Stark wrote:GHETTO - Brian is fucking right. You know why the stupid novels sucked dick? VILLAN INFLATION. The Daleks fucking invaded Gallifrey and built a fucking galaxy and had temporal extinction bombs,
That's all from the audios. Which really didn't suck. Sure, they invaded Gallifrey. In a Trojan Horse kind of way; they were promptly destroyed en masse. Despite the tremendously over the top technology, I found
The Apocalypse Element to be extremely well written and preformed, a worthy part of the nigh-perfect Dalek Empire continuity.
and yet... never won. Time Lords couldn't do jack shit either.
Oh, they could, they chose not to. And that's neither the fault of the books or the audios. You can blame Robert Holmes and
The Deadly Assassin for that, which made them into incompetant, dusty old senators and academics whom the Master could happily run rings around in his sleep. If anything, the novels and audios often tried quite well to improve the Time Lords from what they were given in the series.
This is what we in the business call 'absurd bullshit that sucks shit through a straw due to being retarded'.
The novels also had the (fairly helpful) idea of wiping Gallifrey away, though they excecuted it poorly.
Constantly having guys defeated in huge awesome zomg battles and then just coming back is bullshit.
And established in the series long before the first novels. The Daleks were wiped out in their first serial (indeed,
Invasion of Earth had the cunning idea of setting itself before
The Daleks but unfortunately, that's untenable, and must essentially be dismissed as an offhand guess by the Doctor). So were the Cybermen. Doctor Who's villains have a long history of coming back from extinction, to expect any more permanance is... naive at best.
The overall BBC novel arc sucked because it involved extreme wank for entirely different reasons; not because things kept coming back or getting inflated; Faction Paradox was terribly powerful, the Time Lords were vulnerable, but ruthless and powerful. They essentially mutually annihilated. This stuck right until
The Gallifrey Chronicles (which, as a stand alone book, is utterly superb) when a means of restoring the Time Lords was brought in, in order to mesh with the revived series' continuity.
The Faction Paradox arc sucked because it had hilarious wank like meme-weapons (which only work as conceptual asides and short stories, not with absurd things like changing Gallifrey's existance so that its people are getting shot on the street for stealing bread) and a Time Lord Voodoo Cult. They were quite consistantly terrifying and powerful, but very hard to take seriously as antagonists.