So..does this mean that Matt Smith's doctor will remember that Gallifrey still exists? I hope the answer is he forgets as well, that would send the show back into its old tunes 
When The Doctor entered the Time War, he had his number of regenerations reset (as did all who fought in the war [background fluff, can be hard to find]). So, Eccleston was the first, Tennant second and Smith fourth*. But if you are counting regenerations in total then Eccelston was 10, Tennant 11 and Smith 13*.TheRiddler said:Loved it. Just wondering though: What do we call Matt Smith's Doctor now? Eleven or Twelve? Same deal with Tennant and Eccleston. Especially Tennant, I always liked that David TENnant was Ten, and I'd like to keep that.
It's a really minor thing, but seriously, what do we call these guys now?
You would assume it was through the sonic screwdriver again, but that wouldn't make sense seeing as the the doctor went through a few in the original seriesGizmo1990 said:How is it that the Doctor could spend his whole life, since his first life, doing the maths to time freeze Galifray before the war even began?
....What?Browncoat86 said:http://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/doctor-who-steven-moffat-clears-2794713
This clears up the numbering... ... sort of.
Expect that the Doctor entered the war not under the control of the Time Lords, as is evident by the reactions of the War Council in the anniversary episode and the Doctor's words in 'Night of the Doctor'. He wasn't part of the war until the final days.008Zulu said:When The Doctor entered the Time War, he had his number of regenerations reset (as did all who fought in the war [background fluff, can be hard to find]).TheRiddler said:Loved it. Just wondering though: What do we call Matt Smith's Doctor now? Eleven or Twelve? Same deal with Tennant and Eccleston. Especially Tennant, I always liked that David TENnant was Ten, and I'd like to keep that.
It's a really minor thing, but seriously, what do we call these guys now?
Except Hurt's dialogue, and in the afore mentioned s4 two part finale (not End of Time), the Doctor states he was there from the beginning (When he spoke to Davros aboard the Cruicible, The Doctor stated that Davros was thought to have perished in the first year of the time war and that he tried to save him then).TimeLord said:Expect that the Doctor entered the war not under the control of the Time Lords, as is evident by the reactions of the War Council in the anniversary episode and the Doctor's words in 'Night of the Doctor'. He wasn't part of the war until the final days.
I agree. There's a lot of fanboy/girlism going on in this thread. Don't get me wrong, I can fanboy with the best of 'em but this was just disappointing.spartandude said:Honestly i thought it was shit!
Dont get me wrong the acting was amazing and all the actors did an amazing job, but for the love of god it still seems as though Moffat has yet to learn any lessons. I might forgive him if the Christmas special turns out to tie everything together in a genius fashion but at the moment i cant see that happening.
BBC has officially axed the 13 incarnation limit sometime during Smith, don't exactly recall when. Nor if they ever tried to somehow rationalize it within the show.faefrost said:Forgive me if I'm wrong, but wasn't the 13 limit broken way back in the 70's in the Tom Baker episode that introduced the concept? The whole point was the master was on his last regeneration and failing. And was using some Galifrean artifacts to reboot his regenerations (which obviously worked). But the flipside was that the Tom Baker doctor was exposed to the same process. So he theoretically was either reset to 1, or is one of the few Timelords without a limit, since that time.
PS. Is anyone else now feeling deeply disappointed that we did not get to see a full season or more of John Hurt as the Doctor? His performance was wonderful.
Like you said; Budget.TheSYLOH said:I would have love to see something that might inspire Cass to say the Timelords are as bad as the Daleks. Watch an unnamed monstrosity savage a few pepper pots before getting exterminated.
But no, it's just space marines with lasers.
But no, its just quad-lasers vs flying saucers. These two races made Space-Time their *****, and were taking turns to royal proxy f*ck each other. Would have love to see that.
Or to at least see a Battle Tardis in action.
Yep...and didn't the Gallifrey soldiers look like Cadians?TheSYLOH said:The biggest flaw of the episode is the Time War.
That's partially the way they set it up and described it in episodes like "The End of Time" made it sound like a new definition of hell.
They made it seem that, at best it, would make someone living in the Warhammer 40k universe say "Damn, I never knew I had it so good"
At worst it would be something that would give Cthulhu a bad case of PTSD.
After all its grimdark to say "There is only war", but the Time War is saying "There is only war, There has been only war, There will be only war"
But alas it was generic laser war number 3,232,432,346,