Doctor Who: The Thirteenth Doctor #0: The Many Lives of Doctor Who

· Titan Comics
4.2
10 reviews
eBook
68
Pages
Bubble Zoom
Eligible
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About this eBook

At the end of his life, the Twelfth Doctor faced his darkest hour: losing beloved companions Bill and Nardole in an impossible stand-off against the Cybermen, and losing Missy to herself, not long after.


Mortally wounded in battle, he could see no reason to go on.


He was willing to die a final death.


But a surprise, time-twisting encounter with his oldest self, the first Doctor, led him to recover his desire to go on – to start again.


It’s time for change. For regeneration.


And the Doctor has a few things to say to the Doctor that is to come.


For in his warren of memories and the many lives past lies the key to a brilliant future…

Ratings and reviews

4.2
10 reviews
Mad Night Guard
22 January 2024
While it does finally explore stuff that was set up a decade ago like the Doctor turning Villengard into a banana grove, the 9th Doctor's journey in Japan with Rose and Jack before the parting of the ways. It undermines what makes regeneration interesting by framing it as human, and not in the actual thought out poetic way Moffat did for Matt's regeneration scene. It has a shoehorned in line about how gender in general, for anyone is fluid. It's contradictory in so many ways by conflating sex with gender, undermining how actual trans people are born with gender dysphoria thus creating harmful misinformation that's used to justify hatred towards them. Regeneration is something incredibly alien, that's what makes incarnations of familiar Time Lord characters like Mistress or the thirteenth Doctor so interesting. In Hell Bent a white male Time Lord is shot but just stands back up as a black woman, it is fantastic, incredible, but it's so fascinsting because it's so alien, not human.
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