Forum:Is the Doctor in Sympathy of the Devil of mainstream continuity because he appeared in The 100 Days of The Doctor?

I hope that my question can be understood from the title. The Doctor (Sympathy for the Devil) is a page with the Nondwu tag on it, and for a very solid reason; he was introduced in a piece not meant to be cannon. But he appeared briefly in The 100 Days of the Doctor (audio story) when the Doctor and Evelyn "side step" into his universe, so should he be considered mainstream because of that? Keep in mind that this is different from Forum:Is The Curse of Fatal Death canon? because that was covering a very vague reference to the alternate Ninth Doctor, while this story is an obvious appearance.

And if he is "in-universe" or however tou want to say it, does that mean that his original two stories are as well? OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 05:25, November 24, 2012 (UTC)


 * Perhaps.
 * That the Doctor side steps / crosses over to another universe, based on our other sources would make it valid.
 * Looking at other sources for instance; TV: Inferno and Battlefield, PROSE: Blood Heat, The Shadows of Avalon and the alternate universe arc of The Infinity Race to The Last Resort all feature alternate universes / parallel timelines which we treat as valid.
 * If he is valid, then his stories would be in-universe, but not of the main universe. In other words yes The Warner Doctor did go to Skaro with the Brigadier but it wasn't the same Skaro or even the same universe in which Hartnell's Doctor went to and McCoy's Doctor blew up. So we'd just treat everything of "Sympathy for the Devil" universe as we do with the Parallel universe (Inferno).
 * The difference here that others may point out is that the Sympathy universe was intended to be non-canon (a term we've by now established doesn't really exist) or to be a "what if" scenario (which Big Finish uses). Our own Doctor Who Unbound article uses the term "premises fundamentally altered" linking to parallel universe. Forum:References to BFDWU as alternate or diverging timeline also discusses this separation and CzechOut stated in that discussion "they're meant to be outside the DWU. That's why they're called unbound — as in "not bound by continuity"."
 * But now brining in this extra reference of the Doctor going there, that means it is a place that can be visited by the Doctor and it, by its reference in 100 Days makes it linked to the main DWU. --Tangerineduel / talk 08:16, November 24, 2012 (UTC)
 * Sorry, it's been a while since I've heard this one. Does David Warner actually appear in The 100 Days of the Doctor?  Have you got a time code (either approximate or exact) for this alleged encounter?  We need to examine the precise appearance.   16:59: Sat 24 Nov 2012


 * Yeah, I've never really heard it, (which might make it seem like I don't know what I'm taking about) but he appears on the 99th day if I understand correctly and even describes events of SotD. But I don't know a lot about the story past that, that's kinda why my post above was shown in 90% questions rather than fact. If someone has 100 it would help. OS25 (talk to me, baby.) 20:47, November 24, 2012 (UTC)
 * Well, there are worse ways to spend half an hour. I'll let you know after I've listened to it.   22:27: Sat 24 Nov 2012


 * Neither Warner nor Nicholas Courtney appear. What happens is that the Doctor claims to be travelling "sideways" into alternate realities, and then he gives a barebones description of that world's Doctor and Brigadier.  There is, by my reckoning, exactly one sentence which ties it to  Sympathy for the Devil: "He goes on and on about his time with the Brigadier in Hong Kong".   Evelyn says that he gave up his TARDIS' dimensional stabiliser so that Six and Evelyn could get out of that reality, so in that sense there is a tangible connection between the two universes.  And obviously the mention of "Hong Kong" is an Easter Egg for the "Unbound au fait".  But it's really, really minor.  It's perfectly possible to believe that there's no connection whatsoever.


 * For the ease of writing articles around here, I think it's better just to make a little note about this at The 100 Days of the Doctor and leave it there. Opening up the possibility that all Unbounds are merely parallel universes off of the main DWU — just because of two quick lines in a highly meta-textual celebratory episode — is going a step too far.  If David Warner actually appeared, I'd say you'd have to do it.  As he doesn't, the reference is suggestive more than definitive.  It's very much like the situation in ''The Gallifrey Chronicles where the Rowan Atkinson Doctor is supposedly alluded to.  It's kinda/sorta the Warner Doctor, but maybe it's not.   01:15: Sun 25 Nov 2012