be a good idea to spare these genocidal nutbars when he's so ruthlessly dispatched other dangerous enemies? [[NotQuiteDead Because they keep coming back.]] And he knows it will happen. So the Doctor figures, rather than seemingly killing them, and then being surprised when they return and start wrecking shit, it's better to keep them alive and watch them himself, like he had intended to do to the Master at the end of series 3 (you know, the guy who got shot, and came BackFromTheDead). This is especially prudent with the Master, because the Doctor has seen the lengths his old [[FriendlyEnemy Frenemy]] will go to survive ([[QuestionableCasting Eric Roberts...My God!!]]) and realizes it's better to not give him a chance to start fresh. It doesn't really justify everything, but it's a possible ideas about what he was thinking
226* He could also want to use them in order to help out the universe. While Davros is pretty much impossible to even try not being completely and absolutely evil, he's still a genius inventor who the Doctor could force to make a bunch of technology to help the universe-for example, get him to make a bunch of Dalek casings and use them as peace officer robots. I can imagine the Doctor would actively try to redeem the Master(which is somewhat feasible, considering their close relationship, the Master's FreudianExcuse and [[AffablyEvil friendly tendencies]]), and even if he can't the Master means too much for him to just execute(and that's not even mentioning the metric tons of HoYay they have).
227
228[[WMG: Twelve regenerations means precisely that, ''not'' twelve new different forms.]]
229This means that the Doctor actually did use up one at the beginning of "Journey's End", even though his body didn't change. There will never be a thirteenth Doctor, and the next regeneration and form (of which both would be his twelfth) will be his last. Otherwise, as long as he'd be able to "divert the regeneration energy" into something he could (in theory) keep coming back from death an unlimited number of times.
230
231In "Mawdryn Undead" of Classic Who it was explained that each regeneration uses "energy pockets" he was in his Fifth form and mentioned having 8 left. So the creation of Hand!Doctor should mean that he only has the ability to regenerate one more time. However the point is moot since they'll probably just say he got more regenerations in the Time War or some other HandWave to write around that previous limitation.
232
233[[WMG: The Doctor's mother IS human but she's a human similar to River Song.]]
234She was conceived in a place exposed to the Time Vortex (possibly the [[{{Series/Torchwood}} Cardiff Rift]]). She met the Doctor's father and was eventually accepted into Time Lord society, possibly becoming the Woman in White.
235
236[[WMG: The Doctor is sowing the instruments to his own demise]]
237It seems like the Doctor is leaving a steady trail of [[Main/ChekhovsGun Chekhov's Guns]] that are surely going to shoot him in the ass someday. He's left a sonic screwdriver in a bin and a diary of his exploits in The Library. He got Martha to get rid of Earth's Self-Destruct system... though that self-destruct system was a lose-lose situation.
238* The diary comes with ''another'' sonic screwdriver. Hopefully, his future self is going to show up to collect it as soon as the episode ends; if not, then it's going to be trouble.
239** The sonic screwdriver and diary are in the Library, and the Library is sealed and infested by hordes of Vashta Nerada which will skin alive any living creature that enters their domain after their amnesty with the Doctor expires. Furthermore, the diary is one book in a collection of ''billions of other books''. Good luck finding it that quickly under those circumstances.
240*** Didn't he leave the diary in a room ''flooded with sunlight'', practically a balcony? The room is barred to the Vashta Nerada fully half the time. Anyone who knows it's there could retrieve it, and if Jack could find the Doctor's hand ...
241*** That last is confirmed, Nardole retrieved River's diary from the Library at her behest.
242* Jenny could be an instrument of his demise...or his future self's salvation. Any trouble caused by carelessly dropped artifacts should be negated by the appearance of an adventuresome daughter - but, if she has too much Ten or even Five in her....
243* There are several potentially trouble-causing [[Main/ChekhovsGun Chekhov's Guns]] assoicated with the Eleventh Doctor, but unless you count the Time Cracks, he doesn't drop them in places; they are present in his TARDIS. In "Eleventh Hour" and "Vincent and the Doctor", it is shown that there are certain devices in the TARDIS that Eleven is afraid of using or viewing. This may have been what caused the TARDIS to explode (or nearly explode). It also explains why Eleven disagreed with his TARDIS manual.
244
245[[WMG: The Doctor Wants to Become the Valeyard]]
246At least at some level. The Doctor often seems to have a martyr complex/deathwish. He's 2000 some years old (possibly several billion mentally) and has burned through a few regenerations since the time war in a scant few years (and would have died even more had other people not stopped him from time to time). Not only is the Doctor riddled with Survivor's guilt, he knows that if he becomes the Valeyard he will be able to cross the time-lock and return to Gallifrey and even if it's as an asshole, he'll be able to see his home and people one last time.
247
248[[WMG: The Tenth Doctor was going through the Stages of Grief]]
249How do most people react when they are told they are going to die? They go through 5-7 different stages. It's hard to tell when he was specifically doing what, but when first told of the prophecy by Ood Sigma, he is surprised, and this happens again when Carmen says the same thing in Planet of the Dead. He seems to be trying to avoid thinking about it in Waters of Mars for most of the series, and his attempt to break time like a twig could be both anger (at the thought of dying), and a form of bargaining, only he's trying to set the terms. It's not "if I do this for you, you'll let me live," it's "I'm gonna do this, and you have no choice but to let me live!" And it worked like [[AteHisGun clock....]] [[BoomHeadshot err...]] Moving on. Now we come to the End of Time, and when you actually look at it, you realize that he's at the final step: Acceptance. He went into this adventure knowing he would die (something that had never happened before, at least as early as it did) and up until the HopeSpot, he's clearly come to terms with it. It can't be stopped, which is why Wilf knocking 4 times was even more devestating. No only had he been given hope of surviving the knocking man prophecy, but said prophecy was brought about by his friend, who was only their because he had wanted to prevent the death of the Doctor. Doesn't totally banish the Wangst, but it makes it a little more understandable. You'd be pissed too if after accepting the fact you were dying, [[YankTheDogsChain suddenly you had you chain jerked like that]]. I would.
250
251[[WMG: The Twelfth Doctor will be the Valeyard, or regenerate into the Valeyard at some point.]]
252* In the Valeyard's first appearance, it's mentioned that he's a regeneration somewhere between his 12th and final regenerations.
253* "The Day of the Doctor" introduces John Hurt as the Doctor between 8 and 9, TECHNICALLY making 12 the 13th incarnation of the Doctor. This regeneration and every next one has a chance of being the Valeyard.
254
255[[WMG: The Eleventh Doctor was in denial over his looming death]]
256The Eleventh Doctor's traits and actions are reflective of a person who is trying to experience as much as possible before his death. Also, the Doctor was very insistent that he was the eleventh incarnation, despite the fact that he had two other regenerations (the War Doctor and the Meta-Crisis). It wasn't until "The Time of the Doctor" when he acknowledged that he was in fact the final Doctor and had no more regenerations.
257
258The reason why? His shame and disgust over the War Doctor's actions and the constant reminders of his inevitable death thrust him into denial, constantly running away and delaying the inevitable. It wasn't until the War Doctor was vindicated in "The Day of the Doctor" when he could finally accept his death on Trenzalore.
259
260[[WMG: The Doctor will soon have to answer for wrecking the time line.]]
261Seriously, with at least three to four major disruptions to the time line under his belt, the Doctor is sooner or later going to face criminal charges- if or when the Time Lords return. So, will Ten face charges, or will Eleven have to endure the results of his predecessor's stupidity? We can but guess. Thoughts?
262* And if it's Ten, wil he get in trouble for the events of ''Father's Day''?
263** Maybe. That was Rose's fault, and the Time Lords at the height of their power were reportedly capable of effortlessly crossing dimensions: so, unless these alternative realities are truly locked away, Rose is going to court.
264** Also, the Family of Blood will be released in return for providing evidence against the Doctor, and hopefully, they might be able to explain why he didn't just kill them instead of torturing them for all eternity as punishment for bombing some forgotten village into dust.
265* The Waters of Mars seems to confirm this.
266* And it looks like Eleven's going to get Ten's punishement... if it happens at all. God''dammit.''
267* It has now become evident that Eleven has done plenty of time-wrecking of his own. However, being TheWoobie, he ended up ruining time completely by accident, due to neglecting certain functions of the TARDIS. In other words, no external force is overriding the controls. Eleven is piloting it wrong.
268
269[[WMG: When they meet each other, new series Doctors will argue as much as the old series Doctors, but it will be PlayedForDrama.]]
270For example, Eleven will blame Ten for River's death, while Ten (at some point between "Journey's End" and "Last of the Time Lords"), will be angry that Eleven is travelling with companions again.
271* Jossed. In "The Day of the Doctor", Ten and Eleven do argue somewhat, but for the most part they get along fine.
272
273[[WMG:All incarnations of the Doctor whose numbers are multiples of 6 will be played by actors who have not only appeared on the show before, but share part of their name with one of their predecessors.]]
274This is to keep up the pattern established by Six (Creator/ColinBaker) and Twelve (Creator/PeterCapaldi), both of whom were RecastAsARegular and are also the only actors in the role to have a first or last name in common with one of their predecessors. It might be a coincidence... or maybe it isn't...
275
276[[/folder]]
277
278[[folder: The TARDIS, Time Lords and Timey-Wimey Stuff]]
279[[WMG: The reason the Doctor ends up exactly where and when something that requires assistance is because the TARDIS already KNOWS where and when he needs to be there.]]
280In the heart of the TARDIS lies the Time Vortex, which allowed Rose Tyler to see and know everything that is, was and will be. Thus, whenever the Doctor is going where and when something happens that he is require to solve, it redirects him because it already KNOWS that he was there and then to save the day. This is why there are quite a few instances of the Doctor and his current companion ending up off course from their original destination. Think about it: they could have gone to see Shakespeare at any point in Shakespeare's career, but they drop off just as aliens plan to use him for some nefarious purpose. I did not know whether it belonged in FridgeBrilliance or here so I am placing it in both.
281** And that's... confirmed, pretty much, in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS32E4TheDoctorsWife "The Doctor's Wife"]].
282
283[[WMG: The Time Vortex is a two-way mirror]]
284When Rose [[spoiler: absorbed the energy from the Time Vortex]] in ''The Parting of the Ways'', she was able to see not just the Vortex itself, but ''events''. All events, in all times, across all space. At the age of 8, on Gallifrey [[spoiler: The Master]] did the same. When he stared into the Untempered Schism, he ''saw'' her--'course being 8 and a Time Lord novice to boot he wouldn't think much of it. But given a Time Lord's propensity for densely-packed memory, he held onto it. That's how he knew to mention her in ''The Sound of Drums''.
285** Secondarily, it might explain why [[spoiler: Dalek Caan]] went nuts doing the samesuch staring in the expanse between ''Evolution of the Daleks'' and ''Journey's End''. Sort of an 'Abyss Looks Also' type thing. Both Ninth and Tenth Doctors menntion that you're not supposed to stare at the raw power of time--or at least that if you do, it's bad new bears for your functioning brain. If normal time-travel gives your average schmo a headache (try NOT to think about the TimeyWimeyBall for the episode ''Blink'' for instance), imagine what viewing all times and all things does--to ''any'' sentient. Including [[spoiler: Rose, Donna, and even the Master]] (well, except for that whole ''rat-tat-tat-tat'' business).
286*** He didn't look into the vortex, he was torn apart by entering the time lock. The Daleks have emergency temporal shifted before with no ill effects.
287*** It was said though, that he fell through the vortex and saw everything there was and will be. That's how he learnt to bypass the Time Lock to set things in motion.
288
289[[WMG:Time Lord Technology isn't: it's Magic.]]
290The Sonic Screwdriver in the new series behaves more like a magic wand than a piece of technology. Magic exists in the ''Doctor Who'' universe, as evidenced by "The Shakespeare Code", and the Doctor can impose his will directly on the universe without any mechanical device - for instance, [[spoiler:opening the TARDIS door with one snap of his fingers]]. Time Lords are wizards, possibly from the same race as Gandalf and the Istarii, who have a similar ability to regenerate.
291* This goes hand in hand with the theory that the wizards of the [[Franchise/HarryPotter Potterverse]] are descended from the Time Lords. Combine an Undetectable Extension charm with whatever makes Time Turners and Apparition work, and you have...
292* The Seventh Doctor episode "Battlefield" states that a future regeneration of The Doctor will be [[Myth/KingArthur Merlin]].
293* River makes a comment in one episode that she hates good wizards in fairy tales because they always turn out to be the Doctor.
294** Lest we forget ClarkesThirdLaw...
295
296[[WMG: The loss of Gallifrey as a "focal point" for the TARDIS has resulted in the Doctor being less aware of time changes.]]
297In the new series, The Doctor makes epic changes to the world and then seems either surprised when this results in a different timeline later or unaware that it was his changing things that allowed it to happen; for instance, his removing Harriet Jones as Prime Minister or taking down the Jagrafess and thinking the timeline would just "SnapBack." Both cases leave "holes" that let his enemies get into positions of power.
298* This is because Gallifrey handled stability of the time-space continuum. Just like how dimensional travel is now far more difficult and Flying Killer Time Monkeys will attack Paradox, the universe is now inclined towards for-want-of-a-nail instead of InSpiteOfANail. Also, Gallifrey acted as a cosmic "lighthouse" for the TARDIS, given the Doctor a point of reference to compare things to. For all his rebelling against his species, he's honestly at a loss without them; and he's only partially aware of it.
299
300[[WMG: The time-lock is not the same as time crystallization]]
301Crossing over timelines is A Bad Thing, as "Father's Day" showed. However, it's possible ("Father's Day" again, "Smith and Jones"); it's supposed to be dangerous, not out of the question. This has always been [[TimeyWimeyBall explained]] as being a question of crystallization of time (or the Blinovich Limitation Effect); once a time traveler reaches certain events, they are part of those events and cannot withdraw from them. But the Time War is not said to be crystallized; it is said to be outright locked. The term used is time-lock, which can be broken (at great cost -- in the case of Dalek Caan, his sanity). This would contradict previous explanations - unless the "time lock" is something different entirely.
302
303So, what is the time lock? Who put it there? Well, that's another pair of hands entirely.
304* It's probably something similar to (although far more advanced than) the "time lock" program Tosh developed for Torchwood -- a technological method of preventing time travel to a certain time and place.
305
306[[WMG: The Doctor is wrong about Time being alterable]]
307At least partially. Think about it, whenever something happens in a certain timeline that was not supposed to happen, The Doctor himself prevents any significant changes. Minor changes can be made i.e. the explosion in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E10TheDoctorDances "The Doctor Dances"]], or the survival of Mia and Yuri in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E16TheWatersOfMars "The Waters of Mars"]], but in the long run everything happens the way history recorded it, often even in spite of the Doctor's attempt to do otherwise (again "The Waters of Mars", and also [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E9ColdBlood "Cold Blood"]] where the Silurian/Human alliance is a no go). So the Doctor is * Gasp* wrong! All time is fixed, and at best only minor changes can be made.
308
309[[WMG:The Doctor ''can'' cross his own timeline.]]
310It's the ''TARDIS'' that can't. Notice how when the Doctor crosses his timeline in "Father's Day", he does so with the use of the TARDIS, and this is indirectly responsible for the ClockRoaches (Rose saves her father). However, at the end of Season 31, [[spoiler:when Eleven crosses his own timeline with a Vortex Manipulator, there are no side-effects whatsoever. That, or it's just because his timeline technically didn't exist at the moment, due to the TARDIS exploding]]. Alternatively...
311
312* Alternatively, all the problem with the ClockRoaches were caused by Rose presence (remember all that problem with Donna and the timelines? Rose doesn't become a part-Time Lord, she becomes Bad Wolf). Which also would explain why they didn't appear when Amy met her younger self at the end of Season 5.
313** Keep in mind that time itself was unravelling then.
314
315[[WMG:Vortex Manipulators allow someone to cross their own timeline.]]
316
317[[WMG: Time Lords still exist, and they are hiding from the Doctor.]]
318Okay, this one may sound crazy, BUT it can be explained.
319
320The Doctor isn't good. The Doctor is a very powerful being despite what most people think. Time Lords do not necessarily share our concept of morality. And HeWhoFightsMonsters becomes a monster. After all these years battling Cybermen, Daleks, and the Master, the Doctor is becoming like them.
321
322->'''The Doctor''': I watched it happen. I MADE it happen!
323
324The Doctor decided that he would not only destroy the Daleks, but also the Time Lords.
325
326There are many characters who point out that the Doctor is just as bad as the Daleks. Ironically, many of them ARE Daleks! The lone Dalek pointed out that he "would make a good Dalek". The Dalek Emperor said, "All Hail the Doctor! THE GREAT EXTERMINATOR!". And the Doctor even said "Exterminate" just before torturing a harmless Dalek. What was scary was the look on his face. The Ninth Doctor enjoyed it. Ten and his whole "Time Lord Victorious" is no better: he clearly declared himself a god then.
327
328It's clear that the Doctor caused the destruction of the Daleks and the Time Lords. However, the Time Lords aren't gone. They are hiding somewhere (sometime?).
329** They know he might find them if they go one second out of sync with everything else. So they went TWO seconds out of sync with everything else!
330
331[[WMG:Humanity is the oldest race in the universe. Sort of.]]
332It's known that in the future, "ordinary" humanity develops the technology to time travel, although in "Utopia", Professor Yana mentions that this technology was lost. He was wrong -- it was ''used''. Project Utopia and [[spoiler: the Toclafane]] are just a sad sidebar to the ''real'' plan to escape the collapse of the universe: evacuating from the end of time to the ''beginning'' of time. The reason that apparently contemporary planets like Traken or Trion are inhabited by basically human "aliens" is that the "aliens" are descendants of the wraparound colonists. This theory gets interesting when you consider that the Time Lords are supposedly one of the oldest races in the universe, and slightly headache-inducing if you think about it too much.
333* There's also a theory that this is grabbing the wrong end of the stick. The Time Lords are the oldest civilization in the universe, and as such set most of the default rules of it, including the idea that best template for sentient life is to be an upright biped.
334** That's why it's headache-inducing. Humanity would have done a lot of evolving before reaching the end of the universe. The ones we saw in "Utopia" may have looked the same as we do now, but so does the Doctor. Like him, they could have been very different under the skin. Maybe the Time Lords are what humans (or a branch of them) evolve into. In other words, humans look human because their descendants look human. If that wasn't strange enough, consider that humans wouldn't have survived that long, or possibly have even existed in the first place, if it wasn't for the Doctor. Basically, you've got the mother of all {{stable time loop}}s.
335* This may explain why Earth is such a WeirdnessMagnet and why the Time Lords let The Doctor break their laws to protect it; the universe is trying to kill the paradox, and the Time Lords know how important it really is.
336* Given some of the Doctor's behaviour, it's possible that he's a bit of a throw-back.
337** His mother is ''also'' a throwback, explaining his remark in the movie that he's human on his mother's side.
338* So let's get this straight: you're saying the last humans in the universe created Utopia to go back to the beginning of the universe and became the Time Lords themselves? Yes!
339** As a bit of icing on that cake, a roleplaying game called TimeLords, originally released in the 1980's, posited that the only race in the entire history of the universe (who eventually became known as a Guardians) to completely master the science of time travel were also the LAST race to come into existence in the universe. Coming into their own at the far end of history, they were forced to make the most out of limited resources, which led to a number of unique innovations, like being able to cram [[BiggerOnTheInside a warehouse full of electronics into something the side of a 20-sided die]]. Once they perfected the time travel technology, they used it to shift their entire civilization back to the very beginning of time, where the massive abundance of resources and their incredible technology (as compared to the younger races only just coming into being) led to their becoming decadent and corrupt, until they were ultimately destroyed by one of their own creations. With very few changes, that scenario fits the "humans become Time Lords" theory quite nicely. It also explains why no one saw a problem with Leela and Andred hooking up, why the Doctor and Donna were compatible in the first place, and how the proposed storyline where Ace is accepted into the Time Lord academy would have been possible - the two races are genetically different points on a long timeline, but still interrelated.
340
341[[WMG: Gallifrey itself is a TARDIS.]]
342Because the way it fades in during the climax of ''The End of Time'' is very reminiscent of one. The reason we can't hear the sound effect is because there's no sound in space. Alternately, the reason we can hear the Doctor's TARDIS materialising in space, but we can't hear Gallifrey, is because the sound of the TARDIS materialising is heard or sensed by the Doctor and the materialisation of Gallifrey is not.
343* Since "The Time of the Angels" establishes that the sound is The Doctor leaving the parking break on, we can assume that Gallifrey has a better driver than the blue box does.
344* This would go to explain why Time Lords are so time-sensitive. Regular [=TARDISes=] may have started as some sort of organism that grows from the structure of Gallifrey itself(like a sort of organic crystal).
345** [=TARDISes=] being grown was confirmed in a deleted scene where Ten gives Rose and Handy a piece of the TARDIS, and Doctor!Donna gives them a way to make it mature within their lifetimes.
346
347[[/folder]]
348
349[[folder:Companions]]
350
351[[WMG: Rose Tyler is really the Master]]
352She pretended to love the Doctor to keep a close watch over everything he did, deliberately screwing up at random points while at others being quite capable to fend for herself. It's why she was so upset [[spoiler:that the Doctor dumped her into an alternate universe with a fake Doctor and all of the original Rose's loved ones]]. It's also why The Master [[spoiler: compared Martha to Rose — saying that she wasn't good enough — in the series 3 finale]].The Master killed the real Rose, probably around the time the real one tried to save her dad. That paradox is the crack that kept showing up to haunt Amy.
353
354[[WMG: Jack became two people when his head got cut off]]
355He can regenerate his body from one single bone and so his regenerating process was confused so his head became Boe and his body became another Jack :)
356
357[[WMG: Jack Harkness becomes The Face of Boe because of an alien STD]]
358If anyone has a more plausible explanation, let me know.
359* Jack becomes the Face of Boe as a side-effect of the cure for immortality?
360** We're still looking for plausiblity in a show where aliens helped wipe out Pompeii, fat can turn into cute little aliens and a man can superimpose his DNA pattern onto every human being on the planet?
361** Before Jack went on his way, he was pondering out loud to the Doctor and Rose on what he'd look like in a million years. He was waiting to see the Doctor since the 1800's, having overshot by two centuries, and while waiting, noticed he was also STILL aging, albeit at an extremely slow pace. One would imagine that given enough time, he may have evolved to be more efficient. Screw having a body and just evolve into a giant head. If that's the case, he may have inadvertently undone the immortality Rose gave him but still kept near-infinite HitPoints. He only died because he was powering a city and gave it his all. Also, the only thing the Doctor knows is that the Face of Boe is extremely old and up until the reveal of Jack being from the Boeshane Peninsula, only knows rumors surrounding the origins of Boe.
362* More likely The Face of Boe is what you become when you catch every STD in the universe. If anyone can manage to do that, it's Jack.
363** Nah, episode 3 of ''Series/TorchwoodMiracleDay'' shows he cares about immortal men not receiving [=STDs=] and prefers protection.
364*** But he was ''mortal'' then.
365
366[[WMG: Jack is River and Eleven's son]]
367This is why when Rose brought Jack back, she brought him back forever. It's not that he dies and come back, it's that he's trapped with an infinite series of regenerations. And the two years of memories that are missing, weren't taken by the Time Agency: they were reprogrammed by the Silence in a second attempt to kill the Doctor before the [[spoiler:Fall of the Eleventh at the Field's of Trenzalore.]]
368
369[[WMG: The Face of Boe (Jack) is a head because Jack was beheaded by monks]]
370As we all know, Captain is immortal, and pretends to be a Time Agent. He wears a vortex manipulator. Dorium Maldovar sold River a vortex manipulator “fresh off the wrist of a handsome Time Agent," as said somewhere in the fifth and sixth seasons. Dorium Maldovar works with the Headless Monks from time to time, and the Headless Monks decapitate people. The Face of Boe is a head with no body. Coincidence? I think not.
371* Jack got blown to itty bitty bits. He reformed his entire body. So, no.
372** People beheaded by the Monks still have living heads, so it's not a stretch to say that it would work differently than a human-made bomb. Maybe his body did regrow a head, but since the monks make living heads, that head went on living. Doesn't explain why it was so big, though.
373*** Remember in The Long Game, the TV said that the Face of Boe was pregnant, again. So maybe Jack had surgeries like Cassandra, to implant a birthing system.
374*** The pregnant thing seemed more like tabloid news.
375
376[[WMG: Jack became the Face of Boe when he breathed in the fumes from Gridlock]]
377In the episode Gridlock, the cat-man Thomas Kincade Brannigan tells the Doctor about an incident he purportedly witnessed, where a woman breathed in the exhaust fumes for 20 minutes, causing her head to balloon up to 50 Feet. His wife Valerie thinks he's making it up, but he seems to genuinely believe it. In the same episode we find out that the Face of Boe is on this planet.
378
379Therefore I put it to you that at some point in the past Jack Harkness either spent some time in that area, or else was just exposed to a similar set of fumes, and that this caused his head to balloon up like that woman's did, however unlike her he was immortal and thus survived the experience, leaving him as the face of boe. This may have left him dependent on the fumes, explaining why there is always smoke inside his tank.
380
381[[WMG: The Face of Boe founded a support group for recovering [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_addiction sex addicts]].]]
382He's recovering from that addiction himself.
383
384[[WMG: Jack ''creates'' Fixed Points wherever he goes via his mere existence.]]
385Jack is the ultimate impossible thing. He's like a straight line in the middle of all the timey wimey wibbly lines of the universe. In fact, this troper suspects that the only reason the universe accepts his existence at all is because it eventually finds a way to circumvent the whole Immortal thing so Jack can finally die, possibly as [[spoiler: the Face of Boe]] or not, depending on your leaning. It's possible that his presence somehow influences his environment, resulting in his creating circumstances which cannot be changed.
386
387[[WMG: The reason why Jack Harkness cannot die is that he's a Fixed Point in time.]]
388Specifically, he ''is'' the Face of Boe, and the fixed point is his reveal to The Doctor that [[spoiler:you are not alone.]] It is impossible for Jack to die beforehand since the fixed point ensures that TheReveal must take place. Once the reveal has taken place, he immediately dies, having lost the protection of the Laws of Time - he can't actually survive as a big floating head at all, and his predestination was the only thing keeping him alive.
389* Oh, hey - there's an almost identical guess right up the top there. Sigh.
390** True, but that one is merged into another guess, that Jack is a fixed point is not nessecarily BECAUSE of that scene. It could be something else.
391
392[[WMG: Captain Jack is missing a hand. And a vortex manipulator.]]
393In "The Pandorica Opens," where does River get her vortex manipulator? "Fresh off the wrist of a handsome young Time Agent."
394* Jack didn't have a vortex manipulator. It could be Captain John Hart's hand, though.
395** Well, perhaps she either took it from him in his Time Agent days, took it from him after Children of Earth and got a future Doctor to fix it, or perhaps the WMG about her being his daughter is true, and she just asked for it. Knowing [[ExtremeOmnisexual Jack]], [[ParentalIncest something like genetics wouldn't stop him, and any child of his would be similar]]. Besides, it would be funny, her calling him young. Hell, if the last one is true, he most likely would raise her to want to fuck the Doctor (or it's genetic).
396
397[[WMG:The Time Agency is an offshoot of Torchwood with Jack Harkness as its director.]]
398Torchwood was all but destroyed in the battle of Canary Wharf. Jack rebuilt it in honour of the Doctor to keep the Earth safe. We know Torchwood is famous enough that the name lasts for 200,000 years at least and becomes known throughout the galaxy; it's mentioned in "Bad Wolf" and "The Satan Pit". Jack Harkness is semi-immortal, and [[spoiler:lives for approximately 5 billion years (if the theory below is correct)]]. As a child, he may have been the first person recruited for the Time Agency -- possibly by [[Main/StableTimeLoop the older version of himself]]?
399* Not just an offshoot of Torchwood--it's Torchwood and UNIT merged into one organization.
400* And the older version of Jack erased the younger version's memory in order to close the StableTimeLoop.
401** Or maybe, like with Time Lords, Jack can't remember any time spent with an older version of himself! He was partners with an older version for a couple of years, then when they parted ways he couldn't recall any of the time spent together.
402
403[[WMG: Jack created the Cardiff Rift.]]
404After "The Parting of the Ways", Jack tries to return to the Doctor through his Vortex Manipulator, but ends up in 1869 instead. It's never explained why he ends up then, or why for that matter the Cardiff Rift exists beyond some timey-wimey thing. The first time we see the rift chronologically, however? 1869, where "The Unquiet Dead" sees the rift open enough for the Gelth. And on Christmas Eve. Either a glitch in the Vortex Manipulator had Jack sent to this notable spike in timey-wimeyness. Or maybe he's ''why'' it exists. As a fixed point created by the Time Vortex, Jack's arrival in 1869 created the Cardiff Rift, which later that year was used by the Gelth. Or maybe it has existed since 27 CE because that's when he will eventually be BuriedAlive, and having two Jacks in Cardiff was enough to open it for the Gelth.
405
406[[WMG:River is Jack's Daughter]]
407She's outrageously flirtatious, drawn to The Doctor, and she says "that's when everything changes."
408* She also has his gun. And, not that it really matters, him being immortal and all, but they're from the same century.
409* Jossed. She's [[spoiler:Amy and Rory's KidFromTheFuture]].
410** Being [[spoiler:Amy's daughter]] also explains the ''outrageously flirtatious'' bit.
411
412[[WMG: River is Susan's grandmother.]]
413River was said to have travelled and met many of the previous Doctors. While it was said she did not like the First Doctor, she could have still tried to have sex with him, and wound up being pregnant. This child would then grow up to have Susan.
414* Jossed. In "Silence in the Library," she tells the Tenth Doctor, "You're younger than I've ever seen you." If she was referring to physical appearance, it would not make sense since the Eleventh looks younger, so she must be referring to him just being younger in age. And, of course, we know what happens after this meeting.
415** How could Susan be on Gallifrey in the Doctor's past then?
416
417[[WMG: River Song is the thirteenth regeneration of Jenny]]
418Everyone ''assumes'' that their future relationship will be romantic, but the actual facts could just as easily support a father/daughter relationship. And if she's on her last regeneration, then her being a Time Lady doesn't affect the ending of "Forest of the Dead."
419* [[spoiler: {{Jossed}}. She's Amy and Rory's daughter.]]
420
421[[WMG: River Song's diary is bigger on the inside]]
422Would one small book ''really'' cover all the adventures a companion has with the Doctor? And River seems to know the Doctor better than most, probably meaning she's spent more time and had more adventures with him than the average companion. Her diary is a bit of Time Lord technology, allowing her to catalog all her adventures with the Doctor without running out of room.
423* semi-Jossed, in that River says in "The Husbands of River Song" that her diary is almost full. It could still hold more than a book that size should, but it does have a limit, possibly preset by the Doctor himself.
424
425[[WMG: Clara Oswin Oswald is the "perfect" companion.]]
426Somehow the Doctor has created Clara as the ideal companion - beautiful, brilliant, wonderfully unique - but in doing so, he's created something horrible: though he gets to travel with Clara for the rest of his days, she will always die. Why? Because that's just what happens to the Doctor's companions. Whatever has created Clara has designed her to be as authentic a companion as it can, right down to the inevitable death.
427
428[[WMG: Jack Harkness can only die due to old age/natural causes.]]
429Which is how he's the Face Of Boe. Jack still ages, after all. And when something should kill him, he's usually dead temporarily. Eventually [[AgeWithoutYouth he becomes so ancient and decrepit]] that his body can't logically sustain itself without life support. You turn off the Face of Boe's life support and he'll stay dead until he's plugged back in because he's simply too old for the revival to do anything on its own. By the year 5 billion he's become too old even for the life support to sustain him indefinitely. As for why he's a head? The humanoid Doctor, when aged to actually look 900 years, had a large head and a little body. Lady Cassandra was, due to age, reduced to nothing but a BrainInAJar and skin. That might simply be the consequence of humanoid figures aging beyond reason.
430
431[[WMG: Missy manipulated Clara’s timeline to ensure she’d be the “perfect” companion]]
432She didn’t just find a control freak and place them in Eleven’s path. She engineered one for maximum chaos. And she had a lot of time to cook this one up given her work with the Nethersphere.
433
434[[/folder]]
435
436[[folder:Enemies]]
437
438[[WMG: How the Weeping Angels don't freeze permanently in their normal position]]
439Whenever a weeping angel is in the normal position (i.e., hands in front of face), they split into two in a way similar to a single-celled organism. The two fight at light speed and the "stronger" one is the one left standing, and moves so when the characters turn their heads, the Angel looks as if it has moved to another spot. The reason why they haven't sent everybody back in time already is that it takes enough energy to fight.
440
441[[WMG: The Weeping Angels don't have eyelids]]
442I've only seen "Blink" and the two-parter in season 5, but the Angels always cover their eyes - they never simply close them.
443
444[[WMG: The Weeping Angels are so eager to wipe out all life because they are put in a AndIMustScream status anytime something living observes them]]
445* If I turned into a statue everytime something looked at me, I'd be eager to kill off everything with eyes too.
446** Of course, since ''Blink'' initially establishes that they can't even look at each other (though ''The Time of Angels'' later glosses over this by having an entire army of angels storm around without bothering to cover their eyes), killing all other life would hardly solve their problem.
447*** The Angels are trying to kill each other as well, they're just getting rid of everything else first because intelligent life keeps taking pictures of them and creating more Angels, meaning there's more of them to get rid of.
448*** In "The Angels take Manhattan" not only did it explain that Weeping Angels have the power to turn normal statues into Angels "Doctor: They've converted all the statues in Manhattan" but when chasing the heroes in the hallway they were directly across from each other with Doctor, River, Amy and Rory in between them. (Though if they had frozen because of that it explained how the Ponds got out so easily) What I'm saying is that making more of them, and putting themselves in these situations didn't seem to bother them in that episode.
449
450[[WMG: There is a defense against the Weeping Angels.]]
451* Mirrored sunglasses. That way, even if you blink, the Angel is still caught by its own reflection.
452
453[[WMG: Weeping Angels halve the distance between you and them every time you look away]]
454This is my theory as to why, despite their supposed incredible speed, they don't move all that fast. Every time you look away, and subsequently look back, the Weeping Angel has halved the distance between you. The distance seems relatively accurate in the episodes I've seen. Eventually, they are close enough to simply reach out and grab you.
455* According to Zeno's paradox, if you always halve the distance towards your destination, you will never reach it. So, by your WMG, we're all safe from the Angels in our posters and TV screens because they can never reach us mathematically.
456
457[[WMG: The Weeping Angels have an even scarier predator.]]
458Their ability to be quantum locked is a defense mechanism, meaning there's something that hunts them. Angels send people back in time, are extremely fast and freeze in place when someone sees them. What could require that sort of defense mechanism? The Weeping Angel predator is a creature with the greatest eye-sight in the universe. It has 360 degree sight, stone-like eyes that never need to blink, able to see clearly from miles away and in all light spectrum. Weeping Angels are indestructible normally, but they're only as durable as stone when you're not looking at them and this predator eats stone. It is ageless(rendering send it back in time useless) [[MightyGlacier and while sluggish, far tougher and more durable]]. The proto-Weeping Angels evolved speed to get away from the monster, but the monster evolved a counter-a sort of natural glue that is sprays in the area, so they are slowed down and it can eat them. So they developed the defense mechanism, hoping that the predator would get bored and leave so it doesn't get hungry waiting.
459
460[[WMG: The Master is Koschei the Deathless]]
461The Master dedicated most of his mental prowess towards cheating death. The Master can time travel, and the Master is evil. Surely, he could have inspired legends about an immortal evil being.
462
463[[WMG: The Master will return... as a companion.]]
464He'll decide that maybe the Doctor had the right idea.
465* Interestingly in the (now non-canonical) ''Scream of the Shalka'', the Master ''did'' become the companion to an alternate Ninth Doctor... albeit an unwilling one, given that he was in an android body that was incapable of exiting the TARDIS. Sadly, ''Shalka'' was nixed by the new series before that particular plot thread went anywhere...
466* This is basically [[spoiler:what happens over the course of Season 10 with Missy!]]
467
468[[WMG: The Master will return... with proper facial hair.]]
469And be a companion, because a non evil goatee would be a proper Moffat mindscrew.
470* Confirmed, although separately.
471
472[[WMG: When/if the Master returns, he will do so as an AntiHero.]]
473* Jossed. [[GenderBender She's]] just as evil as ever.
474* And then Confirmed, or at least she was trying.
475
476[[WMG: The Master wrote the WestminsterChimes.]]
477Ding-dong-ding-dong... ding-dong-ding-dong... the people of London have been hearing the Drums for ''years''!
478
479[[WMG: The New Series Master is a result of canonized DracoInLeatherPants.]]
480While Russel T Davies may simply have given the Master a FreudianExcuse for a "more realistic" villain, it's just as possible that Davies considers the Master less evil than [[AxeCrazy he actually is.]] His reasons for giving the Master leather pants is primarily the same as [[SlashFic the shippers]]-bountiful HoYay. [[StraightGay Naturally]], Russel T Davies likes [[HoYay gay subtext]], and the incredibly blatant subtext between the Doctor and the Master was probably an attempt to make the pairing canon. Why is the Master still just as much of a psycho? Davies knows making him an AntiVillain off the bat would [[CharacterDerailment be an outrage]], and isn't so obsessed with the Master that he'd forget he was a villain. [[AuthorAppeal Or maybe he just likes the psycho aspect]] [[AngelDevilShipping in the pairing]]: the fans sure did.
481
482[[WMG: The "Saxon" Master was trying to avenge Gallifrey and save the Universe from [[spoiler: the Daleks and the Valeyard.]]]]
483The Doctor snapped sometime during the Time War and became a FallenHero, destroying the Time Lords. When the Master learned what had become of the Time Lords, he, outraged at the Doctor's destruction of their people, decided to avenge Gallifrey. He took over the Doctor's precious planet Earth, which the Master surmised the Doctor turned into the disturbingly amoral, but very useful, Toclafane. He gloated in his victory--being a really nasty dictator toward the planet he blames for the Doctor's earlier FaceHeelTurn and slide toward the Valeyard was just a bonus. Luckily, he decided to keep Torchwood around because he realized that the Doctor had made the Earth a WeirdnessMagnet. He accurately surmised it was [[spoiler:the Daleks]] and prepared all the weaponry shown in Last of the Time Lords specifically to wipe them out. He kept knowledge of this from the Doctor because he suspected the Doctor would either oppose, halt, or avenge any attempts to destroy them, or, worse, destroy the Earth to get at them.
484[[WMG: [[Creator/SachaDhawan Dhawan!Master]] is younger than the last two.]]
485* Three main reasons: First, we've only seen him regenerate on-screen ONCE in the entire series, meaning the others could be in any order. [[note]]Although Missy is likely after Simm. Just not necessarily the next one.[[/note]] Second, he doesn't seem to view humans as food. Just as targets. Missy would happily have you for lunch, a notion picked up in the (apparently) previous incarnation. Third, he's using a weapon (the [=TCE=]) that hasn't been seen since the classic series.
486[[WMG: Caan, Jast, Thay, and Sec are letters in the Kaled alphabet.]]
487* That makes a lot of sense. Each of the Cult of Skaro's names are only a single syllable, much like all letters[[note]]Except W, or greek letters like Omega[[/note]]. Also, their name tags are basically the same except with what's inside the "box." Its possible that these letters are considered vowels.
488
489[[WMG: The Valeyard technically isn't the Thirteenth Doctor]]
490He is the result of the final regeneration, but Twelve's death was caused by something that caused a double regeneration - therefore creating a proper Thirteen but also spawning the Valeyard. As to what might cause it... Some kind of alien radiation? I haven't gotten that far yet.
491* Biological metacrisis again, but with the Master filling in Donna's spot? He'd be a full Time Lord, presumably (and pick up the Master's evilness like Handy picked up some of Donna's characteristics) but who knows whether he could regenerate? Although if there was a metacrisis, presumably it'd have to occur in a different way so that the Doctor still went from Twelve to Thirteen...
492
493[[WMG: Regardless of whether Time Lords can change sex on regeneration, The Master / Missy ''didn't''.]]
494Everyone assumes s/he did, but it's never actually been confirmed. Indeed, Missy is suspiciously evasive about the whole question - even to her former self. Possibilities:
495* What this troper has always taken to be the case: The Master didn't regenerate into a female body, he stole it. After all, that's something we know The Master does.
496* Alternatively, Missy isn't in a female body at all - he's simply in disguise. Also known to be a standard modus operandi for The Master.
497* Or The Master changed sex the same way people do - through surgery. If you ''want'' to become female, it's probably a more controllable way of doing it than entrusting it to the regeneration process.
498
499[[/folder]]
500
501[[folder:Series 1]]
502
503[[WMG:The bomb the Doctor uses in "Rose" was made by Ace]]
504She left it behind on the TARDIS.
505Of course it was made by Ace. Have you SEEN her explosives? She carried them around in her backpack and used alarm clocks and timers with physical noise-makers in them(as opposed to digital)! She could make them with the contents of an average middle- or hich-school's chemistry classroom's unlocked chemical cabinets! They also had the tendency to be highly unstable. Hence the "Nice to meet you Rose. Now run." Also that bomb was almost identical to several Ace used. Probably only stuck a new timer on there and started it. Ace's Nitro-9 was powerful enough to destroy a Cyber-shuttle and clear a landing space for a ship.
506
507[[WMG: The Ninth Doctor was long-sighted.]]
508It would explain why he seemed to only notice his face for the first time in "Rose"; he never had the chance to look at himself in other mirrors because he couldn't hold them at the right distance. Any time he read words close to his eyes can be attributed to TARDIS psychic translation making it easier for him.
509
510[[WMG: The 9th Doctor was planning to stop JFK's assassination.]]
511Only problem was that he was distracted. Being fresh off the Time War, the 9th Doctor would be in the right mindset to go "Screw causality!" and try to stop the Time War instead. During this year, there were two pre-Time War version of himself to get help from-his first incarnation and the very first episode of the series, and his MagnificentBastard of a seventh incarnation. Through telling and explaining the Time War, the 9th Doctor had a vain hope that it may prevent the Hell that was the Last Great Time War. Unfortunately the Doctor's other selves forgot as they normally do in multi-Doctor stories, and the 9th Doctor wasted his time trying to use the TimeyWimeyBall to make sure they remember. Either the 9th Doctor either missing the opportunity due to not thinking straight as a result of warning his past selves, or more likely giving up with the plan anyway.
512
513[[WMG: The Doctor Hunter in episode 1 of the revived series faked all of his evidence but two pictures.]]
514The picture with Rose, and a single picture where The Doctor was facing the camera. And he did it poorly, too, since he (unlike the prop makers) was unable to take a bunch of photos of Cristopher Eccleston or the Ninth Doctor facing different directions from different distances or knowledge of scaling negatives.
515
516[[WMG: The 9th Doctor had adventures when he dematerialised without Rose near the end of Rose]]
517* He could have met Winston Churchill that time and they went to the court of Emperor Tiberius, as mentioned in the Brilliant Book 2011. There is no mention of Rose there.
518** This is made canon in E-Short ''The Beast of Babylon''.
519
520[[WMG:Adam's fate (kicked out of the TARDIS with a device in his head) was {{retcon}}ned]]
521
522''Dalek'' happened a few years in the future, in a world where it was plausible that someone could have a Dalek in his base for many years without having ever heard of Daleks. When the Daleks invaded Earth in the various new series season endings, they changed history; it's no longer possible that someone from the time of ''Dalek'' could not know what a Dalek is.
523
524Also, the Dalek in ''Dalek'' had been around for years without any other Daleks around for it to contact; but in the new history, it would have been able to contact Daleks during those invasions.
525* Those invasions where the Daleks were utterly wiped out or time-shifted years before? And I don't think that the Progenitors would have wanted to do anything with the part-human Dalek.
526
527Therefore, ''Dalek'' was wiped out of history, and Adam never came on board the TARDIS in the first place.
528
529[[WMG:Adam is Davros.]]
530Adam, a character introduced in the episode "Dalek", is an expert in alien technology and meets a lone Dalek survivor of the Time War. The Doctor then takes him to the year 200,000, where he learns a lot about future technology and receives a data port in his forehead. Since he and the Doctor part company on bad terms (The Doctor takes him home and throws him out for trying to profit from knowledge of the future), this will turn him from a short-sighted but basically okay sap into a raving megalomaniac. He will dedicate the rest of his life to defeating the Doctor by recreating the Daleks, whom he knows are the Time Lord's greatest enemy. And that data port in his forehead looks kinda like a third eye if you tilt your head to the left and squint.
531* So all he needs to do is create a time machine (the Daleks were first created at least 1000 years in our past), a trans-mat, and a trans-species mutator to turn him into a Kaled. A FountainOfYouth to return him to an infant age, or at least a younger one, so he has time to learn all the highly advanced technology he would need to know to make the Daleks would also help. This is the Whoniverse, so none of this should be a problem.
532
533[[WMG:The Fourth Great Human Empire shown in "The Long Game" is an alternate history created by the repeated invasions of Earth.]]
534According to the Doctor, the Fourth Great Human Empire should have had aliens in it. However, the empire he knew came from a history where none of the early 21st-century invasions of Earth occured. The result of this was an Earth that had a negative view of aliens that weren't the Doctor - and had quite a bit of alien technology scavanged from the wreckage of its attackers.
535
536After a few more invasions, the humans finally had had enough. They reverse-engineered the alien technology, built warships, and did what the Master was planning to do - declare war on the rest of the universe. This would have gone rather badly for Earth, except the aliens that had invaded Earth included Daleks. The humans had Dalek technology and could work it. (Hey, if Ian and Barbara could run a Dalek TARDIS even once...) They went after their neighbors first, as well as targeting a few races that had attacked Earth. This created the First Great Human Empire. A coalition of alien races succeeded in bringing down this empire, but they failed to subjugate Earth. The humans made a comeback, and expanded even further.
537
538The cycle repeated a couple more times, with the Fourth Great Human Empire the largest. The Fourth Great Human Empire broke up after the Dalek Emperor sterilized Earth in "The Parting Of The Ways", putting an end to the days of Earth as a single belligerant empire. However, Rose Tyler's annihilation of the Daleks also marked the destruction of the last race in the galaxy - or possibly the universe - capable of posing a threat to humanity. Through resourcefulness, cunning, and a tendency to destroy any new possible threats, humanity survived until the end of the universe.
539* This does go to explain why humanity was so accepting of using the Ood as slaves, Halpen propaganda aside(you'd still wonder why they'd be so eager to use the Ood without questioning why they're so servile). Its possible that, as a result of the Dalek Invasion of the Fourth Human Empire, humanity decided to be peaceful with other races instead of warring, considering how utterly screwed belligerency got them with the Daleks.
540
541[[WMG: After the events of "Father's Day", The Doctor read up on the ClockRoaches and now knows how to stop them.]]
542The Ninth Doctor says that the Time Lords would have stopped the Reapers from appearing, meaning that there is a way to stop them. The Doctor wasn't prepared at the time of "Father's Day", so couldn't do anything. Since then, he's learned all he could from Time Lord documents on the subject and can now control the Reapers so they never appear (which is why they haven't appeared since, even though time-altering events like that one have occurred).
543
544[[WMG: The Doctor has met Wilf when he was the Ninth Doctor, but he doesn't even know it, and Wilf likewise]]
545In "The Empty Child"/"The Doctor Dances", Nancy was "in charge" of the neighborhood children that night during the attacks, Wilf would be right around that age to be one of the older children. This would also fit with The Doctor and Wilf always running into each other and destiny "pulling them together".
546
547[[WMG: The Doctor's "Sometimes you let one go" speech in ''Boom Town'' was directed at Creator/JimmySavile by someone who knew but could not prove, in order to cause a HeelRealization.]]
548
549[[WMG: Jack's butt is BiggerOnTheInside.]]
550Explains where he got that gun in ''Bad Wolf''.
551* [[RuleThirtyFour Gee, I wonder why...]]
552
553[[WMG: Jack has a cybernetically implanted secret compartment inside one of his buttocks]]
554That's where he kept the laser pistol (and the TARDIS key, because he didn't lose it when his clothes got disintegrated).
555
556[[WMG: "Bad Wolf" is the origin of the word bad.]]
557Because no-one knows where "bad" came from etymologically (though there are many different theories), and we have seen the Doctor's influence shape language throughout the cosmos. Given the phrase "Bad Wolf" was littered throughout time and space, it makes sense for a couple of languages to pick the word up - especially English, given it's the official and native language of a country where the Doctor spends a lot of his time, hence the "Bad Wolfs" may be concentrated there. It's possible that the word is common to multiple unrelated languages throughout the universe, and no-one quite knows where it came from, causing much distress to Intergallactic Linguists of the Future.
558
559[[WMG: The Dalek emperor from Recap/DoctorWhoS27E13ThePartingOfTheWays was the same Dalek Emperor from Recap/DoctorWhoS4E3ThePowerOfTheDaleks.]]
560
561[[WMG: Captain Jack wasn't the only person brought back to life.]]
562There were many more people who died on the Gamestation. Given the amount of power that Rose/Bad Wolf was wielding, there's no reason she couldn't have brought them all back; Jack was just the only one we saw. And if they got brought back the same way as Jack, they probably also share Jack's "condition", which would mean that somewhere in the future there's a large number of immortal humans running around.
563* Does this mean that Rose is somehow responsible for the Immortals in Franchise/{{Highlander}}?
564** If it is, then Jack can be killed. He just needs to be beheaded. Admittedly, that may just make it ''possible'' for him to die, given that Face of Boe jazz.
565*** Maybe that's how "The Face of Boe" got started. Captain Jack got his head cut off and had his body separated from it.
566** The Face of Boe was stated to be part of a race of Boekind. So either Jack is so altered as the Face of Boe [[MonsterProgenitor he's capable of spawning a new species]] ([[ExtremeOmnisexual which fits]]) or they're the SocietyOfImmortals created by Rose restoring the life of those on the Game Station.
567
568[[WMG: The Doctor got a new regeneration cycle at the end of “The Parting of the Ways”]]
569We already know from “The Five Doctors” that regeneration cycles could be granted by the Time Lords (like they were offering to the Master in his stolen Trakenite body), and from “The Deadly Assassin” that time energy is required to do so, so it’s realistic that in absorbing the Bad Wolf energy from Rose Tyler’s body he reset his regeneration count back down to zero (while keeping the second heart). This caused a regeneration into the Tenth Doctor (a particularly violent regeneration). The only question in my mind about this is whether Ten is the new ‘one’ or the new ‘two’ making his ultimate number of regenerations (including the previous nine) either twenty-one or twenty-two.
570This, of course, is always assuming that the overload of time energy didn’t just break the cycle of regenerations leading to functional immortality…
571
572[[WMG:At the time Rose was conceived, Pete and Jackie lived in Watkins' old apartment.]]
573And the addition of "Bad Wolf" to Isobel's message wall in the animated version of episode 1 of ''The Invasion'' was Rose's doing in ''The Parting of the Ways''.
574
575[[WMG: Because of the TARDIS's effect on Rose in "The Parting of the Ways"...]]
576...that's why the Doctor seems to have a stronger obsession with Rose as opposed to other companions. It's the residue of the TARDIS in Rose.
577
578[[WMG: Reapers are the temporal equivalent of white blood cells.]]
579They appear in "wounds" of time to sterilize it, and have a habit of being indiscriminate. Destroying humanity was the equivalent of having an allergic reaction, and the Time Lords served as an innoculation when they were around.
580
581[[WMG: Rose inspired TheBigBadWolf trope in the first place.]]
582"Bad Wolf" was spread across space and time, and translated to fit the languages of where it was sent such as "Schlecter Wolf" on the German bomb in "The Doctor Dances". The Brother's Grimm took ideas from it, and even earlier others like [[Myth/NorseMythology Fenrir]] were influenced by it.
583
584[[WMG: The 9th Doctor's presence in the famous pictures was to check on history.]]
585He had just come out of a war that wasn't just horrific [[WarIsHell by the toll on life and sanity]], but on the fabric of time and space itself. Checking out historical events he would know about already and may already have been part of was to see if they events were still intact and not changed/removed by the Last Great Time War. The WhoShotJFK trope could be the war shifting the events around.
586
587[[WMG:Every major character on TheSlowPath in 2005 checks Clive's "Doctor Who?" website from "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E1Rose Rose]]" to find, or at least keep tabs on, the Doctor.]]
588
589This includes:
590* As of Series 3: [[spoiler:Jack Harkness.]]
591* As of Series 10: [[spoiler:Nardole, who's making sure they are all past Doctors and not Twelve, who's supposed to be guarding the Vault.]]
592* As of Series 12: [[spoiler:The Master.]]
593* As of Series 13: [[spoiler:the TARDIS]] (and yes, I am proposing that [[spoiler:the TARDIS]] has access to the Internet and isn't just tracking the Doctor by [[spoiler: seeing all of time and space]].)
594
595[[/folder]]
596
597[[folder:Series 2]]
598
599[[WMG:The events of "Tooth and Claw" gave rise to three alternate timelines]]
600At the end of T&C, the Doctor wasn't entirely sure whether Queen Victoria had avoided infection by the werewolves. In the standard Whoniverse (that is, the timeline in which most of the series takes place), the Doctor's friendly relations with the current Queen (see "Silver Nemesis" and "Voyage of the Damned") indicate that the Royal Family was not infected.
601
602In another timeline, the Royals did become werewolves. They tried to keep it secret until they could build up a great enough force of werewolves to dominate the human race, but they were found out. The resulting revolution deposed (and probably exterminated) the Royals and turned Britain into a successful republic. However, before being deposed, they accelerated the world's technology and imprinted a sort-of Victorian [[SteamPunk Steam Punk-y]] style of design. This, in case you haven't guessed, is Pete Tyler's world.
603
604In the third timeline, the revolution turned bad, as revolutions have a habit of doing. The Royals managed to co-opt the leaders of the revolution, turn them into werewolves, and remain the secret rulers of the new, supposedly-freed, Britain. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss. The brave new world quickly turned very nasty and Orwellian, at least from the point of view of the ordinary, non-werewolf populace. And thus was born the alternate timeline the Third Doctor visited in "Inferno".
605
606Note that the Brigade Leader (the eyepatched alternate Brigadier), being highly placed in the post-revolution armed forces, was probably a werewolf. This means there's a good chance he survived that bullet and maybe even the eruption...
607* Alternately, the royalty/werewolves/revolutionaries managed to infect much of the populace with a degraded form of werewolfism (perhaps through vaccines) as a way of controlling the population. (Why bother with show trials for your opponenents when you can trigger them to "wolf out" and then kill them with no repercussions?) The green goop brought up by the Inferno project could have triggered the werewolfism, since there doesn't seem to be any logical connection between the Earth's core and dodgy-looking wolf-men.
608
609[[WMG: The Doctor's name has already been given.]]
610In The Girl in the Fireplace, the Doctor says that he invented the banana daiquiri a couple of centuries early. Daiquiri-->Da query-->The question. Answering the question invents delicious frozen beverages.
611
612[[WMG: Pete Tyler's Vitex product failed because of a name similar to an anaphrodisiac herb]]
613
614* In Pete's World, where the [[TheAssimilator Cybermen]] of [[MegaCorp Cybus Industries]] were constructed, the health drink Vitex was invented and became extremely successful. However, in the standard timeline, it did not. Perhaps this is because of the name ''Vitex'' sounding like a species called ''Vitex agnus-castus'' - [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitex_agnus-castus known as the Monk's Pepper]] - used for its supposed ability to induce intentional Asexuality in various [[UsefulNotes/RomanCatholicism Catholic religious orders]], a desirable effect for said monks, but the general population would likely not want to ingest a literal FetishRetardant - which Vitex ([[BlandNameProduct the fictional]] [[InNameOnly 'health' drink]]) may sound like.
615* Well, dying twenty years early ''might'' have had something to do with it, eh?
616
617[[WMG:The Doctor didn't drain the TARDIS power cell which he used to kill the Cybermen in "Rise of the Cybermen"]]
618It's too plot-convenient for such a powerful weapon to run out with one shot but later power the TARDIS home with no problem. More likely, the Doctor lied when he said it was dead. Remember, he was in a van full of armed men who'd likely want the weapon for themselves, and he had to prevent them from getting it. He didn't use it to avoid being taken prisoner later because it's an absolute last-resort weapon that he used only when there was no other way to survive.
619* Did he say it was permanently dead? He said its energy was used up and it would take a few hours to recharge, which was why he couldn't use it again right then.
620* It was on some sort of sleep cycle? It was busy recharging throughout Rise of the Cybermen, right?
621
622[[WMG: The Beast is the Doctor]]
623In ''The Name of the Doctor'', the Great Intelligence names him ''Storm'', '''''The Beast''''', ''The Valeyard''. The first and third are very old references (see "the Oncoming Storm"). The second one never appeared before.
624
625The creature imprisoned in Krop Tor in ''The Impossible Planet'' was literally referred to as the Beast. It also fits a theme we have seen before - the Doctor being described as the most dangerous, most evil creature in existence, and imprisoned in an unbreakable tomb (the Pandorica) to protect the universe.
626
627Now that the Doctor has broken the rules of regeneration in ''The Time of the Doctor'' (having retroactively added both the War Doctor and the Meta-Crisis Doctor to his thirteen lives, and then regenerating a thirteenth time), who knows what could happen further on. The Time Lords probably had their reasons to restrict regeneration...
628
629[[WMG: The Beast is not dead]]
630* He is only biding his time until he crawls forth from the shifting shadows. For power was given unto him to bring terror into the hearts of man until the end. Power over the earth, the sky and beyond the stars. Oh, who can stand before The Beast, and who can wage war against it. He is the Final Enemy, and only God himself could ever hope to beat him for good.
631** That's assuming the Beast is actually the Devil, and the universe of Series/DoctorWho actually has a god.
632
633[[WMG: The Beast and Sutekh are the same individual.]]
634Think about it-they're both [[TimeAbyss impossibly old]], [[EldritchAbomination seem to defy the Doctor's knowledge]], and have ''immense'' psychic powers along with a contempt for all life. Plus they're both voiced by Gabriel Woolf. Sutekh, in order to escape his SealedEvilInACan status after "The Pyramids of Mars", had his consciousness freed. After potential millennia of trying to find a new body, Sutekh hijacked a Time Lord and went back to the previous universe, hoping to ensure that no live but him will ever exist. This failed, and the eons of being locked up has weakened his psychic abilities and likely driven him made, with the delusion that he's the genuine Satan. As a result, the Beast hardly resembles his Osirian origin.
635
636* Suppose Sutekh has no actual appearance, his form is simply your mind trying to perceive something beyond comprehension. When he claimed to be an Egyptian deity he appeared with the appropriate symbolism. When he claimed to be the ultimate evil it changed again. What the Doctor was seeing and what the audience was seeing was two different things. We saw Satan, he saw the Time Lord equivalent of an evil god.
637
638[[WMG: At the end of "Love & Monsters", Ursula actually died forever]]
639Elton is an UnreliableNarrator: just look at the Franchise/ScoobyDoo race! Losing all his friends made him so upset that he started imagining things and developed a mental disorder.
640* Or maybe the Doctor tampered with Elton's brains to make him believe Ursula's face had been saved.
641** Better yet, the Doctor added an hallucination to a block of concrete. He's still guilty about tricking Elton's mind.
642
643[[WMG: The events of "Doomsday" were a {{plan}} by Peter Tyler.]]
644How else did he know to teleport to exactly the right place in time?
645* Of all the characters, he's the only one to get exactly what he wants.
646* His catchphrase is "Trust me on this." Obviously you can't trust him. In fact...
647
648[[WMG: Pete Tyler is The Master.]]
649Somehow, in the events of ''Doomsday'', Pete Tyler manages to go from being an annoying, ineffectual nuisance in an alternate reality to manipulating every other character into doing exactly what he wants (see the previous WMG). What's more, he antagonizes The Doctor while winning his respect (a definite Master quality), and even in this reality, is able to deduce more about the workings of time travel than even Shakespeare could. And, let us be honest: we are talking about a man who is important enough to have the ear of the President, due to the success of his "health drink business". This is the equivalent of a Coca-Cola executive being invited to Cabinet meetings, then conveniently being in the exact right place to lead the New World Order after a massive upheaval -- who but The Master could pull it off?
650* Wait... that means Rose is... oh dear.
651
652[[WMG: Pete Tyler is The AlternateUniverse Master.]]
653Basically the above epileptic tree, explained further.
654
655Turns out Pete Tyler DID die in the alternate universe, but The Master of that universe regenerated into his body double, which explains all of the clever things he was able to do, and also why they were never able to conceive children. Also, this Master is a good guy, making him the EvilTwin of the main universe Master.
656* This implies that The Doctor of the AU would be a Goatee'd evil man. Or the AU Doctor that becomes the Valeyard in an above WMG.
657** Or that, as is somewhat typical for alternate reality storylines, it was the death of the Doctor as a young man that eventually inspired the Master to become good. Depending on when the breakpoint took place, it's possible that a previously evil Master has reformed to "honor the Doctor's sacrifice", maybe even going so far as to try and protect that backward little planet the Doctor used to like so much. Even farther back, and perhaps the only reason the Master is on Earth at all is because he decided to hide the Hand of Omega there years ago after he stole it from Gallifrey...
658*** Also, keep in mind that, in a universe without the Doctor, the Time War would have ended differently, which means no need for the beacon, which means no "sound of drums", which means the Master would be far more sane...
659
660[[WMG: There is, [[DeadAlternateCounterpart or at least was]] a Doctor in Pete's World.]]
661Given how important the Doctor is to the timeline, why wouldn't there be one in the AlternateUniverse? But how come we never hear of him? The fact Rose does't exist in this timeline may be why. Without her and the Bad Wolf entity, the Doctor died in one of the adventures we've seen or in some alternate adventure created because of the ripple effect. There is a Torchwood Institute in Pete's World; perhaps they were formed in response to a HeroicSacrifice on the alternate Doctor's part. If so the alternate TARDIS might be in storage by them or a possible alternate UNIT, which would give the Meta-Crisis Doctor one.
662
663[[WMG: The TARDIS triggered the HADS in "The Impossible Planet/Satan Pit"]]
664It's mentioned that it's a ContrivedCoincidence that the Doctor found the TARDIS just in time to escape, but what if it isn't. Mentioned a few times the Hostile Action Displacement System has the TARDIS automatically relocate in the event that it comes under risk. Given that "The Doctor's Wife" reveals that it takes the Doctor where they need to be, it's entirely possible that the TARDIS triggered the HADS when the area it was in collapsed, and it purposely chose to land where the Doctor would end up later. Alternatively it just did this without using the HADS, given everything it wouldn't surpise me if the TARDIS could fly itself and just humored people who used it's "controls".
665
666[[/folder]]
667
668[[folder:Series 3]]
669
670[[WMG: The reason Ten gave a FateWorseThanDeath to the Family of Blood:]]
671Humans are ''disgusting''. He likes hanging out with them, but he could never have imagined ''being'' one of them ([[HalfHumanHybrid sort of]] [[RetCon again]]), Eight's erratic behavior notwithstanding. He ''could'' have just killed them; any difficulty would have just been an excuse. He could even have just let them die (they had only a few months left in their personal timelines when they went after him and his). But they forced him to be human, and that ''really'' made him mad. Thay ''had to pay''.
672* So HumansAreSpecial ''and'' HumansAreBastards, with a sideorder of WhatTheHellHero? Yes!
673
674[[WMG: Kathy Nightingale's daughter Sally and Billy Shipton's wife Sally are the same person]]
675A friend of mine came up with this when we were rewatching Blink. If Kathy got married a few years after landing in 1920, her daughter, the youngest of her children, was probably born somewhere in the 1930's. That would put Sally in her 30's when Billy was transported to 1969.
676
677[[WMG: Sally Sparrow and Larry Nightingale from ''Blink'' somehow are Amy and Rory.]]
678How? Timey Wimey.
679
680[[WMG: The Weeping Angels from "Blink" came from the images given to the Doctor.]]
681The Doctor didn't find out about the "image of an Angel" rule until he's in his eleventh regeneration, so maybe the images that Sally gave him came to life in Wester Drumlins, and then those Angels were the four Angels from the episode.
682
683[[WMG: The Doctor gets sent back to 1969 shortly after the "four things and a lizard" incident.]]
684Sally gave the Doctor the info in the nick of time. Maybe the "four things" ''were'' the Angels...
685* [[FridgeBrilliance There were four Angels frozen in the basement...]]
686
687[[WMG: The events of "Blink" were an EvilPlan on the part of the Angels.]]
688
689Now that we know that anything that holds the image of an Angel becomes and Angel, it would seem the Angels in ''Blink'' succeeded in getting into the TARDIS after all. How? ''Those pictures Sally Sparrow took of them, then gave to the Doctor.'' Now they're sitting in the depths of the TARDIS somewhere, forgotten and waiting for the perfect time to attack. Assuming that during ''Blink'' they still had the problem of the Angels dying in the Maze of the Dead, they had this plan: because they don't know how to fly the TARDIS, the Angels from the pictures and the Angel from the Byzantium plotted to bring the Doctor to them. Then while he's running around trying to climb up to the ship, they take control and use the TARDIS energy to feed their army. Then they have two sources of energy instead of one, doubling their chances of success.
690* No, that's not it. The Angels in Blink are also part of the time loop. Sally Sparrow gives the Doctor the pictures. He takes them. The angels get out. He and Martha get zapped back in time, defeat the angels, get the pictures... I'm not entirely sure that works, but I think there's a way to do it so that the Doctor and Martha are not part of the time loop.
691
692[[WMG:Jack Harkness is the Face of Boe]]
693This is suggested in Main/{{canon}}, but it's just as likely that Jack got his childhood nickname of "the Face of Boe" as a jokey reference to the ''real'' [=FoB=]. It is ''also'' possible that he got the nickname as described, and, after aging so much that he was nothing more than a giant face with tentacles, he chose to use it as an alias again. But now we're heading into Main/StableTimeLoop territory.
694* When the Doctor is aged 1000 years in "Last Of The Time Lords", his head becomes much bigger than the rest of his body, and he lives in a cage. Coincidence, or hinting that the same thing would happen to Jack?
695** If it does, it'll take longer. Jack is already over 2000 chronologically by now, but a high percentage of that was spent cycling through lives. It can't happen to him until he goes for a thousand years or so ''without'' any intervening deaths.
696* We have no evidence that The Face of Boe was famous in his time; the earliest time the Face is known to be famous in is about the year 200,000. Jack is from the 51st century, but he could easily live to see 200,000 C.E. again even if he takes "the slow path."
697* Perhaps five billion years is enough time for Jack to change enough for his fixed-point effect to come loose.
698** Maybe he's not really totally ''immortal'' at all. He's connected directly to the Vortex, and the Doctor can feel the entire timeline in his head: maybe the act of sensing the vortex directly through Jack is blocking out everything, and the Doctor is only ''assuming'' Jack is immortal because all he can see when he looks at Jack is the vortex, and the vortex feels timeless.
699
700[[WMG: Jack was kidding about being the Face of Boe]]
701In "Utopia", Martha mentioned the Face of Boe to the Doctor, but Jack was in the room... so obviously he heard her say it. Jack probably thought it would be funny to mess with the Doctor and Martha.
702
703[[WMG: Jack calls himself "The Face of Boe" in his old age as a self-deprecating joke.]]
704When he first starts turning into a giant head, he's actually rather bitter about losing his good looks (and possibly the ability to screw). One day, he's talking to some friends or followers or whatever he has at that point, and he reminisces about being the "Face of Boe" as a young man - that dashing fashion model of a Time Agent - and it sticks. Because now that face is all he has left.
705
706[[WMG: Jack is not a fixed point in time]]
707Jack informing the Doctor that another Time Lord has survived ''is'', meaning he cannot die permanently until he does. This could explain why he was able to die as the Face Of Boe.
708* Somewhat Jossed by Children of Earth; though it takes place after the Doctor Who series 4 finale, long after Jack has had his most recent interaction with the Doctor, he is shown to die and revive. The broad theory hasn't been proven false, but the details have. Perhaps the Face of Boe's sacrifice is the fixed point?
709* Who's to say that the Face of Boe didn't revive after that death?
710* I thought the Doctor was more freaked out that Jack was a "fact" as in immortal which is just too weird, even for the Doctor.
711
712[[WMG: The Futurekind from Utopia are at least part Weeping Angel. Maybe it's made of many horrors from across the stars.]]
713You look at their facial structure, their teeth, and they are distinctly Angelesque, especially that of the one that smuggled into the Silo. They seem to be carnivoires, but not cannibals. They appear to be race puritans, like Daleks and Cybermen, and it's implied they a not a natural race. It's said that the Futurekind are what awaits the human race, they are converted into them like vampires and werewolves. The tattoos on some of their faces are like the markings from Impossible Planet. It's possible they were a science experiment to try and preserve the human race, by taking the strongest races that never die and emulating features of theirs, without acknowledging their danger, and instead creating monsters. Or instead, the were an experiment done by someone like the Master to destroy the human race.
714
715[[WMG: The Toclafane from the End of the Universe travel back in time and become Daleks]]
716When Martha helps capture a Toclafane body/shell/SealedEvilInaCan, they appear to me as primitive Daleks. It's been canon that Daleks came from Kaleds... but maybe they weren't created so to speak. The Daleks pulled a trick with the fake human that "invented the Ironsides". Everyone assumed that Bracewell invented them, but the Doctor recognized them. The Doctor may learn that humans eventually pull the same trick just to survive. After all, Human's found out about the situation. The story of it could have been passed down until the end of the Universe where they decide that's their only way to truly survive.
717
718[[WMG: The Archangel Network was based on Traken Union technology.]]
719In "The Keeper of Traken", the Keeper rules over the worlds of the Traken Union, using a machine called the Source to influence the minds of all the citizens so they'd be terribly nice to each other. The Master very briefly had access to the Keeper's powers, and is one of the two or three people left with knowledge of that technology. He used it to build the Archangel Network, but couldn't get it to accept him as a proper Keeper. At the climax of "Last of the Time Lords", the Doctor could, and was able to use the resulting powers to arrange matters to his liking.
720
721[[WMG: The Valiant is the Master's TARDIS]]
722Think it through: during the Time War, the Master is resurrected to fight; instead, he flees all the way to the end of time itself. To do so (and to Chameleon Arch himself successfully), he would need a TARDIS of his own, which remains in that time period once he steals the Doctor's TARDIS and returns to the 21st Century. But when he goes back and forth to find and transport the Toclafane, one would imagine he'd rig a way of getting his own TARDIS back with him as a backup. We also know that the Master was involved in the design of the Valiant "down to the very last detail." What better place to hide a TARDIS than in plain sight?
723
724Why didn't he use his TARDIS to go elsewhere? He wanted to lay a trap for the Doctor and find out what the hell happened in the Time War.
725
726Added bonus to this idea: it explains his willingness to use the Doctor's TARDIS as a Paradox Machine. He has a spare!
727* Jossed. He doesn't willingly go back to the 21st century, the Doctor locked his own TARDIS' controls, plus UNIT humans are perfectly able to command it in "The Poison Sky" and "The Stolen Earth".
728
729[[WMG: The Master never actually hit Lucy, despite what people think.]]
730She got into a fight with Martha's mom.
731
732[[WMG: The Master faked his death in "Last of the Time Lords".]]
733Lucy didn't seem too surprised that the Master wasn't squealing in agony over being shot in the heart. The Master had planned his "final" encounter with the Doctor in advance. Lucy would shoot him in his heart, so he could stress out the Doctor, who, having so much else on his mind, would forget that Time Lords have two hearts. Then, just before he was "burned" by the doctor, he called his TARDIS and left. The way Steven Moffat's mind works, the actual (not a reincarnated version, like in "The End of Time") Master is bound to return.
734* Doubtful. Given the heavily implied DomesticAbuse, Lucy genuinely shot the Master to kill (though the Master probably expected a betrayal.)
735
736[[WMG: The series 3 ender was what jump-started 10's superiority complex.]]
7375.5 billion people calling your name, nay, begging for your help, their only hope, on a psychic feed directly into your skull can do that- especially when you then [[spoiler: become a god amongst even Time Lords]], if only briefly. Most evidenced in ''Voyage of the Damned'' where The Doctor shouts "''I CAN DO''' '''''ANYTHING'''''!" when told that he can't retrieve data that doesn't exist from a system that couldn't bring it back anyway, though the mouthful of bitter humble pie he gets shortly afterward gets him to sit down and shut up until the next few times he tries to get uppity at the laws of time and physics. The Time Lord victorious was the logical conclusion of this run, though we don't actually know if he's going to cut back as Eleven or get even worse.
738He had already been a bit... as he was, but that's addressed on the main WMG page (ctrl+ f "last words"). This is only about why he had it so strongly later on.
739
740[[WMG:The events of "Last of the Time Lords" are essentially true.]]
741They are just happening in a modified form. Obviously, it would take more than one year to build up enough faith amongst the people to destroy the Master's psychic field; it has taken over 30 years. Martha was forced to travel back in time and whispered the tale of the Doctor to one Sydney Newman, who then carried it onto Terry Nation and Verity Lambert who then carried it on throughout the generations. All the stories in Doctor Who are true enough, any continuity lapses are due to faulty memory and a sort of chinese whispers.
742
743[[WMG: The Master never really died]]
744The Master could travel between the 21st century and the year 100 trillion, and he did so to fetch the Toclafane. While he was doing this, one of him in the future stopped himself from going into the past so there would be two of him. Normally, the universe would correct this paradox; but his past self had turned the TARDIS into a Paradox Machine, so he got away with it. Once Jack destroyed the Paradox Machine, everything reset, and the Toclafane were sent back to the future. Then Lucy shot the Master ''on his orders'' so he could refuse to regenerate so, when the paradox was corrected, he wouldn't be stuck with the Doctor. Rather, he is in the year 100 trillion fixing a time-duplicate Tardis. Lucy saved his signet ring from the pyre as a memento.
745
746This plan has the benefits of sticking it to the Doctor, giving the Doctor a false sense of security, and getting a TARDIS out of the whole deal. It also provides another parallel to the Doctor. The Doctor has a half-human meta-crisis duplicate, and the Master has a dead TimeTravel duplicate.
747* Supported by [[spoiler: his turning up again. And again and again.]]
748** Also supported by JokerImmunity.
749
750[[WMG: The Toclafane are just one form of future humanity.]]
751It's 100 trillion years into the future. If humanity survived all that time, there's probably plenty of corners out there who met the end in their way.
752
753[[WMG: The Master survived the Time War because of LoopholeAbuse.]]
754The Time War is unreachable because of a time lock, which is supposed to prevent people from changing events. The Master managed to get out without a Void Ship, but this wasn't just JokerImmunity; he realized that the lock may prevent going back in time, but not ''forwards'' since it doesn't change history. This is also how Daleks "fell through time" in the first place; they were somehow transported to the future.
755
756[[WMG: The Master has unlimited regenerations.]]
757[[JokerImmunity Not that it'd matter much to him]], but he was revived to fight in the Last Great Time War. The Time Lords threw out the rule book in the War, so if they need a soldier why don't they give him way more regenerations than is normally allowed? Potentially this could mean there are loads of incarnations who fought in the Time War, and loads of incarnations between the new series Masters we don't see a clear cut between.
758
759[[/folder]]
760
761[[folder:Classic Series Crossovers]]
762
763[[WMG: At some point while Carole Ann Ford is still alive, Susan will show up to regenerate.]]
764
765[[WMG: The three Time Ladies (Romana/Susan/Rani) are still out there.]]
766Okay, well, you all remember that Romana stayed behind in E-Space, right? E-Space is a different universe, for all intents and purposes. So, there is a chance, however small, that the Time War never got E-Space, so Romana may never have been called to fight.
767
768When Susan was seen in ''The Five Doctors'', she did not appear to have any ties to Gallifrey. We did not find out where she'd been, what she'd been doing, or what happened to her between leaving the TARDIS and appearing in the above episode. Afterwards, she disappears again. The "no ties to Gallifrey" is the important bit. If she has no real ties to Gallifrey, or if she's in a regeneration that's more devious then her grandfather normally is, then ''she may not have had to fight in the War'', and may be alive.
769
770Finally, the Rani. She ruled a planet, and may have been allowed to stay on the basis that she needed to protect her subjects (which is probably just an excuse to avoid the War, but hey). If something happened to her subjects/planet, then she could have escaped, Chameleon-Arch style. She may even be River, as has been suggested. If her planet was okay, then she might be too.
771
772So, does this affect [[Series/DoctorWho NuWho]] at all? Does it, hell!
773
774a) If Romana is still in E-Space, then the Doctor could end up there again, or she might escape. Either way, she's gonna want to know what the hell happened, and that could be an interesting set up.
775
776b) If Susan is still around, then there are a ''crapload'' of possibilities. For example, what happens if she meets her Auntie Jenny? Will she have been waiting for something? ''Was'' she the weird woman ''who was never fucking explained'' from TEoT?
777
778c) If the Rani's still around, then hooray! A ClassicWho villain returns! If she's River, then ''holy shit'', things are gonna get INTERESTING...
779* This doesn't seem unlikely for the Rani, since she was an exiled criminal who, otherwise then the Master, had no combat experience, she most likely wasn't called back to Gallifrey to aid the war, since she seemed to despise her kind almost as much as any other creature, she wouldn't have voluntarily helped them out either and as she was depicted as a master of Tardis control/manipulation, hiding/acting and chemistry it shouldn't be much of a problem for her to make both her Tardis and her body signature vanish during the war and continue her experiments.
780
781* This troper always assumed that, whether they were called in to fight or not, the psychic "shockwave" of sorts caused so many Gallifreyans exploding all at once killed off everyone else of their kind in the universe. They are telepathic beings, after all, and seem to be able to sense each other no matter where in time or space they are. It doesn't seem like too much of a stretch to think that when a Time Lord dies, everyone can feel it. And when a million Time Lords die all at once, the others not only feel it, but die as well. The Doctor was spared because he has terrible telepathy (come on, the Master can **remotely hypnotize people**, and all the Doc can do is sort-of kind-of read minds and get migraine whenever an Ood is nearby?) and was never really connected properly in the first place. And his TARDIS survived because she was old and crap, while all the sleek newer and better-maintained models blew up/stopped working when their power source (the Eye of Harmony) was destroyed.
782
783[[WMG: They start having crossovers with "Classic Doctors"]]
784But of course, they'll hire exact lookalikes (Except for [=McGann=] and (maybe) [=McCoy=] doesn't look "that" different enough that he could still pull it off) I know it's beyond blasphemous to hire "fakes" but they did it before in "The Five Doctors" after Hartnell died. I personally feel, I would rather watch exact lookalikes join in crossovers than never see those Doctors on screen ever again. Maybe Tom Baker has an [[HopeSpot IdenticalGrandson?]]
785
786[[WMG: The New series Valeyard will be played by Dylan Moran]]
787Because it would be just too awesome.
788
789[[/folder]]
790
791[[folder:Crossover Theories]]
792
793[[WMG: The Nightmare Child is The Nightmare Child (from the Music/{{KISS}}: Psycho Circus video game).]]
794Same names.
795
796[[WMG: Lucy Saxon was the Doctor Who's universe version of Lucy Pevensie from the [[Literature/TheChroniclesOfNarnia Narnia]] series]]
797In this reality it was Lucy and not Susan who turned her back on Narnia, the reason being that when she grew up she met the Master, who married her and took her to the end of the universe where she witnessed mankind fed into furnaces and screaming at the dark. She realized then that there was no hope, no point to anything.
798* ...''Fuck.'' Is anything in childhood safe?
799
800[[WMG: [[Series/DoctorWho Captain Jack]] is [[Franchise/PiratesOfTheCaribbean Captain Jack]] ]]
801
802Captain Jack Sparrow eventually finds and drinks from the fountain of youth, but loses his memories as he is de-aged. This goes on for a while; Jack slips through the centuries, careful after a few mishaps (the Jack of the movies has already messed this up at least once) not to drink away the location and nature of the fountain as he scours the globe for a more practical means of remaining immortal. As the world marches on without him and the bulldozers come through to pave over the fountain, he bottles roughly a lifespan's worth (in his eternally scheming appreciation that a bottle of youth might be extremely useful one day) and decides to grow old and die already. The world had lost its luster for him.
803
804Unfortunately, his prolonged use of the fountain left him with a much longer than average lifespan. He lives to see the twenty-first century, when "everything changes"; but the technology on earth still doesn't facilitate space piracy, and he's now a decrepit old man and no match for the Somali pirates. So he hunts down a Time Agent from the future who's doing whatever Time Agents do and barters a lift to around 5000 AD. Here, he drains his last bottle of Youth, keeping only his most fundamental characteristics (including his womanizing nature, his taste for adventure, his insistence on being called "Captain", and his tastefully dated fashion sense) and gets re-brought up by the Harkness family.
805
806[[WMG: [[VideoGame/{{Portal}} GlaDOS]] was one of the Cybermen in "The Next Doctor".]]
807Oh, come ''on''. "That was designated: a lie".
808* What on... when did [=GLaDOS=] ever use the phrase "the cake is a lie" herself?
809** She didn't. She does often talk about lying, though.
810--->'''[=GLaDOS=]''': Have I lied to you? ... I mean, in this room?
811
812[[WMG: All of the mysteriously missing parents of characters from various fandoms were all swallowed by the Cracks]]
813Do you have a better suggestion? Because really, there's far too many missing parents of fictional characters for it to be coincidence.
814
815[[WMG:John Simm ''is'' the Master.]]
816No, he just doesn't play the Master. He ''is'' the Master.
817* Look, his name even anagrams into... um... J.S.? No! It's Ms.!
818** In the same vein, David Tennant ''is'' the Tenth Doctor. He chose that surname for a reason.
819** Well, [[Series/LifeOnMars2006 Sam Tyler]] is 'masterly,' and Mister Saxon is revealed to be Master No. Six (that we see on screen). So...
820
821[[WMG:The Master is Sam Tyler from ''Series/{{Life On Mars|2006}}.'']]
822The Master dies in 2009... and wakes up in 1973. In turn, he is somehow related to Rose, and uses her to keep tabs on the Doctor.
823* Sam Tyler was Pete Tyler's brother, and ''Series/{{Life On Mars|2006}}'' was a secret ''Series/DoctorWho'' spinoff all along.
824* [[http://fc29.deviantart.com/fs21/f/2007/236/6/0/Life_on_Earth_by_echidnite.png Of course.]]
825* [[Series/LifeOnMars2006 Sam Tyler]] is 'masterly'.
826
827[[WMG:Lucy Saxon is in the Sky with Diamonds.]]
828The Master specifically chose a woman named Lucy as a way of drawing in and taunting the Doctor, who is, ever since his first incarnation, a fan of Music/TheBeatles, and in fact, both Time Lords are fan of pop music. Why would he taunt the Doctor in such a roundabout way? Because "the skies are made of diamonds!" The surreal landscape described in the song also fits that of Gallifrey as described by the Doctor.
829* A number of people suspect that the Lucy and "skies are made of diamonds" were both an intentional Beatles gag by Creator/RussellTDavies. This doesn't invalidate the theory.
830
831[[WMG: Captain Jack and the Doctor are one and the same.]]
832Because they are both Creator/RobinWilliams.
833* [[http://trolllogicfics.livejournal.com/25602.html Here you go.]]
834
835[[WMG: The Strogg of VideoGame/QuakeII and VideoGame/QuakeIV are a product of Nanogenes gone haywire]]
836Another Chula medical ship crashed somewhere where the human Marines were waging war. The nanogenes were released, and they came across a messed-up corpse of a soldier inside a destroyed vehicle. Commence "healing" ala [[Series/DoctorWho the Empty Child]]: fallen weapon gets integrated into the severed forearm, body and limbs plus parts of the wreckage are haphazardly stitched together, and voila¡: a Strogg am I.
837
838Because the soldier's brain was damaged beyond remembering anything except his mission (destroying the enemy), the resulting {{Biological Mash-Up}} is out to kill everyone; if the conflict was between two human factions, then it would naturally go after untouched humans. This explains the Stroggss lust for HumanResources.
839
840[[WMG: "The Wire" from "The Idiot's Lantern" is Koh the Face Stealer from ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'']]
841Both Koh and the Wire suck off peoples faces. Maybe Koh found a way out of the spirit world into the signals from the television and made up the "alien" story from the memories it sucked from Rose. Oh, and maybe Mr Magpie was not vaporized, but sucked into the spirit world.
842
843[[WMG:''Doctor Who'' and ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' share a universe.]]
844The vampires and assorted nasties are not aliens, no. No, they have trickled in all through history, but when the Carrionites tear holes in time and space in "The Shakespeare Code", they create a semi-dormant link to Quor-Toth, an alternate earth from a history where the Carrionites destroyed the Eternals instead of the Eternals banishing them. The Powers That Be are agents of the White Guardian, The Eternals, or both. The Master is... The Master, probably from either when he was stuck in his last body or in a body he stole after "Survival" but before the movie.
845* This theory is killed by Andrew telling Spike that he's "seen every single episode of Doctor Who." Of course, it might have been some other fictional series called Doctor Who. Many 'real' Doctor Who episodes have been missing since the seventies, making Andrew's claim outright impossible.
846*** It wouldn't be the first time shows that share a universe made this kind of mistake. For instance, Seinfeld shares a universe with Mad About You, but features an episode where George watches Mad About You.
847** Andrew had access to Jonathan. Jonathan knew magic. He could have magicked them up for them.
848** In Remembrance of the Daleks, we hear a TV in the background get most of the way through introducing Doctor Who before being cut off. Maybe all the episodes of "Doctor Who" exist intact in the Whoniverse.
849** How about this: after the Time War, the Doctor didn't want to be forgotten, so he arranged for the BBC to get its hands on a bunch of archival records from the TARDIS and release them as fiction. This is Old Who. ''Buffy'' predates New Who, so we don't need to explain it.
850* It makes sense that there'd be Doctor Who fiction in the Whoniverse; in one (new series) episode, he even has a ''fan club'' based entirely off information on the internet about him and the various alien invaders he'd fought.
851* There was an arc in Old Who about a godlike entity, the Black Guardian, trying to get control of the Key to Time - the final part of which turned out to have been transformed into a teenage girl called Astra. Good thing the Guardian didn't notice what Glory was up to on Earth, or she might have had competition for Dawn.
852* A couple of Buffy characters cameo in the Doctor Who novels, although they also refer to Buffy as being a TV show in the Doctor Who universe. One book had both a cameo from a Buffy character and a reference to Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer.
853* This has been confirmed. A Buffy [[ComicBook/BuffyTheVampireSlayer Season 8 Comic]] (which is {{CANON}} for "Buffy") featured the Tenth Doctor and Rose ambling merrily along on the street. It is only a background detail, but it is Canon, nonetheless.
854** A red telephone box is behind them. Good enough for government work. It sounds like a form the TARDIS would have become mode-locked to in an alternate universe; therefore, Buffy the Vampire Slayer takes place in Pete's World.
855*** Or, ya know, one of the millions of other alternate universes. This means that someone needs to write The Slayer Organization into the Series 4 ending.
856*** The tech level of Buffy's world supports the claim. We see [[spoiler:the Trio making stuff almost as wicked as Lumic's Cybermen]]. Though there is a question of zeppelins... As for the red telephone box, it's quite standard variety. It's probably native, and the TARDIS is somewhere around the corner. Whether that is so or not, that box is a very nice piece of WMG Fuel.
857* Old Who '''did''' include vampires ("State of Decay") and werewolves ("Inferno", "The Greatest Show in the Galaxy"). "The Curse of Fenric" had a variant on vampires. The ExpandedUniverse has both re-confirmed the existence of vampires and established the existence of werewolves in the Franchise/{{Whoniverse}}.
858** However, the vampires and werewolves work in different ways, and (according to the Expanded Universe) the Time Lords would have erased anywhere with as many vampires as Sunnydale from history. No, Doctor Who and Buffy are merely in the same multiverse - with the season 8 comic recording one of the Doctor's rare but not unprecedented transdimensional trips. The entire Franchise/MarvelUniverse is in the same multiverse, according to various BBC authorised Marvel comics, as well as the Franchise/{{Transformers}} and Franchise/GIJoe.
859* The Powers That Be are also responsible for the Doctor showing up on Earth every time there's an alien invasion. He is an unwitting Champion.
860** Or, in the case of the Seventh Doctor, a witting one.
861* The Doctor almost never visits modern-day America because he and the Slayer Organization have an agreement that they patrol the US. He only visits briefly or in the past, where it doesn't apply. Torchwood was the space equivalent to the Watchers. The vampire races all come from different Old Ones blood, as implied by the recent comics. That allows each race to operate. The Scoobies and Angel Investigations only operate in the area controlled by the [[BuffySpeak dusty bumpy vampires]]. Other vampire breeds are handled by other groups, an ancient treaty between numerous ancient vampire hunter groups. When Torchwood formed they discovered Space Vampires and the Weevils and so were brought into the fold as the expert there. The Slayer Organization took over The Watchers' duty and campaigns with them to all work together on all threats. UNIT and The Doctor don't work with the vampire hunters, and step on everyone's toes, but the Slayers like them and work with them.
862
863[[WMG:The Master is [[Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer The Master]].]]
864Dressing in black. Plans for world domination. Hypnotic abilities. Somewhat melodramatic. Those two could be brothers... or the same person. In one of his many desperate attempts to stave off death, the Time Lord gave vampirism a go, keeping under the radar as not to attract the Doctor's attention. Unfortunately, this eventually attracted the Slayer's attention. Although his body was killed (and then, eventually, bashed into dust), anyone who watches ''Series/DoctorWho'' knows that the Master [[Main/BackFromTheDead can't be done away with quite that easily]].
865
866[[WMG:The Doctor is [[WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender the Avatar.]]]]
867
868Season 3 finale: he goes all glowy and flies. Since Aang also does this in the Avatar State, the logical conclusion is that the Doctor is the Avatar, albeit either an alternate universe one or a different incarnation.
869* One of the previous theories would make him an earlier Avatar than Aang.
870
871[[WMG:Marcie in ''Series/DarkSeason'' is a future incarnation of the Doctor]]
872The series was written by RTD, you never see Marcie's family, and she acts awfully adult and intelligent. This screams "Doctor" in a way that just isn't true of most series where this kind of speculation is done.
873
874[[WMG: Christina de Souza from Planet of the Dead is [[Literature/TheMagicSchoolBus Ms. Frizzle]]]]
875What else are you going to do with a ''flying bus''?
876
877[[WMG: Jenny is the Spirit of the 61st Century.]]
878Like [[ComicBook/TheAuthority Jenny Sparks and Jenny Quantum]] before her, teammates of a different Doctor, Generated "Jenny" Anomaly will have a very interesting future and look young for at least a hundred years.
879
880[[WMG: The ''Madame de Pompadour'' is a Supreme Alliance ship.]]
881We know the Supreme Alliance is not especially concerned with ethical matters or the Three Laws of Robotics.
882
883[[WMG: 11 shot JFK in an 11/9 (or 13/9) crossover to MakeWrongWhatOnceWentRight.]]
884As of the time that the picture was taken, Nine was still unsure as to whether Eleven was a disguised Valeyard or not. If the shot coming from the hill rather than the records library could dangerously change the future of the past, it might not be possible to fix it if "Eleven" really was the Valeyard.
885Corrolary: this explains why [[Series/QuantumLeap Sam Beckett]] was going loony in "Lee Harvey Oswald". He was Leaping into a Time Lord!
886
887[[WMG: The Valeyard shot JFK in an 11/9 (or 13/9) crossover to MakeWrongWhatOnceWentRight.]]
888Same as above, but Nine's unheeded suspicions were correct. Eleven or 13 (after using RetroactivePreparation by way of the WriteBackToTheFuture method or setting up an ExpositionBeam) erased Nine's and/or (if Eleven) his own memories of the event so the Valeyard wouldn't remember what happened and Nine through Whichever could live without the guilt.
889
890[[WMG: Jenny will regenerate into MediaNotes/JennyEverywhere.]]
891
892[[WMG:The Reality Bomb doesn't destroy Reality, it destroys Reality TV.]]
893After Davros was rescued, he created the new Daleks, right? WRONG!
894
895Davros, a kid at heart, went to watch Cartoon Network on his portable TV. But as you
896know, most of CN was taken over by...you guessed it, CN Real! Angry, Davros went on
897to make plans for a "Reality TV Bomb" which was evventually shortened to Reality Bomb. The Doctor and co. either misunderstood him or liked CN Real. Caan manipulated Davros because he still wanted to watch Survivor:Skaro Edition.
898
899Since his attempt failed,a depressed Davros and Caan (now sane and given a proper Mark III travel machine) went on to take over the Royal Albert Hall. Caan's the Dalek seen chasing the conductor.
900
901Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICsZE17MHwA
902
903* So...if the Bomb was meant to destroy Reality TV, how did it manage to wipe out those people? Then again, in order for there to be Reality TV, there must be people, so that's why the bomb wiped them out, to prevent more reality tv shows from being made.
904** Those were the candidates for Survivor.
905
906[[WMG: The Time War was related to Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion in some way]]
907Because one of the soulless Rei clones could quite easily fit the description of Nighmare Child, Cruciform just means cross-shaped (and Eva LOVES the christian imagery), and yet another Nth Impact would be a pretty good candidate for killing off the Time Lords/Daleks. Also, Eva is pretty much the only thing that can stand up to the level of horror and mind screw said to have taken place during the Time War.
908* Supporting this is the Time Lords' easy regeneration and mild psychic powers, which could imply they're a kind of Angel descended from Adam, and the Daleks' technical focus possibly meaning they're a form of Lilim. The Time Lords' intelligence is similar to that of Rei and Kaworu, except evolved over time without Lilim competition, not created.
909
910[[WMG:The Doctor is a grown-up version of ''Literature/PeterPan''.]]
911Because the two characters are so similar. Peter did away with Captain Hook when he was a child, so he's found a new archenemy: the Daleks. And when he would go back to London, he'd always take companions on wonderful adventures, but be forever barred from having a normal life. The only difference is that he found a different way to fly. Rather than fly by happy thoughts, he flies by TARDIS now.
912
913[[WMG:The Tenth Doctor's body is from Barty Crouch Jr's shell.]]
914Um, ''duh''.
915
916[[WMG: The Doctor is using [[Franchise/StarWars Jedi mind tricks]] on Rory.]]
917Rory: Umm, we are not her boys.
918* Doctor: Yeah we are.
919** Rory: Yeah we are.
920
921Doctor: I think I will leave the kissing to the brand new Mr. Pond!
922* Rory: Um, no, that's not how it works.
923* Doctor: Yeah, it is.
924* Rory: ...Yeah, it is.
925
926[[WMG: The Weeping Angels are an aspect or servitors of [[Franchise/CthulhuMythos Nyarlathotep]].]]
927One of Nyarlathotep's masks, the Faceless God, appears as a faceless sphinx with the ability to send its followers back through time. The angels hide their faces so that they don't see each other and freeze (and ''you'' certainly don't want to look at their faces), so they could be said to be "faceless" FromACertainPointOfView, and they do indeed send their victims into the past.
928
929[[WMG: Donna Noble moves to the United States after [[spoiler: getting her mind wiped.]]]]
930The interviewee for the new management position on ''Series/{{The Office|US}}'' played by Catherine Tate (season 8, episode 25) certainly seems like Donna would have acted prior to meeting The Doctor and trying to fake being good enough for a management position. The timeline works out for her to have moved to America in search of an easier-to-get better job, possibly at Wilfred's suggestion.
931* So long as she doesn't meet Chang Lee or Grace, she should be fine.
932
933[[WMG: The Ood are descendants of the [[TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons Mind Flayers]]]]
934Think about it. They're both somewhat humanoid creatures with tentacles in their faces. Both have a telepathic bond to each other and a larger brain that acts as the main part of the HiveMind. And they both reproduce by turning Humans into one of them (though Mr Halpen might've been a special case).
935
936What proably happened is that, one day, the Illithids, being the intelligent beings they are, figured out that slavery, brainsucking, and Evil in general is bad for their karma (kinda like Dalek Sec did in ''Evolution of the Daleks''). They decided to evolve into kinder creatures that spend their time singing with each other via telepathic link (don't ask where the hindbrain comes from).
937
938Ironically, the Ood, whose ancestors had lots of mentally manipulated slaves working for them, got turned into slaves themselves.
939
940In case you were wondering how they arrived in [[TheVerse the Whoniverse]], [[AWizardDidIt a Time Lord did it]]
941
942* Or the Illithids themselves did it. They are established to be lords of the universe far in the future, and so they time travelled back from there. Perhaps another group chose to travel to another universe rather than the past of their own.
943
944[[WMG: The Master's current form is [[Webcomic/HetaliaAxisPowers Prussia]].]]
945[[http://halloweenbloodyqueen.deviantart.com/art/The-Real-Gilbert-162466296 If]] [[http://alikurai.deviantart.com/art/Heta-Masters-200551574 these]] are anything to go by, there's an eerie resemblance between the current Master and the nation once known as Prussia. Considering he's a Time Lord, it's not out of the question that he's either using his Gilbert-persona to screw around with the other Nations or had taken up a dead Prussia's identity to further hide himself in plain sight.
946* Prussia is seen to be alive in recent stuff though, so he can't be dead. Also, if the Master realised that nations were running around as people, he would be targetting them in his plans. Unless this IS part of the Master's plan. In which case, we should probably be scared.
947
948[[WMG: The Vastha Nerada have many names.]]
949One of which? [[VideoGame/{{Zork}} A Grue.]]
950
951[[WMG: The Great and Bountiful Human Empire is the Imperium of Man if the Emperor were around to lead it]]
952The Great and Bountiful Human Empire is described as including a million worlds and alien races, all based around Earth. It could be that the Great and Bountiful Empire exists in an alternate time line where the Horus Heresy never took place, and the Emperor were able to bring humanity the golden age it was about to get before Horus decided to screw everything up. A hundred and sixty thousand years of peace and prosperity could easily be enough to explain the decrease in Imperial looking architecture.
953
954** Often have I had a very similar theory. According to canon there have been many Great and Bountiful Human empires, and yet for some reason the Doctor has avoided Earth during the year 40,000. Probably because he would be immediately identified as Xenos filth and his transparent attempt at psychic paper wouldn't work on a librarian. I assume that far in the future all that trouble with Chaos was dealt with.
955
956[[WMG: Solomon from Evolution of the Daleks didn't die!]]
957
958Solomon was actually immortal! He didn't die from that blast. He had to fake it to not freak out everyone and would move out when buried. Later, he'll end up dying in [=NYC=] for real when [[Franchise/Highlander the Kurgan kills him.]]
959
960[[WMG: 10 is a [[Literature/AClashOfKings Sorrowful Man]]]]
961* Because he says "I am so sorry."
962
963[[WMG: River Song is MelBrooks.]]
964Mel is short for Melody and brook is another word for river. At some point in her life, she regenerated into a man and decided he wanted to be a director for a while.
965
966[[WMG: The parallel Cyberman universe is the same universe as depicted in Creator/TerryPratchett's ''Nation''.]]
967Daphne would be both willing to demolish the monarchy, and as queen herself, be in the perfect position to do so.
968
969[[WMG:The Master is posing as Barack Obama]]
970Taking for granted that he's not dead and/or permanently timelocked.
971* He's running a gambit exactly like the Saxon trick of Series 3, but in America this time, and instead of beginning world domination immediately, he's lulling us into a false sense of security. It's not actually my idea, though. I kind of stole it from a post onthe Doonesbury website:
972--->"The birthers ought to take it a step further. Is there any real proof that Obama was ever born? I mean, he may have been delivered to Earth by galactic terrorists who see this presidency as the first step to subjugating the human race."
973* Clearly, the long-form birth certificate recently released was a piece of psychic paper.
974
975[[WMG:The Timeless Child was originally the Childlike Empress from ''Film/TheNeverEndingStory''.]]
976
977While the official version has Fantasia being saved by Bastian Bux, maybe that isn't what "really" happened. If Fantasia truly was destroyed by the Nothing, then the Childlike Empress could have used the Auryn to wish for an escape. This would have come in the form of a portal to another dimension (the one we see the Timeless Child standing under). She would have no memory of her previous life since that is the cost of using the Auryn. Her seemingly endless ability to regenerate would explain the Empress' longevity.
978
979[[/folder]]
980
981[[folder:Real Life and Meta]]
982
983[[WMG: There Will Be a Google Doodle for the Day of the 50th Anniversary]]
984Google displayed a Douglas Adams tribute today. If they're that nerdy, there's no doubt they'll commemorate one of the most beloved TV series of all time. I know it's a pointless WMG, but... called it!
985* They did one for ''[[Franchise/StarTrek Star Trek]]'s'' ''46th'' anniversary, so they've just got to do one for Who's 50th.
986** Confirmed!
987
988[[WMG: Everyone's a Time Lord, and Christopher Eccleston quit because he's The Doctor.]]
989* Earth was destroyed in 1963, the day JFK was assassinated. After that, Johnson was so upset that he declared nuclear war, rendering the planet inhospitable to human life for the next several thousand years. After the Time War, The Doctor couldn't bring himself to destroy his species, so he created a giant Chameleon Arch, and made everyone human instead. He put them on Earth several million years AFTER 1963, once it was hospitable again. He created the show (pretending that it was created by Sidney Newman) so that nobody would expect any of it was real. See, there's a TV show about it. The guy we see as 1 was actually 9. The show was succesful enough that he didn't need to do any more shows himself, and let the writers go free. After someone found out the truth, he recreated the new show. He'd had to regenerate into Christopher Eccleston by that time, though. That's why he only did one season, because he didn't want people suspecting he really was The Doctor. He put the fob watch in the new show so Doctor Who fans who wanted to be Time Lords would go around opening fob watches, when the real key to de-chameleonizing looks completely different.
990
991[[WMG: David Tennant will be a surprise torchbearer for the RealLife Olympics.]]
992Because the entire UK would ''love'' the reference, even if it confuses the hell out of the rest of the planet.
993* {{Jossed}}.
994
995[[WMG: Every writer who dreams their stories is a Time Lord that used the Chameleon Arch]]
996
997Over the millennia, they all had their own reasons to become human, but they never rediscovered their true selves and lived and died human. Which means [[TomatoInTheMirror you could be a Time Lord]] [[ParanoiaFuel and never know it.]]
998
999[[WMG: The writers of "The Shakespeare Code" received an advanced copy of the 7th book and wrote Shakespeare's Moment of Awesome based on how Harry killed Voldemort.]]
1000As the recap page of "The Shakespeare Code" indicated, banishing evil spirits wasn't exactly the function of the Expelliarmus spell. In the Whoverse, Martha just said it because she felt her experience with the witches was "A bit Harry Potter." However, in the real world, you don't need to be a Time Lord to find out about how book 7 ended at the time the episode was written. The writers, with their connections to the publishing companies or even with Rowling (if she's a fan of the show), somehow got an advanced copy of Book 7 and thought "Hey! Let's base a scene off the big fight between Harry and Voldemort!" It's totally plausible.
1001
1002[[WMG: Rusty and the Moff have personal contests between themselves.]]
1003This is evident in series four, where the challenge was for each writer to write in the style of the other. It explains why the Library two-parter is more romantic than Blink, Fireplace (only just), or Empty Child, and why the last four episodes of series four are NightmareFuel trips more than Rusty's usual fare.
1004
1005[[/folder]]
1006
1007[[folder:Jossed]]
1008
1009[[WMG:The oft-mentioned Time War was the cause of the 8th Doctor regenerating into the 9th.]]
1010Yeah, the world, his wife, their dog and their dog's dog has proposed this, and it's more or less universally accepted in Main/{{fanon}}. But it still needs writing down.
1011* Series 4 spoiler: [[spoiler: Tenth implies that Human Ten was "born in battle like Ninth was".]] The general theory seems confirmed.
1012* Possibly the Time Lords forced the regeneration to turn the Doctor into a more reliable asset. Notice how enamored the 9th and 10th incarnations seem of Gallifrey, as opposed to the classic, renegade character.
1013** If you were the last remmant of a lost civilization, wouldn't you care for the ones gone, even if you really didn't like them in the first place?
1014* This does seem to be pretty much accepted as canon now. Even the Doctor Who comics are referencing it as such now, even though they're about as canon as the novels. The fifth issue of ''Doctor Who: The Forgotten'' features an Eighth Doctor adventure where he's imprisoned for over a month [[ThePlan in order to execute in order to steal the Key of Rassilon to use as a final gambit (locking away 'the Medusa Cascade' forever]], the Doctor notes). This does suggest that the Eighth took part in said Time War, at the very least.
1015** No specific mention is made of the Time War, but the Eighth declares 'the skies turn to blood as starships explode and thousands die,' and the Tenth would later recall after this story occurred, 'The Time War happened. I saw Arcadia destroyed. I laughed at the face of the Nightmare Child. And I saw Gallifrey sacrificed, burned when the Cruciform fell. I turned the key in the lock. I doomed them all.' So yeah, just about canon... or so we hope.
1016* Perhaps 8 committed suicide after destroying Gallifrey, feeling he couldn't take the burden.
1017* Jossed, in the online prequel to the 50th anniversary special, [[spoiler:which features 8 regenerating into Creator/JohnHurt's incarnation.]]
1018
1019[[WMG: The Doctor ended the Time War by staring into the Time Vortex to destroy all the Daleks, sacrificing one of his lives in the process.]]
1020Because some Time Lord needed to. He looked into the heart of his TARDIS, became temporarily omnipotent, and removed the Daleks from all of spacetime... but couldn't control the process, and ended up destroying Gallifrey and his people as well. And since this was the Eighth Doctor - the one who never completely recovered from his amnesia - he forgot a few Daleks.
1021** It didn't get out of control. He cognitively chose to kill the Time Lords as well, lest they destroy reality.
1022* Makes total sense in continuity. He seemed to know exactly what would happen when Rose did it.
1023* There's even more than that. The Doctor tells Jack, "If a Time Lord [looked into the vortex] he'd become God". The Master comments about the end of the Time War, "You must have felt like God". Hmm.
1024
1025[[WMG: The Twelfth Doctor will find Gallifrey at the ''end'' of Capaldi's tenure.]]
1026It looks like the search for Gallifrey will be the main story arc for the Twelfth Doctor, just as the crack in time and space was the main story arc for the Eleventh Doctor. At the end of Capaldi's tenure, The Doctor will return to the events of "The Day of the Doctor" and find Gallifrey. The reason that we do not see his entire face is that he has a facial disfigurement that will result in his regeneration into the Thirteenth Doctor. The Thirteenth Doctor will arrive on Gallifrey.
1027* Jossed.
1028
1029[[WMG: Rose will return at least once more, serving as the harbinger of the apocalypse]]
1030There will be plots wherein the fabric of reality is threatened. When Rose shows up, the Doctor will know that things are bad. If this becomes a recurring thing, the Doctor will actually be scared of Rose.
1031** Considering Steven Moffatt considers Rose the Clingy girlfiend that never leaves. And was one of the few that nixed the idea of Handy Ten and Rose getting their own personal TARDIS to zoom about in. While he's in charge the odds of us seeing Rose Tyler again is in the long odds box ..
1032** Possibly confirmed, with news of Billie Piper returning for the 50th anniversary. Said anniversary likely deals with the Question, which when answered is implied to be what caused the creation-negating time cracks of Season 5(or something ever worse, depending on whether the Silence were behind the time cracks or not). Given Moffat's views on Rose and respect for his predecessors' work, one wonders how it'll go down.
1033
1034[[WMG: The twelfth Doctor will have facial hair.]]
1035Jossed.
1036
1037[[WMG: River will show up in a "The [X] Doctors"-style special.]]
1038Self-explanatory, since David Tennant isn't a regular any more.
1039
1040[[WMG: The Master and Jenny will return in the same two-part special.]]
1041It will be explained by a single quote:
1042--> '''Jenny:''' Really, Dad, if they're not breathing and there's no pulse, you ''always'' assume they're dead!
1043* Jossed.
1044
1045[[WMG:The Twelfth Doctor's going to cut off and retain all his limbs in his first full episode.]]
1046It'll be soon enough after his regeneration to regrow them and so he'll have enough bio-matching receptacles to doge another four regenerations. Considering Ten's last thoughts were about not going, this probably carried over and is at the forefront of Eleven's mind but he got distarcted or detered from doing this, so he will atempt it later.
1047** Wouldn't that be a bit dark for a kid's show? Also, what does he cut off the final limb with, his tongue?
1048*** I get the feeling that he doesn't like making things too easy for himself. It's likely that he could carry around a ton more useful tech than the Screwdriver(such as the TARDIS power cells which he uses to blast through dozens of Cybermen in Age of Steel) but doesn't because it would make life less fun.
1049** Jossed.
1050
1051[[WMG:The first thing Twelve will do post-regeneration will be absolutely killing the bow tie]]
1052Why? RuleOfFunny.
1053
1054[[WMG: Twelve will be female.]]
1055''[[Recap/DoctorWhoS32E4TheDoctorsWife The Doctor's Wife]]'' confirmed that Time Lords and Time Ladies can change sex during regeneration. Eleven had a scare regarding this. The Doctor will go through such a change between Eleven and Twelve. And will [[RunningGag still not be ginger!]]
1056* There are mass guesses below which offer Creator/ZooeyDeschanel and Creator/EmmaWatson as suggestions to play her. And [[RunningGag neither are ginger!]].
1057* Jossed.
1058
1059[[WMG: The first thing the Twelfth Doctor will do is...]]
1060Rip off the bow-tie. And bow-tie sales will decrease dramatically in the [[RealLife real world]].
1061** Jossed, it's the last thing the Eleventh Doctor does.
1062
1063[[WMG:Sometime during his tenure, the Eleventh Doctor will meet [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geronimo Geronimo]].]]
1064A time-traveler who has a historical figure as a catchphrase. How are they going to avoid it?
1065* This being the Docter we're talking about, he will of course inspire the name's current usage.
1066* Jossed.
1067
1068[[WMG: The primary reason Moffat would bring back Rose in the 50th Anniversary is to have her fight over the Doctor with River]]
1069Well, they both are extremely clingy to the Doctor and they both hate people getting in on "their" Doctor, especially Rose. River, being a touch MarySue and a creation of Moffat's, would win that argument. Rose has no true reason to return alongside Ten, as her story is totally finished.
1070* Considering [[TrollingCreator Moffat's policy on the shippers]], I don't think that's the main reason-the main reason is probably because she's experienced in reality-endangering crises. They'll probably interact similar to "School Reunion", where they'll bitch a bit over the Doctor before joking about how they're being so clingy.
1071** Jossed. River doesn't appear, and Rose isn't actually Rose.
1072
1073[[WMG: The Time Lock was initiated primarily [[SealedEvilInACan to prevent the Daleks from getting out.]] ]]
1074While designing a lock to prevent the war's history is a good idea, what Time Lord in their right mind would design a way to prevent themselves from getting out? Even back at the beginning of the War, before [[WarIsHell it turned to Hell]], you'd think the Time Lords would design some method of bailing out. Before initiated the Time Lock, the Time Lords realised that if they lost, the entire universe would be at the complete mercy of [[OmnicidalManiac the Daleks.]] To ensure this would never happened, they made sure there was no physical method of escape. If the Time Lords won, they'd be spatially trapped, but still able to observe the universe like before. If the Time Lords lost, the Daleks would be stuck in the wasteland. The Daleks didn't think the Time Lords had the balls to pull it off, so they fell for the trap. The Void Ship was likely a Time Lord invention to try and TakeAThirdOption, but failed because a)The Cult of Skaro stole it and b)It could only fit four Daleks.
1075
1076[[WMG: The Doctor's name is silence.]]
1077The ArcWords during the Silence arc are, "Silence will/[[spoiler: must]] fall when the question is asked." The question is, "[[spoiler: Doctor who]]?" The most logical reasoning is that the Doctor's name is a period of time during which whoever is saying it says nothing. Silence. It is unpronouncable because there is nothing to pronounce.
1078
1079[[WMG: The Silence will hire the Master to kill the Doctor.]]
1080Through some convoluted method, the Master Race had one survivor. The Silence will find him and give him the power to take down the Doctor. The reason he agrees to do this is because he thinks the ultimate victory over the Doctor would be to make the Time Lords extinct. His episodes will reveal a sort of DeathSeeker characteristic in him.
1081* Jossed.
1082
1083[[WMG: Each of the Eleventh's Companions will have a specific classical element associated with them]]
1084From what we've seen of Clara Oswald, it's clear to see that she is associated with the element of water/ice. On her first appearance she appeared on an planet covered in snow, then she appeared in a very specifically snow related Christmas special. This is then later followed by an episode where she and The Doctor encounter an Ice Warrior. Compare this to Amy Pond, who, despite her aquatic name, could be said is connected to the element of fire. Though Amy's first appearance wasn't fire-related, what was her actress's first appearance? The Fires of Pompeii. She also has the fiery red hair. By this theory, The Eleventh should have 2 more companions displaying earth and wind. Although, perhaps Rory accounts for one of these. I could also give a case for Amy representing Earth due to her myriad encounters with the stone-like weeping angels. But this could also be a result of Rory's elemental influence.
1085* The Eleventh Hour had the Atraxi threaten to incinerate the earth. So there's the fire. However, the theory as a whole is jossed unless River, Craig, Canton, or a member of the Paternoster gang count.
1086
1087[[WMG: The Eleventh Doctor will encounter the Master again]]
1088
1089Nearly every single incarnation of the Doctor has encountered some incarnation of the Master. The only one who hadn't was the first and second Doctors, but the Master character hadn't been invented yet. While he may have died in "End of Time", there is no reason why the writers couldn't cheat and have the Eleventh Doctor travel into the distant past to encounter a younger version of the Master. Perhaps this younger version that hadn't yet become evil, and then inadvertently help him to the Dark Path? If the younger Master recognizes who the Doctor is then perhaps that would be the original reason why their antagonism exists.
1090* Most likely, he will be the jackanapes that Three described him as in ''Terror of the Autons''.
1091
1092[[WMG: The Daleks will be the ones to ask the Question.]]
1093The Doctor will go to Trenzalore expecting to meet River Song and tell her his name, since she has to learn it some time. However, he will find instead/as well the Daleks are there, and they will ask the Question. Owsin's SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome will turn out to be a disaster, and the Daleks will gain terrible knowledge from the answer.
1094
1095Jossed.
1096
1097[[/folder]]
1098
1099----
1100
1101[[WMG: The Doctor's name is the key to unlocking the Time War]]
1102
1103That is why the Silence are determined to make sure that the question "Doctor who?" is never answered. They know about the Time War and the circumstances of how it was brought to an end.
1104
1105* Sort-of confirmed? [[spoiler:When the crack in space-time reappeared in Time of the Doctor, it was implied that the pocket universe Time War Time Lords were trying to contact the Doctor through the crack and waiting for him to answer their question: "Doctor who?". Whether the Time War Time Lords could have returned through the crack is unanswered, but the Silence were certainly afraid of it happening.]]
1106
1107* [[spoiler:If they can send a new regeneration cycle, and seemingly create planet sized cracks in time and space, it seems that they can, and would've come back. However doing this would've created a new Time-War, which is what the Silence was afraid of.]]
1108
1109[[WMG: [[Series/TheSarahJaneAdventures Luke Smith]] is The Doctor]]
1110He's got brains, and he ''loves'' time travel! The Bane got a hold of some Time Lord DNA and used human DNA to fill in the missing parts. This is why he has more trouble regenerating than other Time Lords. When the 8th Doctor claims he's "half-human on his mother's side," he is referring to Sarah Jane. He is able to travel back in time to the Gallifrey of long ago by means of something which has not yet been revealed.
1111* It would explain why all versions of the Doctor who have met Sarah Jane love her.
1112
1113[[WMG: The Doctor has lied about the outcome of The Great Time War.]]
1114Theory [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uj31ajsuBTY here]].
1115* Big, fat, unsarcastic O. M. G. That's freaking brilliant.
1116* I could almost see that happening... I mean, season 4 even further helps this what with guys like ''Davros'' making it out of the Time War in one piece. If biggies like that were able to escape, it's almost certain that the Time Lords didn't burn like the Doctor claims.
1117* ''The End of Time'' revealed that there is at least some truth to this, although exactly what happened is still not 100% clear.
1118* Gallifrey, however, is most definitely Time Locked, and the Time Lords, at least the Counsil under Rassilon, are vengeful for this.
1119* Semi-confirmed. He didn't deliberately lie about it, however he did [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Recap/DoctorWho50thASTheDayOfTheDoctor forget about the outcome being changed and his role in it due to multiple incarnations from his past and future also being involved]].
1120
1121[[WMG: Chaucer says "What the Cædmon?"]]
1122Cædmon says "What the Plautus?" and Plautus says "What the Homer?"
1123** Or what the Aristophanes! Maybe what the Virgil could pop up somewhere?
1124
1125[[WMG: Except for Sarah Jane Smith (and her son), none of the people the Tenth Doctor said goodbye to will ever appear again in the series.]]
1126It was a send-off to all of them, and to hand the reins over to Steven Moffat. To be symbolic, the last companion he visited was Rose (who was the first in Series 1), and to nail it in further many traces of RTD are being removed one by one in the new season (all the recent Dalek invasions and ''The Next Doctor'' are now RetGone, and the last RTD-era Daleks were [[KilledOffForReal killed off]]). This means (sadly) that there will be no more adventures with [[CoolOldGuy Wilfred Mott]] or any possible chance that Donna Noble will ever recover, outside of {{Fanon}}.
1127** This seems to be the case, although this troper wishes Eleven would pop in on Wilf to let him know he was alright. Poor guy must have a massive case of Survivor's Guilt. But then again, Eleven is a different person, just like Ten said he would be, so it might not help.
1128** Partly Jossed by real life: Sarah Jane's actress died April 2011 and didn't appear in any episodes between ''The End of Time'' and then.
1129
1130[[WMG:All 13 Doctors will unite in the eventual Main/GrandFinale.]]
1131Because it will be awesome.
1132* It would be a complete TimeParadox, rip time and space asunder, and decimate everything. The resulting universe made from this new "Big Bang" will eventually become the boring, "adventureless" one we inhabit now.
1133** We've already seen and read team-ups between various combinations of the first six Doctors. And Five and Ten.
1134* By the time this show finally wraps up, we'll all be watching TV in the form of a Holodeck, and they'll be able to simulate all of the deceased actors perfectly. William Hartnell will smell like peppermint.
1135* [[spoiler:Partly confirmed: It isn't the GrandFinale, but the 50th anniversary has Doctors 1-12 and War [[TrickedOutTime trick out time]] to save Gallifrey.]]
1136
1137[[WMG: The Eleventh Doctor will procure another fez]]
1138Because fezzes are cool.
1139* The trailer for the next series shows him sitting at what appears to be [[spoiler: the President of the United States's desk]] trying to order people around. He demands a fez, but it's not shown if he gets it or not.
1140* Confirmed - but only briefly, when he [[spoiler: gatecrashes a Laurel and Hardy film, as well as while on holiday with Kazran and Abigail]].
1141
1142[[WMG: Amy and Rory's relationship is a parallel to the Doctor and the Master's]]
1143(This assumes the Doctor and the Master had a little more than friendship going on back in the day)
1144Okay, so Amy ran off to go on adventures without Rory, and Rory just wanted to stay home and have a normal life. Perhaps the Doctor stole the TARDIS to see the universe, but the Master didn't want to leave Gallifrey like all the rest of the Time Lords. The difference is that Rory didn't have any way to get his fiance back (and so he had to wait for the Doctor to show up again), but the Master DID have ways to leave his planet when he realized he might leave the Doctor for good. The threat Rory faced was that Amy would leave him for the promise of an exciting life with the Doctor, and the threat the Master faced was that the Doctor would simply leave him for this new, exciting life (so it's basically the same as with Amy, but without the possible new love interest).
1145* This also explains why the Doctor pushed them so hard to stay together and get married. He lost his chance with the Master, so he either didn't want them to end up like he and the Master did or he's trying to make them live out the life he should have had with the Master, travelling about and seeing the universe together.
1146* Just accept "[[Recap/DoctorWhoTheCurseOfFatalDeath The Curse Of Fatal Death]]" as canon, and you're there!
1147
1148[[WMG:The Master's resurrection ring survived the explosion.]]
1149It was never explicitly stated that it didn't. And Creator/StevenMoffat may have said that he won't be bringing back any of the old series villains, but then we saw a Dalek in the S31 Trailer...
1150* Probably a Void Dalek (from Doomsday), since if the Cybermen escaped there then it's guaranteed that at least some of them did too. As for The Master, death has never stopped him before so why should it now?
1151** It was a Void Dalek, but they then brought in a new generation of Pure Daleks (though, they look different, biologically, they are the originals). The Dreamlord is almost certainly the Valeyard and The Mondas Cybermen were the ones seen, according to WordOfGod. The reason they looked like Earth-2 Cybermen is because they couldn't afford to remake them for it. So, he lied.
1152
1153[[WMG:Within the next ten years -- possibly within the Eleventh Doctor's era -- there's going to be a plot involving the Doctor having to save the lives of Zoë's parents.]]
1154She'll probably going to have to be born within the next decade and has to be around to save the Earth from the Cybermen in the mid-seventies (The Invasion) by giving UNIT the correct calculations to destroy the wave of Cybermen missiles with a limited number of UNIT missiles. Thereby the Earth avoids a death by paradox.
1155
1156[[WMG: The "time girl" is the Nightmare Child]]
1157In a Time War, what worse thing (for the Doctor at least) could there be than a child, representing a whole new generation of potentially evil Time Lords? As for why she's appearing--and apparently was created--after the War ended, well, [[TimeyWimeyBall wibbly wobbly you know the rest]].
1158
1159[[WMG: The Doctor is disgusted with his past companions]]
1160The Tenth Doctor hates violence, sacrifice and death. (Although the Ninth seemed perfectly fine with sacrifice) It has been mentioned that he doesn't want anymore companions so that nobody else gets hurt because of him, but there are clues that hint more than that. In the final episode, he looks at many of his companions with various looks of horror, disgust and indignation when they try their [[WellIntentionedExtremist extremism]]. Martha threatens to blow up the earth, Jack and Sarah Jane threaten to blow up the crucible, Handy kills all of the Daleks and Rose, Mickey and Jackie show up with big gun. He shakes them all off without any resistance. He's even ready to get rid of Rose. The only companion it looks like he doesn't want to get rid of is Donna. She did absolutely nothing to harm the Daleks or self-sacrifice. All she did was give Davros a taste of his own medicine and disable everything. She tried to stop Handy from genocide.
1161
1162The look on his face when he says "They've all got someone else. Still, I'm fine." seems more like a self-rationalization, as to why he wants them gone.
1163* No, no; the reason he's disgusted with them is because none of them tried to torture the Daleks or have them imprisoned for all eternity. Yes, it's a double standard, but Ten's very good at double standards.
1164** And of course, they never tried to prevent humans from beating death (Despite life after death being you, aware and alone in never ending darkness, with an evil from beyond the dawn of time for company in the Who-Niverse)save the life of a callous mass murderer or two OR nearly let the universe die with their inaction
1165* I don't think he's disgusted with his companions, as much as he is with himself. Ten says it himself in a talk with Wilf during "End of the World (Part 2)", "It's not like I'm an innocent, I've taken lives. But I got worse, I got clever, I manipulated people into taking their own. Sometimes I think the Time Lord lives too long." He isn't disgusted with his companions, it's just that when he looks at them he sees what they were before he met them, and what he made them become, and that disgusts him. We also saw in "Amy's Choice" just what the Doctor thinks of himself, and it isn't pretty.
1166
1167[[WMG: The more silly Doctor Who episodes never happened; they are "traveller's tales" told by the Doctor to impress his companions]]
1168There's a suggestion that the Doctor tells his companions a lot of stories about his quests; several episodes begin with him ending a bizarre-sounding tale ("Turns out, it wasn't the robot king after all! Fortunately, I was able to re-attach the head..."). The episodes with flying sharks and skyscraper-sized steampunk cybermen never actually took place; note that in these episodes, the Doctor's companions are not present at all. The Doctor is not known for telling the truth, so is it unlikely that he exaggerates or outright makes up his stories?
1169
1170[[WMG: Doctor/Amy/Rory is meant to parallel Mickey/Rose/Doctor.]]
1171The main difference is Amy sticks with Rory where Rose was undeniably horrible to Mickey and left him for the Doctor. The Doctor sometimes seems to fancy Amy over River, who seems to almost alarm him with how forward and over sexualized she tends to be, but knows he can't get Amy because he is well aware that Rory is a better man than he.
1172
1173[[WMG: The Doctor likes Earth so much specifically because it reminds him of Gallifrey.]]
1174This explains why Time Lords and humans are so similar.
1175
1176[[WMG: The Silence are actually all one person. ]]
1177
1178The doctor can't go to a place and time he's already been, because he would cross over his own time stream. It's the reason why he can't go back in time and team up with himself in some way, except for that one time. And that other time. Whatever. Anyway, the point is, if one person crosses over their own time stream, they could do it again and again, making many of themselves. Maybe even an army. This, however, could deform them. Make them ugly. Stretch them out. Crossing the streams is bad, and if they were to cross the streams so many times, they would become monstrous. The punishment for doing such damage to the time stream is that you don't exist in people's memories once their eyes leave you. The Silence exist in space normally, but they don't exist normally in time as everything else does.
1179Now, who could do this? Who has a time machine, a taste for suites, the ability to shoot lightning from their hands, and such a devotion to defeating the Doctor that they would go through endless pain to do so?
1180The master.
1181
1182[[WMG: Donna will eventually return, but will be played by a different actress.]]
1183Donna and 10.5 are half-human-half-Time-Lords. 10.5 has Time Lord brain, but can't regenerate. Therefore, it is possible that Donna, who has human brain, can regenerate. Donna as we know her will grow old, and on her death-bed, she will regenerate and grow a second heart, thus becoming a full Time Lord. At the same time, she will regain her memories of the Doctor. At some point during his travels, the Doctor will land in the second half of the 21st century, where new Donna will recognise the TARDIS. After having a few adventures with her, the Doctor will eventually leave her with a piece of the TARDIS so she can grow her own.
1184* Apparently Jossed, Donna passed the metacrisis to her daughter.
1185
1186[[WMG: The Time Cracks were the same phenomenon the Doctor used to end the Time War.]]
1187As revealed in the Season 5 finale, the Time Cracks originated from the Doctor's exploding TARDIS. Said time cracks were [[RetGone erasing]] [[ApocalypseHow the cosmos]]. One wonders why an out-of-date TARDIS, or any TARDIS for that matter would be such a doomsday weapon. It's possible, though, that the Doctor himself created this back in the Time War. In order to stop the Time War, the Doctor used a modified(as in "direct, and doesn't require the TARDIS exploding") Time Crack to create a timey-wimey RetGone wave that doesn't stop. Thanks to the Time Lock preventing anything from getting out, it didn't erase the universe-only what was inside of the Time Lock(this did not include the TARDIS, as it was the epicentre of the blast). The reason why the Master/Cult of Skaro/Time War survivors still existed was both the sheer LogicBomb of the event and the Time Lock preventing Time War history for being altered, meaning the blast could only RetGone the present and ([[FateWorseThanDeath probably unending]]) future of the War, [[TimeyWimeyBall at least by the perspective of the Doctor.]] The reason for so much "falling through time" was similar to stuff falling through the cracks in time, albeit far less got out(the Dalek Emperor, [[JokerImmunity likely the next appearance of the Master]] etc).
1188
1189[[WMG: When the Doctor refers to meeting fictional characters he is referring to adventures in the Land of Fiction]]
1190
1191[[WMG: A companion will die and stay dead.]]
1192Because this show needs ''real'' drama and no companion has died and stayed dead since 1982.
1193
1194[[WMG: The Valeyard will be a merge between the Dream Lord and the Meta-Crisis Doctor.]]
1195Just like how The Watcher merged with the Fourth Doctor to create the Fifth Doctor, the Dream Lord will merge with the Meta-Crisis Doctor to become The Valeyard.
1196* BONUS: Rose will die. Finally.
1197** As much as I would love that, the Cult of Skarose would be up in arms.
1198
1199[[WMG: Paul [=McGann=] will play the Thirteenth Doctor.]]
1200If The Curator is a future incarnation of The Doctor who could reuse old faces, then maybe the face of the Eighth Doctor will be reused.
1201* Jossed. It's Creator/JodieWhittaker.
1202
1203[[WMG: The 60th anniversary special will be a multi-doctor episode.]]
1204In 2023, the show may be following the adventures of the Fourteenth or Fifteenth Doctor. The Thirteenth Doctor will be included. Peter Capaldi will return as the Twelfth Doctor. Matt Smith will return as the Eleventh Doctor, and if he has aged visibly, it can be explained that he arrived from the end of his first decade on Trenzalore. Maybe David Tennant will return as the Tenth Doctor. If he has visibly aged, it can be explained that it is a result of a paradox collision like in "Time Crash." I am not sure if Christopher Eccleston would want to return as the Ninth Doctor.
1205** Near-certain. Matt said he'd be back for the 60th.
1206** Every X0th anniversary is a multi-doctor episode, it would be strange if this wasn't the case
1207
1208[[WMG: The Twelfth Doctor will create another Biological Meta-Crisis.]]
1209The new Meta-Crisis doctor will then be deposited in Pompeii, under the alias of Caecilius. Furthermore, he purchased the Tardis not because he thought it was a work of art, but because he knew that his previous self would [[StableTimeLoop look for it and find it in his house, and would then save the world from the Pyrovals.]]
1210** If that is true, much as I hate the [[AssPull Meta-Crisis]], I think Caecilius had his memory erased.
1211** Alternately, the Twelfth Doctor will one day have to jump into ''Clara's'' timestream to save her many, many duplicates, and be split into thousands of copies including the previous characters Peter Capaldi has played on ''Doctor Who'' and ''Torchwood''.
1212** ... and Series/TheThickOfIt, Film/TheLairOfTheWhiteWorm, Film/WorldWarZ...
1213
1214[[WMG: Capaldi's Doctor will be called Thirteen.]]
1215As of ''The Day of The Doctor'', the Doctor considers the War Doctor to be worthy of being called Doctor again (kind of an awkward sentence there). Because of this, "Twelve" will address himself as his actual incarnation number.
1216* Except the Doctor doesn't seem to refer to ''any'' of his incarnations by numbers, but by snarky nicknames like "Captain Grumpy".
1217
1218[[WMG: The Twelfth Doctor will revisit Queen Victoria]]
1219But this time, he and Clara will act like sophisticated gentlepeople. In which The Queen will be approve. But of course, she has no idea he and ten are the same person. Twelve will lampshade that to Clara.
1220-->'''Twelve:''' She banished my Tenth incarnation. Do you see him around anywhere?
1221
1222[[WMG: Concerning Magpie Electricals]]
1223It was inherited by a relative of Mr. Magpie from [[Recap/DoctorWhoS28E7TheIdiotsLantern "The Idiot's Lantern"]] who kept it going, and eventually it became a large, extremely successful business. Because this is the most plausible reason why a small electronics shop from an otherwise standalone episode set in 1952 should keep popping up in episodes set in later times like [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E12TheSoundOfDrums "The Sound of Drums"]][[note]]via FreezeFrameBonus[[/note]], [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E2TheBeastBelow "The Beast Below"]] and [[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E4BeforeTheFlood "Before the Flood"]]. There's even another Magpie Electricals shop appearing in a Series 10 episode somehow!
1224
1225[[WMG: The cult of Skaro (and the genesis ark) in series 2 and 3 are from Pete's universe]]
1226
1227[[WMG: The Fourteenth Doctor will be played by...]]
1228* Creator/DanielRadcliffe?
1229* Creator/JohnBoyega?
1230* Creator/RosabellLaurentiSellers?
1231** All Jossed, it's… Creator/DavidTennant?! While Fifteen will be portrayed by Creator/NcutiGatwa.
1232[[WMG: A crossover with Andy's Prehistoric Adventures]]
1233* The Doc checks in on Andy to make sure he is using his time machine responsibly. Andy is constantly using it to find last minute fixes for problems with his museum's displays (and to gape at dinosaurs). The Doctor agrees this is an entirely appropriate use of a time machine and goes on her way.
1234
1235[[WMG:A future New Year's special...]]
1236Will show the planet Clara mentioned in "Under the Lake" where it's perpetually New Year's Eve and she lost her sunglasses and most of her dignity.
1237
1238[[WMG:Riley’s surname is Vashtee because of the Vashta Nerada.]]
1239Either himself or one of his parentsgrandparents got orphaned by the Vashta Nerada and the surname came from that.
1240
1241[[WMG:Next companion will be from the future.]]
1242And we will see the Steven Taylor Spaceship Fleet and Vicki Pallister Veterinarian Clinic referenced.
1243
1244[[WMG: There will be parallel between the next Doctors and the first regen cycle]]
1245During a chain of events involving a lot of the universe getting destroyed. Surrounded by various charactersCompanions from different planetsspecies each: an older human of non-British origin, and a few younger aliens, cut off from their worlds by said planet destroying events. At least one of them with connections to the villain and who starts out as a side character, not initially joining the doctor but simply reappearing.
1246
1247
1248
124916 is young, calm, and heavily themed after a specific sport, and travelling with a bunch of younger aliens who are like kids to them. One of the aliens dies tragically, the other two start a relationship on Earth.
1250
1251
1252
125317 is more brash, wears bright colors, and travels with an actractive companion of non-British origin (andor whose actor is putting an accent) who is trying to get away from abusive (step)family members.
1254
1255
1256
125718 is more manipulative and has an young, rebellious Companion.
1258
1259
1260
126119 is a bit forgetful and each of their story arcs features various sets of Companions each. The usual Companion is from a bit in the past than the release date, and is an young rebel who tends to have a somewhat vintage aestethic (even for the time said companion is from) and falls in love with the Doctor.
1262
1263
1264
126520 is traumatized, but cool, and dresses more modern. He picks up a present day Earth Companion and hangs out with their family.
1266
1267
1268
126921's era is mostly a continuation of 20's, with present day Earth Companions and romantic drama with them.
1270
1271
1272
127322's era instead does all new. Clumsy, young Doctor, and his Companions are a couple from present day Earth. Companions end up having a kid who ends up being plot important, and the Doctor gets married to a side character.

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