Doctor confirms Kroton targeting
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Doctor demonstrates to Zoe and Jamie that the probe uses pattern recognition, identifying his face as the target, allowing him to evade the probe's attacks by obscuring his face. Selris realizes the probe was sent specifically to attack the Doctor, leading Zoe to conclude the Krotons know his identity.
The Doctor theorizes about contacting the Krotons and then lowers his hands and talks to his companions. When the Doctor lowers his hands, the probe attacks, disintegrating a student who attempts to attack it with an axe, but the computer removes the Doctor's image from its screen as a result.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Anxious and frustrated, with a simmering anger at the Krotons' indiscriminate violence.
Jamie reacts with alarm as the Doctor tests the probe, warning him of the danger. He watches in horror as the probe kills the Gond student, mistaking him for the Doctor. His shock turns to frustration as he realizes the probe's stupidity and the Krotons' callousness. He remains protective, urging the group to act cautiously amid the unfolding crisis.
- • Keep the Doctor and Zoe safe from the probe's attacks.
- • Understand the Krotons' motives to counter their threats effectively.
- • The Krotons are ruthless and cannot be reasoned with.
- • The Gonds' only hope lies in resistance, not submission.
Alert and focused, with a growing sense of unease as the probe's lethality becomes apparent.
Zoe observes the Doctor's experiment with the probe, confirming its pattern recognition and deducing that the Krotons know his appearance. She warns the Doctor about the probe's danger, her voice tense with alertness. Her sharp intellect deciphers the probe's mechanism, reinforcing the Doctor's analysis while remaining vigilant about the immediate threat.
- • Understand the Kroton probe's targeting system to anticipate its actions.
- • Support the Doctor while ensuring the group's safety amid the escalating danger.
- • The Krotons' technology is precise and deadly, requiring careful analysis to counter.
- • The Gonds' compliance is maintained through fear of such automated violence.
Determined in life, but his death is one of tragic futility, exposing the Krotons' indifference.
A Gond student, attempting to sneak up behind the Kroton probe with an axe, is killed instantly by its disintegrating gas. Mistaken for the Doctor, his death becomes a tragic catalyst for the Gonds' awakening. His ashy outline and abandoned axe serve as a grim reminder of the Krotons' lethal efficiency, forcing the group to confront the cost of their oppression.
- • Attack the Kroton probe to protect the Doctor and his companions.
- • Challenge the Krotons' authority through direct action.
- • The Krotons' rule must be resisted, even at personal cost.
- • Unity and defiance are the only ways to break their control.
Cautious and conflicted, torn between his duty to the Krotons and his growing unease with their brutality.
Selris questions the Doctor about the probe's targeting, warning against provoking the Krotons further. He urges the Gonds to leave the Learning Hall after the computer's warning, prioritizing compliance to avoid catastrophe. His cautious leadership is challenged by Thara's defiance, exposing the fracture in Gond unity. Selris' authority wavers as the Krotons' violence forces him to confront his role in their oppression.
- • Prevent further provocation of the Krotons to avoid retaliation.
- • Maintain order among the Gonds amid the escalating crisis.
- • The Krotons' rule, while oppressive, is necessary to prevent greater harm.
- • Resistance against the Krotons will only lead to destruction.
Enraged and determined, with a fierce resolve to fight the Krotons' oppression.
Thara, enraged by the student's death, hurls the axe at the door in defiance, accusing the Krotons of murder. He clashes with Selris, demanding resistance against their oppressors. His outburst galvanizes the Gonds, forcing a confrontation between submission and rebellion. Thara's defiance becomes a catalyst for the group's fracture, exposing the Krotons' true nature.
- • Inspire the Gonds to resist the Krotons' rule.
- • Expose the Krotons' violence to break the Gonds' compliance.
- • The Krotons' rule is built on lies and violence, and must be overthrown.
- • The Gonds' only hope lies in unified resistance.
Determined and analytical, with a undercurrent of moral outrage at the Krotons' violence.
The Doctor methodically tests the Kroton probe's targeting by obscuring and revealing his face, forcing it to attack an innocent Gond student. He deduces the probe's facial recognition system, confirming the Krotons' surveillance capabilities. His calculated risk exposes the Krotons' lethal efficiency, triggering a computer warning that declares him 'destroyed.' He remains composed, analyzing the situation even as the student's death escalates tensions.
- • Confirm the Kroton probe's targeting mechanism to understand their surveillance capabilities.
- • Expose the Krotons' true nature to the Gonds, forcing them to confront their oppression.
- • The Krotons' control relies on fear and technological superiority, which can be exploited.
- • The Gonds' compliance is rooted in ignorance, and revealing the Krotons' brutality will spark resistance.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Though not directly interacted with in this event, the Dynatrope wall scanner is referenced by the Doctor as a potential means to communicate with the Krotons. He deduces its existence based on the probe's targeting mechanism, suggesting that the Krotons monitor the Gonds through embedded surveillance. This clue sets up the next phase of the conflict, where the Doctor and his companions may exploit the scanner to turn the Krotons' technology against them.
The Gond student's axe, wielded in a desperate attempt to attack the Kroton probe, becomes a symbol of defiance. When the student is killed by the probe's disintegrating gas, the axe clatters to the floor, its blade glinting under the hall's lights. Thara later hurls it at the door in a fit of rage, turning the weapon into a metaphor for the Gonds' fractured resistance. The axe's abandoned state underscores the futility of direct confrontation with the Krotons' technology.
The Kroton computer screen dominates the Learning Hall, projecting the Doctor's live image as the probe hunts him. When the probe kills the Gond student, mistaking him for the Doctor, the screen blinks out and issues a stark warning: 'Your leader has been destroyed.' This false declaration exposes the Krotons' overconfidence in their surveillance, while also forcing the Gonds to confront the probe's lethal precision. The screen's role as a conduit for Kroton authority is momentarily undermined by the Doctor's cunning.
The Kroton probe, a hovering surveillance device, plays a pivotal role in this event. It targets the Doctor based on facial recognition, but when he obscures his face, it mistakes a Gond student for him and kills the student with disintegrating gas. The probe's lethal efficiency exposes the Krotons' ruthless surveillance, triggering a computer warning that declares the Doctor 'destroyed.' Its retreat after the attack confirms the Krotons' reliance on automated targeting, setting the stage for the Doctor's counterattack.
The Kroton probe's disintegrating gas is the lethal mechanism that kills the Gond student. Unleashed with precision, the gas rapidly dissolves the student, leaving only an ashy outline. This instant, painless death underscores the Krotons' technological superiority and their indifference to Gond lives. The gas's use confirms the probe's programming: it is designed to eliminate threats without hesitation, reinforcing the Doctor's deduction that the Krotons prioritize efficiency over morality.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Learning Hall serves as the battleground for this event, where the Doctor's experiment with the Kroton probe exposes the Krotons' lethal surveillance. Once a site of indoctrination, the hall now pulses with tension as the probe's attack fractures the Gonds' unity. The hum of teaching machines contrasts with the sudden violence, creating a dissonant atmosphere. The hall's crystalline hexagonal door, leading to the Dynatrope, looms as a symbol of the Krotons' control, while the ashy outline of the dead student becomes a grim centerpiece.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Krotons' involvement in this event is manifested through their surveillance probe and computer system. The probe's lethal attack on the Gond student, mistaken for the Doctor, exposes their ruthless efficiency and indifference to Gond lives. The computer's warning—declaring the Doctor 'destroyed'—reveals their overconfidence in their technology. This event underscores the Krotons' reliance on automated systems to maintain control, while also setting up their eventual downfall as the Doctor exploits their vulnerabilities.
The Gond Society is fractured during this event as the Krotons' violence forces a confrontation between submission and resistance. Selris, representing the elders' compliance, urges the Gonds to leave the Learning Hall to avoid provoking the Krotons further. Thara, embodying the younger generation's defiance, demands resistance, throwing the axe in a symbolic act of rebellion. The death of the Gond student becomes a catalyst for this divide, exposing the societal tension between fear and defiance.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Doctor demonstrates the probe's pattern recognition, and when he lowers his guard, the probe attacks, indicating a direct cause-and-effect relationship. This also establishes the Krotons' hostility towards the Doctor."
Gonds fracture over Kroton violence"Thara's defiance escalates the tension, leading to the Kroton computer issuing a warning and asserting its authority, creating a direct escalation of conflict."
Gonds fracture over Kroton violence"The Doctor demonstrates the probe's pattern recognition, and when he lowers his guard, the probe attacks, indicating a direct cause-and-effect relationship. This also establishes the Krotons' hostility towards the Doctor."
Gonds fracture over Kroton violence"Thara's defiance escalates the tension, leading to the Kroton computer issuing a warning and asserting its authority, creating a direct escalation of conflict."
Gonds fracture over Kroton violencePart of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"DOCTOR: "It's all right, Zoe. I think it's quite safe now.""
"ZOE: "Pattern recognition.""
"DOCTOR: "Yes, and the pattern is my face.""
"SELRIS: "Doctor, do you mean that thing was sent out to attack you and only you?""
"DOCTOR: "Yes, so it seems. It's rather flattering, isn't it.""
"THARA: "There's your wonderful Krotons for you Father! Murderers!""
"COMPUTER [OC]: "This is a warning. Your leader has been destroyed. All Gonds leave the Learning Hall at once.""