I don't think I ever saw anything about that, and I can't find it now that I'm looking.As it is, Moffat later regretted the decision to bring the Time Lords back and issued a public apology to fandom over it...
I don't think I ever saw anything about that, and I can't find it now that I'm looking.As it is, Moffat later regretted the decision to bring the Time Lords back and issued a public apology to fandom over it...
Right hereI don't think I ever saw anything about that, and I can't find it now that I'm looking.
That's makes no sense. The original Doctor would've noticed just like in this episode. And, it seems like each original Doctor who didn't regenerate would not have another TARDIS. And do those originals also regenerate eventually. If so, do those regenerations also get split? And so on.On the video commentary for The Giggle, RTD confirmed the bi-regeneration kicked in retroactively for each classic Doctor
So that makes "Tales of the Tardis" true.
The Bi-Regeneration phenomenon not only affected this regeneration, but also affected all the Doctor's previous Regenerations at the same time. So , without the Doctor knowing up until this point, each of his/her Regenerations created a Copy of the Doctor's previous form which is independent of the Doctor (For example, when the Fifth Doctor regenerated, then a copy of the Fifth Doctor which would become independent was created while the main body became the 6th Doctor and so and so)
I feel like if you watch the specials back to back you should play a drinking game.
Take a shot every time the Doctor and Donna get separated by a wall.
"There's no such thing. Bi-generation is supposed to be a myth..." is obviously a deliberate joke on RTD's part.Theory i read on twitter - the bigeneration was another consequence of the Doctor spreading the salt; it was another myth or legend that was allowed to become reality.
I don’t know if that was RTD’s intention but I really like it.
This is Doctor Who.The bi-regeneration, we’ll just chalk that up to wtf. If you don’t want it to be Dr Who write another programme.
Moffat's novelization of Day of the Doctor published in 2018 retcons the sequence by having several hundred Doctors show up, so I guess you can say in this scenario the double Doctors did take part in Save Gallifrey.So if all the Doctors got doubled then why didn't 24 Doctors show up at the end of 'Day of the Doctor' to save Gallifrey?
This whole Whoniverse thing is just a bit naf
RTD explains the bi-regeneration
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