It certainly reads like some sort of overwrought and ultimately hollow season finale “event.” The rather bare bones plot sees the TARDIS make an emergency landing on Earth due to a “time storm” and from then on it’s basically every over-the-top all-star fan fiction as Cybermen, Daleks, Silent and more show up for various reasons, necessitating a visit to the Eternity Clock, some sort of giant depository of all time and events that probably contradicts a million Doctor Who stories and audio books. The Eternity Clock is a 2D platformer on a 3D plane with some for-the-most-part uninspiring puzzles to break up the monotony somewhat. If that makes it worth twenty of your preferred currency unit then so be it, you won’t really need a review to tell you what to do. Second, it is the best Doctor Who game ever. Two things need to be said about Doctor Who: The Eternity Clock. Still, that’s OK, the TARDIS often misses its target dates by much larger margins. Doctor Who: The Eternity Clock finally arrives on the PlayStation Network, with later releases planned for the Vita and the PC, after missing its original release date by about a month.
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