Doctor Who has returned with “The Star Beast,” the first of three specials marking the series’ 60th anniversary, featuring the return of David Tennant and Catherine Tate. This time around, Tennant is not playing his familiar Tenth Doctor, but has instead returned as the Fourteenth Doctor. The Time Lord isn’t yet sure why his old face returned, or what it has to do with his unexpected reunion with Tate’s Donna Noble. Despite the Doctor’s uncertainty regarding his latest regeneration, he has quickly settled into being his new old self, equipping himself with an upgraded sonic screwdriver and discovering the TARDIS has undergone an impressive regeneration of its own.The sonic screwdriver and the TARDIS have often been updated to suit a new Doctor’s tastes in recent years on Doctor Who. The Ninth and Tenth Doctors had a gloomy, organic TARDIS console room and a simple, blue-tipped sonic screwdriver. This was all replaced by the Eleventh Doctor, who first piloted the TARDIS from a brighter, zanier console room, which gifted him a chunkier, green-tipped sonic. This console room was later replaced by a darker, more angular design and the Twelfth Doctor would later replace the green sonic with an all-blue design. Jodie Whittaker’s Thirteenth Doctor built her own sonic using a combination of Stenza technology and scrap metal, while her TARDIS had a shadowy, crystalline console room. Now, the sonic and the TARDIS have undergone their most radical overhaul yet.This new ability is a long overdue upgrade, building upon the sonic screwdriver’s previous applications. The Doctor has often been seen using the sonic to scan alien technology and lifeforms, gathering all kinds of analytical data from the handy sci-fi tool. However, in the past, the sonic screwdriver could only convey this data through flashing lights and bleeps. Now the sonic screwdriver can create detailed readouts, allowing the Doctor to check data in depth.
Doctor Who has returned with “The Star Beast,” the first of three specials marking the series’ 60th anniversary, featuring the return of David Tennant and Catherine Tate. This time around, Tennant is not playing his familiar Tenth Doctor, but has instead returned as the Fourteenth Doctor. The Time Lord isn’t yet sure why his old face returned, or what it has to do with his unexpected reunion with Tate’s Donna Noble. Despite the Doctor’s uncertainty regarding his latest regeneration, he has quickly settled into being his new old self, equipping himself with an upgraded sonic screwdriver and discovering the TARDIS has undergone an impressive regeneration of its own.
The sonic screwdriver and the TARDIS have often been updated to suit a new Doctor’s tastes in recent years on Doctor Who. The Ninth and Tenth Doctors had a gloomy, organic TARDIS console room and a simple, blue-tipped sonic screwdriver. This was all replaced by the Eleventh Doctor, who first piloted the TARDIS from a brighter, zanier console room, which gifted him a chunkier, green-tipped sonic. This console room was later replaced by a darker, more angular design and the Twelfth Doctor would later replace the green sonic with an all-blue design. Jodie Whittaker’s Thirteenth Doctor built her own sonic using a combination of Stenza technology and scrap metal, while her TARDIS had a shadowy, crystalline console room. Now, the sonic and the TARDIS have undergone their most radical overhaul yet.
This new ability is a long overdue upgrade, building upon the sonic screwdriver’s previous applications. The Doctor has often been seen using the sonic to scan alien technology and lifeforms, gathering all kinds of analytical data from the handy sci-fi tool. However, in the past, the sonic screwdriver could only convey this data through flashing lights and bleeps. Now the sonic screwdriver can create detailed readouts, allowing the Doctor to check data in depth.
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