Tardis

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Tardis

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A partially Cyber-converted human, originally known as Ashad, came to be known as the Lone Cyberman when he re-lit the flame of a lost Cyber-Empire. Though he was rejected when offering himself up for conversion, Ashad later played a key role in the re-ascension of the Cybermen, following their near-annihilation in the Cyber-Wars.

Though he maintained much of his human appearance and temperament, Ashad despised his own kind throughout. Loyal to the cause he believed in, and filled with hatred, the Lone Cyberman sought to restore the Cyber-Empire to its former glory, and then to extinguish all life, beyond the race he revered.

After intending to destroy all organic life in the universe, Ashad was killed by the Spy Master with the Tissue Compression Eliminator in order to gain access to the Cyberium while the Doctor and her companions blew up Ashad's Cybercarrier and its army of Cybermen, foiling his plans. His remains, including the death particle he carried, were subsequently used by Ko Sharmus to destroy the CyberMasters.

The Master subsequently cloned Ashad and later recruited him into his Dalek-Cyberman alliance plan. However, Ashad was destroyed once and for all by Tegan Jovanka with the help of an AI hologram of the Doctor.

Biography[]

Origin[]

Originally human, (TV: Ascension of the Cybermen [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).) Ashad had multiple children before undergoing cyber-conversion, transforming him into a Cyberman. He did not have an emotional inhibitor, stating he "[did] not need to be stabilised". As he recalled to the Thirteenth Doctor and Mary Shelley, his children joined the resistance against the Cybermen, and so he slit their throats. (TV: The Haunting of Villa Diodati [+]Maxine Alderton, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).)

Ashad offered himself up to join the ranks of the Cybermen only to be "denied" as his upgrade began. Though initially keeping to the shadows out of shame, Ashad stayed committed to the cause and became convinced that he was chosen to ascend the Cyber-race. After the Cyber-Army was all but lost, he took it upon himself to revive the Empire as their champion. (TV: Ascension of the Cybermen [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).)

Forewarning[]

Captain Jack Harkness once tried to contact the Doctor to warn her to "beware of the Lone Cyberman" and to not give it what it wants. However, he got hold of Ryan Sinclair, Yasmin Khan and Graham O'Brien instead, initially believing them to be the new Doctor. When he was corrected, he told them to warn the Doctor and tell her about a fallen empire. (TV: Fugitive of the Judoon [+]Vinay Patel and Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).)

Searching for the Cyberium[]

Ashad travelled back in time to 1816 to attempt to extract the Cyberium, the database of Cyberman history, from Percy Shelley. The Thirteenth Doctor absorbed it herself, knowing Shelley's death would alter the future. However, when Ashad threatened to tear reality by summoning his ship, she relinquished the Cyberium to him, knowingly ignoring Jack's warning but deciding she would rather confront the Cybermen in the future than change the course of history by having the Earth destroyed in 1816. After taking the Cyberium, Ashad disappeared. (TV: The Haunting of Villa Diodati [+]Maxine Alderton, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).)

Restoring the Cybermen[]

A shrine for our rebirth (AOTC)

Ashad commandeers an abandoned Cybercarrier. (TV: Ascension of the Cybermen [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).)

After returning to his own time, Ashad travelled to a refugee planet in a cyberfighter along with two Cyberguards. Upon arrival, he unleashed a swarm of Cyberdrones to destroy the anti-Cyberman defences before he and his guards arrived, managing to prevent all the humans from escaping the planet. Patrolling for the remaining humans and the Doctor, Ashad was confronted by Ethan, who claimed to be the only human left as he surrendered. Seeing through the ruse, Ashad executed Fuskle. He allowed Ethan to live so that he might tell the other species of the universe of the Cybermen's return, but soon fell victim to an explosive thrown by the Doctor. By the time he recovered, the Doctor had stolen one of his cyberfighters.

Hacking into the craft's communication system, Ashad spoke to the Doctor, unimpressed by her previous victories over the Cybermen, and swore to bring about "the death of everything". Tracking the human craft, Ashad and the Cyberguards arrived at a deserted Cybercarrier. Finding hundreds of thousands of dormant Cyber-Warriors, Ashad removed their organic components and led some of his army to the carrier's bridge to retake the ship from the humans. (TV: Ascension of the Cybermen [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).)

Alliance with the Master[]

After Ashad reached the Planet of the Boundary, he realised that humans were aboard the Cybercarrier, though they were able to evade his search by hiding in Cyberarmour. Ashad was subsequently contacted by the Spy Master who offered him an alliance and the planet of Gallifrey. Accepting, Ashad took his ship to Gallifrey through the Boundary, though he left behind death squads to kill the humans still on the planet's surface.

In the Matrix chamber, Ashad met with the Master, though he was alarmed to see the Doctor in a paralysis field. The Master reassured Ashad, who then explained that his goal was to upgrade the Cybermen to become a purely robotic race before using the death particle created for him by the Cyberium to wipe out all life in the universe. Disappointed by the idea of purely robotic creatures, the Master instead suggested using the Cybercarrier's cyber conversion chambers to transform the deceased Time Lords into Cybermen, an idea that Ashad found appealing.

As the Master and Ashad examined the chambers aboard the carrier, the Master questioned Ashad about the Cyberium and attempted to get it to leave Ashad in favour of him. Ashad furiously told the Master that the Cyberium would never leave him as long as he was still alive. In response, the Master used his Tissue Compression Eliminator to shrink Ashad, killing him and releasing the Cyberium. (TV: The Timeless Children [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).)

Post-mortem[]

The Master, though dismayed that Ashad's death didn't detonate the death particle, was able to convince the Cyberium to take him as its new host and left Ashad's shrunken remains on the floor of the carrier. The Doctor used memories of Ashad, among others, to overload the Matrix on Gallifrey.

Ashad's shrunken body was found by the Doctor as she and her companions destroyed the Cybercarrier and the Cyber-Army aboard it, foiling Ashad's plan to rekindle the Cyber-Empire. Contacted by the Master who had created an army of CyberMasters instead, the Doctor attached Ashad to an explosive in order to sacrifice herself to detonate the death particle and end the Master and his army. However, Ko Sharmus decided to sacrifice himself instead to make up for causing the problem in the first place by sending the Cyberium somewhere that Ashad could eventually find it. In his last moments, Ko Sharmus detonated the bomb, obliterating Ashad's remains and detonating the death particle which wiped out all organic life on Gallifrey. (TV: The Timeless Children [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).)

After breaking the Doctor out of prison, Jack asked if her friends had given her his message about the Lone Cyberman. Jack was dismayed to learn that the Doctor had given Ashad the Cyberium, but she reassured him that she had "sort of" resolved the issue. (TV: Revolution of the Daleks [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who New Year Special 2021 (BBC One, 2021).)

Revival[]

The Master later revived Ashad in a cloned body, and he acted as a liaison between the Master and the Cyber-Warriors, as part his Dalek-Cyberman alliance, which would turn Earth into a Cyber-conversion facility. Ashad was smuggled into UNIT HQ in 2022 within a bigger on the inside "Russian doll". Ashad and a squad of Cyber-Warriors emerged at the right time to attack UNIT HQ, and free the Master from imprisonment . Ashad slaughtered most of the operatives stationed there and successfully established a conversion pod in the basement, which he used to convert the remaining UNIT soldiers. Ashad later accepted Kate Stewart's surrender in return for her knowledge of Earth's defences, falsely promising to let her men go. He oversaw Kate's attempted conversion, only for Tegan Jovanka with the help of the Holo-Doctor, to sabotage the conversion unit's power source, electrocuting Ashad and the other Cybermen and destroying him once and for all. (TV: The Power of the Doctor [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who Centenary Special 2022 (BBC One, 2022).)

Personality[]

Due to his lack of an emotional inhibitor, Ashad was able to express and understand emotions and even tended towards anger. Despite this, he lacked mercy or remorse, being completely loyal to the Cybermen and revealing he killed his own children for joining the resistance. He also knew how to manipulate emotions, as shown when he taunted Mary Shelley about sparing her son not out of pity, but because he was unsuitable for conversion, and when he blackmailed the Doctor into handing over the Cyberium or he'd tear reality by summoning the ship. (TV: The Haunting of Villa Diodati [+]Maxine Alderton, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).)

Consumed by self-loathing, Ashad hated his existence as an organic lifeform to the point of seeking out the Cybermen as a means to correct this. Upon receiving the Cyberium, Ashad sought to create a purely mechanised universe first by removing the organic components from the Cyber-Warriors before planning to unleash the death particle and eradicate all organic life from the universe. (TV: Ascension of the Cybermen [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020)., The Timeless Children [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).) He told Kate Stewart that he considered his former human form "weak and feeble". He considered Cyber-conversion "the greatest of gifts". (TV: The Power of the Doctor [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who Centenary Special 2022 (BBC One, 2022).)

Appearance[]

Ashad Worlds Apart

Ashad, the Lone Cyberman. (GAME: Worlds Apart [+]Doctor Who card games (Reality+, 2021).)

Having undergone a partial cyber-conversion, Ashad's human body was housed in an incomplete, weathered Cyber-suit (TV: The Haunting of Villa Diodati [+]Maxine Alderton, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020)., Ascension of the Cybermen [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).. The Timeless Children [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).) resembling those associated with the Cyberiad, (TV: Nightmare in Silver [+]Neil Gaiman, Doctor Who series 7 (BBC One, 2013).) but with a left arm resembling those of both the planet Mondas and the Mondasian colony ship's first Cybermen, (TV: The Tenth Planet [+]Kit Pedler and Gerry Davis, Doctor Who season 4 (BBC1, 1966)., World Enough and Time [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 10 (BBC One, 2017)./The Doctor Falls [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 10 (BBC One, 2017).) lower legs matching the Cybus-style model associated with the Cyber Legions, (TV: Rise of the Cybermen [+]Tom MacRae, adapted from Spare Parts (Marc Platt), Doctor Who series 2 (BBC One, 2006)., A Good Man Goes to War [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 6 (BBC One, 2011).) and a unique Cyber-helmet with an incomplete faceplate that exposed the left side of his face. He wielded a functional Cyber wrist blaster, although its energy could be drained by time hopping. (TV: The Haunting of Villa Diodati [+]Maxine Alderton, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020)., Ascension of the Cybermen [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020)., The Timeless Children [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020)., The Power of the Doctor [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who Centenary Special 2022 (BBC One, 2022).)

Similar to the converted Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart, (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 8 (BBC One, 2014).) Ashad's side handles were mostly silver but with black corners. (TV: The Haunting of Villa Diodati [+]Maxine Alderton, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020)., Ascension of the Cybermen [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020)., The Timeless Children [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 12 (BBC One, 2020).)

Behind the scenes[]

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