TheRebelcloakMan
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Joined 11-20-14, id: 6294552, Profile Updated: 11-25-14

Gender: Male
Age: 17
Writing Preferences: Doctor Who, Superwholock, my own material, Sci-Fi
Future Plans: World Domination, obviously... With writing. After three years of Maths in University. Yeah.

A Bit About Me
My name's Deio, I'm a Welsh teenager from Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwyllllantysyliogogogoch (yeah, that place), currently living with my parents, with an older brother in Durham University. I've had a passion for writing from my early years, when I started writing songs about sleeping and being squashed in the local garage and pineapples... Probably. I've been watching Doctor Who since I was 8 years old, when Christopher Eccleston brought the show back alongside Billie Piper and Russell T Davies, and I fell in love with the show instantly. I started to realise how much I enjoyed the show during 2009, when I definitely noticed the massive gaping hole I had in my life of a distinct lack of Doctor Who. Then I really started to fall for the show when Matt Smith and Steven Moffat came along, my favourite incarnation of our favourite Time Lord and my favourite writer. 2010's opener, The Eleventh Hour, is still one of my favourite episodes to date, and the writing of that episode actually made me realise I wanted to become a writer. I'd always been good at writing - English or Welsh essays, projects, letters - I just had a way with writing. But the Moff's excellent script for Smith's first episode as the Doctor was just so superb, I couldn't help but be inspired.
Then, on September 1st 2012, Asylum Of The Daleks aired. Up to this point, all I'd written since my fantastical revelation was a lousy attempt of a Zombie book I hadn't even got quarter of the way through, and some pieces of English fiction for school. But when this episode hit the screens, I turned the television off at the end and said, screw it, this is happening. I started to come up with ideas for my own Doctor Who episodes, my own monsters, my own story arks. By the end of the year, I had made my very own series. When I say series, I mean 13 episode descriptions, titles and descriptions of each episode's villains or monsters. Ranging from Daleks to the Makaya (the first monster I ever made, a mighty, cyborgian race I still hold very dearly), this series was one of the things I felt most proud of. The series was great. But I decided it wasn't enough.
I modified that series a little, and decided to use my own Doctor instead of Smith's, to see where it would go. I made another series, then another, then another. The same way as before, still. My friends loved my ideas, but they weren't into it like I was. They weren't Whovians. When I got to my sixth series, I was getting a little tired of the image of the Doctor I had in my head. So, I made series 6 his last series, and the Twelfth (I should point out, each episode was post-The Angels Take Manhattan. Therefore there was no Hurt Doctor, and Capaldi's incarnation never existed. Although, a few later incarnations were quite similar) Doctor regenerated at the end, in what I must admit to be a rather disappointing finale with the Master and biologically manipulated Dinosaurs.
I then moved on the Thirteenth Doctor, the first of his new regeneration cycle. Made another five series, regenerated. Fourteenth Doctor, another 5, regenerated. Fifteenth, another 3, regenerated. In total, the project I now recognise as Rough Who lasted 11 months, 100 series and an incredible 1330 episodes. For you fellow Mathematicians out there, that's thirteen episodes per series, with two exceptions. Series 40 lasted 32 episodes as it was set in Classic Style, and Series 93 lasted 22 episodes, as it was based on and developed from the Doctor Who Magazine Comic Strip 'The Chains Of Olympus'. There were also two single episodes - the 50th and 100th Anniversary specials. The series ended with the 35th Doctor. 35th! So many things happened - Gallifrey returned god knows how many times, the Doctor met the Valeyard and discovered his true origins, the real reason behind the Doctor leaving Gallifrey is revealed, the Doctor gains two new regeneration cycles, he becomes immortal at the end, he has a son, his son regenerates twelve times and then dies in the 50th anniversary special, the Master and the Rani return, the Doctor meets well over 300 new monsters and foes, and we go through a second Time War. But after 100 series, I couldn't carry on.
I then started coming up with ideas for the latest Doctors, from McGann to Smith. Those episodes ended up taking around 285 slots on my computer, bringing my total episode count up to over 1600. Those episodes were in more detail than the episodes I'd made before, but I couldn't get into them as much. So I took a short break, before embarking on a new challenge - script writing. Now, I'd turned one of the Rough Who episodes into a script once before, in the summer of 2013 (Series 7 Episode 3, The Rebirthing Of The Gelth, with the Thirteenth Doctor and Hannah), and that had turned out to be a hit! But this time, I knew how to format it right. I knew what I wanted to do, and I knew how to do it. So, I embarked on writing Doctor Who: Revelation. I am generally a very busy person, so I'm still taking my time in writing this, but I've completed the first three scripts. I made a new incarnation of the Doctor - the Thirteenth, following Capaldi after his regeneration caused by a brutal battle with the Ice Warriors. A middle-aged, blonde, alien, softer-than-Twelve but still no delight to be in the company of, this incarnation breaths new life into my Whoniverse. The companion, Jessica Edwards, is a Psychology graduate from London, jobless, and after three episodes, starting to doubt the man she's begun travelling with. Jasper Storm, another companion, will join in the next episode. A young man, a rogue hunter of demonic creatures, from the planet Esqualon Delta, the vortex-manipulating Jasper is based mostly on... well... me. But other than that, he's pretty badass. The series' story ark is an incredibly unique and exciting one, and the Doctor knows one thing by the beginning of the finale - secrets aren't kept forever...

I am also a very brief part of the 'Manhattan, She Wrote' fanfiction series, contributing to Jordan Isaac Smith's script, episode 9, by the name of 'A Multitude Of Drops'.