Energy weapon

Energy weapons were any device that intended to use directed energy in a destructive manner. Energy weapons ranged in size and type from handheld anti-personnel weapons to massive cannons mounted on weaponized transports, crafts, buildings, or platforms. Such weapons were also used for combat in the vacuum of space, mounted on space ships, or even planetary bases. While weapons mostly came in the form of handguns or long guns, they also were shaped like a mobile device or some kind of hand tool, such as Missy's device, the laser screwdriver, or the Tissue Compression Eliminator. Other examples of this were the Rheon carbine and Sontaran baton, which were both stick or wand shaped. Such weapons also were made to be disguised as jewelry, or were wearable, being put in a gauntlet or glove, such as Rassilon's gauntlet, or glove weapon in "The Impossible Astronaut" Space suit. Other exoskeletons, as well as cyborgs, robots, or otherwise machine like beings or entities, could have weapons built in to their bodies, such as the Cybermen, Daleks and Kahler-Tek.

Anti-personnel energy weapons
An energy weapon could be a handheld weapon that fired energy rather than a projectile of some sort. This energy might be a laser, plasma, or some other types of energy that can either be shaped and formed like patterned wave, sound wave, energy blast, bolt or beam. Weapons can also project fundamental physical forces kinetic energy, friction, pressure or even gravity, electric or electric like energy, particle based, or radiation based energies, and powerful frequencies and electromagnetic waves. Weapons like the Wrist-gun could even use telekinetic or psychic energy. Advantages of energy weapons over firearms included their ability to do significantly more damage than a projectile, and, ironically, their ability to not only kill, but also be able to incapacitate, or "stun" the target, usually rendering them unconscious. The energy's affects can either creating physical trauma with a shot, causing a target to combust or be immolated, cause an explosion on the targets surface in the same manner as an self propelled explosive, with said explosion partially or completely destroying the target, causing a burned or cauterized fatal wounds, striking the target with fatal amounts of impactive physical force, enough to send a target flying of the ground, fatally mutilating, fussing or deforming cells, tissues, or organs, causing the target to burst into flames, ambers or sparks, causing a pressure imbalance that causes the target to explode or implode into gore, causing the target to rapidly age, shrink, or shrivel, to a fatal effect, or even complete or partial incineration, disintegration, vaporization or true obliteration, the last of which can even result in erasing a target from existence entirely. While most of these effects can cause wounds and other forms of visible damage or harm, some weapons are capable of causing death in a similar way of radiation poison or causing an electrocution like effect and fatally shock a target, thereby causing no visible effects on the target, though potentially such damage may not be visible because it is internal. Such effects sometimes can only effect living creatures while weapons with a certain intensity, power setting and capacity, fundamental physical force or mechanical energy, heat level, or frequency can damage or destroy most machines and machine like beings. They were often informally referred to as blasters, phasers, disruptors, cannons or ray guns. Hand-held weapons in the form of guns could be in various forms, such as handguns and long guns, while others had multiple designs, shapes and features.

Dalek gunstick energy weapons were part of their casings, though were originally removable. (TV: Genesis of the Daleks)

Both the Cybermen of the Doctor's universe and the Cybermen of Pete's World were seen with built-in energy weapons; the former had them in their heads, while the latter in their forearms. The former also used Cyber-guns. (TV: Revenge of the Cybermen, Army of Ghosts/Doomsday). Mercy Hartigan - upon been converted into the CyberKing - had an energy weapon on her head. (TV: The Next Doctor)

Sontaran soldiers typically carried some form of blaster. (TV: The Time Warrior)

The Chancellery Guard on Gallifrey used a weapon called a staser. According to one account, staser fire prevented regeneration. (TV: Arc of Infinity) However, the Twelfth Doctor shot the General once with the sidearm of the President's personal security, triggering the General's regeneration. (TV: Hell Bent)

Jack Harkness carried a Compact laser deluxe, which was able to defeat the androids Trine-E and Zu-Zana when they tried to kill him. Shortly afterwards, Jack improvised an energy weapon out of the defabricator. (TV: Bad Wolf)

The Judoon carried hand held weapons. (TV: Smith and Jones)

Chantho used an energy weapon against the Master. While not immediately fatal, the injury triggered a regeneration. (TV: Utopia)

The Preachers carried large energy blasters to fight Cybermen; while the Doctor modified them to be be used against Daleks, they were ultimately ineffective. (TV: Doomsday)

The Sea Devils carried energy weapons. (TV: The Sea Devils)

The Master's Tissue Compression Eliminator was a particularly exotic form of energy weapon, later replaced with a laser screwdriver.

River Song carried a disintegrator pistol which was capable of an Alpha Meson burst. (TV: The Pandorica Opens/The Big Bang)

The Anubians could fire an energy weapon through their palms. (TV: Curse of Anubis)

The personnel aboard Space Station Nerva carried energy pistols that could stun and kill. Their armoury section also contained fission guns that were much more formidable. (TV: The Ark in Space)

The guards on an Earth-like planet carried light-guns that used the power of liquid light beams to strike in their victims' eyes and control their movements. (TV: The Savages)

When trying to stop the 'Metaltron' Dalek in Van Statten's vaults, the Doctor armed himself with a powerful looking alien gun. (TV: Dalek)

Ray guns
Several species and individuals specifically identified their energy weapons as ray guns. The Moroks, (TV: The Space Museum) the Cat-People, (PROSE: Invasion of the Cat-People) and the Scorchies used ray guns themselves. (AUDIO: The Scorchies) Whilst the Monstrons armed their Engibrain soldiers with ray guns. (COMIC: The Menace of the Monstrons)

Some merely referred to themselves (or others as possessing "ray guns") as the Daleks did in reference to their own gunsticks (TV: The Daleks' Master Plan) and Jamie McCrimmon and the Second Doctor did when describing the Chameleons' weaponry. (TV: The Faceless Ones)

On one occasion the Second Doctor invented a ray gun which he tested on an Earth-like planet. When the Master of Spiders attacked them, he used the ray gun to kill one spider and to destroy the Master's mechanical spider. (COMIC: Master of Spiders) He later used the ray gun on a giant squid which attacked him on Nook. (COMIC: Peril at 60 Fathoms)

Large-scale energy weapons
The Daleks used ship-mounted energy weapons during their invasions of Earth in the 21st (TV: The Stolen Earth) and 22nd century. (TV: The Dalek Invasion of Earth) They also utilised Special Weapons Daleks that were equipped with an enormous energy cannon capable of vaporising several other Daleks in a single shot. (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks)

Other ship-mounted weapons such as a Jathaa sunglider weapon, deployed by the Torchwood Institute in 2007 during the Sycorax's appearance over London on Christmas day were also capable of massive destruction, destroying the aforementioned Sycorax and their ship. (TV: The Christmas Invasion)

The human-built airship carrier Valiant also carried a Jathaa sunglider energy weapon. (TV: The Poison Sky)

The predominantly human built and constructed town-sized CyberKing was fitted with an energy weapon on its arm. (TV: The Next Doctor)