Voord
Regime Enforcement, Infiltration, and Hostile Raids on MarinusDescription
Affiliated Characters
Event Involvements
Events with structured involvement data
The Voord (frogmen) are represented in this event through the dead frogman in the torpedo-like submarine and the living frogman’s footprint trail leading toward the pyramid. The dead frogman’s corroded protective suit confirms the acid sea’s lethality and the Voord’s attempts to navigate it, while the living frogman’s presence foreshadows the group’s eventual confrontation. The Voord’s hostility and territorial nature are evident in their aggressive stance toward intruders, as seen in the raised knife near the pyramid.
Through physical evidence (dead frogman, footprint trail) and implied presence (living frogman near the pyramid).
Exercising authority over the island’s territory, using lethal force to protect it from intruders.
The Voord’s presence underscores the island’s hostility and the dangers the TARDIS crew will face as they venture deeper into their territory.
The dead frogman suggests internal struggles—perhaps failed missions or breaches in their defensive protocols—while the living frogman’s aggression hints at a collective determination to protect their home at all costs.
The Voord are represented in this event through the frogman's corpse and the implications of his protective suit and the submarine. The discovery of the corpse confirms the island is inhabited by an organized group (the Voord) who rely on technology (submarines, protective suits) to navigate their hostile environment. The torn suit and the acid's corrosion underscore the Voord's vulnerability, despite their defensive measures. The crew's realization that the island is inhabited and defended ('This means this place is inhabited'—Ian) frames the Voord as an antagonistic force, though their full nature is not yet understood. The corpse serves as a warning of the Voord's hostility and the dangers of trespassing on their territory.
Through the corpse of a fallen member and the technological artifacts (submarine, protective suit) they used.
Exercising authority over the island through defensive measures (acid sea, submarines, protective gear) and hostility toward intruders.
The Voord's presence reinforces the island as a defended space, where even the inhabitants are not entirely safe from their environment. Their actions shape the crew's perception of the island as unwelcoming and dangerous.
Implied tension between the need to defend the island and the vulnerability of the Voord's protective measures (e.g., the torn suit).
The Voord’s presence is implied through the frogman’s footprint trail, the corroded suit in the submarine, and the later appearance of a living frogman near the pyramid. Their role in this event is antagonistic, representing the planet’s hostile inhabitants and the institutionalized defenses designed to repel intruders. The Voord’s influence is felt through the environmental hazards—the acid sea, the glass beach, and the pyramid’s traps—and their direct threat to Susan as she follows the trail alone. Their power dynamics are those of an unseen but relentless force, exerting control over the island and its secrets through both natural and technological means.
Through environmental design (acid sea, glass beach) and direct physical threats (frogman’s knife, footprint trail, pyramid traps).
Exercising absolute authority over the island, using both natural barriers and direct action to eliminate intruders and protect their secrets.
The Voord’s institutionalized hostility is evident in the planet’s design, where every feature—from the acid sea to the pyramid—serves as a barrier or trap. Their influence is felt through the crew’s growing unease and the realization that they are unwelcome, setting the stage for Arbitan’s coercion and the dangers that lie ahead.
Unified in their purpose to defend the island, with no internal dissent or hierarchy evident in this event. Their actions are coordinated and relentless, driven by a shared instinct to protect their home.
The Voord’s influence is subtly but critically present in this event through the pyramid’s traps and the Would-Be Assassin’s brief appearance. The Voord’s reliance on automated defenses—such as the pressure-activated slab—underscores their hostile control over the island and their determination to repel intruders. The traps serve as a manifestation of the Voord’s power, ensuring that anyone who ventures too close to the pyramid is swiftly neutralized. While the Voord themselves are not physically present, their presence is felt through the pyramid’s mechanisms and the Would-Be Assassin’s actions, which hint at their surveillance and hostility.
Through the pyramid’s automated traps and the Would-Be Assassin’s covert actions. The Voord’s influence is exerted indirectly, relying on the pyramid’s hidden mechanisms to enforce their control over the island.
The Voord exercise authority over the island and its structures, using the pyramid as a tool to repel intruders and protect their territory. Their power is exerted through technological and environmental control, ensuring that outsiders are swiftly and efficiently neutralized.
The Voord’s control over the pyramid and its traps reinforces their dominance on the island, ensuring that any outsiders—such as the TARDIS crew—are swiftly neutralized. This event highlights the Voord’s reliance on both technological and human resources to maintain their power and protect their territory.
The Voord’s actions in this event suggest a highly organized and efficient approach to defending their territory. Their use of automated traps and covert operatives indicates a structured hierarchy and a clear chain of command, ensuring that their goals are met without direct exposure.
The Voord’s influence is felt indirectly in this event, primarily through the trapdoor mechanism that swallows Susan and the Doctor. While the Voord themselves are not present, their presence is implied by the would-be assassin’s earlier fall into the pyramid and the trap’s lethal efficiency. The Voord’s hostile agenda is reflected in the pyramid’s defenses, which are designed to eliminate intruders without warning. Their role in priming the trapdoor underscores the group’s vulnerability and the pyramid’s status as a Voord-controlled stronghold.
Via the pyramid’s automated trapdoor mechanism, which functions as a Voord defense system.
Exercising authority over the pyramid’s environment, using it as a tool to repel or eliminate intruders.
The Voord’s presence turns the pyramid from a neutral location into a hostile environment, forcing the TARDIS crew to adapt or face elimination.
The trapdoor’s activation suggests a coordinated Voord strategy to defend their territory, though the specifics of their internal operations remain unseen.
The Voord manifest as a relentless, organized force seeking to seize control of the Conscience of Marinus. Their glass submarines and coordinated attacks reveal a strategic, long-term plan to infiltrate the pyramid, while their silence and efficiency underscore their discipline. The Voord’s return after ‘many years’ suggests a cyclical conflict, with Arbitan as their sole obstacle. Their presence forces the TARDIS crew to confront Marinus’ deeper political and moral struggles, elevating the stakes from personal survival to ideological conflict.
Through direct, lethal action (ambushes, knife attacks) and implied strategy (submarine infiltrations).
Exercising external pressure on Arbitan and the pyramid, challenging the Conscience’s authority.
Their actions threaten to destabilize the Conscience’s role as Marinus’ moral arbiter, forcing Arbitan to seek desperate allies.
United in purpose but potentially fractured by past failures (implied by Arbitan’s reference to ‘many years since their last assault’).
The Voord are represented by the assassin attacking Arbitan and the unseen observer watching Ian and Arbitan’s departure. Their actions embody the relentless and hostile nature of their infiltration, seeking to disrupt the pyramid’s defenses and eliminate its guardian. The Voord’s presence in this event underscores the urgency of the situation and the high stakes of the conflict, as their persistence threatens to overwhelm Arbitan’s lone defense.
Through direct action (assassination attempts) and surveillance (unseen observer).
Exercising aggressive pressure on Arbitan and the pyramid’s defenses, seeking to exploit vulnerabilities.
The Voord’s actions reflect their broader goal of seizing control of Marinus and its critical machine, threatening the planet’s stability and the crew’s survival.
The Voord are the looming antagonist force in this event, their presence on Marinus driving Arbitan’s desperation and the crew’s entrapment. Though not physically present in this scene, their threat is implicit in Arbitan’s ultimatum and the crew’s forced compliance. The Voord’s existence as a hostile, invasive force frames the Keys of Marinus as the only means to protect Marinus—and by extension, the crew’s freedom—from their corruption.
Through the implied threat of their invasion and Arbitan’s desperate measures to counter them.
Exerting indirect but overwhelming pressure on the crew, as their actions force Arbitan to blackmail the TARDIS crew into retrieving the keys.
Their looming presence justifies Arbitan’s extreme measures, framing the crew’s entrapment as a necessary evil to prevent a greater catastrophe.
The Voord are the implied antagonist force in this event, their presence looming as a threat that Arbitan is desperate to counter. While not physically present in this scene, their existence is referenced through Arbitan’s urgency to recover the keys of Marinus. The Voord’s threat to Marinus and the Conscience of Marinus is the underlying reason for Arbitan’s blackmail, forcing the crew into a high-stakes quest. Their influence is felt indirectly, as Arbitan’s coercion is a direct response to their ongoing attacks on the planet.
Through Arbitan’s desperate actions and the implied threat of their attacks on Marinus.
Exerting indirect pressure on the crew through Arbitan’s coercion, as their attacks on Marinus drive Arbitan’s need for the keys.
The Voord’s actions have created a state of emergency on Marinus, leading to Arbitan’s extreme measures and the crew’s forced involvement in the planet’s conflict.
The Voord are represented in this event through their silent, lethal infiltration of Arbitan’s Control Room and the assassination of Arbitan. Their presence escalates the stakes for the TARDIS crew, who are now stranded and must complete their mission to survive. The Voord’s actions demonstrate their relentless pursuit of the Keys of Marinus and their willingness to eliminate obstacles, including Arbitan, to achieve their goals.
Through direct action—specifically, the assassination of Arbitan—demonstrating their infiltration capabilities and lethal efficiency.
Exercising authority through violence and intimidation, challenging Arbitan’s control and forcing the TARDIS crew into a desperate situation. Their power is evident in their ability to breach the pyramid’s defenses and eliminate a key figure without warning.
The Voord’s actions undermine Arbitan’s authority and leave the TARDIS crew without guidance, forcing them to rely on their own resources to complete the mission. Their assassination of Arbitan marks a shift in the power dynamics on Marinus, as they remove the primary defender of the Conscience of Marinus.
The Voord operate with silent efficiency, demonstrating a highly coordinated and disciplined approach. Their internal dynamics are not explicitly shown, but their actions suggest a unified and relentless pursuit of their goals.
The Voord are represented in this event through their silent, lethal efficiency, as a Voord assassin sneaks up behind Arbitan and stabs him in the back. Their presence is felt even in their absence, as Arbitan warns the crew about the Voord’s potential breach of the building. The Voord’s influence is a constant threat, driving the crew’s urgency and Arbitan’s desperation.
Via the Voord assassin’s lethal action, symbolizing their relentless pursuit of the keys and their hostility toward outsiders.
Exercising authority through fear and violence, challenging Arbitan’s control and the crew’s mission.
The Voord’s actions underscore the high stakes of the mission and the immediate danger the crew faces. Their assassination of Arbitan leaves the crew as the only hope for Marinus’s survival.
The Voord’s presence is felt through the silent, lethal action of their assassin, who strikes Arbitan down as the crew teleports away. Their involvement in this event marks the escalation from threat to outright violence, removing the last obstacle to their dominance of Marinus. The Voord’s power dynamics shift from coercion to outright aggression, their influence mechanisms now including assassination and the seizure of Arbitan’s stronghold.
Through the Voord operative’s silent, lethal action, embodying their ruthless efficiency and disregard for moral constraints.
Exercising overwhelming authority, eliminating resistance through violence, and seizing control of Marinus’s fate.
The Voord’s actions here solidify their control over Marinus, leaving the crew as the sole remaining threat to their plans.
None explicitly shown, but their disciplined, silent execution suggests a highly organized and hierarchical structure.
The Voord are referenced indirectly through Darrius’s suspicion of Barbara and Ian as potential infiltrators. Their presence looms as a hostile force seeking control of the micro-key and the Conscience of Marinus, adding to the urgency and danger of the scene. The organization’s influence is felt through the tension and distrust that Darrius directs toward Barbara and Ian, as well as the broader context of their mission.
Via institutional distrust and suspicion, manifested in Darrius’s interrogation and accusations.
Exerting indirect influence through the threat of infiltration and the need for vigilance, creating a climate of distrust and urgency.
The Voord’s presence underscores the high stakes of the mission and the need for Barbara and Ian to prove their legitimacy quickly, as failure could mean the loss of the micro-key and the Conscience to the Voord.
The Voord’s influence permeates the scene indirectly, their role as hostile infiltrators shaping Darrius’s paranoia and the interrogation’s high stakes. Though not physically present, their perceived threat looms over the exchange, forcing Barbara to disprove any association with them to gain Darrius’s trust. The Voord’s broader conflict with Arbitan and the guardians of Marinus is reflected in the scene’s tension, where distrust and survival are intertwined. Their absence is felt through the mechanisms of suspicion and the urgency to verify Barbara’s legitimacy.
Through Darrius’s accusations and the institutionalized paranoia surrounding the keys’ protection. The Voord are invoked as a spectral threat, their potential infiltration justifying the interrogation’s rigor.
Exercising indirect authority over the scene’s events, as Darrius’s actions are motivated by the need to counter Voord threats. Their perceived power forces Barbara into a defensive position, where proof of her mission is non-negotiable.
The Voord’s presence reinforces the broader conflict over the keys, where trust is a liability and proof is the only currency of survival. Their indirect influence highlights the planet’s fractured alliances and the cost of misplaced trust.
The Voord, represented by the disarmed guard lying unconscious in the corridor, loom as a constant threat in this scene. Their disciplined hierarchy and enforcement of Yartek’s authority are symbolized by the guard’s presence and the dagger now in Barbara’s possession. The Voord’s influence is felt even in their absence, as the companions’ cautious movements and whispered plans reflect their awareness of the danger posed by Yartek’s forces. The organization’s power dynamics are subtly challenged by the companions’ ability to disarm and outmaneuver one of their guards, a small but significant victory in their larger struggle.
Via the disarmed Voord guard lying unconscious in the corridor, whose presence symbolizes the Voord’s looming threat and the companions’ ability to turn the tables on their enemies.
Being challenged by the companions, who have temporarily gained the upper hand by disarming one of their guards and securing a weapon for their defense.
The Voord’s presence in this scene underscores the broader institutional power struggle on Marinus, where Yartek’s regime seeks to dominate the planet through control of the Conscience of Marinus. The companions’ ability to disarm a Voord guard, however temporary, represents a small but meaningful resistance to this institutional power.
The Voord operate as a tightly disciplined force under Yartek’s command, with little room for individual initiative or dissent. Their internal hierarchy is reflected in the guard’s obedience and the companions’ ability to exploit his vulnerability.
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