Subject: Not... quite sure what all your words mean.
Author:
Posted on: 2014-06-30 16:57:00 UTC

'No Sell'? But I get the picture. I'm not sure what the 'certain way' in question was - TARDIS Wiki talks about some sort of pulse device, I guess it's that?

But no, I have no problem with 'they can upgrade to account for everything you do'. Not 'become immune to', naturally - but if you're rolling boulders down on them, they should be able to upgrade thick body armour, possibly tripod-style supports. Phobos' idea of total physical restructuring is the key to that version - and given that we have the cybermites and detatchable hands, it's absolutely not out of the question.

But a change introduces new weaknesses. So now they're immune to boulders - but to get the mass, they've had to merge several Cybermen into a single unit, and they're also ridiculously heavy. Got a gravity globe you can shoot, like in Flesh and Stone? That's an escape route for you, since there's no way a Cybertank can make the 'jump and catch the reverse gravity'. Or, with a little technobabble, maybe you focus the reversal on the single-unit tank, which can't hold on against the pull - so then they separate, and you go back to the boulders.

The problem with the nuclear strike, to my mind, isn't that it was dark (er, 'grimderp', apparently?); Doctor Who has never shied away from megadeaths for any stretch. No, the problem is that it wasn't clever. It's like Macgyver's gun; we signed up to watch the Doctor come up with a clever plan to fix things, not to watch him resort to brute force.

As I've said elsewhen: both RTD and Moffat have a tendency to have someone else provide the solution at the end of the episode (whether it's a true deus ex machina depends on the story). The difference is that RTD drove the Doctor into situations he couldn't fix; Moffat sets him problems he can't fix without dying, or without massively compromising his principles (The Beast Below). And the nice - and slightly scary - thing about Eleven is that he almost always chose to save the world (or whatever) anyway.

(Random Example, for if my explanation broke down somewhere in there: The Parting of the Ways sits the Doctor in front of a Dalek invasion of Earth. He is unable to do anything except send Rose home; she then shows up out of nowhere and saves him. Nightmare in Silver sits the Doctor between the Cybermen and the universe, and gives him a nuclear bomb - which he is willing to use, despite the fact that he's sitting pretty at Ground Zero. I'm not saying the difference is universal, but it's a definite theme)

hS

Reply Return to messages