Winner Takes All (Doctor Who)
Encyclopedia
Winner Takes All is a BBC Books
BBC Books
BBC Books is an imprint majority owned and managed by Random House. The minority shareholder is BBC Worldwide, the commercial subsidiary of the British Broadcasting Corporation...

 original novel written by Jacqueline Rayner
Jacqueline Rayner
Jacqueline Rayner is a best selling British author, best known for her work with the licensed fiction based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who....

 and based on the long-running British
United Kingdom
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandIn the United Kingdom and Dependencies, other languages have been officially recognised as legitimate autochthonous languages under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages...

 science fiction television
Science fiction on television
Science fiction first appeared on a television program during the Golden Age of Science Fiction. Special effects and other production techniques allow creators to present a living visual image of an imaginary world not limited by the constraints of reality; this makes television an excellent medium...

 series Doctor Who
Doctor Who
Doctor Who is a British science fiction television programme produced by the BBC. The programme depicts the adventures of a time-travelling humanoid alien known as the Doctor who explores the universe in a sentient time machine called the TARDIS that flies through time and space, whose exterior...

. It was published on May 19, 2005, alongside The Clockwise Man
The Clockwise Man
The Clockwise Man is a BBC Books original novel written by Justin Richards and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was published on May 19, 2005, alongside The Monsters Inside and Winner Takes All...

and The Monsters Inside
The Monsters Inside
The Monsters Inside is a BBC Books original novel written by Stephen Cole and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was published on May 19, 2005, alongside The Clockwise Man and Winner Takes All...

. It features the Ninth Doctor
Ninth Doctor
The Ninth Doctor is the ninth incarnation of the protagonist of the long-running BBC television science-fiction series Doctor Who. He is played by Christopher Eccleston....

, Rose Tyler
Rose Tyler
Rose Marion Tyler is a fictional character portrayed by Billie Piper in the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who, and was created by series producer Russell T Davies...

, Jackie Tyler
Jackie Tyler
In "Rise of the Cybermen" and "The Age of Steel" Coduri plays a parallel Earth version of Jackie. In this universe, she is still married to Pete, but they have no children, although she has a Yorkshire terrier named Rose. Despite Pete's success, which has led to Jackie becoming a celebrity, they...

 and Mickey Smith
Mickey Smith
Mickey Smith is a fictional character in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, played by Noel Clarke.Mickey is introduced as the boyfriend of the Ninth and Tenth Doctor's companion Rose Tyler, and a recurring character on the programme...

.

Synopsis

The time travellers return to present-day Earth and become intrigued by the latest craze, the video game Death to Mantodeans. Is the game as harmless as it seems and even if it is, why are so many people going on holiday and not coming back? The Doctor and Rose need Mickey Smith's help as Earth is threatened once more by aliens known as the Quevvils.

Plot

Rose calls her Mum
Jackie Tyler
In "Rise of the Cybermen" and "The Age of Steel" Coduri plays a parallel Earth version of Jackie. In this universe, she is still married to Pete, but they have no children, although she has a Yorkshire terrier named Rose. Despite Pete's success, which has led to Jackie becoming a celebrity, they...

, who tells her that she just won the lottery and hangs up. Rose asks the Doctor if they can pop home for a bit, just to check on her. The TARDIS
TARDIS
The TARDISGenerally, TARDIS is written in all upper case letters—this convention was popularised by the Target novelisations of the 1970s...

 lands in its 'favorite spot' on the Powell Estate. Mum says that she only won a 'games thing' on the scratchcards, not money. When Rose asks about it, her Mum shows her some orange bits of paper with 'Percy the Porcupine' and silver stuff rubbed off. She says that its a test promotion in the area, and you get one every time you buy something. If you win, you take the ticket to a booth, where a person dressed as a porcupine
Porcupine
Porcupines are rodents with a coat of sharp spines, or quills, that defend or camouflage them from predators. They are indigenous to the Americas, southern Asia, and Africa. Porcupines are the third largest of the rodents, behind the capybara and the beaver. Most porcupines are about long, with...

 gives you your prize.

Rose and the Doctor go to visit Mickey. Rose's Mum gave him the game that she'd won, and he's been playing it. There is a pile of games near his computer, including one called Bad Wolf. He says everyone is playing Death to Mantodeans because there's a big cash award for the first person to finish it, and no one has yet. The game has a lot of difficult puzzles to solve, and seems to have a glitch, as half the time it doesn't save your game and you have to start over.

The Doctor takes the controls from Mickey, and solves one of the puzzles, causing a door to open and monsters that look like giant praying mantises show up on the other side. He fires the weapon at them and kills them. Rose says 'You don't like guns' and he replies 'I hate guns. Which isn't to say that a bit of fantasy violence can't be therapeutic.'

Rose goes out to the shop to get some tea and biscuits, since Mickey says he doesn't have any food. She passes the local bully, Darren Pye on the way, and ignores his taunting. On the way back, she finds he's throwing stones at Mrs Desai, so Rose jumps in and hits him with her bag, spilling milk all over. He pulls out a knife, but suddenly the Doctor is there and intimidates Darren into leaving. She asks why he left Mickey's, and he teases her he knew she was in trouble, but then admits that Mickey chucked him out when the Doctor beat his score by several thousand points.

On the planet Toop, there are two buildings. One looks like a pyramid with its top sliced off and the other is a solid square. In the main control room of the later building, the Quevvils are in an uproar. One of their controllers is showing amazing skill and speed, but then it stops, and the carrier is destroyed. Frinel, the leader, orders that their Earth agents find the controller.

Back in his flat, Mickey turns the game back on, but it won't work properly. Then his front door crashes open.

Rose and the Doctor are walking around, and see the many posters along the street. The Doctor looks closely at them, and wonders how humans could fit into costumes like that. They take a bus downtown to see the prize booth. They determine that tickets are needed to get into the booth, so they go to a nearby store and bought a couple of items, and when those didn't win, tried another, and another but still didn't win anything. They decide to go back to Mickey's and have a look at his game console.

When they arrive, Mickey's door is open, and Mickey is nowhere to be found. There are claw marks on the door. The Doctor prises off the back of the game console, and confirms that it's alien. They determine that the aliens meant to get the Doctor (because of his score in the game), but got Mickey by mistake. And the Doctor can tell he's been teleported because of the tingle in the air. Since they don't know where Mickey has been taken, the best way to follow him is to play the game again and hope the aliens take the bait. Rose reminds the Doctor that the Mantodeans are real, and he doesn't shoot any more. The Doctor says the best way to get the aliens to come find him is to beat his previous score, and then stop. If he wins, they'll have no need of either him or Mickey.

The Doctor tells Rose to hide behind his chair and hold onto his ankle. If they see her, she'll be captured too, but this way she'll be brought along without the Quevvils' knowledge. A few moments later, there is a lemon fizz in the air, and the door crashes open.

Rose was disoriented, but was able to pull herself together and hide before the Quevvils see her. She sees the protesting Doctor bundled through a door, and hears a yell of surprise from Mickey before the door is closed. When the Quevvils become distracted, she darts out the room's other door and into a hallway. There is a ladder with a trapdoor, but it is locked. At the other end of the hall is another door, and on the other side is a musty storeroom with old newspapers and magazines. She goes through the door on the other end, and finds herself at the newsagents where she'd bought the milk earlier.

The prize booth is still there. As she thinks of how to get in, she remembers something about porcupines loving salt, and swipes a salt cellar from a chip shop. She then buys a hundred penny sweets, and starts rubbing off tickets. The fifty-eighth win a game console, so she feeds it into the slot at the booth. As the Quevvil goes to get the game, she jumps the counter and dumps salt all over the trap door. She runs out the door, back to the newsagents, and into the cellar. She watches the Quevvils climb the ladder and go through the trapdoor, then went through the room to the door where Mickey and the Doctor are.

Rose unties them both, but the Doctor wants to try something before they leave. He has Mickey stay at his position, and then has Rose maneuver his game to the same place. The control pad becomes all juddery the closer they get to each other. The Doctor adjusts Rose's game, and has her try again. As they move forward, they can see people with disks stuck to their foreheads and metal cubes strapped round their necks, and Rose and Mickey recognize them both. Rose remembers her Mum telling her that Mrs Hall had won a holiday.

They hear the Quevvils coming back, and the Doctor sends Rose and Mickey back to his flat via the teleport. He tells them to collect up as many of the games as they can, to try to prevent more deaths. The Quevvils come in just as they teleported, and one fires. Mickey is hit, but only wounded. Since Mickey is hurt, Rose goes out to collect games by herself.

The Doctor manages to hide from the Quevvils, but overhears them talking about following Rose and Mickey, so he jumps out and breaks their teleport. After some running about, the Doctor is back in his chair, not playing the game, but trying to keep the Quevvils talking.

Rose goes back to her flat first, and finds it empty with a note from her Mum saying that she won a holiday and was going with Dilys. She goes through the rest of her scratchcards, hoping for a holiday, but only finds two more games. She goes back to the booth, and uses one to get inside, then when the Quevvil won't tell her anything about her Mum, throws the game back at it, knocking a pile of games over.

As a crash was heard from upstairs, the Doctor is able to escape. He uses his sonic screwdriver
Sonic screwdriver
The sonic screwdriver is a fictional tool in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who and its spinoffs. It is a multifunctional tool used by The Doctor. Its most common function is that of a lockpick, but can be used to perform other operations such as performing medical scans,...

 to get out of the newsagents and heads back to Rose's flat.

Rose runs out of the booth, and finds her Mum's friend Dilys outside. She tells Rose that they weren't able to go on holiday and gives Rose her ticket, to perhaps use later. Then she tells Rose that her Mum is in hospital, because she was beaten up by Darren Pye.

Rose isn't in her flat when the Doctor arrives, so he goes to Mickey's. Mickey shows him that someone on-line has figured out what is going on with the game, and is trying to sell them. The Doctor tells him to start spreading rumors about the games being dangerous, and then heads back to Rose's, where she finds him waiting for her. The two of them head out to try to collect the games.

They decide to tell people that the games are dangerous, but still don't have much luck collecting any. People either won't let them have it, or say that someone else had come by making threats if they didn't give it up. They learn that Darren Pye is the one threatening people, and they head back to Mickey's.

Mickey tells them that things have gotten worse. Now, not only are the games being sold, but someone is selling the holiday tickets as way to get rid of someone. The Doctor says that they need one of the holiday scratchcards for the TARDIS to figure out where the planet is. He is about to go out to the shop when Rose pulls the one Dilys gave her out of her pocket.

When they reached the TARDIS, the Doctor sticks the card in a slot in the console, and away they go. Suddenly the TARDIS lurches violently, and the Doctor says they were repelled by something, and are probably going to the place where the winning card holders materialize.

The Doctor and Rose exit the TARDIS into a grim room with a group of adults and two children. They all have metal discs stuck to their foreheads. The Doctor tries to hurry everyone into the TARDIS, but the Quevvils come in before anyone moves. They take Rose to be a carrier and tell the Doctor that he must play the game for them. As she passes the Doctor, he grabs her in a big hug and sneaks her the sonic screwdriver.

After Rose is taken away, and a disc is pushed into her forehead and a cube is wired to her body. The disc is activated, and then she is teleported elsewhere.

The Doctor tells the Quevvil 'I was planning on just rescuing everyone and, you know, maybe destroying your technology so you wouldn't do it again. If she gets hurt, though, this planet's dust. Just thought I'd mention it.' The Quevvils take the Doctor out, and bring the boy named Robert along. He tells the Doctor that the Quevvils took his mom. They are brought to a room with a large screen, and the Doctor is given a control pad. The Quevvils tell him that if he doesn't play, the boy will be killed.

Rose recovers from the teleport, but cannot move. Then her arm moves without her will, and makes a thumbs up sign, and she realizes the Doctor did it. She starts to make her way through the maze.

Back at the base, Robert throws a fit to distract the Quevvil guarding them and the Doctor managed to knock it over. He uses the control pad to remove Robert's disk and presses it into the Quevvil's forehead, then presses a button and freezes it in place.

While they were doing all this, a Mantodean was approaching Rose. At the last second, Robert sees it, and Rose jumps and gets away. The Doctor decides that he needs to make the controller work better, and tells Robert to keep an eye on Rose while he does it. Rose feels that something is changing, and then finds that she moves much easier and smoother than she could before.

The Doctor unties Robert, who searches the room and finds a map of the maze. It includes small white lights that indicate active carriers, and blue ones that are inactive.

The Doctor uses Rose to call Mickey on her phone and tells him to find all the active games. Mickey goes to the youth club, and finds several boys playing the game. He has them help him to stop people from starting new games, and to go through the ones that the Doctor and Rose collected and find saved games.

Robert is watching the map, and tells the Doctor that one of the lights is jumping around. The Doctor makes Rose head for the light, and then she uses the sonic screwdriver to remove the box so that the person can be taken out of the game. Mickey and the boys keep looking for active consoles, and another finds people online who are playing, and tells them that jumping around is a cheat of some sort.

Suddenly, the intercom buzzes, and the Doctor and Robert hurry to find a control pad so their controlled Quevvil can respond.

Mickey has gone through all the consoles he had, so he took two of the boys and some of their equipment to visit Mrs Pye and go through the consoles that Darren had collected.

The Doctor and Robert are again interrupted by Quevvils calling to find out why the game wasn't being played as expected. The door explodes before they were able to get the controlled Quevvil to respond, so the Doctor has to go back to pretending to play. He and Robert are taken to another room, with lots of Quevvils around to guard them. All of the other prisoners are brought into the room as well, and the Doctor is told that one will be killed every time he deviates from the game.

Rose makes it to the center of the game, and the Quevvils get ready to teleport, but the Doctor has Mickey send a signal that disrupts it, which atomizes all the Quevvils. Everything in the stronghold went dark and quiet, and Rose finds that she can move and talk on her own again. Rose runs out of the room and away from the Mantodeans. As she moves through the maze, she finds someone else trapped there in the dark.

The Doctor removes the control disks from all the prisoners, sends them back to Earth, and then destroys the teleporter. He then takes Robert back to the TARDIS and Robert asks how they are going to find Rose. The Doctor tells him 'Oh, the TARDIS'll manage, now the force field's down, I can't quite work out why, but she seems to have taken a shine to that girl.'

Rose is trying to think of a way to use the sonic screwdriver to get the two of them out, when she hears the sound of the TARDIS approaching. The door opens, and Robert and his mom are reunited, and they all go back to Earth.

Later on The Doctor and Rose leave the flat arm to arm, and head for the future.

Continuity

  • Rose tells the Doctor 'You've reversed teleportation before,' a reference to "The End of the World
    The End of the World (Doctor Who)
    "The End of the World" is the second episode of Series One of the British science-fiction television series Doctor Who. Written by show runner Russell T Davies and directed by Euros Lyn, the episode was first broadcast on 2 April 2005....

    ".
  • Mention is made of Rose being gone for a year, and Mickey being a suspect in her disappearance, a reference to "Aliens of London
    Aliens of London
    "Aliens of London" is the fourth episode of the first series of the British science fiction television show Doctor Who that was first broadcast on 16 April 2005. The Doctor takes Rose back to 21st century London, just in time to witness a spaceship crashing into the River Thames, triggering a...

    ".
  • The Doctor's dislike of guns in this book anticipates his comments in "The Doctor Dances
    The Doctor Dances
    "The Doctor Dances" is an episode in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast on 28 May 2005. It is the second of a two-part story and saw Jack Harkness, played by John Barrowman, join the Doctor as a companion. The first part, "The Empty Child", was...

    " about destroying the weapons factory on Villengard.
  • One of Mickey's video games is called Bad Wolf.

Discontinuity

  • In this book, Jackie seems to be much nicer to the Doctor then she is in the usual Ninth Doctor episodes.

See also

  • New Series Adventures Canonicity
  • Whoniverse
    Whoniverse
    Whoniverse, a portmanteau of the words "Who" and "universe", is a word used to describe the fictional setting of the television series Doctor Who, K-9 and Company, Torchwood, The Sarah Jane Adventures and K-9, as well as other related stories...


External links

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