Well sort of. Everything dies in the end, even Time Lords. [ said in a 'duh' tone. Just...ignore the fact that earlier he said he doesn't die. ] I'll die then regenerate and when I run out of regenerations, I'll die die.
[ which will probably never happen because Doctor Who makes the BBC money and this Doctor doesn't even know how many regenerations he has left BUT HEY, LET'S DODGE THAT QUESTION. As for the other question, the Doctor shrugs before continuing. ]
One, there is no old body. This Doctor, me right here, I'm the same man who grew up looking at Gallifrey's orange sky and who's shown up here as an Edwardian gentlemen with a penchant for amnesia, I've just got a different face and personality. Same phone, different case. And nah, the time from all angles is a different weird Time Lord thing—a weird thing that some humans can do, if they grew up near a rift or are particularly temporally sensitive or got brought back to life by an eternal entity.
video; private
[ which will probably never happen because Doctor Who makes the BBC money and this Doctor doesn't even know how many regenerations he has left BUT HEY, LET'S DODGE THAT QUESTION. As for the other question, the Doctor shrugs before continuing. ]
One, there is no old body. This Doctor, me right here, I'm the same man who grew up looking at Gallifrey's orange sky and who's shown up here as an Edwardian gentlemen with a penchant for amnesia, I've just got a different face and personality. Same phone, different case. And nah, the time from all angles is a different weird Time Lord thing—a weird thing that some humans can do, if they grew up near a rift or are particularly temporally sensitive or got brought back to life by an eternal entity.