Worlds in Time (video game)

Doctor Who: Worlds in Time was a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) developed by Three Rings and published by BBC Worldwide. It was the first multiplayer online game in the history of the Doctor Who franchise. It was also the first game developed by an American company, and the first to be financially supported through micropayments.

Announced on 24 February 2011, after enjoying a lengthy public preview period which began on 20 December 2011, the game officially was released on 13 March 2012.

It was announced on 14 January 2014 that the game would be discontinued on 3 March of the same year. The game's services lasted to the end of the Eleventh Doctor's era, the Doctor central to its story, and closed not long after the debut of the Twelfth Doctor.

Synopsis
The players follow in the Doctor's footsteps, travelling through time and space, exploring alien worlds, encountering various species, and helping the Doctor save civilised cultures from various threats.

Plot
A temporal even has caused time itself to shatter into crystal shards, the doctor realizing this to be of grave importance to fix recruits you and other time travelers to help save all of time, to send you off on this adventure the doctor even gives your your very own sonic screwdriver to battle evil forces who are also after these shards

Characters
to be added

Crew
to be added

Gameplay
Worlds in Time was a multiplayer online game in which the players solve various puzzles and challenges in a multiplayer environment. Although free to play, many of the things needed to progress in gameplay required chronons - the in-game currency - that regenerated at the rate of one every half-hour until the limit of 50 was reached. This limit could be exceeded by purchasing more with real money.

The game also had a purely social aspect. According to a BBC spokesman, the game "offers players a multitude of elements and opportunities to socialise ... our goal is to become the largest Doctor Who community ever assembled."