Krotons
Dynatrope Operation, Mental Exploitation, and Coercive Domination of Gond SocietyDescription
Affiliated Characters
Event Involvements
Events with structured involvement data
The Krotons are the unseen but absolute rulers of Gond society, their authority enforced through Selris and the ritual of sacrifice. Their law is declared as unassailable, their selections as sacred, and their machine as the ultimate arbiter of Gond fate. The Krotons’ influence is palpable in every action—from the extraction of the tablet to the opening of the hexagonal door—yet they remain physically absent, their power wielded through proxies like Selris and Eelek. Their institutional control is total, reducing the Gonds to compliant participants in their own oppression.
Through institutional protocol (the ritual of sacrifice) and the actions of their Gond proxies (Selris and Eelek).
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, with no room for dissent or challenge. Their law is enforced as divine and unquestionable.
The Krotons’ involvement in this event solidifies their grip on Gond society, ensuring the continuation of their oppressive system. The ritual reinforces the Gonds’ belief in their benevolence, masking the brutality of their true intentions.
The Krotons are the unseen but absolute rulers of Gond society, their influence manifesting through the ritual selection of companions and the enforcement of their law. Though physically absent, their presence is felt in every action and word during the ceremony, from Selris' announcement to the opening of the hexagonal door. The Krotons' power is exercised through the Gonds' unquestioning obedience, their traditions, and the Dynatrope machine, which serves as the instrument of their control. The ceremony itself is a performance of their authority, reinforcing the Gonds' submission and the inevitability of sacrifice.
Via institutional protocol (the selection ceremony) and symbolic imagery (the silver cape, the hexagonal door, the tablet).
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, their power is unchallenged and enforced through fear, tradition, and the Dynatrope machine.
The Krotons' involvement in this event reinforces their role as the unseen architects of Gond society, their power embedded in every aspect of Gond life. The ceremony serves as a reminder of their dominance, ensuring the Gonds' continued submission and the perpetuation of their oppressive system.
None visible in this event; the Krotons operate as a monolithic, unified force with no internal conflicts or divisions.
The Krotons' influence is palpable in this event, as their machine, the Dynatrope, operates to dissolve Abu's body, leaving only his ceremonial breastplate and necklace behind. The process is a manifestation of their oppressive system, which preys on the Gonds' most promising students under the guise of 'honor.' The Krotons' unseen presence looms over the scene, reinforcing their role as the unseen architects of the Gonds' suffering and the companions' growing moral outrage.
Via the institutional protocol of the Dynatrope machine, which operates autonomously to carry out the Krotons' will. The machine's function symbolizes their absolute control over the Gonds' lives and traditions.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, with the companions as external witnesses challenging their unseen dominance. The Krotons' power is demonstrated through the Dynatrope's lethal efficiency, which enforces their rule without direct intervention.
The Krotons' actions deepen the Gonds' indoctrination, ensuring that future generations continue to accept their rule without question. The companions' witnessing of this event marks the beginning of their challenge to this system, setting the stage for their intervention.
The Krotons' internal processes are not visible, but their reliance on the Dynatrope and Gond traditions suggests a hierarchical and controlling structure. Their actions are unified and purposeful, with no indication of internal dissent or conflict.
The Krotons' involvement in this event is indirect but devastating. Their true nature as oppressive rulers is revealed through the Dynatrope's lethal function, as Abu is dissolved before the TARDIS crew's eyes. The machine serves as their instrument of control, harvesting the brain fluid of the Gond's top students under the guise of 'companionship.' The event exposes the Krotons' deception, their system of indoctrination, and their willingness to sacrifice the Gond people to maintain their power. The crew's witnessing of Abu's fate accelerates their mission to dismantle the Krotons' control and free the Gond people.
Via institutional protocol being followed (the selection and sacrifice of 'companions') and through the Dynatrope machine, which executes their true purpose. The Krotons themselves remain unseen, their presence felt only through the machine's actions and the Gond people's blind obedience.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gond people, with the TARDIS crew as external observers challenging their system. The Krotons' power is embodied in the Dynatrope, which enforces their 'law' through fear and deception. The crew's presence marks the beginning of a challenge to this authority, as they seek to expose the truth and free the Gond people.
The event underscores the Krotons' institutionalized oppression, revealing the true cost of their 'law' and the Gond people's sacrifices. It sets the stage for the crew's mission to expose the Krotons' deception and free the Gond people from their tyranny, challenging the very foundations of their society.
The Krotons' internal dynamics are not directly visible in this event, but their system of control is revealed to be highly structured and ruthless. The selection and sacrifice of 'companions' suggest a hierarchical process, with the Krotons at the top and the Gond people at the bottom. The crew's witnessing of Abu's fate introduces an external threat to this system, forcing the Krotons to respond or risk exposure.
The Krotons are the unseen antagonists of the event, their authority enforced by Selris, Eelek, and the Gond Guards. Their 'law' is the foundation of the ceremony, their 'gift' of companionship a death sentence. The Doctor's revelation—'We saw him killed!'—exposes the Krotons as oppressors, not benefactors. Their influence is felt in every action: the silver capes, the Dynatrope, the guards' spears. The Krotons' power lies in their absence; they do not need to be present to control the Gonds, their myth enough to enforce obedience. This event marks the beginning of their unraveling, as the Doctor's truth forces the Gonds to question their absolute rule.
Through institutional protocol (the ceremony), symbolic imagery (silver capes, the Dynatrope), and enforcers (Selris, Eelek, the guards).
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, but facing its first challenge from the TARDIS crew and Thara's rebellion.
The Krotons' grip on Gond society is weakening; the ceremony's disruption and the Doctor's revelation plant the seeds of rebellion.
The Krotons' internal workings are unseen, but their reliance on Gond compliance is exposed as fragile.
The Krotons are the unseen but all-powerful antagonists of the event, their influence manifesting through the Gonds’ rituals and the Dynatrope’s deadly machinery. Their selections of 'companions' like Vana and Abu are revealed to be a front for exploitation and murder, with the machine vaporizing the victims to harvest their brain fluid. The Krotons’ power dynamics are absolute—they demand blind obedience, enforce their laws through fear, and maintain control over the Gonds through indoctrination. Their organizational goals in this event are to ensure Vana’s submission to the Dynatrope and to suppress any defiance that threatens their system. They exert influence through the Gonds’ complicity, the teaching machines’ propaganda, and the Dynatrope’s lethal trap. The event exposes their true nature, setting the stage for the crew’s rebellion against their rule.
Through the Gonds’ rituals, the Dynatrope’s machinery, and the teaching machines’ indoctrination. The Krotons themselves are absent but their authority is absolute.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, with no room for defiance or questioning. The TARDIS crew’s intervention is the first challenge to their unchecked power.
The event fractures the Gonds’ blind faith, exposing the Krotons’ selections as a death sentence. The crew’s intervention plants the seeds of rebellion, challenging the Krotons’ absolute authority for the first time.
The Krotons operate as a monolithic, unseen force, with no internal divisions or hierarchies visible to the Gonds. Their power is enforced through the Dynatrope and the Gonds’ fear, but the crew’s defiance introduces a crack in their system.
The Krotons' influence is palpable in this event through the deadly Dynatrope trap, which is designed to eliminate intruders and enforce their oppressive rule. Their system is revealed to be ruthless and psychologically damaging, as seen in Vana's catatonic state. The Doctor and the group's actions directly challenge the Krotons' control, marking a turning point in their mission.
Via institutional protocol (the Dynatrope trap) and collective action (the psychological and physical trauma inflicted on Vana).
Exercising absolute authority over the Gond people, using fear and trauma to maintain control.
The Krotons' actions reinforce their absolute power and the high cost of resistance, but the Doctor's intervention begins to challenge their unchallenged authority.
The Krotons’ influence is palpable in this event, as Vana’s catatonic state is a direct result of their psychological manipulation. Their presence is felt through the Dynatrope’s machinery, the gas that dissolves the Gonds, and the trauma inflicted on Vana. The organization’s control over the Gonds is underscored by the group’s desperate attempt to rescue Vana and the shift in their priorities from investigation to her care. The Krotons’ power dynamics are revealed as absolute, their methods of control deeply ingrained in Gond society.
Via the Dynatrope’s machinery and the psychological trauma inflicted on Vana.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, their control manifested through the Dynatrope and the catatonic state of its victims.
The Krotons’ actions reinforce their dominance over the Gonds, demonstrating the futility of resistance in the eyes of the Gond elders and the broader community. Their influence is so deeply ingrained that even a rescue attempt like this one is met with the immediate need to address the trauma they inflict.
The Krotons operate as a unified, unseen force, their internal processes and hierarchies obscured from the Gonds. Their actions are systematic and relentless, reflecting a collective will to maintain control at all costs.
The Krotons loom over this event like a silent, malevolent god, their influence woven into every word, every action, every trembling hand. Though they are not physically present, their presence is everywhere—in Vana’s catatonia, in Selris’ legends, in the wasteland’s poisonous legacy. The Doctor’s hypnosis is an attempt to pry open the Krotons’ grip on Vana’s mind, while Zoe and Jamie’s questions are a direct challenge to the narrative the Krotons have forced the Gonds to accept. The Krotons are the unseen puppeteers, and this scene is the moment their strings begin to snap. Selris’ recounting of the Gond oral history is not just a story—it is a confession of the Krotons’ crimes, delivered in his own voice.
Through the psychological and physical control of Vana, the historical trauma of the wasteland, and the indoctrinated beliefs of Selris. The Krotons are represented by their absence—no living Gond has seen them, yet their influence is absolute. Their power is manifested in the Dynatrope, the teaching machines, and the poisonous rain, all of which are invoked in this scene as evidence of their tyranny.
Absolute and unchallenged—until now. The Krotons have ruled the Gonds through fear, deception, and psychological control, but the Doctor’s hypnosis and the crew’s questions represent the first real threat to their dominance. Selris is the Krotons’ greatest asset (a loyal enforcer of their laws), but he is also their greatest vulnerability (his faith is cracking). The power dynamic in this scene is a battle between the Krotons’ invisible control and the crew’s visible defiance.
This event marks the beginning of the Krotons’ unraveling. Selris’ fracture is the first domino to fall in a chain reaction that will lead to Gond rebellion. The Krotons’ power has always relied on the Gonds’ blind obedience, but the Doctor’s hypnosis and the crew’s evidence are planting seeds of doubt that will grow into full-blown defiance. The Krotons’ greatest weapon—indoctrination—is now their greatest weakness, as the truth begins to surface.
The Krotons operate as a monolithic, unseen force, but their internal dynamics are hinted at in the way they maintain control: through the Dynatrope (a machine that consumes Gond students), the teaching machines (which dictate Gond culture), and the wasteland (a permanent scar of their aggression). There is no evidence of internal conflict within the Krotons themselves, but their reliance on Selris and other Gond leaders suggests a hierarchy—someone must give the orders, and someone must enforce them. The Krotons’ internal dynamics are a mystery, but their external influence is absolute—until now.
The Krotons' influence looms over the scene, even though they are never physically present. Their oppressive legacy is evoked through Selris' recounting of the Gond oral tradition, which describes their arrival as silver-skinned invaders who unleashed a poisonous rain, creating the wasteland. The Krotons' control is further implied through Vana's catatonic state, a direct result of their Dynatrope machine. The TARDIS crew's skepticism and the Doctor's hypnotic intervention begin to unravel the Krotons' carefully constructed facade of benevolence, exposing their true nature as oppressors.
Through the Gond oral tradition recounted by Selris, the Dynatrope machine's effect on Vana, and the wasteland's existence as a physical manifestation of their violence.
The Krotons exert absolute control over the Gonds through fear, conditioning, and the threat of retaliation (as evidenced by the wasteland). However, their power is beginning to be challenged by the TARDIS crew's investigation and Selris' growing cognitive dissonance.
The Krotons' influence is the foundation of Gond society, shaping their science, culture, and laws. Their control is so deeply embedded that even Selris, a leader among the Gonds, struggles to question their authority without risking psychological and physical harm.
The Krotons operate as a monolithic, unseen force, with no internal conflicts or hierarchies revealed in this event. Their power is absolute, and their goals are uniformly oppressive, as evidenced by their treatment of the Gonds and their use of the Dynatrope to harvest brain fluid.
The Krotons are the unseen but all-powerful rulers of the Gond people, their influence manifesting through the Custodian’s obedience and the teaching machines' oppressive presence. During this event, their authority is directly challenged as the students interrogate the Custodian and uncover the truth about the 'companions.' The Krotons' system of control is exposed as a facade, and their teaching machines—symbols of their dominance—are targeted for destruction. This event marks a critical moment where the Krotons' unseen rule is forced into the light, setting the stage for direct confrontation.
Through the Custodian’s bound loyalty and the teaching machines' oppressive hum, as well as the students' defiance of their rules.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gond people, but facing a growing challenge from the rebellious students who reject their control.
The students' rebellion threatens to dismantle the Krotons' carefully constructed system of control, forcing them to respond and exposing their vulnerability.
The Krotons' internal processes remain unseen, but their reliance on servants like the Custodian and the teaching machines is revealed as a potential weakness.
The Krotons are the unseen but all-powerful antagonists in this event, their influence felt in every line of dialogue about fear, war, and oppression. Though they do not appear physically, their presence is omnipresent—through the teaching machines, the Hexagonal Door, and the wasteland itself. The Krotons' involvement is the catalyst for the entire scene: Selris' fear of war, Beta's urgency to stop Thara, and the crew's determination to intervene all stem from the Krotons' control over Gond society. Their power dynamics are those of an oppressive, invisible force, maintaining dominance through psychological manipulation (fear of the wasteland, belief in their 'benevolence') and institutional control (the teaching machines, the sacrifices). The crew's plan to cut through the wasteland is a direct challenge to this system, making the Krotons' involvement the driving force behind the event's conflict.
Through institutional protocols (the teaching machines, the sacrifices) and psychological manipulation (fear of war, fear of the wasteland). The Krotons are represented by the systems they have put in place, which the Gonds enforce out of fear.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, with Selris and Beta acting as reluctant enforcers. The Krotons' power is invisible but total, maintained through the Gonds' self-imposed slavery and fear of rebellion.
The Krotons' influence is the foundation of Gond society, shaping every decision from the enforcement of 'laws' to the suppression of rebellion. Their impact is to keep the Gonds in a state of controlled fear, ensuring their own dominance remains unchallenged.
The Krotons operate as a monolithic, unseen force with no internal conflicts or hierarchies visible to the Gonds. Their 'internal dynamics' are a mystery, but their external influence is absolute and unyielding.
The Krotons are the unseen but all-powerful force behind this event, their influence felt in every word and decision. Their system of control—enforced through the teaching machines and the sacrificial ‘companions’—is the target of the Doctor’s moral indictment. The Krotons’ absence in the scene is palpable, their presence looming like a specter over the Gonds. Selris’ fear of rebellion is rooted in his belief that the Krotons will retaliate with devastating force, a fear that the Doctor and Jamie seek to undermine. The Krotons’ power dynamics are those of an oppressor, their control absolute but their true motives shrouded in mystery. Their influence mechanisms include psychological manipulation (through the teaching machines), cultural indoctrination (dictating Gond science and law), and the threat of violence (the wasteland, the Dynatrope). The organization’s goals in this event are to maintain their dominance over the Gonds and to continue harvesting the ‘companions’ for their unknown purposes.
Via institutional protocol (the teaching machines, the selection of companions) and the looming threat of retaliation (Selris’ fear of war). The Krotons are represented indirectly, through the systems they have put in place and the fear they have instilled in the Gonds.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, their power rooted in fear, deception, and the threat of violence. The Krotons’ control is enforced through Selris and the teaching machines, but their true nature remains hidden, making them an almost mythical force of oppression.
The Krotons’ influence is the foundation of Gond society, shaping every aspect of life from education to governance. Their control is so absolute that even the idea of rebellion is met with paralyzing fear, as seen in Selris’ reaction. The Doctor’s challenge to this system marks the beginning of a potential unraveling of their power.
The Krotons operate as a monolithic, unseen force, their internal dynamics obscured from the Gonds. Their actions suggest a cold, calculating intelligence, but their true motives—why they harvest the ‘companions’ and what they gain from controlling the Gonds—remain unknown, adding to their aura of mystery and dread.
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.
Through the Kroton probe's automated attack and the computer's warning, demonstrating their institutional brutality.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, with the Doctor and his companions as the only immediate challenge to their rule.
The event forces the Gonds to confront the Krotons' true nature, eroding their compliance and setting the stage for rebellion.
The Krotons' reliance on technology and automation is exposed as a weakness, as the Doctor's cunning exploits their overconfidence.
The Krotons are the unseen but all-powerful antagonists of this event, exerting their influence through the probe's lethal targeting and the computer's evacuation order. Their actions demonstrate a ruthless commitment to maintaining control, even at the cost of innocent lives. The probe's misrecognition of the Doctor as the student is framed as a success by the computer, revealing the Krotons' overconfidence in their technology and their willingness to manipulate the truth to sustain fear. Their involvement polarizes the Gonds, with Thara's defiance directly challenging their authority.
Through the Kroton probe's lethal action and the computer's authoritative evacuation order, both of which enforce their rule without direct physical presence.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, with the Doctor and his companions as external threats to be eliminated. Their power is both technological (probes, computers) and psychological (fear, misinformation).
The event underscores the Krotons' reliance on fear and technology to maintain power, but also exposes the fragility of their system when exploited (as the Doctor does). The misrecognition of the probe creates a narrative opening for rebellion, while the evacuation order accelerates the Gonds' internal conflict.
The Krotons operate as a monolithic, impersonal force, with no visible internal dissent or hierarchy. Their actions are protocol-driven, prioritizing the preservation of their crystalline dynasty at all costs.
The Krotons’ influence looms over the scene as the Doctor examines Vana’s catatonic state and questions the Gonds’ suppressed knowledge. Their manipulation of the Gonds’ education and psychological control over individuals like Vana are central to the conflict, driving the Doctor’s defiance and the team’s fracturing cohesion. The Krotons’ presence is felt through the gaps in the Gonds’ knowledge, Vana’s condition, and Selris’ insistence on compliance, highlighting their role as the primary antagonist force in the narrative.
Via institutional protocol (the Gonds’ suppressed knowledge and Vana’s catatonic state) and through the ideological divide between Selris’ compliance and the Doctor’s defiance.
Exercising authority over the Gonds through psychological manipulation, suppressed education, and institutional control. The Krotons’ power is challenged by the Doctor’s investigation and the team’s growing awareness of their manipulation.
The Krotons’ influence is felt through the Gonds’ limited technological capabilities, Vana’s trauma, and the ideological divide between compliance and defiance. Their control shapes the narrative’s tension and the Doctor’s determination to expose their manipulation.
The Krotons operate as a monolithic, oppressive force with no visible internal conflict. Their internal dynamics are characterized by absolute authority and the suppression of dissent, reflected in the Gonds’ passive obedience and the Doctor’s defiance.
The Krotons’ influence looms over the event, manifesting through Vana’s catatonic state and the Doctor’s preoccupation with uncovering their schemes. Their control over the Gonds’ knowledge and technology is subtly referenced, as the Doctor notes the gaps in Gond chemistry and the selective nature of their teaching machines. The Krotons’ psychological threat drives the Doctor’s urgency and the team’s fracturing unity, as their mind-control tactics and surveillance probes create a climate of fear and mistrust.
Via the psychological and technological control exerted over the Gonds, as well as the Doctor’s growing obsession with exposing their influence.
Exercising indirect but pervasive control over the Gonds and the Doctor’s team, shaping their actions and decisions through fear and manipulation.
The Krotons’ influence is felt through the Doctor’s growing detachment and the team’s fracturing cohesion, as their control over the Gonds creates a ripple effect of fear and uncertainty.
The Krotons operate as a monolithic, unseen force, with no internal tensions or hierarchies visible in this event. Their power is absolute and their goals singular: maintain control at all costs.
The Krotons are the unseen antagonists in this event, exerting their influence through the learning console’s reaction to Zoe’s performance. Their predatory interest in her intellect is signaled by the machine’s approval of her score, foreshadowing her selection as a 'companion.' The Krotons’ control over the Gonds is further highlighted by the Doctor’s warnings about their manipulative nature and the learning machines’ role in enslaving the Gonds. Their presence is felt through the technology they deploy, symbolizing their hierarchical and technologically advanced domination.
Via the Kroton learning console and its reaction to Zoe’s performance, as well as the Doctor’s warnings about their manipulative nature.
Exercising authority over the Gonds through psychological manipulation and technological dominance, with the Doctor and Zoe as potential threats to their control.
The Krotons’ influence is felt through the learning console’s approval of Zoe’s score, signaling their predatory interest in her intellect and foreshadowing her selection as a 'companion.'
The Krotons operate as a hierarchical and technologically advanced organization, with a focus on extracting superior minds for their survival and conquest.
The Krotons, though not physically present, are the driving force behind the trauma inflicted upon Vana and the urgency of the companions’ actions. Their mind-altering technology—the Dynatrope and its associated 'burning ball'—has left Vana in a shattered state, serving as a stark reminder of their predatory nature. The organization’s influence is felt through Vana’s hallucinations and fragmented descriptions, which Jamie and Thara interpret as evidence of a Kroton weapon. This event underscores the Krotons’ goal of harvesting mental energy from high-intelligence individuals to solidify their crystalline forms, while also highlighting the companions’ growing resolve to challenge their dominance.
Through the psychological and physical aftermath of their technology, manifested in Vana’s trauma and the companions’ reactions.
Exercising authority and control over the Gonds through fear, psychological manipulation, and advanced technology. The companions, though not yet directly opposing the Krotons, are beginning to recognize the need to resist their influence.
The Krotons’ actions in this event reinforce their role as an oppressive, otherworldly force that views the Gonds as mere resources. Their influence extends beyond physical presence, shaping the companions’ urgency to seek the Doctor’s help and uncover the truth behind their schemes.
The Krotons operate as a unified, hierarchical entity with a singular goal: survival and domination. There is no evidence of internal conflict or dissent within their ranks, as their actions are driven by a collective, coldly calculating purpose.
The Krotons are indirectly but powerfully present in this event through Vana’s trauma. Her descriptions of the 'burning ball,' 'flashing lights,' and 'the machine' reveal the psychological warfare they employ to control the Gonds. The organization’s influence is felt in the lingering horror Vana experiences, as well as in Jamie and Thara’s growing recognition of the Kroton threat. Their absence from the scene makes their presence all the more ominous, as the characters grapple with the aftermath of their experiments.
Through the psychological trauma inflicted on Vana, which manifests as hallucinations and fragmented speech.
Exercising authority over the Gonds through psychological manipulation, even in their absence. Their influence is felt in Vana’s shattered state and the urgency it creates for Jamie and Thara.
The Krotons’ actions here reinforce their role as oppressive overlords, using technology to break the will of the Gonds and justify their domination.
None explicitly shown, but their hierarchical and technologically advanced nature is implied in their ability to deploy the Dynatrope and monitor Gond activity.
The Krotons, though not physically present in the Learning Hall, exert their influence through the message pad, the gong, and the crystalline doorway. Their selection of Zoe—and later the Doctor—as companions is communicated with cold authority, the message pad flashing their names in stark script. The gong’s resonant boom marks the finality of their decision, and the doorway’s grinding open seals the Doctor and Zoe’s fate. The Krotons’ actions frame the Doctor and Zoe as threats to be contained, their selection a calculated move to drain the mental energy of superior minds for their own survival. The organization’s presence is felt in every aspect of the event, from the testing machine’s activation to the irreversible nature of the selections.
Via institutional protocol being followed (the message pad, the gong, the crystalline doorway) and through the collective action of their technology (the teaching machines, the test results needle).
Exercising absolute authority over the individuals in the Learning Hall, including the Doctor, Zoe, Selris, and Jamie. The Krotons’ power is unchallenged, their commands enforced without question, and their selections final. The Doctor’s defiance is a temporary disruption, but ultimately, the Krotons’ control prevails.
The Krotons’ involvement in this event reinforces their role as the ultimate authority on the planet, both feared and obeyed by the Gonds. Their selection of the Doctor and Zoe as companions underscores their predatory nature, as they prioritize the extraction of mental energy over individual lives. The event also highlights the Doctor’s defiance as a temporary but significant challenge to their control, setting the stage for future resistance from within the Dynatrope.
The Krotons operate as a hierarchical, technologically advanced collective with a singular goal: survival and evolution. There is no internal debate or conflict within their ranks, as their actions are driven by a predatory logic that views all other beings as resources to be exploited. Their internal dynamics are characterized by cold efficiency and unyielding authority, ensuring that their commands are followed without question.
The Krotons dominate this event through their message pad, test machine, and the Dynatrope door, all of which enforce their will without direct physical presence. Their selection of Zoe and the Doctor is not a choice but a command, delivered with the finality of a death sentence. The gong and the grinding door are their voice, their authority absolute. The Doctor's attempt to outmaneuver them backfires spectacularly, proving that their system is designed to trap even the most cunning minds.
Through institutional protocol (the test, the message pad, the gong) and the physical manifestation of their domain (the Dynatrope door).
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, the Doctor, and Zoe—their control is unchallenged, their system designed to crush resistance.
The Krotons' actions reinforce their role as an inescapable, predatory force—any resistance is futile, and their system is designed to absorb even the brightest minds.
None visible—their actions are unified, hierarchical, and devoid of internal conflict.
The Krotons exert their influence through Selris’ delivery of the message pad and the gong’s ominous resonance, which seals the Doctor and Zoe’s fate as companions. Their selection process is communicated with cold authority, reinforcing their role as unseen but all-powerful controllers. The Krotons’ actions are implied through institutional protocol (the message pad) and ritual (the gong), marking the transition from test subjects to experimental subjects and underscoring their dominion over the Gonds.
Through institutional protocol (message pad) and ritual (gong)
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds and the selected companions
Reinforces the Krotons’ dominance over the Gonds and the irreversible nature of the companions’ selection
Hierarchical and technologically advanced, with a focus on extracting mental energy to sustain their existence
The Krotons are the unseen but dominant force behind the trap in the Dynatrope control room. Their technology—the force generator, hexagonal forcefield, and mind-altering beam—is deployed to immobilize and mentally subdue the Doctor and Zoe. The Krotons’ influence is exerted through their advanced machinery, which operates autonomously to capture and prepare their victims for further manipulation. Their goal is to assert control over the companions, stripping them of their autonomy and setting the stage for their eventual psychological domination.
Via institutional technology (force generator, forcefield, mind-altering beam)
Exercising absolute authority over the Doctor and Zoe through technological superiority
Demonstrates the Krotons’ ability to manipulate and control through technological means, reinforcing their dominance over the Gonds and any outsiders
The Krotons’ involvement in this event is manifested through their advanced technology, which silently and methodically captures the Doctor and Zoe. Their force generator and mind-altering beam operate without warning, embodying their superior control over the environment and their victims. The Krotons’ presence is felt through the precision and efficiency of their trap, which strips the Doctor and Zoe of their agency and prepares them for further manipulation. This event highlights the Krotons’ ability to dominate not only the Gonds but also outsiders like the Doctor and Zoe, reinforcing their role as an unstoppable, oppressive force.
Via institutional protocol and advanced technology, operating autonomously to capture and control intruders.
Exercising absolute authority over the Doctor and Zoe, demonstrating their technological and strategic superiority. The Krotons’ control is unchallenged and unquestioned within the Dynatrope control room, leaving their victims helpless.
Reinforces the Krotons’ role as an oppressive, technologically advanced force that can dominate both the Gonds and outsiders with ease. Their ability to capture the Doctor and Zoe underscores their ability to control and manipulate those who threaten their plans.
The event reflects the Krotons’ collective and methodical approach to maintaining control, with their technology operating as an extension of their will. There is no indication of internal dissent or debate, as their actions are unified and purposeful.
The Krotons are the unseen but all-powerful force behind this event, their authority enforced through Selris’s compliance. Their influence is felt in the rigid obedience of the Gonds and the symbolic barriers like the Dynatrope door. Jamie’s defiance is a direct challenge to their control, though they are not physically present. Their presence is palpable in the ideological conflict and the institutionalized fear they instill.
Via institutional protocol being followed (Selris’s justification of obedience) and through the physical and symbolic barriers they have established (the Dynatrope door).
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, with Selris acting as their enforcer. Jamie’s defiance represents an external challenge to this authority, though the Krotons themselves remain unchallenged in this moment.
The Krotons’ control is reinforced by Selris’s compliance, but Jamie’s defiance introduces a crack in the system, foreshadowing potential resistance.
The Krotons' presence is omnipresent in this event, even though they are not physically visible. Their influence is felt through the Dynatrope Control Room’s machinery, the bubbling vats of crystalline slurry, and the thermal switch that harnesses the Doctor and Zoe’s mental energy. The Doctor’s deductions about the Krotons' use of mental energy to operate the switch and the emerging solid forms in the vats reveal their exploitative and oppressive methods. The Krotons' goal of forced crystallization—powered by stolen intellect—is laid bare, setting the stage for the Doctor and Zoe’s resistance and the Gonds’ eventual defiance.
Through the institutional machinery of the Dynatrope (the thermal switch, the vats, and the energy transfer process), as well as the implied hierarchy and control over the Gonds and their captives.
Exercising absolute authority over the Doctor and Zoe, using them as unwilling participants in the crystallization process. Their power is technological and oppressive, relying on the subjugation of superior intellects to fuel their own rebirth.
The Krotons' actions in this event reinforce their role as oppressors, using the Doctor and Zoe as tools to achieve their goals. Their reliance on stolen intellect highlights the fragility of their power—if the Doctor and Zoe can escape and expose their methods, the Krotons' control over the Gonds and their captives could be broken.
The crystallization process suggests a hierarchical and possibly factional dynamic within the Krotons, where certain individuals (or groups) are prioritized for rebirth. The Doctor and Zoe’s mental energy is being used to accelerate this process, implying a sense of urgency or competition among the Krotons.
The Krotons are the driving force behind the event, using the Doctor and Zoe's mental energy to accelerate their solidification process in the vats. Their operations in the Dynatrope Control Room are felt through the bubbling slurry, the disappearing wall, and the ominous solidifying shapes, all of which the Doctor and Zoe react to with alarm. The Krotons' indirect presence underscores their manipulative and exploitative nature, as they prioritize their own transformation over the well-being of the Gonds and their captives.
Via institutional protocol and systemic control, manifested through the Dynatrope's machinery, the vats, and the thermal switch.
Exercising authority over the Doctor and Zoe, as well as the Gonds, through technological and psychological manipulation.
The Krotons' actions reflect their broader institutional goal of dominating the Gonds and expanding their control through the exploitation of superior minds.
Hierarchical and methodical, with a focus on the collective transformation of their crystalline forms.
The Krotons' influence is palpable in this event, as the emerging crystalline entities and the 'air' lines attached to them are direct manifestations of their mind-altering technology. The Doctor and Zoe's struggle to understand and counteract these entities reflects the Krotons' broader goal of draining mental energy to solidify their crystalline forms and maintain their control over the Gonds. The corridor itself is a product of the Krotons' design, serving as both a trap and a testing ground for their captives.
Via the emerging crystalline entities and the 'air' lines, which are physical representations of the Krotons' technological and psychological dominance.
The Krotons exercise authority over Zoe and the Doctor, using their technology to trap and manipulate them. The Doctor's analysis of the entities represents a challenge to this authority, as he seeks to understand and counteract the Krotons' methods.
The Krotons' actions in this event reflect their broader institutional goal of maintaining power through technological and psychological control, reinforcing their dominance over the Gonds and any outsiders who threaten their systems.
The Krotons' internal processes are not directly visible in this event, but their reliance on the crystalline entities and 'air' lines suggests a hierarchical and systematic approach to their operations, with a clear chain of command and specialized roles.
The Krotons’ influence looms over this event like a specter, though they are never physically present. Their authority is enforced through Selris, who acts as their mouthpiece, repeating their edicts with the weight of institutional power. The Krotons’ control is absolute in this moment: the door is impassable without their permission, and Selris’s warnings carry the threat of their retribution. Yet, Jamie’s defiance introduces a crack in this facade of dominance. The Krotons’ power here is twofold—both the tangible (the door, the teaching machines) and the psychological (Selris’s fear, the Gonds’ conditioned obedience). Their absence makes them all the more menacing, as their rules are enforced by proxy, and their punishments are implied but never specified.
Via institutional protocol being followed (Selris’s warnings) and through the physical manifestation of their control (the crystalline door and the Learning Hall’s oppressive atmosphere).
Exercising authority over individuals through proxy (Selris) and institutionalized fear. Their power is unchallenged in this moment, but Jamie’s defiance plants the seed of doubt—both in Selris and, by extension, in the audience.
The Krotons’ influence is the glue holding Gond society together—or, more accurately, the chains binding it. Their control is so absolute that even the suggestion of defiance (Jamie’s crowbar) feels like an act of heresy. This moment highlights how deeply their power is embedded in the Gonds’ psyche, but it also foreshadows the potential for that power to be challenged.
None explicitly shown, but implied to be a monolithic, unchallenged hierarchy where dissent is not just discouraged but unthinkable. The Krotons operate as a singular, omnipotent force, with no internal conflicts or divisions visible to the Gonds (or to Jamie).
The Krotons, as an organization, are directly challenged in this moment as their conditioning system—the cornerstone of their control over the Gonds—is revealed to be flawed. The exchange between the two Krotons exposes the organization's fragility, as their collective confidence in their dominance is shaken. The Krotons' involvement in this event is defined by their struggle to maintain authority in the face of unexpected resistance, highlighting the precarious nature of their rule.
Through direct dialogue and internal debate between two Kroton representatives, reflecting the organization's collective anxiety and strategic concerns.
Exercising authority over the Gonds, but facing an unexpected challenge to that authority from within their own systems. The Krotons' power is momentarily destabilized as they confront the possibility of systemic failure.
The Krotons' involvement in this event underscores the institutional tension between their desire for absolute control and the reality of resistance. The failure of the conditioning system threatens to unravel the very foundations of their rule, forcing them to adapt or risk collapse.
A moment of internal debate and tension, as the Krotons grapple with the implications of the conditioning failure. The exchange between the two Krotons reveals a fracture in their collective confidence, as one clings to the illusion of control while the other confronts the harsh truth.
The Krotons' presence is felt through the sabotaged photoelectric cell and the activation of the poison jet, both of which are deliberate traps designed to contain and eliminate the Doctor and Zoe. Their influence is exerted through the environment itself, demonstrating their control over the Dynatrope and their willingness to use lethal countermeasures. The Krotons' technological superiority and ruthless efficiency are highlighted as the Doctor and Zoe are forced into a desperate evasion, underscoring the organization's power dynamics in this high-stakes confrontation.
Via institutional protocol (sabotaged photoelectric cell and poison jet as fail-safes) and collective action (designing the Dynatrope as a lethal trap).
Exercising authority over the environment and its inhabitants, using technology and traps to maintain control and eliminate threats.
The Krotons' actions reflect their broader institutional goal of suppressing knowledge and controlling the Gonds through fear and technology. Their traps and countermeasures are part of a larger system designed to maintain their dominance.
None explicitly shown in this event, but the Krotons' actions suggest a highly coordinated and efficient organization with no internal dissent or hesitation in using lethal force.
The Krotons, as an organization, are the primary drivers of this event. Their collective intelligence and hierarchical decision-making process are on full display as they monitor the Doctor and Zoe’s escape, deduce their non-Gond origins, and pivot to target Jamie. The Krotons’ actions in this scene reflect their overarching goal of securing high-intelligence hosts to accelerate their solidification from liquid vats to physical form. Their ability to adapt their strategy in real-time—shifting from lethal force to capture—demonstrates their ruthless pragmatism and intellectual superiority. The event underscores the Krotons’ role as manipulators of Gond society, using their technology to exploit the Gonds’ conditioning and turn them into tools for their own survival. The Krotons’ focus on Jamie’s mental capacity also highlights their broader experimental needs, framing the Gonds and other high-intelligence beings as disposable resources.
Through direct, real-time surveillance and strategic decision-making in the Dynatrope Control Room. The Krotons’ voices and actions are the primary manifestation of their organizational goals and influence mechanisms.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds and the intruders. The Krotons’ ability to monitor, analyze, and issue orders without resistance underscores their dominance. However, their initial miscalculation about the dispersion unit’s efficacy introduces a moment of vulnerability, which they quickly correct by adapting their strategy.
This event reinforces the Krotons’ institutional role as oppressors and exploiters of the Gonds. Their ability to pivot from passive observation to active targeting demonstrates their adaptability and willingness to deviate from protocol when necessary. The focus on Jamie’s mental capacity also highlights the Krotons’ broader experimental goals, which may have long-term implications for the Gonds and other civilizations they encounter.
The interaction between Kroton 1 and Kroton 2 reveals a hierarchical dynamic, with Kroton 1 taking the lead in strategic decisions while Kroton 2 provides analytical support. There is no sign of internal conflict—only a seamless alignment of goals and methods, underscoring the Krotons’ unity of purpose.
The Krotons’ influence permeates this event through the shaft’s design and the ramp’s role as a controlled escape route. Their presence is felt in the sabotaged photoelectric cell and the looming threat of capture, even if they aren’t physically visible. The Doctor’s rejection of the ramp is a direct challenge to their engineered control, exposing their reliance on predictability. The Krotons’ goals—capturing the Doctor and Zoe to extract their mental energy—are advanced through the shaft’s oppressive layout, but the Doctor’s defiance disrupts their plan, setting up future resistance.
Via institutional protocol (the shaft’s design) and environmental control (the ramp as a funnel). Their influence is indirect but pervasive, shaping the Doctor and Zoe’s options.
Exercising authority over the environment to limit agency, but facing active resistance from the Doctor. Their power is systemic (embedded in the shaft’s design) but vulnerable to improvisation and defiance.
The Krotons’ reliance on predictability and control is exposed as a weakness. The Doctor’s defiance here foreshadows their broader challenge to the Krotons’ dominance over Gond society, undermining the organization’s perceived invincibility.
The Krotons’ influence permeates this event, even though they are not physically present. Their authority is embodied in the Dynatrope door, which Jamie forces open in defiance of their rules, and in Selris’s urgent warnings, which reflect the Krotons’ psychological control over the Gonds. The act of breaching the door is a direct challenge to the Krotons’ system of domination, setting the stage for a confrontation between Jamie’s defiance and their power. The Krotons’ presence is felt in the oppressive atmosphere of the Learning Hall and the Dynatrope, where their technology hums with latent danger.
Via institutional protocol (the sealed door and Selris’s warnings) and through the latent threat of the Dynatrope’s mind-altering influence.
Exercising authority over the Gonds and their environment, though Jamie’s defiance represents an external challenge to that control. The Krotons’ power is systemic, enforced through technology and psychological manipulation, but Jamie’s action introduces a wildcard element of resistance.
The Krotons’ system of control is momentarily disrupted by Jamie’s defiance, but their influence remains deeply embedded in Gond society. This event foreshadows a larger conflict between resistance and submission, with the Krotons’ power ultimately tested by the Doctor, Zoe, and Jamie.
None explicitly shown, but the Krotons’ reliance on the Gonds’ obedience suggests internal processes for maintaining control, such as monitoring and enforcing compliance through Selris and other Gond leaders.
The Krotons, as an organization, are the driving force behind this event. Their cold, utilitarian logic is embodied by Kroton 2, who reassesses Jamie’s value as a 'living repository of knowledge' after the mind-draining device’s premature shutdown. This moment highlights the Krotons' adaptability—they do not waste resources, even organic ones, and are willing to pivot their strategy to maximize control and intelligence-gathering. The organization’s influence is exerted through surveillance, technological dominance, and the systematic exploitation of captives, all of which are on full display in the Dynatrope control room.
Through Kroton 2, a subordinate operative acting as the voice of the collective’s strategic calculations.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds and captives, with a paranoid need to suppress any threat to their dominance.
The Krotons' adaptability and ruthless pragmatism reinforce their institutional power, demonstrating that they will exploit any advantage—even the failure of their own technology—to maintain control.
The Krotons operate as a collective with a hierarchical structure, where subordinates like Kroton 2 execute the commands of higher-ranking commanders. There is no evidence of internal dissent or debate in this moment; their actions are unified and purposeful.
The Krotons are the unseen but all-powerful antagonist in this event, their influence permeating every word and action. Eelek and Axus frame the rebellion as a direct response to Kroton oppression, using the Doctor’s capture as proof of their ruthlessness. Beta’s scientific skepticism (‘We only know what the Krotons tell us’) underscores their control over Gond knowledge, while his proposal to develop a chemical weapon is a direct challenge to their forbidden subjects. The Krotons’ absence makes their presence even more oppressive—they are the elephant in the room, the reason for the confrontation. Their power is exerted through the mind-draining machines (mentioned by Axus) and the threat of violence (embodied by Eelek’s guards). The event reveals the Krotons’ strategy: divide and conquer, pitting the Gonds against each other while they drain the brightest minds for their own ends.
Via institutional control (through the teaching machines and mind-draining), and through the fear they inspire in the Gonds (exploited by Eelek).
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, both physically (through the Dynatrope) and intellectually (through controlled education). Their power is indirect but total, making resistance seem futile.
The Krotons’ influence is the catalyst for the rebellion, but their indirect control ensures that the Gonds’ resistance is fractured—some, like Eelek, seek immediate violence, while others, like Beta, cling to the hope of scientific solutions. Their power dynamic ensures that the Gonds are always reacting, never acting with unity.
The Krotons operate as a monolithic force, with no internal conflict or hierarchy visible to the Gonds. Their unity contrasts with the Gonds’ divisions, making them seem invincible.
The Krotons are the unseen antagonists of this scene, their crystalline dominance casting a long shadow over the Gonds’ rebellion. Though physically absent, their influence is everywhere—Beta’s forbidden chemical experiments, Eelek’s urgency, and the Doctor’s capture all stem from the Krotons’ oppressive control. The organization’s teaching machines and Dynatrope act as the silent puppeteers, manipulating the Gonds into this internal conflict by limiting their knowledge and draining their intelligence. The Krotons’ threat is the catalyst for the rebellion, but also the reason for its fractures: Eelek’s impatience and Beta’s caution are both responses to the same oppressor.
Through the implied presence of their teaching machines (which captured the Doctor and Zoe) and the Dynatrope (which drains Gond intelligence). The Krotons are represented by the consequences of their actions—the Doctor’s fate, Vana’s weakness, and Abu-Gond’s death—all of which loom over the confrontation in Beta’s home.
Dominant and manipulative; the Krotons exert control over the Gonds through fear, knowledge suppression, and physical domination (e.g., the Dynatrope). Their power is absolute, yet fragile—Beta’s chemical experiments and Eelek’s rebellion are attempts to exploit that fragility.
The Krotons’ influence is the ultimate reason for the rebellion’s existence, but also the source of its internal divisions. Their oppression forces the Gonds to choose between Eelek’s violent resistance and Beta’s cautious science, with no guarantee of success either way. The Krotons’ power is such that even the rebellion’s strategies are shaped by their presence.
United in their oppression of the Gonds, but vulnerable to exploitation. The Krotons’ internal workings are unknown, but their reliance on the Dynatrope and teaching machines suggests potential weaknesses—weaknesses that Beta’s science and Eelek’s militancy are both attempting to exploit, albeit in different ways.
The Krotons, as a collective, dominate this event through their hierarchical efficiency and cold utilitarianism. The Commander’s decision to prioritize capturing the Doctor and Zoe over destroying the TARDIS exemplifies their strategic focus on mental energy extraction. Kroton 2’s retrieval and deployment of a canister to the wasteland demonstrate the collective’s ability to act swiftly and decisively, while the abrupt dismissal of Jamie underscores their hierarchical efficiency. The Krotons’ organizational structure ensures that every action serves the Dynatrope machine’s operation, with no room for sentiment or deviation from the collective’s goals.
Through the Kroton Commander’s directives and Kroton 2’s execution of orders, the collective’s will is manifested in the control room and extended into the wasteland.
Exercising absolute authority over the Dynatrope, the Gonds, and the captured fugitives. The Krotons’ power is centralized in the control room, where decisions are made and assets are deployed to suppress threats.
The Krotons’ actions in this event reinforce their institutional power, as they demonstrate their ability to adapt to threats and prioritize their long-term goals over short-term destruction. Their focus on intelligence extraction underscores their dependence on the Dynatrope machine, which is the cornerstone of their dominance.
The event highlights the Krotons’ hierarchical efficiency, with the Commander making strategic decisions and subordinates like Kroton 2 executing them without hesitation. There is no internal debate or tension; the collective operates as a unified, machine-like entity.
The Krotons, as a collective, are represented in this event by a commander and Kroton 2, who operate with cold efficiency to interrogate Jamie and escalate their oppressive measures. The organization's hierarchical structure is evident in the commander's authority over Kroton 2, as well as in their dismissive treatment of Jamie. The Krotons' focus on capturing the Doctor and Zoe underscores their strategic prioritization of high-intelligence targets, while the activation of 'vision control' signals their willingness to escalate their domination of the Gonds. The Krotons' reliance on technology, such as the Dynatrope and canisters, highlights their systematic approach to maintaining control and eliminating threats.
Through formal hierarchical command (the Kroton commander) and subordinate execution (Kroton 2).
Exercising absolute authority over organic lifeforms, with a clear chain of command and no tolerance for deviation from directives.
The Krotons' actions in this event reinforce their institutional power and their reliance on technology to maintain control. Their escalation of oppressive measures signals a darkening of the conflict, as they tighten their grip on the Gonds and prioritize the capture of high-intelligence targets like the Doctor and Zoe.
The event highlights the Krotons' hierarchical structure, with the commander issuing orders and Kroton 2 executing them without question. There is no indication of internal dissent or disagreement, underscoring the collective's unity and efficiency.
The Krotons, as a collective crystalline organization, manifest their dominance in this event through the Kroton Commander’s cold efficiency and Kroton 2’s obedient execution of orders. Their hierarchical structure is on full display as they prioritize 'vision control' over extracting information from Jamie, revealing their escalating paranoia and institutional logic. The Krotons' focus on suppressing the Gonds' perception underscores their belief that mental control is the key to maintaining their rule, even as external threats like the Doctor and Zoe force them to adapt their tactics.
Through the Kroton Commander’s directives and Kroton 2’s obedient actions, embodying the collective’s utilitarian logic and hierarchical efficiency.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds and their captives, while being challenged by external forces like the Doctor and Zoe, whose high intelligence poses a direct threat to their operations.
The Krotons' escalation of suppression tactics reflects their growing awareness of external threats and their willingness to tighten control over the Gonds, even at the cost of individual lives. This event highlights their institutional resilience but also their vulnerability to strategic disruptions, such as those the Doctor and Zoe may orchestrate.
Hierarchical and procedural, with the Commander issuing directives and subordinates like Kroton 2 executing them without question. The collective’s cold logic prioritizes institutional goals over individual concerns, though the mention of 'vision control' suggests internal debates or adaptations in response to external pressures.
The Krotons are the dominant force in this event, even in their absence. Their will is invoked by Selris as the reason the Doctor and Zoe entered the Dynatrope, and their oppressive control is the catalyst for Thara’s rebellion. The Krotons’ influence is felt through the Gonds’ fear, Vana’s weakened state, and the Doctor’s strategic compliance. Their power dynamics are absolute, as they dictate the actions of even the most defiant Gonds, including the Doctor.
Through the fear and compliance they inspire in the Gonds, as well as the indirect mention of their demands (e.g., ‘the will of the Krotons’).
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, with no visible resistance capable of challenging their dominance.
The Krotons’ presence is the driving force behind the Gonds’ fractured resistance, as their oppression forces figures like Thara and Eelek to challenge Selris’ leadership.
None (as crystalline beings, the Krotons operate as a unified, hierarchical collective with no internal conflict).
The Krotons are the unseen but all-powerful antagonists in this event, their influence felt through Selris’ deferential tone and Thara’s frustration. The revelation that the Doctor and Zoe entered the Dynatrope machine voluntarily is framed as a response to Kroton demands, exposing the Gonds’ powerlessness. The Krotons’ authority is absolute: Selris justifies inaction as inevitable (‘It is the will of the Krotons’), while Thara’s outrage highlights their perceived benevolence as a lie. Their oppressive regime is the catalyst for Thara’s rebellion, as she rejects her father’s fatalism and aligns with Eelek’s militant stance.
Through Selris’ deferential language (‘the will of the Krotons’) and the implied threat of the Dynatrope machine, as well as Thara’s critique of their perceived benevolence.
Dominant and unchallenged. The Krotons exert control through fear, institutional compliance (Selris’ council), and technological superiority (the Dynatrope). Their power is absolute, but Thara’s defiance signals the first cracks in Gond submission.
The Krotons’ influence is the driving force behind the Gond society’s paralysis, but Thara’s rebellion in this scene marks the beginning of their challenge. The organization’s ability to maintain control depends on suppressing Gond dissent, which is now embodied in Thara and Eelek’s faction.
Hierarchical and coldly utilitarian. The Krotons operate as a collective, with subordinates (e.g., Kroton 2) enforcing their will. Their internal cohesion contrasts with the fracturing Gond society, which they exploit for their own survival.
The Krotons, as an organization, are represented here through the interrogating Kroton, who enforces their collective policies with bureaucratic precision. The exchange with Jamie illustrates their systemic dehumanization of organics, where life is valued only for its utility to the Dynatrope machine. The Kroton’s decision to 'disperse' Jamie reflects the organization’s zero-tolerance approach to perceived threats, reinforcing their hierarchical dominance over the Gonds and other species.
Via institutional protocol being followed (interrogation, assessment, and disposal of non-essential organics).
Exercising absolute authority over Jamie, treating him as a disposable resource. The Krotons’ power is unchallenged in this moment, with Jamie’s fate sealed by bureaucratic logic.
The Krotons’ actions here reinforce their role as an oppressive, dehumanizing force, where organic life is either a resource or an obstacle. This moment foreshadows the Doctor’s later revelation about the Krotons’ tellurium-based physiology, hinting at their vulnerability despite their apparent invincibility.
The Krotons operate as a unified, hierarchical collective with no internal dissent. The interrogating Kroton acts as an extension of the broader organization, with no need for debate or justification—only adherence to protocol.
The Krotons are represented through the actions of the individual Kroton interrogating Jamie, as well as the broader procedural logic of the Dynatrope. Their collective will is embodied in the machine’s operation, the dismissal of Gond lives, and the pursuit of 'high brains' to power their solidification. The Krotons’ involvement in this event underscores their predatory nature, their utter disregard for organic life, and the urgency of the Gonds’ rebellion to stop their domination.
Through institutional procedure and technological dominance, as embodied by the interrogating Kroton and the Dynatrope’s operation.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds and Jamie, with the Dynatrope as their ultimate tool of control and oppression.
The Krotons’ actions reinforce their role as an inescapable force of oppression, driving the Gonds’ desperation and the urgency of their rebellion. Their reliance on 'high brains' exposes a critical vulnerability that the Doctor and Zoe may exploit.
The Krotons operate as a unified, hierarchical collective with no internal dissent or emotional conflict. Their actions are driven solely by procedural logic and the need to power the Dynatrope.
The Krotons are represented through their cold, procedural logic in the Dynatrope control room, where Jamie's interrogation exposes their predatory nature. Their collective manifests as a hierarchical unit, with subordinates like Kroton 2 executing orders to drain 'high brains' for the Dynatrope. The organization's power dynamics are oppressive, treating the Gonds as expendable while targeting the Doctor and Zoe for their intelligence. Their influence mechanisms include technological dominance, surveillance, and psychological control.
Via institutional protocol (procedural logic, surveillance, and interrogation)
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds; treating them as expendable while targeting high-intelligence beings like the Doctor and Zoe
The Krotons' predatory logic fractures Gond unity, driving some to reckless rebellion (Eelek) while others (Selris) seek stealthier resistance. Their existence as an existential threat elevates the stakes of the rebellion beyond liberation to survival.
Hierarchical and coldly efficient, with subordinates executing orders without question
The Krotons are the looming, unseen antagonist in this event, their presence felt through Beta’s warnings and the invocation of the wasteland’s devastation. Though not physically present in the Council Chamber, their dominance over the Gonds is the driving force behind the council’s fracturing and the urgency of the debate. The Krotons’ advanced technology and ruthless suppression of Gond resistance serve as a constant threat, shaping the Gonds’ strategies and the council’s power dynamics. Their influence is exerted indirectly, through the fear they inspire and the historical evidence of their destructive capabilities.
Through the memory of their past actions (the wasteland’s devastation) and the implied threat of their technology (the Dynatrope, firepower), the Krotons are a spectral but ever-present force in the council’s deliberations.
The Krotons exert absolute authority over the Gonds, with their technological superiority and brutal suppression tactics leaving the Gonds in a position of desperation. The council’s internal struggle is a direct response to this oppression, as the Gonds grapple with how to resist an seemingly invincible foe.
The Krotons’ influence is the catalyst for the council’s fracturing, as the Gonds’ desperation leads to internal power struggles and conflicting strategies. Their unseen presence looms over every decision, shaping the Gonds’ fear and driving the urgency of their debate.
The Krotons’ internal dynamics are not directly visible, but their organizational goals are clear: to maintain control and suppress resistance at all costs. Their influence is exerted through fear, historical trauma, and the Gonds’ own divisions, ensuring that any rebellion is doomed from the start.
The Krotons are represented in this event through the interrogating Kroton and its subordinate (Kroton 2), whose actions reflect the collective’s hierarchical, utilitarian logic. The Kroton’s procedural directives (e.g., attending to the TARDIS, dispersing 'waste matter') embody the organization’s cold efficiency, while its obliviousness to Jamie’s theft highlights a critical flaw: overconfidence in their dominance. The event underscores the Krotons’ institutional power but also foreshadows their vulnerability to organic defiance.
Via institutional protocol (procedural directives, surveillance, interrogation) and collective action (deployment of subordinates like Kroton 2).
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds and captives, but unknowingly challenged by Jamie’s theft—a microcosm of the rebellion to come.
The Krotons’ institutional power is momentarily subverted by Jamie’s theft, revealing a crack in their otherwise impenetrable control. This event foreshadows the Gonds’ potential rebellion and the Krotons’ eventual downfall.
Hierarchical chain of command (e.g., Kroton directing Kroton 2) and collective indifference to individual Kroton failures (e.g., the theft goes unnoticed).
The Krotons are represented in this event through their implied surveillance of the Doctor and Zoe from the cliff top. Their presence is felt through Zoe's unease and the Doctor's dismissal of her concerns, creating a dynamic where the companions' actions are potentially being monitored in real-time. The Krotons' institutional control over Dulkis is reinforced by their ability to observe and react to threats, even when not physically present. Their cold, utilitarian logic is reflected in the Doctor's deduction of their tellurium-based life system, which he intends to exploit with hydrogen telluride. The Krotons' role as antagonists is underscored by their surveillance, which introduces a layer of danger and urgency to the companions' plan.
Via institutional surveillance and implied threat. The Krotons' presence is felt through Zoe's paranoia and the Doctor's indirect acknowledgment of their monitoring capabilities.
Exercising authority over the companions through surveillance and intimidation. The Krotons' elevated position (both physically and metaphorically) allows them to observe and potentially intervene in the companions' actions, creating a power imbalance that the Doctor seeks to disrupt with his scientific counterattack.
The Krotons' surveillance in this moment reinforces their institutional control over Dulkis, creating a sense of omnipresent threat that shapes the companions' actions. Their ability to monitor and react to threats ensures that any rebellion or counterattack must account for their watchful presence, adding a layer of complexity to the Doctor's plan.
The Krotons operate as a unified, hierarchical collective with a single-minded focus on maintaining their life system and dominance. There is no evidence of internal dissent or debate in this event, as their actions are driven by cold, procedural logic.
The Krotons are represented in this event through their latent surveillance of the Doctor and Zoe outside the TARDIS. Their influence is felt through the implied presence of a Kroton on the cliff, observing the team's activities and potentially gathering intelligence for a counterattack. The Krotons' cold, procedural logic is evident in their focus on monitoring and controlling the situation, prioritizing the function of their Dynatrope machine and the suppression of threats over individual lives. Their involvement in this event underscores the team's vulnerability and the high stakes of their mission, as the Krotons' surveillance could lead to direct intervention or retaliation.
Via latent surveillance and implied observation from the cliff top overlook. Their presence is felt through the Doctor's context and Zoe's growing paranoia, even though they are not physically present in the scene.
Exercising authority over the environment and the team's activities, with the potential to intervene or retaliate based on their observations. The Krotons' power is rooted in their advanced technology, surveillance capabilities, and oppressive control over Dulkis.
The Krotons' surveillance in this event reinforces their institutional power and control over Dulkis, while also highlighting the team's precarious position. Their ability to observe and manipulate the team undetected underscores the broader oppressive dynamics at play on the planet, where the Gonds and other organics are treated as expendable.
The Krotons operate with a cold, hierarchical logic, prioritizing the function of their Dynatrope machine and the suppression of threats. Their internal dynamics are characterized by procedural efficiency and a dismissive attitude toward individual lives, as evidenced by their treatment of the Gonds and their focus on monitoring the Doctor and Zoe as potential threats.
The Krotons, as an organization, manifest through the Kroton in the control room, whose actions reflect their collective’s relentless pursuit of high-intelligence targets. The surveillance of Zoe and Jamie’s captivity illustrate the Krotons’ systematic oppression, where individuals are reduced to resources for the Dynatrope. Their power dynamics are absolute, with no room for negotiation or mercy.
Through a Kroton operative executing surveillance protocols in the control room.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds and captives; their technology and hierarchy leave no room for resistance.
Reinforces the Krotons’ role as an unstoppable, oppressive force, where individual lives are expendable to their machine.
Hierarchical and procedural—subordinates like the Kroton in the control room follow orders without question, reflecting the collective’s unified, emotionless logic.
The Krotons are represented through Kroton 2’s off-screen command, enforcing their authority and surveillance over the Doctor and Zoe. Their influence is felt through the abrupt interruption of the Doctor’s scientific inquiry, demonstrating their control and the constant threat they pose. The Krotons’ presence is omnipresent, and their commands are absolute, leaving no room for negotiation or resistance. This event highlights their power dynamics as the dominant force on the planet, with the Doctor and Zoe as vulnerable targets.
Through Kroton 2’s off-screen command, enforcing institutional protocol and surveillance.
Exercising absolute authority over the Doctor and Zoe, with no room for negotiation or resistance. The Krotons’ control is pervasive, and their commands are enforced without question.
Reinforces the Krotons’ institutional power and the oppressive control they exert over the planet and its inhabitants. The event underscores their ability to disrupt even the most subtle acts of resistance, such as the Doctor’s scientific gathering.
The Krotons operate as a unified, hierarchical collective with no internal dissent or debate. Their commands are issued without hesitation, reflecting a cold, utilitarian logic that prioritizes the survival and dominance of their species.
The Krotons, as an organization, manifest their collective will through the primary Kroton commander's decisive action to destroy the TARDIS. This moment exemplifies their zero-tolerance policy toward threats, where surveillance failures are met with immediate and ruthless responses. The organization's power dynamics are on full display, with the commander's authority unchallenged and subordinates like Kroton 2 executing orders without hesitation. The Krotons' institutional logic treats the TARDIS not as a curiosity but as a liability to be erased.
Through the primary Kroton commander's authoritative directives and Kroton 2's compliant execution of orders. The organization's hierarchical structure is evident, with decisions flowing from the top and being carried out with mechanical precision.
Exercising absolute authority over subordinates and external threats. The Krotons operate under a strict chain of command, where the commander's word is law, and dissent or hesitation is nonexistent. Their power is further demonstrated by their ability to shift from surveillance to destruction in an instant, with no regard for the moral implications.
This moment underscores the Krotons' fragile confidence in their dominance. Their immediate escalation to destruction reveals their paranoia and the fragility of their control, particularly in the face of unknown variables like the TARDIS. The organization's response also highlights their dismissive attitude toward organics, treating them as disposable assets or threats to be neutralized.
The event reinforces the Krotons' hierarchical structure, with no internal debate or dissent over the destruction order. The primary Kroton commander's authority is absolute, and subordinates like Kroton 2 operate purely on directives, with no room for independent thought or moral consideration.
The Krotons’ involvement in this event is a masterclass in institutional efficiency, their collective will manifested through a single Kroton unit and the Dynatrope’s scanners. The organization’s power is on full display as they systematically eliminate the TARDIS, demonstrating their ability to project force across the planet with minimal direct engagement. The Krotons’ actions here are not impulsive but calculated, a reminder that their dominance is built on technology, surveillance, and ruthless pragmatism. The destruction of the TARDIS is not just an isolated act of violence; it is a statement of the Krotons’ intent to crush any resistance, no matter how advanced or seemingly untouchable. Their involvement in this event underscores their role as an unstoppable force, one that the Doctor and Zoe must outthink rather than outfight.
Through a single Kroton unit acting as an extension of the Dynatrope’s will. The Kroton’s movements and actions are guided by the collective’s intelligence, with the Dynatrope’s scanners serving as its eyes and targeting systems.
Exercising overwhelming authority over the Doctor’s team and the Gonds. The Krotons’ ability to destroy the TARDIS with ease establishes their technological and strategic superiority, forcing the Doctor into a reactive, desperate position. Their power is not just physical but systemic, rooted in their control over the Dynatrope and their network of scanners and canisters.
Reinforces the Krotons’ reputation as an indomitable force, making it clear that their rule over the Gonds is absolute and their expansion unchecked. The destruction of the TARDIS sends a message to any potential rebels: the Krotons will not tolerate interference, and their reach is limitless.
The event highlights the Krotons’ hierarchical structure, where individual units act as interchangeable extensions of the collective. There is no debate or dissent—only the execution of a directive. The Kroton’s success in this event may embolden the collective, but it also exposes a potential weakness: their reliance on technology that can be hacked or disrupted.
The Krotons, as an organization, are embodied in this event through the Kroton Commander and Kroton 2, who represent their hierarchical structure and cold utilitarianism. Their dialogue and actions reflect the organization’s desperate need to restore the Dynatrope’s function, revealing their vulnerability and the stakes of their domination. The Krotons’ arrogance in treating Jamie as a non-threat underscores their institutional disregard for organic life, while their focus on operational efficiency highlights their single-minded pursuit of power. This moment is a microcosm of the Krotons’ broader strategy: subjugate, exploit, and eliminate any threat to their survival.
Through the Kroton Commander and Kroton 2, who act as spokesmen for the organization’s goals and hierarchy. Their dialogue and actions reflect institutional protocols and the Krotons’ collective will.
Exercising absolute authority over the control room and its occupants. The Krotons’ power is unchallenged in this moment, but their desperation to restore the Dynatrope reveals a underlying fragility in their dominance.
This event underscores the Krotons’ reliance on the Dynatrope as the cornerstone of their power. Their desperation to restore its function highlights the fragility of their dominance, while their institutional disregard for organic life sets the stage for their eventual downfall at the hands of the Gonds and the Doctor’s companions.
The brief moment of disorientation in Kroton 2’s dialogue hints at internal tensions within the Krotons’ collective, likely due to their crystalline exhaustion. The Commander’s authoritative demeanor, however, suppresses any dissent, maintaining the illusion of unity and control.
The Krotons' influence is felt indirectly in this event through their attack, which triggers the TARDIS's HADS system. Their absence from the scene is a tactical retreat, but their presence looms as the primary antagonistic force driving the companions' actions. The Doctor's reference to the Krotons as the reason for the 'stupid' landing spot highlights their procedural, almost bureaucratic approach to domination—one that the companions are beginning to outmaneuver through adaptability and cleverness. The Krotons' power dynamics here are one of unchecked authority, but their reliance on technology (e.g., the Dynatrope) exposes their vulnerability to organic ingenuity.
Via their aggressive action (attack on the TARDIS) and implied surveillance.
Exercising authority through technological dominance, but facing challenges from the companions' adaptability.
Their actions reinforce the companions' determination to resist and free the Gonds, accelerating the rebellion's momentum.
Hierarchical and procedural, with subordinates executing commands from higher-ranking Krotons (e.g., Kroton 2).
The Krotons, though not physically present in this event, cast a long shadow over the Doctor and Zoe's actions. Their hostile attack on the TARDIS triggers the Hostile Action Displacement System (HADS), forcing the TARDIS to dematerialize and rematerialize on the cliffside. The Krotons' oppressive dominance and threat to the Gonds are underscored by the Doctor's urgency to return and reassure the Gonds, as well as address Jamie's potential worry. Their influence looms as a constant, unseen force driving the narrative tension and shaping the Doctor's strategic decisions.
Via the immediate threat of their attack, which triggers the TARDIS's defensive protocols, and through the looming presence of the Dynatrope machine in the distance.
Exercising authority over the Gonds and their planet through technological and psychological oppression. The Doctor and his companions are positioned as external threats to their dominance, requiring swift elimination.
The Krotons' actions reinforce their role as the primary antagonists, driving the Doctor and his companions to incite a rebellion among the Gonds. Their oppressive control creates a sense of urgency and high stakes, motivating the Doctor's strategic decisions.
The Krotons operate as a hierarchical collective, with commanders directing subordinates like Kroton 2. Their cold, utilitarian logic prioritizes the function of the Dynatrope machine and the elimination of threats, with little regard for individual Gonds or external moral considerations.
The Krotons are the unseen but ever-present antagonists in this event, their oppressive rule driving the Gonds’ desperation and the council’s fracturing. Eelek’s reckless plan to assault the Krotons is a direct response to their dominance, while Selris’s strategic alternative aims to undermine their machine. The Krotons’ influence is felt through the Gonds’ divided loyalties and the urgency of their debate, as the council grapples with how to break free from their control. Their power looms over the chamber, shaping the Gonds’ choices and the rebellion’s future.
Through the Gonds’ fear, desperation, and the need to act against their oppressors.
Exercising authority over the Gonds through fear and oppression, driving their internal divisions and urgency to act.
The Krotons’ oppressive rule is the catalyst for the Gonds’ internal conflict, as their desperation to act drives Eelek’s reckless plan and Selris’s strategic alternative. Their influence is felt in every decision made in the Council Chamber, shaping the rebellion’s path and the Gonds’ unity.
The Krotons’ influence permeates this event as the unseen antagonist, their Dynatrope machine the silent driver of Gond desperation. Their power dynamics are absolute: the Gonds’ debate is a reaction to Kroton oppression, with Eelek’s assault and Selris’s sabotage both responses to the Krotons’ unassailable control. The organization’s active representation here is through the Gonds’ fear and the structural vulnerability of their machine (the pillars), while their institutional impact is the looming threat of mental energy extraction and retribution. The Krotons’ goals—maintaining dominance through the Dynatrope—are implicitly challenged by Selris’s plan, making this event a turning point in the rebellion’s strategy.
Through the Gonds’ collective fear of Kroton retribution and the structural weaknesses of their machine (the pillars), which Selris exploits as a counter-strategy.
Exercising near-total control over the Gonds, with the council’s infighting a symptom of their oppression. The Krotons’ power is so absolute that even rebellion is framed as a response to their dominance.
The Krotons’ unchallenged authority forces the Gonds into a corner, where their only options are Eelek’s doomed assault or Selris’s high-risk sabotage. Their institutional impact is the catalyst for the council’s fracture and the rebellion’s desperate pivot.
The Krotons, as an organization, are embodied in this scene through Kroton and Kroton 2, their rigid hierarchy and procedural logic on full display. Their focus on the Dynatrope’s exhaustion reveals their single-minded devotion to the machine’s survival, even as it threatens their own existence. The organization’s power dynamics are stark: the Krotons exercise absolute authority over the Gonds and their captives, yet their detachment makes them vulnerable to exploitation, as Jamie’s escape demonstrates. Their influence mechanisms—technological dominance, surveillance, and psychological control—are all on display, but the ticking clock of the Dynatrope’s failure introduces a crack in their armor.
Through Kroton and Kroton 2, who embody the organization’s hierarchical structure, procedural logic, and cold utilitarianism. Their dialogue and actions reflect institutional priorities: machine stability and captive recapture.
Exercising absolute authority over the Dynatrope, the Gonds, and their captives, but their single-minded focus creates blind spots that organic life (like Jamie) can exploit. The organization’s power is both its strength and its weakness—rigid control leaves no room for adaptability.
The Krotons’ institutional impact is twofold: their rigid control is crumbling under the weight of the Dynatrope’s failure, while their detachment from organic life creates opportunities for rebellion. The scene underscores their vulnerability to organic cunning and the desperation of their situation.
The exchange between Kroton and Kroton 2 reveals a hierarchical but seamless operational dynamic, with no internal tension or debate. The organization’s internal processes are purely procedural, with no room for dissent or adaptability—until the Dynatrope’s failure forces a reckoning.
The Krotons are the unseen but dominant force driving the event. Their presence is felt through the Gonds’ desperation to sabotage the Dynatrope and the Doctor’s alarm at the potential retaliation. The Krotons’ cold, utilitarian logic is implied in the Gonds’ fear—they are framed as an unstoppable, ruthless collective that views the Gonds as expendable. The Doctor’s reaction to the sabotage plan highlights the Krotons’ capacity for devastating counterattacks, positioning them as an existential threat that demands strategic, not brute-force, resistance.
Through the implied threat of retaliation and the Gonds’ fear-driven actions.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds, with the Doctor and his companions as the only external challenge to their dominance.
The Krotons’ influence is felt in the Gonds’ willingness to risk everything, including their lives, to break free. Their oppression has pushed the Gonds to the brink, making the Doctor’s arrival a potential turning point—or a new target for their wrath.
The Krotons operate as a unified, hierarchical collective with no internal dissent. Their actions are coldly logical, driven by the need to solidify their forms and expand their power.
The Krotons are the dominant antagonistic force in this event, driving the Gonds' desperate plan to sabotage the Dynatrope. Their influence is felt through the Gonds' fear and the Doctor's urgency to pivot to a more strategic approach. The Krotons' cold, calculating nature is reflected in the Gonds' belief that any rebellion will trigger devastating retaliation. The Doctor's alarm at the Gonds' plan underscores the Krotons' capacity for ruthless oppression and their willingness to crush any resistance.
Through the Gonds' fear and the Doctor's recognition of their capacity for retaliation. The Krotons are not physically present but are the driving force behind the Gonds' actions and the Doctor's strategic pivot.
Exercising overwhelming authority over the Gonds, who are desperate to break free from their control. The Krotons' power is reflected in the Gonds' fear of retaliation and the Doctor's urgency to implement a more strategic counterattack.
The Krotons' influence is felt in the Gonds' desperation to rebel and the Doctor's recognition that their plan is flawed. Their power dynamics shape the entire conflict, driving the Gonds to take reckless actions and the Doctor to seek a more strategic solution.
The Krotons operate as a unified, hierarchical collective with no internal dissent. Their cold, procedural logic ensures that they will respond to any rebellion with overwhelming force, making them a nearly invincible adversary.
The Krotons, though physically absent from the under-hall, loom large over this event as the unseen antagonists whose infrastructure is being sabotaged. Their presence is felt in the looming Dynatrope, the machine that has drained the Gonds' intelligence for generations. The Krotons' role in this event is passive but critical—they are the target of the Gonds' rebellion, their technological dominance the very thing that the sabotage seeks to undermine. Their absence from the scene underscores the Gonds' strategic advantage: they are striking at the heart of Kroton control without direct confrontation, forcing their oppressors into a reactive position. The Krotons' influence is also felt in the Gonds' disciplined execution of the sabotage, a reflection of the fear and respect they inspire.
Via the Dynatrope machine, the physical manifestation of Kroton control and oppression. The machine's presence in the under-hall serves as a constant reminder of the Krotons' dominance, even as the Gonds work to dismantle it.
The Krotons are the dominant force in this event, their technological infrastructure the target of the Gonds' rebellion. However, the Gonds' calculated sabotage represents a challenge to that dominance, a shift in the power dynamic that could force the Krotons into a reactive position.
The sabotage of the Dynatrope represents a direct challenge to the Krotons' institutional power. If successful, it could force the Krotons to abandon their dominance over the Gonds, at least temporarily, and seek alternative means of control.
The Krotons' internal dynamics are not directly visible in this event, but their reliance on the Dynatrope suggests a potential vulnerability. If the machine is destabilized, the Krotons may be forced to adapt their strategies or even retreat, revealing internal tensions or debates over how to respond to the Gonds' rebellion.
The Krotons’ influence looms over the scene like a silent specter, their prohibitions on chemistry and their oppressive rule shaping every action and dialogue. Though physically absent, their presence is felt in Beta’s hesitation, Thara’s defiance, and the Doctor’s calculated maneuvering. The Krotons’ ban on chemistry is the primary obstacle the Doctor seeks to overcome, and their broader system of control—manifested through teaching machines, surveillance, and the Dynatrope—is the target of the rebellion. The organization’s power dynamics are clear: they exercise authority over the Gonds through fear and manipulation, but their control is being challenged by the Doctor’s interference and the Gonds’ growing defiance.
Via institutional prohibitions (the ban on chemistry) and the looming threat of retribution, which shapes the actions and dialogue of the Gonds and the Doctor.
Exercising authority over the Gonds through fear, manipulation, and institutional control, but facing growing challenges from the Doctor’s strategic interference and the Gonds’ escalating rebellion.
The Krotons’ influence is being directly challenged in this scene. The Doctor’s manipulation of Beta into synthesizing sulphur is an act of defiance against their prohibitions, and the Gonds’ refusal to flee (Thara and Vana) signals their growing resistance. The scene marks a turning point where the Krotons’ control begins to unravel, setting the stage for open rebellion.
The Krotons operate as a hierarchical, utilitarian collective with little internal dissent. Their unity and cold logic make them a formidable opponent, but their reliance on the Dynatrope and their underestimation of the Gonds’ potential for defiance create vulnerabilities that the Doctor exploits.
The Krotons are the unseen but omnipresent antagonists in this scene, their authority enforced through Beta’s evacuation orders and the prohibition on chemistry. Their influence is felt in Beta’s conflicted loyalty, Thara’s defiance, and Vana’s strategic resistance. The Krotons’ power dynamics are characterized by cold utilitarian logic, dismissing Gond lives as expendable. Their institutional impact is to suppress Gond intelligence and rebellion, but this event marks the beginning of their challenge by the Doctor and the Gonds.
Through institutional protocol (evacuation orders) and implied surveillance (Beta’s reluctance to defy).
Exercising authority over the Gonds through fear and prohibition, but facing growing resistance from Thara, Vana, and the Doctor.
The Krotons’ grip on the Gonds is beginning to weaken as their rules are openly defied, foreshadowing the rebellion’s escalation.
Hierarchical and procedural, with subordinates like Kroton 2 enforcing commands without question.
The Krotons, as an organization, are exposed in this moment as vulnerable and reactive. Their cold utilitarianism gives way to desperation as the Dynatrope's failure threatens their entire operation. Kroton, the commander, takes charge, but the crisis reveals the Krotons' reliance on quick fixes and their neglect of long-term maintenance. The organization's power dynamics are tested as Kroton 2 defers to its superior, and the collective's authority is momentarily shaken by the machine's instability. This event underscores the Krotons' blind spots—their assumption of invincibility and their dismissal of the Gonds' growing resistance—as their technology betrays them.
Through Kroton (Commander) and Kroton 2, who embody the organization's hierarchical structure and reactive decision-making.
Exercising authority over their subordinates (Kroton 2) and their technology (the Dynatrope), but facing an existential threat to their control.
The crisis highlights the Krotons' institutional fragility—their reliance on a single, unstable machine for their survival and dominance. It foreshadows their eventual downfall as the Gonds' rebellion gains momentum, and their technology, once a tool of oppression, becomes their undoing.
The chain of command is tested as Kroton 2's panic briefly disrupts the usual efficiency of the Krotons' operations. There is an unspoken tension between the need for immediate action and the risk of long-term consequences, but the organization suppresses debate in favor of compliance.
The Krotons, as a collective crystalline organization, dominate this event through their hierarchical command structure. Led by the Kroton, they prioritize stabilizing the Dynatrope before pivoting to acquire the Doctor and Zoe as 'high brains.' Their actions—cutting auxiliaries, rerouting power, and issuing capture orders—reflect a ruthless, protocol-driven logic where individual lives are expendable. The organization’s desperation is palpable, as their survival hinges on both technical fixes and predatory acquisition, revealing their vulnerability beneath the mechanical facade.
Through the Kroton’s direct commands and Kroton 2’s execution of technical tasks, embodying the collective’s voice and will.
Exercising authority over the Dynatrope and its surroundings, but operating under constraint due to dwindling power reserves. Their power is both absolute (over subordinates and the Gonds) and fragile (dependent on external intellects).
The Krotons’ actions here underscore their declining control, as their focus shifts from stabilization to predation—a sign of their desperation and the Doctor’s growing threat to their survival.
Hierarchical and protocol-bound, with the Kroton as the decisive leader and Kroton 2 as the obedient executor. No internal conflict is evident, but their desperation creates a sense of urgency that could fracture their unity if prolonged.
The Krotons are an ever-present, looming force, their machine’s unharmed state and impending freedom driving the crew’s desperation. Though not physically visible, their influence is felt through the leaking sphere (a sign of vulnerability) and the revelation that Jamie is trapped inside their stronghold. The organization’s cold, crystalline logic contrasts with the Gonds’ improvisational defiance, their overconfidence in their technology creating the opportunity for exploitation. The Krotons’ power dynamics are one of dominance, but the Doctor’s discovery of the sphere introduces a crack in their invulnerability.
Through the Dynatrope’s unharmed state and the leaking power sphere, which symbolizes their technological superiority—and its hidden flaw.
Exercising authority over the Gonds and TARDIS crew, but facing an unexpected challenge from the crew’s scientific exploitation of the sphere’s leak. Their power is absolute until the moment it isn’t.
The Krotons’ institutional impact is one of oppression, but the crew’s discovery of the leaking sphere introduces a narrative tension: their rigid logic may be their undoing. The organization’s confidence in their technology blinds them to the Gonds’ resourcefulness.
The Krotons operate as a hive mind, with no internal dissent or hierarchy—until the moment the Dynatrope’s flaw is exploited. Their internal dynamics are purely functional, with no room for adaptability or improvisation.
The Krotons are the antagonistic force driving the event, even though they are not physically present in the Under Hall. Their influence is felt through the leaking power sphere, the failed sabotage attempt, and the group’s frantic discussions about Jamie’s potential absorption. The Krotons’ machine serves as a looming threat, its mechanical logic and ruthless efficiency implied in the stakes of the scene. The organization’s goal—to escape the planet and stabilize their power source—is in direct conflict with the Gonds’ and the Doctor’s crew’s objectives. Their power dynamics are one of dominance and inevitability, but the leaking sphere suggests a momentary vulnerability that the group must exploit.
Through the implications of their actions: the leaking power sphere, the failed sabotage, and the urgency of Jamie’s potential absorption. Their presence is felt in the group’s dialogue and the atmospheric tension of the Under Hall.
Exercising authority over the Gonds and the TARDIS crew through fear and technological superiority. The Krotons’ machine is a symbol of their control, and their ability to absorb high-brain organics (like Jamie) reinforces their dominance. However, their vulnerability (the leaking sphere) creates a temporary shift in power dynamics, giving the group a chance to fight back.
The Krotons’ actions have far-reaching consequences for the Gonds and the TARDIS crew. Their machine is a symbol of oppression, and their escape would mean the devastation of the planet. The leaking sphere, however, offers a glimmer of hope that their power can be challenged and overturned.
The Krotons operate as a collective with a single, unyielding purpose: survival and escape. There is no internal conflict or debate—only a mechanical, protocol-driven response to threats. Their internal dynamics are those of a hive mind, where individuality is subsumed by the greater goal.
The Krotons are represented by Kroton 2, who emerges from the Dynatrope to demand the Doctor and Zoe as 'high brains' to activate their escape mechanism. The organization exerts its power through threats, lethal demonstrations, and negotiation, forcing the Gonds to comply with their demands. The Krotons’ desperation to escape the planet drives their ruthless actions, and their collective survival depends on securing the Doctor and Zoe.
Through Kroton 2’s direct negotiation and demonstration of lethal force; the organization’s power is embodied in its technology and willingness to kill.
The Krotons hold absolute power over the Gonds, using threats and violence to enforce their demands. Eelek’s compliance underscores their dominance, while Jamie’s escape hints at a potential countermeasure.
The Krotons’ actions reflect their desperation and ruthlessness, reinforcing their role as an existential threat to the Gonds and the Doctor’s companions.
The Krotons operate as a collective, with Kroton 2 acting as a subordinate unit to the lead Kroton. Their internal cohesion is absolute, driven by the need to survive.
The Krotons are the primary antagonists in this event, demanding the surrender of the Doctor and Zoe to activate the Dynatrope’s drive mechanism. Their ultimatum is enforced through Kroton 2’s lethal gas canister, which kills a Gond as a demonstration of their power. The Krotons’ collective will is represented by Kroton 2, who acts as their spokesperson and enforcer. Their involvement underscores their dominance over the Gonds and their willingness to use violence to achieve their goals. The Krotons’ power dynamic is one of absolute control, leaving the Gonds with no choice but to comply.
Through Kroton 2, who speaks and acts on behalf of the collective, and through the Dynatrope, which looms as a symbol of their technological and intellectual superiority.
Absolute and unchallenged. The Krotons hold the power of life and death over the Gonds, using fear and violence to enforce their demands.
The Krotons’ actions reinforce their role as oppressors and exploiters, deepening the Gonds’ sense of helplessness and desperation. Their ultimatum sets the stage for the Doctor and Zoe’s capture and the Gonds’ internal division.
The Krotons operate as a unified, hierarchical collective, with Kroton 2 acting as the enforcer of their will. There is no internal dissent or conflict—only ruthless efficiency in achieving their goals.
The Krotons are the antagonistic force driving the tension in this event, though they are not physically present. Their influence is felt through the Dynatrope’s lethal defenses, including the sacrificial door and poison gas jets, which activate as Jamie is freed. The Krotons’ oppressive control is embodied in the machine’s design, which prioritizes the capture and drainage of mental energy from high-brain individuals like the Doctor and Zoe. Their threat looms over the scene, as the Doctor’s urgency to deploy Jamie to retrieve sulphuric acid is directly tied to the need to sabotage their power source before they can escape and devastate the planet.
Via the Dynatrope’s automated defenses and the implied threat of Kroton retaliation if the crew fails.
Exercising absolute authority over the Gonds and the TARDIS crew, with their crystalline technology and lethal gas serving as tools of control and punishment.
The Krotons’ control is absolute, with their technology enforcing a regime of fear and subjugation. Their influence is felt in every aspect of Gond society, from the Learning Hall’s collapsed ruins to the scattered breastplates of failed Gonds.
None directly observable in this event, but their collective will is unified in the pursuit of escape and domination.
The Krotons, though not physically present in this scene, cast a looming shadow over Beta and Jamie’s efforts. Their prohibition of sulphuric acid production drives the desperation and recklessness of Beta’s actions, as he knows the consequences of failure. The Krotons’ oppressive rule is the ultimate pressure point, forcing the Gonds and the TARDIS crew into a dangerous alliance. Their influence is felt in the unstable chemical reactions and the high stakes of the mission, where even a small misstep could trigger planetary devastation.
Through the prohibition of sulphuric acid production and the looming threat of Kroton retaliation.
Exercising authority over the Gonds through fear and oppression, while the TARDIS crew and Gonds resist through desperate, improvised actions.
The Krotons’ oppression fuels the Gonds’ resistance, pushing them to take dangerous risks in their quest for freedom.
The Krotons loom as an ever-present, oppressive force in this event, even though they are not physically present in the Learning Hall. Their threat is felt through the Gonds’ desperate actions—Vana’s attempt to warn the Doctor, Selris’s warnings to Axus, and the militant faction’s willingness to surrender the Doctor and Zoe to avoid Kroton retaliation. The Krotons’ influence is exerted indirectly, through the Gonds’ fear and the internal power struggles their domination has sparked. The sulphuric acid, intended as a weapon against the Krotons, becomes a symbol of the Gonds’ resistance, but also of their desperation in the face of an overwhelming enemy.
Through the Gonds’ dialogue and actions, which are all shaped by the Krotons’ looming threat and the need to sabotage their power source.
Dominant and oppressive, with the Krotons holding the Gonds in a state of fear and division. Their power is exerted through the threat of annihilation, forcing the Gonds to turn on each other.
The Krotons’ influence is the catalyst for the Gonds’ internal strife, as their fear of annihilation drives some to pragmatism (Eelek/Axus) and others to defiance (Selris/Vana). The event underscores how external oppression can fracture a society from within.
None (as an external force), but their presence is felt through the Gonds’ reactions and the high stakes of their struggle.
The Krotons are an ever-present and looming threat in this event, driving the urgency and tension of the Gonds’ actions. Although not physically present, their influence is felt through the debate between Selris and Axus, as well as the Gonds’ desperate attempts to secure the sulphuric acid vial. The Krotons’ potential betrayal and the Gonds’ fear of their retaliation shape the entire scene, underscoring the high stakes of their rebellion and the need for unity and strategic thinking.
Through the debate between Selris and Axus about trusting the Krotons, as well as the Gonds’ actions to secure the sulphuric acid vial as a means of sabotaging their power source.
Dominant and oppressive, with the Gonds struggling to resist their control. The Krotons’ looming threat drives the urgency of the Gonds’ actions, but their internal divisions risk undermining their ability to mount an effective rebellion.
The Krotons’ influence is felt throughout the scene, as the Gonds’ actions are driven by their fear of retaliation and their desire to secure freedom. The event underscores the high stakes of the rebellion and the need for unity and strategic thinking in the face of the Krotons’ threat.
United in their ruthless pursuit of power and control, with no internal divisions or debates. Their cold, calculating approach contrasts sharply with the Gonds’ fractured and desperate struggle.
The Krotons, as a collective, are the driving force behind this exchange, their organizational identity on full display. The dialogue between Kroton and Kroton 2 is not just a technical report but a manifestation of the collective’s mechanical logic and detachment. Their admission of the Dynatrope’s impending exhaustion is framed as an operational failure rather than a personal crisis, reinforcing the organization’s priority on function over individual survival. This moment underscores the Krotons’ ruthless efficiency and their willingness to accept annihilation as a natural consequence of failure.
Through the dialogue and actions of Kroton and Kroton 2, who embody the collective’s voice and priorities. Their exchange is a direct manifestation of the Krotons’ institutional protocol and collective mindset.
Exercising absolute authority over their own fate, treating the impending exhaustion as an inevitable and acceptable outcome. The Krotons’ power lies in their unyielding adherence to logic and protocol, even in the face of annihilation.
This exchange solidifies the Krotons’ institutional identity as a force driven by logic and function, unaffected by the emotional stakes of their impending annihilation. It highlights their willingness to accept failure as a natural consequence, reinforcing their role as antagonists who prioritize collective survival over individual or moral considerations.
The exchange between Kroton and Kroton 2 reflects the Krotons’ hierarchical structure, where subordinates like Kroton 2 report critical data to superiors like Kroton. There is no internal debate or tension—only compliance with protocol and acceptance of the collective’s fate.
The Krotons, as a collective, are the driving force behind this event, their hierarchical structure and mechanical logic dictating every action. Their urgency to secure the Doctor and Zoe as 'high brains' reveals their desperation to escape the planet before the Dynatrope's power fails. The organization's survival hinges on this moment: their ability to enforce protocol and isolate the most intellectually capable captives. The exchange between Kroton and Kroton 2 underscores their rigid chain of command, where deviation is not an option. Their collective voice is cold, efficient, and unyielding, reflecting their crystalline nature and their absolute priority: escape at any cost.
Through Kroton (the lead operative) and Kroton 2 (his subordinate), who enforce protocol and confirm the 'high brains'' capture. Their dialogue and actions embody the collective's priorities and constraints.
Exercising absolute authority over the Dynatrope and its operations, but operating under the constraint of dwindling time and resources. Their power is centralized and hierarchical, with Kroton at the apex, but their desperation creates a vulnerability: their reliance on the Doctor and Zoe as irreplaceable assets.
The Krotons' actions here reinforce their role as oppressors, but their desperation also exposes their fragility. Their reliance on external 'high brains' to power their escape highlights their inability to adapt or innovate, setting the stage for their downfall at the hands of the very individuals they seek to exploit.
The exchange between Kroton and Kroton 2 reveals a seamless but rigid hierarchy, where initiative is suppressed in favor of protocol. There is no room for debate or improvisation—every action is dictated by the collective's survival instincts.
The Krotons’ influence is felt indirectly but powerfully in this scene, as their demand for the Doctor and Zoe’s immediate immersion in the Dynatrope drives Eelek’s betrayal. Though not physically present, their authority is absolute, shaping the actions of the Gonds and dictating the outcome of the event. The Krotons’ mechanical logic and ruthless efficiency are reflected in Eelek’s cold orders and the guards’ unquestioning enforcement, creating a chain of command that ensures the Doctor and Zoe’s submission. The Doctor’s desperate signal to Vana is a direct response to this looming threat, representing the last vestige of resistance.
Through Eelek’s enforcement of their demands and the Kroton’s off-screen voice, which asserts their control over the situation. Their presence is felt through the fear and urgency it inspires in the Doctor, Zoe, and Vana.
Absolute and unchallenged. The Krotons hold the power of life and death over the Gonds, using their advanced technology and threat of violence to enforce compliance. Eelek’s faction acts as their proxy, ensuring the Gonds’ submission while the Krotons focus on their escape. The Doctor’s resistance is futile in the face of this power, making his signal to Vana a desperate gamble.
The Krotons’ influence solidifies their dominance over the Gonds, while also highlighting the fragility of their control. The Doctor’s signal to Vana introduces a wildcard—the possibility of sabotage—that could disrupt their escape plan. This event underscores the Krotons’ reliance on external proxies (like Eelek) and their vulnerability to internal resistance, even as their power appears absolute.
The Krotons operate as a unified, hierarchical collective with no internal dissent. Their internal dynamics are purely functional, focused on the efficient execution of their escape plan. However, their dependence on the Gonds (and Eelek’s faction) introduces a potential weakness, as the Gonds’ loyalty is not absolute and can be exploited by the Doctor’s resistance.
The Krotons are the unseen but ever-present antagonists in this event, their dominance looming over the Gonds’ actions. The Dynatrope’s closing doorway and the hum of its machinery serve as reminders of their control, while Selris’s dive into their stronghold underscores the high stakes of defying them. The Krotons’ power is both a physical and psychological barrier, forcing the Gonds to make desperate choices—like Selris’s sacrifice—to break free. Their influence is felt in the urgency of Vana’s warnings and the finality of Selris’s decision.
Through the institutional power of the Dynatrope and the Kroton machinery, which dictates the terms of the Gonds’ rebellion.
Exercising near-total authority over the Gonds, but their control is being challenged by acts of defiance like Selris’s. The Krotons’ power is absolute within the Dynatrope, making Selris’s entry a direct confrontation with their dominance.
The Krotons’ influence is a constant pressure on the Gonds, driving them to extreme measures like Selris’s sacrifice. Their power is both a catalyst for rebellion and a reminder of the cost of defiance.
The Krotons operate with ruthless efficiency, but their reliance on the Dynatrope’s power source makes them vulnerable to sabotage—a weakness the Gonds exploit through acts like Selris’s.
The Krotons are the dominant force in the Dynatrope Control Room, their collective will manifested through the lead Kroton and Kroton 2. They exert absolute control, vaporizing Selris without hesitation and demanding the Doctor and Zoe’s compliance. Their actions are driven by a desperate need to escape the planet before the Dynatrope collapses, and they use their technological superiority and ruthless efficiency to coerce the Doctor into assisting them. The organization’s presence is felt in every command, every threat, and every mechanical movement of the Krotons, reinforcing their authority and the stakes of the situation.
Through the lead Kroton and Kroton 2, who issue commands and enforce the Krotons’ will with cold precision.
Exercising absolute authority over the Doctor, Zoe, and the Gonds; their power is unchallenged in the Control Room, and their threats are backed by lethal force.
The Krotons’ actions reflect their institutional dependence on the Dynatrope and their willingness to sacrifice individuals to achieve their collective survival.
The Krotons operate as a unified, emotionless collective, with no internal dissent or hierarchy beyond the lead Kroton’s authority. Their actions are synchronized and driven by protocol.
The Krotons are represented through Eelek’s justification of his betrayal, as well as the looming threat of their Dynatrope’s activation. The organization’s mechanical logic and ruthlessness are implied through their demand for high-brain organics and their indifference to the Gonds’ lives. Their presence drives the urgency and stakes of the scene, as the ticking clock of the Dynatrope’s activation looms over the characters’ decisions. The Krotons’ power dynamics are characterized by their dominance and control over the Gonds, as well as their willingness to eliminate any threats to their escape.
Through Eelek’s justification of his betrayal and the implied threat of the Dynatrope’s activation. The Krotons are also represented by their mechanical logic and ruthlessness, which drive the urgency and stakes of the scene.
The Krotons exercise authority over the Gonds, treating them as expendable tools for their survival. Their dominance is reflected in Eelek’s betrayal of the Doctor and Zoe, as well as the looming threat of the Dynatrope’s collapse. The organization’s power is absolute, and their influence is exerted through fear and control.
The Krotons’ influence is felt through the moral and physical stakes of the rebellion, as well as the urgency of the characters’ decisions. Their presence underscores the cost of betrayal and the strength of loyalty, while the ticking clock of the Dynatrope’s activation looms over the scene. The organization’s institutional impact is characterized by its dominance and control, as well as its indifference to the lives of the Gonds.
The Krotons operate as a hierarchical and mechanical collective, with no internal divisions or tensions. Their internal dynamics are characterized by absolute loyalty to their organizational goals and a willingness to eliminate any threats to their survival. The event highlights their ruthlessness and indifference to the lives of the Gonds, as well as the moral and ideological stakes of the rebellion.
The Krotons are the antagonistic force in this event, their collective represented by the lead Kroton and Kroton 2 as they attempt to force the Doctor and Zoe into assisting with the Dynatrope transfer. Their power dynamics are rooted in control and domination, but their paranoia about contamination and rigid protocols make them vulnerable to sabotage. The Krotons' dissolution under the effects of the sulphuric acid marks the collapse of their collective, shifting the balance of power in favor of the Gonds and ensuring the companions' escape.
Through direct action and enforcement, with the lead Kroton and Kroton 2 commanding the Doctor and Zoe and operating the Dynatrope. Their collective is represented by their crystalline forms, their burbling commands, and their desperate attempts to maintain control.
Exercising authority over the Doctor and Zoe, but operating under the constraint of their dwindling power reserves and vulnerability to contamination. The Krotons' power is challenged by the companions' sabotage, leading to their collapse and the restoration of balance.
The Krotons' collapse under the sabotage marks the end of their dominance over the Gonds and the restoration of balance to the planet. Their failure ensures the companions' escape and shifts the narrative focus to the Gonds' liberation.
The Krotons' internal dynamics are rooted in their collective logic and hierarchical structure, with the lead Kroton and Kroton 2 operating as extensions of a single, unified will. Their paranoia about contamination and rigid protocols create internal tensions, making them vulnerable to the Doctor and Zoe's deception.
The Krotons, as a collective, are represented by Kroton and Kroton 2, who enforce their demands on the Doctor and Zoe. Their authority crumbles as Zoe pours the sulphuric acid into the power tank, triggering a chemical reaction that dissolves their crystalline forms. The Krotons' gas weapons discharge chaotically, filling the chamber with toxic fumes and marking their defeat. This moment exposes their vulnerability to human ingenuity and shifts the balance of power in favor of the Gonds.
Through Kroton and Kroton 2, who enforce the Krotons' demands and collapse as the sabotage takes effect.
Exercising authority over the Doctor and Zoe initially, but losing control as the sabotage destabilizes their power source and dissolves their forms.
The Krotons' collapse marks the end of their dominance over the Gonds, enabling the Gonds' survival and shifting the power dynamics on the planet.
Hierarchical and collective, with Kroton as the lead and Kroton 2 as a subordinate enforcer. Their internal cohesion is shattered by the sabotage.
The Krotons, as a collective crystalline organization, are represented through their leaders Kroton and Kroton 2, who oversee the Dynatrope's transfer process. Their authority crumbles as Zoe's sabotage triggers the dissolution of their forms and the machine's collapse. The organization's power dynamics shift from control to desperation as the companions' defiance turns the tide. The Krotons' influence mechanisms—ruthless enforcement of protocols and lethal gas weapons—are rendered ineffective by the sulphuric acid, symbolizing their downfall and the Gonds' liberation.
Through Kroton and Kroton 2, who oversee the Dynatrope's transfer and enforce demands on the Doctor and Zoe.
Exercising authority over the Doctor and Zoe initially, but challenged and ultimately dismantled by their sabotage.
The Krotons' collapse in this event marks the end of their dominance over the Gonds and the planet, paving the way for the Gonds' liberation and the companions' escape. Their downfall reflects the fragility of oppressive systems when faced with defiance and resourcefulness.
Hierarchical and protocol-bound, with Kroton as the primary leader and Kroton 2 as his subordinate. The organization's internal cohesion is tested as the sabotage unfolds, leading to panic and dissolution.
The Krotons, as an organization, are no longer physically present in this event, but their defeat is the central focus. Their crystalline power source is dissolved by the sulphuric acid, leading to their final collapse. The Krotons' absence is palpable, their once-dominant presence reduced to the smoldering ruins of their machine. Their influence over the Gonds is now gone, leaving a power vacuum that the Gonds must navigate. The organization's involvement is symbolic, representing the end of their rule and the Gonds' liberation.
Through their absence and the ruins of their machine, the Krotons are represented as a defeated and irrelevant force. Their influence is no longer a factor in the Gonds' future, though their legacy of oppression lingers in the challenges the Gonds face.
None (the Krotons are defeated and no longer exert any power over the Gonds or the narrative). Their power dynamics are irrelevant in this event, as their rule has been brought to an end.
The Krotons' defeat marks the end of their institutional power and the beginning of the Gonds' independence. Their collapse is a symbolic and practical victory for the Gonds, freeing them from oppression and allowing them to chart their own course. However, the challenges of self-governance and internal unity remain, as the Krotons' legacy of division lingers.
The Krotons, though defeated and dissolved, cast a long shadow over this event. Their absence is a void, a reminder of the tyranny that once ruled the Gonds and the structure (however oppressive) that defined their society. The organization’s defeat marks the end of an era, but it also leaves the Gonds without the external force that once dictated their actions. This absence forces the Gonds to confront their own capabilities and limitations, as they grapple with the challenges of leadership, unity, and self-sufficiency. The Krotons’ influence lingers in the form of the threats they left behind, such as Eelek’s faction, which could unravel the Gonds’ fragile victory.
Through their implied absence and the void they leave behind, as well as the lingering threats they enabled (e.g., Eelek’s faction).
None (defeated and dissolved). Their power is entirely in the past, but their legacy continues to shape the Gonds’ future through the challenges they face.
The Krotons’ defeat has freed the Gonds from tyranny but also left them without the structure (or oppression) that once defined their society. Their ability to govern themselves and build a self-sufficient future will determine whether they can escape the cycle of oppression and achieve lasting freedom.
None (defeated and dissolved). Their internal dynamics are irrelevant, but their legacy continues to shape the Gonds’ challenges.
The Krotons, though defeated, cast a long shadow over this event. Their absence is a constant reminder of the Gonds’ victory, but also of the challenges they face in building a future without the threat of external domination. The organization’s influence is felt through the legacy of their oppression and the void left by their destruction. The Krotons’ power dynamic is one of irrelevance in the present moment, but their historical impact continues to shape the Gonds’ aspirations and fears.
Through the absence of their physical presence and the symbolic weight of their defeat. The Krotons are represented in the Gonds’ collective memory and the challenges they now face in forging their own path.
The Krotons’ power is entirely neutralized, but their legacy looms large as the Gonds grapple with the implications of their victory. The organization’s influence is now purely historical, but it serves as a cautionary tale and a source of motivation for the Gonds.
The Krotons’ defeat has freed the Gonds from immediate threat, but their legacy will continue to influence the Gonds’ political and scientific development. The organization’s impact is now indirect, serving as a backdrop for the Gonds’ struggle to define their own identity.
None, as the Krotons are no longer an active organization. Their internal dynamics are irrelevant in the present context.
Related Events
Events mentioning this organization
In the Learning Hall, Selris publicly announces Abu and Vana as the Krotons’ chosen ‘companions,’ sealing their fate under Gond law. The ritual unfolds with …
In the Learning Hall, Selris announces the names of the two selected Gond students—Abu and Vana—who will become 'companions' to the Krotons. The ritual unfolds …
The TARDIS materializes on a desolate, sulfur-scented planet under twin suns. Jamie and Zoe immediately react with visceral discomfort—Jamie calls it 'bad eggs,' Zoe identifies …
The TARDIS crew ascends a treacherous cliff path, where the Doctor’s scientific curiosity is immediately piqued by the geological formations. He examines a flat rock, …
The TARDIS crew ascends a steep cliff path, with the Doctor analyzing geological samples—a flat rock containing magnesium silicate (mica)—while Jamie and Zoe exchange quick, …
The TARDIS crew stumbles upon the Dynatrope Machine—a colossal hexagonal metal structure embedded in a cliff face—after Jamie’s reckless exploration. The Doctor immediately recognizes its …
The Doctor, Jamie, and Zoe stumble upon the Dynatrope—a colossal hexagonal machine embedded in a cliff face—while investigating the Krotons’ domain. The Doctor immediately recognizes …
The Learning Hall erupts into chaos as Thara defies the Krotons’ selection of Vana, drawing a weapon to block her from entering the Dynatrope. The …
The Doctor and companions arrive in the Learning Hall during a Kroton companion selection ceremony, where Vana is being forced into the Dynatrope against Thara's …
The Doctor, Jamie, Zoe, and Thara arrive outside the Dynatrope—a Kroton booby trap designed to eliminate intruders—where Vana has been sent as a sacrificial companion. …
After the Doctor thwarts the Dynatrope’s deadly gas trap to rescue Vana, she stumbles out in a dazed, unresponsive state—unable to recognize Thara or speak. …
In Selris' modest home, the Doctor hypnotizes Vana to uncover the truth about the Krotons' influence, while Selris clings to his faith in their benevolence. …
In Selris’ modest home, the Doctor and his companions press Selris to explain the Krotons’ history after witnessing Vana’s catatonic state and Abu’s dissolution. Selris, …
In the Learning Hall, Thara and a group of Gond students ambush the Custodian—a balding, torch-bearing figure responsible for maintaining the Kroton teaching machines. The …
In Selris’ home, the Doctor and his companions force Selris to confront the brutal truth about the Krotons’ system of control. Jamie’s blunt question about …
The Doctor deliberately manipulates a Kroton probe by obscuring his face, forcing it to attack an innocent Gond student instead of him. This calculated experiment …
The Doctor deliberately manipulates a Kroton probe to attack an innocent Gond student instead of himself, exposing the Krotons' targeted surveillance and lethal intent. The …
The Doctor examines Vana’s catatonic state, using a borrowed solar-powered light to assess her condition while questioning the Gonds’ knowledge gaps—revealing the Krotons’ deliberate suppression …
As the Doctor prepares to leave Selris' house to investigate the Learning Hall, Jamie's unease about the Doctor's erratic behavior surfaces. The Doctor, distracted and …
The Doctor and Selris descend into the under-hall beneath the Learning Hall, where the Doctor discovers the machine’s hidden foundations—a clue to the Krotons’ control …
Vana awakens in a state of extreme psychological distress, her mind fractured by lingering visions of the Kroton mind-altering process. She describes a 'burning ball' …
Vana awakens in a state of extreme distress, her mind fractured by lingering visions of the Kroton mind-altering process—a 'burning ball' and disorienting flashes. Jamie …
The Doctor and Zoe examine the crystalline door in the Learning Hall, discovering its organic structure—revealing the Krotons’ machine is a living entity. Selris retrieves …
The Doctor, alarmed by Zoe’s selection as a Kroton ‘companion,’ refuses to let her face the mind-altering test alone. Overriding the machine’s parameters with deliberate …
The Doctor and Zoe, now marked as unwilling test subjects by the Krotons, stand before the crystalline doorway leading to the Dynatrope. Their arrival is …
The Doctor and Zoe enter the Dynatrope’s control room, a seemingly abandoned spaceship, only to discover it is a Kroton-controlled vessel. The Doctor’s immediate suspicion …
The Doctor and Zoe enter the Dynatrope’s control room, immediately noting its eerie emptiness and the presence of two seats—an obvious invitation. The Doctor, sensing …
In the Learning Hall, Jamie confronts Selris about the Gonds' passive acceptance of the Krotons' authority, his frustration boiling over after the Doctor and Zoe …
The Doctor and Zoe regain consciousness after enduring a brutal mental energy transfer in the Dynatrope, their bodies visibly strained from the process. The Doctor …
After enduring a brutal mental energy transfer in the Dynatrope, the Doctor and Zoe witness the Krotons' accelerated solidification process in the bubbling vats—a clear …