User:BananaClownMan/Sandbox

= Sandboxs = User:BananaClownMan/Doctorstemplate User:BananaClownMan/Mastertemplate
 * User:BananaClownMan/Sandbox/Individuals killed by the Doctor
 * User:BananaClownMan/Sandbox/Individuals killed by the Master
 * User:BananaClownMan/Sandbox/Lines

= Prime Sandbox = The Fourteenth Doctor was the Doctor to follow the Thirteenth Doctor after she regenerated due to being struck down by the Spy Master during her final fight to save the Earth from destruction. He looked virtually identical to the Tenth Doctor.

A day to come
When encountering the "Vortex Butterfly", the Tenth Doctor was cryptically told that he would not be "limited" to "thirteen lives". (COMIC: Vortex Butterflies)

When the Eleventh Doctor met the Curator in the Under Gallery and quipped how he "never forget[s] a face", the Curator cryptically replied that he "might find [him]self revisiting a few" in the "years to come", though only "old favourites". (TV: The Day of the Doctor)

When Captain Lundvik threatened to shoot him, the Twelfth Doctor speculated that he would "keep on regenerating forever" if he was executed. (TV: Kill the Moon) would later state his own uncertainty to the number of regenerations the Doctor had been granted, (TV: Hell Bent) with  and  also considering their own uncertainty when debating whether to throw the Twelfth Doctor off a roof, believing they "could [be] up and down the stairs all night." (TV: The Doctor Falls)

The Twelfth Doctor was forced through seven false regenerations by a "regeneration vampire". With the assistance of the Eleventh Doctor, the regeneration energy he expended was returned to him. (AUDIO: Regeneration Impossible)

The Thirteenth Doctor once considered regenerating to generate residual artron energy. (PROSE: The Maze of Doom)

At the conclusion of the Flux Offensive, after the embodiment of Time disintegrated the Ravagers and Azure, the Thirteenth Doctor was warned that her "time [was] heading to its end". (TV: The Vanquishers) The Thirteenth Doctor later wrote a book about all of her lives to aid the her next incarnation if they "[felt] weird" after regeneration. (PROSE: A Short History of Everyone)

The Thirteenth Doctor remarked to Cleo Proctor that she would stand up again if she "clobber[ed]" her, remarking that she would regenerate "possibly several times". (AUDIO: Salvation)

Hijacked by the Master
The Thirteenth Doctor was made to undergo a forced regeneration into her fourteenth incarnation in a chamber by the Spy Master, who used the energies of a Qurunx as a power source for a cyber-conversion planet that allowed him to obtain energy to hijack the Doctor's regeneration and insert himself as her fourteenth incarnation. However, due to a fail-safe the Doctor had enacted before her regeneration, the Holo-Doctor was able to work in conjunction with Yaz Khan, Tegan Jovanka and Ace to undue the Master's Dalek Plan, with Inston-Vee Vinder helping Yaz to force the Master back into the chamber so that they could use the CyberMasters' regeneration energy to get the Master to degenerate back into the Thirteenth Doctor, returning him to his original body. (TV: The Power of the Doctor)

Post-regeneration
"I know these teeth."

- The Fourteenth Doctor's first words

After the Thirteenth Doctor freed the Qurunx so it could destroy the cyber-conversion planet, the Master spitefully used his Tissue Compression Eliminator to redirect the Qurunx's destructive blast at the Doctor, fatally wounding her. Staving off the regeneration long enough to have a final conversation with Yasmin Khan, the Doctor then travelled alone to a cliff overlooking the sea, where she could enjoy the sunrise before she regenerated. Making peace with herself, the Doctor began to regenerate, with her outfit morphing into a completely different set of clothes with her. After the regeneration completed, the Fourteenth Doctor found himself taken aback by the fact that he was in a body remarkably identical to his tenth incarnation. (TV: The Power of the Doctor)

Death
"."

- The Doctor's last words

Skills
He could determine the date by smelling the air. (COMIC: Liberation of the Daleks)

Without the aid of the TARDIS's translation circuit, the Doctor could speak German. (COMIC: Liberation of the Daleks)

Appearance
The Fourteenth Doctor greatly resembled a slightly older version of his tenth incarnation, sharing his tall, slim frame, finely boned hands and face, thick brown hair with sideburns, and large, dark brown eyes. He instantly recognised the similarity by the familiar feeling of his teeth and face. His face had a five-o'clock shadow of stubble. (TV: The Power of the Doctor)

Main attires
As his clothes manifested with him from his predecessor's regeneration, the Fourteenth Doctor emerged wearing a navy blue trenchcoat over a white button-up shirt, with a silver tie, a loose fitting waistcoat and trousers of black and turquoise tartan, and Converse shoes. (TV: The Power of the Doctor)

Other matters

 * The Fourteenth Doctor's numbered designation was officially confirmed by Russell T Davies in an article posted to the official Doctor Who website following the broadcast of The Power of the Doctor.
 * Having previously portrayed the Tenth Doctor prior to his tenure as the fourteenth incarnation, David Tennant holds the distinction of being the first actor to have portrayed two different numbered incarnations of the Doctor in a mainline story of Doctor Who without needing to fill in for an actor playing the new incarnation, following Sylvester McCoy filling in for the Sixth Doctor during his regeneration scene in Time and the Rani in addition to his main role as the Seventh Doctor, Paul McGann briefly acting as a body double for John Hurt's War Doctor in the closing moments of The Night of the Doctor after the regeneration of his Doctor, Tom Baker and Colin Baker portraying the Curator alongside their original incarnations, and Richard E Grant playing both the Tenth Doctor in The Curse of Fatal Death and the Ninth Doctor in Scream of the Shalka.
 * The Fourteenth Doctor is the first Doctor to have their immediate post-regeneration story be depicted in a medium other than television, in the form of the Doctor Who Magazine comic story, Liberation of the Daleks.