Issue 168
- Chronic Fatigue
- Cameron Dixon tries to discuss spoilers without giving too much away.
- WhoLine
- The latest news from the worlds of Doctor Who.
- Crater of Needles
- Gian-Luca di Rocco pays tribute to Caroline John and Mary Tamm, who played not the Doctor’s companions, but his assistants.
- Season 2012 Reviews
- Eric Briggs examines Asylum of the Daleks, and asks whether Nazis dance.
- Block Transfers
- Julie Chaston reviews Dinosaurs on a Spaceship. When exactly does it take place for the Doctor…?
- Clockwork Antiquaria
- J.M. Frey argues that Doctor Who embodies the essence of the Steampunk aesthetic.
- Season 2012 Reviews
- Greg McElhatton shows no mercy when it comes to dissecting A Town Called Mercy.
- Love & Monsters
- Deborah Stanish loved The Power of Three. Well, she would have, if not for the story…
- LionHearted
- David J. Lamb asks why the villains we’ve had since 2005 aren’t as immediately memorable as those of the classic series.
- Fluid Links
- Robert Smith? plays the music, lights the lights, and gets things started in his review for The Angels Take Manhattan.
- The Tempered Schism
- Peter McAlpine pays tribute to one of the Doctor’s longest-running companions, Bernice Summerfield, on the occasion of her 20th anniversary.
- The Land of Fiction
- Graeme Burk reviews three DVDs from the Sylvester McCoy era: Dragonfire, The Happiness Patrol, and The Greatest Show in the Galaxy. Also, DVD reviews of The Ambassadors of Death, The Android Invasion and The Seeds of Doom; the Seventh Doctor travels solo in the Big Finish monthly range; the Fourth Doctor’s first audio season concludes with Trail of the White Worm and The Oseidon Adventure; three lost Colin Baker stories make their way to audio; and, reviews of Who is the Doctor and Volume 1 of The Official Doctor Who Fan Club.