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List of Doctor Who robots

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who has featured many robots. The Daleks and Cybermen are not listed as they are cyborgs, and therefore not true robots.

Contents: Top - 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

[edit] A

[edit] Adherents of the Repeated Meme

[edit] Advertising satellite

[edit] Androids (Androzani)

[edit] Androids (Cyberman)

Main article: Earthshock

[edit] Androids (Karfel)

Main article: Timelash

[edit] Androids (Krall)

Main article: The Android Invasion

[edit] Androids (Taran)

Main article: The Androids of Tara

[edit] Androids (Terileptil)

Main article: The Visitation

[edit] Androids (Urbankan)

Main article: Four to Doomsday

[edit] Anne Droid

Main article: Bad Wolf

[edit] C

[edit] Chumblies

Main article: Galaxy 4

[edit] Cleaning robots

Main article: Paradise Towers

[edit] Clockwork Droids

A Clockwork Droid unmasked.
A Clockwork Droid unmasked.

In The Girl in the Fireplace, the Clockwork Droids were androids who came to stalk and take Madame de Pompadour's brain in 18th Century France, believing it could be used to repair their ship.

The Clockwork Robots began as repair robots on board the space ship SS Madame De Pompadour in the 51st Century. Their only purpose was to fix the ship if it broke down. When the ship did break down in the Dagmar Cluster, they did not have the right parts and so they used the 50 crew members on board, using their body parts to repair the ship. The last part they needed was a brain and they believed that the 37 year old brain (the same age of their ship) would only work. They used the ship's quantum drive to open multiple time windows to 18th Century France, trying to find the one that led to Madame de Pompadour's 37th year.

They followed camouflage procedure to blend into the surroundings and rebuilt themselves, giving them a more clockwork-like look. They are equipped with a short range teleporter, scanners, tranquilizers, and sharp saw-knifes for part removal. They can also heat themselves up if they get frozen and empty unwanted fluids out of their system. Whenever they are in the room, they make an unnerving 'tick-tock' noise from their clockwork parts, which means they often break the clock in the room to avoid raising suspicion. The Doctor defeated them by disconnecting the time window that led back to the ship, which caused them to shut down from lack of purpose.

[edit] Clockwork Soldiers

Main article: The Mind Robber

[edit] Cybermat

Main article: Cyberman#Cybermats

[edit] D

[edit] Dalek duplicates

[edit] Davinadroid

Main article: Bad Wolf

[edit] G

[edit] Gundan

Doctor Who race
Gundans
Type Armoured war robot
Affiliated with Human slaves
Homeworld The Gateway
First appearance Warriors' Gate

The Gundans were a squad of war robots encountered by the Fourth Doctor in the 1980 story Warriors' Gate by Stephen Gallagher. They were designed by the human slaves of the Tharils and used as a spearhead in the revolution which overthrew the Tharil empire. Designed with the primary purpose to resist and kill Tharils, the Gundans could travel the time winds like their prey and butchered many during the revolt. Each Gundan was armed with an axe and decorated with horns to make the robots seem more fearful. The revolt began on the day of the Great Feast, and several inert and decaying Gundans were found by the Doctor when he visited the feasting hall in the Gateway between the universes. The skeletons of their defeated enemies remained in their seats around the feasting table. The Doctor repaired the memory wafers of a Gundan to discover what had caused the decay of the Gateway.

[edit] I

[edit] Ice Soldiers

Main article: The Keys of Marinus

[edit] K

[edit] K1

In Robot, K1 was a robot designed in the 20th century to replace Humans in dangerous environments, but was subverted by a group of intellectuals who wanted to take power for themselves.

[edit] K9

Main article: K-9 (Doctor Who)

[edit] Kamelion

Main article: Kamelion

[edit] Kandy Man

Doctor Who universe character

Kandy Man
Affiliated with Helen A
Race Robot
Home planet Terra Alpha
Home era Unspecified
First appearance The Happiness Patrol
Last appearance The Happiness Patrol
Portrayed by David John Pope

The Kandy Man (or Kandyman) was a pathological, psychopathic robotic killer from 1988's Seventh Doctor story, The Happiness Patrol (written by Graeme Curry). Employed by the egocentric Helen A, the Kandy Man delighted in creating methods of torture and destruction using confectionery, such as drowning people in sugary solutions like its "fondant surprise". It was sadistic, speaking with a squeaky voice and had a very warped sense of humour, claiming it liked its victims to "die with a smile on their faces" by making candies that were so sweet the human body was unable to cope with the pleasure.

Composed of things like sherbet, marzipan and caramel, it was created by Gilbert M, with whom it shared an almost symbiotic relationship. The Doctor stuck the Kandy Man to the floor using lemonade — it had to keep moving or its constituent ingredients would coagulate. The Kandy Man died when its external candy shell was dissolved in a pipe by fondant surprise released by the repressed Pipe People.

Although it resembled the trademarked character of Bertie Bassett, the BBC's own internal investigations revealed that this was entirely coincidental, though they did promise Bassetts that the character would not return.

The Seventh Doctor encountered the Kandy Man again on the planet Tara in The Trials of Tara, a short story by Paul Cornell from Decalog 2 written entirely in iambic pentameter. In that story Count Grendel rebuilt the Kandy Man after its charred body crash landed on Tara.

[edit] L

[edit] L1

Main article: The Mysterious Planet

[edit] L3

Main article: The Mysterious Planet

[edit] M

[edit] Mechanoid

The Mechanoids were large, spherical robots originally created to serve humans in The Chase. Mechanoids which had been sent to prepare the planet Mechanus for human colonization kept the astronaut Steven Taylor prisoner, since he did not have the Mechanoids' control codes. Daleks, following the TARDIS crew, engaged the Mechanoids in battle.

The Mechanoids appear in the Big Finish audio drama The Juggernauts. In this story, Davros adds human nervous tissue to robotic Mechanoid shells to create the Juggernauts of the play's title. The Mechanoids also appear in the comic strip The World That Waits in the 1965 annual The Dalek World.

[edit] Megara justice machine

Main article: The Stones of Blood

[edit] Metallic Root

Main article: Death to the Daleks

[edit] Mining robot

Main article: Colony in Space

[edit] Movellan

Main article: Movellan

[edit] O

[edit] Osirian service robots

Main article: Pyramids of Mars

[edit] P

[edit] Polyphase Avatron

Main article: The Pirate Planet

[edit] Q

[edit] Quark

Doctor Who race
Quarks
Type Robots
Affiliated with Dominators
Homeworld Unknown
First appearance The Dominators

The Quarks appeared in the Second Doctor serial The Dominators by Henry Lincoln and Mervyn Haisman in 1969.

The Quarks were used on Dulkis by the Dominators to enslave and terrorise the indigenous Dulcian population to ensure the drilling of bore holes through the planet's crust. The Dominators planned to use their technology to fire seeds down the holes which would force the core to erupt, thus providing a new fuel source for their fleet.

The Quarks were rectangular in shape, with four arms: one pair which folded into the body, the other pair being retractable. On the end of each arm was a solitary claw. The legs extended out below the Quark body. The spherical head was visibly divided into octants; the upper four octants formed the sensory hemisphere, which detected changes in light, heat and motion. At the corners of seven of the octants were directional crystal beam transmitters (the eighth corner joined with the robot's extremely short neck). Quarks communicated by means of high-pitched sound waves. Their major weakness was a tendency to run out of energy rather quickly.

The Quarks were portrayed by children (requiring them to have a chaperone whilst on set.) One Quark was also seen in the serial The War Games, while one of the children who portrayed one of the Quarks appeared as an Axon (in their humanoid guise) in The Claws of Axos. The Quarks were designed as an, albeit unsuccessful, attempt at creating a merchandise property, as the Daleks had become earlier.

Quarks are also referred to in the Big Finish Productions audio drama Flip-Flop. When they attacked the space yacht Pinto, the Seventh Doctor and Mel went searching for leptonite crystals in order to defeat them. It is not known whether the Doctor succeeded in defeating the Quarks on that occasion. The Quarks were also mentioned, and mocked viciously, in the Doctor Who Unbound audio play Exile.

The Quarks can also be seen on the VHS cover of the The Five Doctors, although they did not appear in the story because they were drafted out at an early stage. They were replaced by a Raston Warrior Robot that was encountered by The Third Doctor.

Additional information on the Quarks can be found in:

  • Harris, M. The Doctor Who Technical Manual 1983. Severn House London/J. M. Dent Pty Ltd Boronia/Australian Broadcasting Corporation Publishing, Sydney.

[edit] R

[edit] Raston Warrior Robot

The Raston Warrior Robot decimating a squad of Cybermen.
The Raston Warrior Robot decimating a squad of Cybermen.

The Raston Warrior Robot was found in the Death Zone on Gallifrey, it had the ability to move faster than lightning and was capable of taking out a troop of Cybermen (The Five Doctors). According to the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel The Eight Doctors by Terrance Dicks, the robots were built by an ancient race, older than the Time Lords, who were ultimately destroyed by their own weapons. However, the novel Alien Bodies by Lawrence Miles claims that this is just false advertising on the part of their manufacturers. It uses atomic radiation as a power source, drawing it from the atmosphere and locks onto electrical impulses in the brain of its victim, but can become confused if it meets two beings with the same brain pattern. It is furthermore considered by many fans that the Raston Warrior Robot was made by Rassilon as a weapon against the Great Vampires. This explains the 'inbuilt armaments' that the robot has: arrows which it launches out of its hands to pierce enemy vampires through the heart, razor-sharp discs it throws to decapitate its victims and finally long blades that come out of the robot's wrists which can stab or cut; probably used in close combat or when its primary weapons have run out. Another of these robots appears in the Past Doctor Adventure World Game, also by Dicks.

[edit] Robot

In The Robots of Death, there were three types of slave Robots with an unknown general name on an unnamed planet that has great mineral wealth trapped in the sands of its surface. The are three types of robot are the basic model (D for dumb) which follows orders but does not speak; the Voc which is capable of speech; and the Super Voc which has superior intelligence so it can order other robots.

[edit] Robot Bus Conductor

[edit] Robot Clown

[edit] Robot Crab

Main article: Paradise Towers

[edit] Robot Doctor Who

[edit] Robot Dracula, Frankenstein's Monster and The Grey Lady

[edit] Robot Knight

Main article: The Time Warrior

[edit] Robotic Santa Clauses and Christmas Trees

Used together in both The Christmas Invasion and The Runaway Bride, the Robotic Santa Clauses and Robotic Christmas Trees were used by both the Sycorax and the Racnoss on Christmas Day 2006 and 2007 respectively. In the latter encounter, the Doctor refers to them as "mercenaries," perhaps implying that they are a race of robotic creatures who are employed - in their first appearances, he described them as the pilot fish to a larger enemy. However, apart from using the Sycorax teleport system, the Santa's of the The Christmas Invasion didn't seem to work for the Sycorax. The Sycorax didn't need a reason to kill Rose, Jackie and Mickey but the Santas did. They wanted the Doctor's regenerative energy, attempting to kill Rose, Jackie and Mickey as they were protecting the Doctor. It seems that after the Sycorax invasion, the Racnoss took over the Santas, referred to by her as "roboforms" (which reflects more on her way of saying things than their name as she also called the Doctor "Doctor-man" and "Physician").

The robotic Santa Clauses were humanoid robots disguised as Santa Clauses playing as a brass band, however they would then attack their targets with guns hidden within the instruments. They also had remote controls for both themselves and the robotic Christmas trees.

The robotic Christmas trees were used in a similar way to the robotic Santa Clauses, yet used different methods of attack - in The Christmas Invasion, the branches of the tree swirled at high speeds cutting through nearly everything, and in The Runaway Bride they used bombs disguised as baubles on the trees which would fly around the room and seemingly hit randomly around the area, detonating. In at least the latter case, the trees were controlled remotely by the Robotic Santa Clauses.

In The Runaway Bride the Santa's appeared without their masks, and were shown to have golden faces, featureless except for black eyepieces.

[edit] S

[edit] Seers of the Oracle

[edit] Servo robot

Main article: The Wheel in Space

[edit] Sontaran surveillance robot

[edit] Spider robots

Spider robots coming out of the ducts on Platform One in The End of the World.
Spider robots coming out of the ducts on Platform One in The End of the World.

The Spider Robots were used by Lady Cassandra in both The End of the World and New Earth.

They are small robots with four tentacle-like appendages and two saucer-shaped body parts. The top part has a red 'eye' which can emit light. Individually, they aren't very strong or dangerous, but can be formidable in large groups. They were transported by metallic orbs, which were in turn transported by the Adherents of the Repeated Meme.

In The End of the World, the Spider Robots were used by Cassandra to disrupt the systems of Platform One (namely the sun filter systems) so that she could claim the insurance money to pay for her plastic surgery bills. In New Earth, they were used for spying around the eponymous planet.

[edit] T

[edit] Trine-e

Main article: Bad Wolf

[edit] W

[edit] War Machines

Main article: The War Machines

[edit] White Robots

Main article: The Mind Robber

[edit] Y

[edit] Yeti

Main article: Yeti (Doctor Who)

[edit] Z

[edit] Zu-Zana

Main article: Bad Wolf
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