Warning: Spoilers ahead for Doctor Who season 14, episode 6, "Rogue."
Summary
- "Rogue" teases the Toymaker's true impact on the Doctor's timeline.
- The holographic face in "Rogue" hints at the Shalka Doctor being reintegrated into the timeline.
- The Toymaker's influence on Doctor Who's canon relaxes rules, allowing for new Doctor iterations.
Doctor Who season 14 cast, it's clear the twist isn't over.
"Rogue" is a largely self-contained Doctor Who adventure, but the writers still find a way to make coy nods to other ongoing mysteries. For instance, Susan Twist's cameo in "Rogue" is very easy to miss, and Jonathon Groff's bounty hunter character finally makes Doctor Who's first reference to "The Boss" since "The Star Beast." On top of all that, there's an unknown Doctor present in the holographic parade of former versions of the Time Lord.

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Doctor Who has been a fixture on TV screens for 60 years, meaning there are plenty of stories to choose from when picking out the Time Lord's best.
Doctor Who's Unknown Regeneration Can Be Blamed On The Toymaker
The holographic face could be Richard E Grant's "Shalka Doctor"
When the Doctor is proving to Rogue that he isn't a Chuldur, he shows the bounty hunter all of his former faces. It doesn't exactly refuse Rogue's shapeshifter accusations, but it does establish the Doctor as a Time Lord rather than a member of the same race as the episode's antagonists. Among the holographic avatars of all the former Doctor actors is a face that looks familiar, but it isn't anyone who has played a canon version of the Doctor. It looks an awful lot like Richard E Grant, which could be delayed and compelling evidence of the Toymaker's meddling.
Grant voiced an animated version of an alternate Ninth Doctor in 2003. The Doctor Who show, Scream of the Shalka, followed the exploits of Grant's Doctor. At the time, the franchise had been inactive since Paul McGann's 1996 failed Doctor Who movie. Scream of the Shalka was originally intended to add to the show's main continuity, with Richard E Grant voicing the latest iteration of the Doctor. Now known as "The Shalka Doctor," the animated Doctor isn't considered canon, as Christopher Eccleston snagged the true role of the Ninth Doctor when the main show was revived in 2005.
Just as the Toymaker added extra regenerations that lived before William Hartnell's First Doctor, Harris' celestial villain is likely the one responsible for reintegrating the Shalka Doctor into the timeline of the franchise's titular Time Lord. That is, if the holographic face shown in "Rogue" does turn out to be Richard E Grant. If so, then one of the Doctor's alternate timelines could now be considered to be part of Doctor Who's main continuity. Fifteen is distracted by trying to save himself during this sequence with Rogue, so he probably missed the erroneous visage.
Reestablishing the Shalka Doctor as Doctor Who canon would certainly fit the Toymaker's claims in "The Giggle" of having made a "Jigsaw" out of the Doctor's history.
RTD Already Confirmed The Toymaker Loosened Doctor Who's Canon
The Doctor Who showrunner has allowed certain stories to breathe
Doctor Who has been in existence for six decades now, and countless individuals have contributed to the lore of the franchise. As a result, canonical clashes are inevitable, as even the smallest out-of-place detail can send the overall story spiraling off into an illogical realm. During the commentary for "The Giggle," Russell T Davies confirms that the Toymaker's jigsaw comment, "Relaxes the rules," and essentially allows all the conflicting storylines to exist in harmony.

What The Toymaker's "Legions" Are In Doctor Who Season 14
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A brilliant example of the Toymaker working wonders for the Doctor's nebulous backstory is allowing Paul McGann's Eighth Doctor to be half-human. The comment from Eight in the Doctor Who movie can't just be a throwaway line, as his human DNA is a major part of the film's plot. While the Doctor being half-human never made any sense, it can now be easily attributed to the Toymaker. Harris' character provides a similar solution to all the pre-William Hartnell Doctors, meaning all the other versions of the Doctor once never existed and are products of the Toymaker's intervention.
Doctor Who's New Doctor Means Other Non-TV Regenerations Can Become Canon
Rowan Atkin's comedic take on the Doctor is arguably now in the running to become part of the official lore
The unknown Doctor that appears in the hologram in "Rogue" opens the door for a slew of other versions of the Doctor to make their live-action debuts. Iterations of the Doctor from Doctor Who comics and novels could find their way to the small screen, not to mention the other non-canonical regenerations from the franchise's vast array of audio dramas. In short, the Doctor's timeline could be about to go even more haywire in the near future.
A rich vein of potential alternate Doctors comes in the 1999 Comic Relief special, "The Curse of Fatal Death."
A rich vein of potential alternate Doctors comes in the 1999 Comic Relief special, "The Curse of Fatal Death." The Doctor Who parody featured stars like Rowan Atkinson, Joanna Lumley, and Hugh Grant all playing various regenerations of the Doctor. Richard E Grant even plays a version of the Time Lord, four years prior to Scream of the Shalka being released. "The Curse of Fatal Death" was written by Steven Moffat, making it his first script penned for anything Doctor Who-adjacent. This creates an even stronger possibility that it could be used as future source material.
The Toymaker's Influence On Doctor Who Continues To Be Huge
The Doctor's timeline is probably still harboring pockets of change caused by the Toymaker
Although the Doctor and the Toymaker go back a very long way, the villain was largely forgotten about until the Doctor Who 60th-anniversary celebrations. The three-minute salt scene with David Tennant in "Wild Blue Yonder" is what allowed the Toymaker to cross into the Doctor's reality. As a result, that moment is turning out to be much more pivotal than it initially seemed. Even though the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Doctors managed to team up and defeat the Toymaker, the villain's legacy is only just now becoming clear. In other words, banishing the Toymaker hasn't rectified the damage he caused.

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Jinkx Monsoon's Maestro is another example of a threat to the Doctor that wouldn't have existed without the Toymaker. As the Toymaker's child, Maestro is the direct descendant of Neil Patrick Harris' antagonist, and boasts similarly godlike abilities that almost lead to the end of the Doctor and Ruby in Doctor Who season 14, episode 2, "The Devil's Chord." So, while certain signs of the Toymaker's actions have been easy to spot in the Disney era of Doctor Who, others have been either more subtle or hidden in plain sight, and his banishment didn't quash his alterations to reality.
Episode |
Disney+ Release Date |
---|---|
"Space Babies" & "The Devil's Chord" |
May 10 |
"Boom" |
May 17 |
"73 Yards" |
May 24 |
"Dot & Bubble" |
May 31 |
"Rogue" |
June 7 |
"The Legend of Ruby Sunday" |
June 14 |
"Empire of Death" |
June 21 |

Doctor Who
- Release Date
- December 25, 2023
- Network
- BBC
- Directors
- Douglas Camfield, David Maloney, Christopher Barry, Michael E. Briant, Barry Letts, Michael Ferguson, Richard Martin, Peter Moffatt, Pennant Roberts, Lennie Mayne, Chris Clough, Ron Jones, Paddy Russell, Paul Bernard, Michael Hayes, Timothy Combe, Morris Barry, Gerald Blake, Graeme Harper, Waris Hussein, Rodney Bennett, Mervyn Pinfield, Hugh David, John Gorrie
Cast
- The Doctor
- Millie GibsonRuby Sunday
The latest Doctor Who series introduces the Fifteenth Doctor, ed by new companion Ruby Sunday.
- Seasons
- 2
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