
I'm curious as to whether your explanation for the relative uneffectiveness (Relative compared to "Squish the primordial ooze as soon as you notice the shots") of the Soontaran Time travel is original or based on "Classic" Dr,Who?

Moderator: LadyTevar
In "Remembrance of the Daleks" the Doctor comes across a Dalek time machine the size of a briefcase with a crystal ball, commenting that they had "come a long way" even though in a earlier scene he describes Dalek time travel tech as "cheap and nasty" with none of Time Lord's refined elegance - the Time War era Dalek must've taken a few more steps with their time travel technology, where their miniaturised time travel units can be fitted into their casing (not unlike Idiran FTL packs that can be strapped onto spacesuits in CP).Xon wrote: The Time Lords really do live up to thier name with thier near complete mastery of Time Travel and almost any other field they care about. It took the Daleks tens of thousands of years with a level of technological development which makes Draka luck appear trivial too eventually force a MAD with the Time Lords. And that is with the Time Lords leaving them virtally alone for most of thier history (the times they do interfere are Big Events, but these are only set backs)
The Time Lords are stupidly advanced, and the Dalek's have a tech development curve which is almost vertical.Big Orange wrote:In "Remembrance of the Daleks" the Doctor
Was the old bit of fluff about their tech progress being literally exponential (1,000 years equaling a million years of tech development or somesuch) ever retconned?Xon wrote:The Time Lords are stupidly advanced, and the Dalek's have a tech development curve which is almost vertical.Big Orange wrote:In "Remembrance of the Daleks" the Doctor
I don't think so, since The Dalek Survival Guide was written by the current Dalek voice actor and Doctor Who co-writer, Nicholas Briggs, so the Daleks' very fast tech development where their evolution is millions of times faster than other species could be seen as secondary canon (it makes sense that the Daleks could nearly catch up with the Time Lords, with the Time Lords themselves unable keep a effective tab on the essentially apocalyptic development of Dalek civilization).DEATH wrote: Was the old bit of fluff about their tech progress being literally exponential (1,000 years equaling a million years of tech development or somesuch) ever retconned?
And even their grunt soldiers are extremely intelligent with top notch scientific and technical educations.NecronLord wrote:It's 100 times faster, not millions. They're so effective because every neuron of their culture is devoted to its collective advancement.
I get that impression with the Time War era Daleks or with the earlier Daleks from "The Dalek Invasion of Earth" and "Remembrance of the Daleks", but I hear from fans that the Daleks were starting to get almost pathetic as villains between the early 1970s up until the mid 1980s.Imperial Overlord wrote: And even their grunt soldiers are extremely intelligent with top notch scientific and technical educations.
Dalek ecological and exploratory (projects?) were suspended.
was in early middle age and just vain enough to hide the first strands of grey in her Kaled-black hair
Terry Nation's fault. He fell in love with Davros, who was a really good character in "Genesis of the Daleks". The problem was, of course, that Davros only really fit in in "Genesis", which ends with him realizing exactly how horrible his creations are just before they exterminate him. The Daleks had to be nerfed into stupidity so they needed to resurrect him to solve their problems and Davros's death retconned away in order to bring him back. Again and again and again.Big Orange wrote: I get that impression with the Time War era Daleks or with the earlier Daleks from "The Dalek Invasion of Earth" and "Remembrance of the Daleks", but I hear from fans that the Daleks were starting to get almost pathetic as villains between the early 1970s up until the mid 1980s.
If you look at the upper half of a Dalek travel machine I notice a ventilation grill (in the Dalek Survival Guide it's supposedly a air filtration unit for nutrients) but it can seal itself off if the Daleks can take space flights, submerge into deep water and can doubtlessly withstand hostile environments involving corrosive chemicals or radiation. But I still wonder how alien beings, who are like mini-spaceships, would make the interiors of their ships and complexes liveable for the very humanoid vermin they vehemently abhor on principle and fanatically want to completely annihilate at all costs...NecronLord wrote:Daleks can survive in space, but they have also been seen to interact with their atmosphere on occasion - being infected with an airborne movellan virus, for example.
In that 'having half as much internal volume' (presumably) should mean 'Sontaran cruisters have half the internal volume of Dalek saucers', but reads as 'Dalek saucers have half the internal volume of Sontaran cruisers. "Sontaran battlecruisers have equal power generation to Dalek saucers despite having only half the internal volume and devote a larger percentage of that volume to multiple weapons systems.""Sontaran battlecruisers have equal power generation to Dalek saucers having half as much internal volume and devoting a large percentage of internal volume to multiple weapons systems."