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£9.99

The Monoids appeared in the First Doctor story 'The Ark'. After their own planet was destroyed, they joined humans on the Ark that was fleeing Earth before the planet was consumed by the sun. The Monoids had a single eye and communicated with sign language. They acted as servants to the humans. The figurine is 10 cm tall.
£9.99

At the end of the Time War, the Master used a chameleon arch to turn himself into the human Professor Yana. He then hid himself as the end of the Time. Yana was a kind man who only realised his true identity when he met the Doctor. Once he regenerated, the Master was as murderous as ever. The figurine, which is one of Eaglemoss's very best, is 9.6 cm tall.

£9.99

Sharaz Jek is the villain in 'The Caves of Androzani', which is one of the most admired Doctor Who stories ever made. He was a specialist in androids, who he used to harvest toxic spectrox. He was horribly burned in an accident which led him to wear a distinctive black and white mask. He was eventually killed in a battle with his nemesis Morgus. The figurine is roughly 10 cm tall.

£9.99

The Cheetah People appeared in the Seventh Doctor story 'Survival' and were the last aliens to appear in the series classic run. They were originally humanoids who took on catlike characteristics including fur, fangs and claws, when they were exposed to a a virus that rewrote their DNA.

The figurine is 9 cm tall.

£9.99

The Cybermen were redesigned in the Tenth Doctor's first season. These Cybermen, who made their debut in the story 'Rise of the Cybermen', were from a parallel universe where Cybus Industries was the most powerful corporation on Earth. The design gave them hard outer bodies for the first time and became the most familiar version of the Cybermen for the next decade.

The figurine is 10.5 cm tall.

£9.99

The clockwork robots appeared in the Tenth Doctor story 'The Girl in the Fireplace'. They were from the 51st century but after a computer malfunction they became obsessed with Madame de Pompadour. They travelled through time to the 18th century, making various attempts to steal her brain. As part of their plan they dressed like members of the French court.

The figurine is 9.5 cm tall.

£9.99

The Ice Queen Iraxxa appeared in the Twelfth Doctor story 'Empress of Mars'. She had spent years in suspended animation but was revived in 1881, after humans who had been transported to Mars entered her tomb. The Doctor helped her to lead her people to a new home which began the Martian Golden Age.
£9.99

The Autons are a form of living plastic that is animated by the Nestene Consciousness. They made their debut in 'Spearhead from Space', the story that introduced the Third Doctor. As part of their plan, they created humanlike bodies that had guns concealed in their hands. This figurine shows an Auton worker, who were effectively warriors and only had crude features.

The figurine is 10 cm tall.

£9.99

These zombies appeared in the Twelfth Doctor story 'Oxygen'. The people inside the spacesuits were dead. The ir suits had actually turned on them and killed them  after they received order to eliminate their organic components. The figurine is 9.8 cm tall.

£9.99

The Winders were cyborg policemen on the Starship UK. Their heads which were human on one side, rotated rotated to reveal an horrific smiling face. The figurine is 10 cm tall.

£9.99

The Valeyard was a malevolent version of the Doctor who was pulled out of time. He claimed to be created from somewhere between the Doctor's Twelfth and Thirteenth regenerations. He led the prosecution of the Sixth Doctor in the Trial of a Time Lord, hoping to take the Doctor's remaining regenerations for himself. The figurine is 9.6 cm tall.

£12.99

The Cyber Warriors were an advanced form of Cyberman who appeared in 'Ascension of the Cybermen'. They were survivors of the last great Cyber War in the distant future. The Doctor and her companions encountered an entire ship full of them who led the invasion of Gallifrey.

The figurine is 10.4 cm tall.

£9.99

This figure depicts Cloister Wraith, the guardian of the Matrix of Gallifrey, as they appeared in the Twelfth Doctor episode, 'Hell Bent'.

The figurine is 10 cm tall.

£89.99

To celebrate the 25th anniversary of The Matrix, Master Replicas are releasing an incredibly detailed die-cast model of Morpheus's ship The Nebuchadnezzar.

When The Matrix was released in 1999, the Wachowskis changed cinema forever. Sci-fi had never been cooler. The original movie played with huge ideas as Morpheus and his allies freed Neo from his mundane reality and introduced him to the truth: a world where the machines have subjugated humanity.

The Nebuchadnezzar, which was designed by concept artist Tani Kunitake, was at the heart of the story. The Neb was a rusting hovercraft that used EM pulses to protect itself from the machines, as Morpheus and his crew managed to stay one step ahead of the robotic Sentinels.

This impressive die-cast model has been digitally sculpted before being cast in zinc alloy and ABS, and painted by hand. It has been officially licensed by Warner Bros. and is a true collectors item.

The ship measures 11.8 inches (30 cm) long.

There's nothing better to cuddle up to than this plush version of Star Trek: Lower Decks Badgey. Sure, he's a psychopath who wants to kill us all, but rendered in plush, he couldn't be cuter or cuddlier.

Badgey was originally a training hologram, who was created by Rutherford. Unfortunately, he was made using unstable AI and, after some holodeck malfunctions, he gained sentience and set out to kill his creator. Despite having his neck broken and his memory wiped, he kept coming back before eventually evolving into a digital god and heading off to create his own universe.

Badgey is the second in Master Replicas Lower Decks plush series and joins Moopsy, which is back in stock after a sell-out first run.

Order now to get the first edition, which comes with a limited-edition Badgey card.

Size: 10 inches x 5.5 inches (25 cm x 14 cm).

£49.99

This is Master Replicas first ever Doctor Who ship: the Dalek saucer from 2005's 'The Parting of the Ways'. This impressive polyresin model is 21 cm across and was sculpted by Dalek expert Gavin Rymill. The Daleks used saucers with a similar design in the TV Century 21 Dalek comic strip, but in the 1960s TV budgets didn't stretch to expensive spaceship models. The classic Dalek ship only made its debut in 2005 when a massive fleet of Dalek ships prepared to invade Earth. The ship was made as a 3D CG model by the Mill. Master Replicas recruited Dalek expert Gavin Rymill to recreate the ships using renders made at the time and careful study of the episodes. 

The Union Fighter PT-197, better known as the Pterodon, is a super-sleek one-man fighter, which made its debut at the beginning of the third season of The Orville. It was part of a new fleet of fighters that was introduced in the aftermath of the Kaylon War. It is incredibly maneuverable and, as Gordon will tell you, a hell of a lot of fun to fly.

The model, which measures just under 9 inches (22 cm)nose to tail, is made of die-cast and is based on the original CG model that was created for the show. It has never been available before.

Shipping From December 2024

This final set from the Time Lords Victorious series features the Tenth Doctor in full Time Lord regalia and Brian the Ood. These figurines were only produced as part of this set and were not available separately. They each stand between 9 and 10 cm tall.

£44.99

This is a replica of the Pegasus gate from Stargate Atlantis. It was discovered in the city of Atlantis after Daniel Jackson realised that, if they had enough power, the stargates could be used to travel between galaxies.

The Atlantis Gate was an upgrade on the SG-1 version. On the show its glyphs appeared digitally, as the crew dialed into a new location. The gate had been left unused for thousands of years after the Ancients fled to the Milky Way after losing their battle with the Wraith, but was revived by the Pegasus team.

The replica gate is made of polystone and comes with a separate display base that carries the Stargate Atlantis logo. Master Replicas has carefully reproduced every glyph on the gate, which was based on a digital model that was supplied by MGM.

The model measures 9.25 inches (23.5 cm) across.

Shipping From: January 2025

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