Jake Arnott – of The Long Firm and He Kills Coppers fame – brings together the Sixth Doctor, Peri, and John Dee in the most fun adventure the Time Trips range has seen. As is traditional, the Master’s plan could’ve worked perfectly if he hadn’t got the Doctor involved. He could’ve just helped himself to the necessary equipment and sodded off without attracting any attention. Unusually, he hasn’t bothered with an elaborate disguise, and his insane plan involves a massive overhaul of the established timeline. Instead, he just seems to be having a good time being gleefully sadistic. If this was a new villain, it’d be underwhelming; as it’s a well-realised Ainley Master (complete with Temporal Schism reference), it feels quite fitting. While he’s hoist by his own petard (he really needs to get a new one) he does have a deliciously malicious time here, inflicting cruelty both physical and psychological. The only grumble – and it is very much a pedantic fan grumble – is that he keeps calling Peri ‘Peri’, rather than ‘Miss Brown’. The Doctor, meanwhile, has John Dee for a companion during much of the story. It’s similar to his relationship with Herbert in Timelash, but on a much more even footing. Dee is very good at asking annoying questions, and while the Doctor’s dialogue is perhaps a bit more Third than Sixth, their repartee is entertaining and goes off on enjoyable tangents. Apart from Sixie’s description of his Fifth incarnation as ‘tediously sure of myself’, which you have to interprate as a total lack of self-awareness for it to work, the brash, verbose and overconfident nature of the Sixth Doctor is captured very well by Arnott, as are his moments of quiet reflection. All in all, it’s a confident, fun and knowing story with depth, and is by far the most successful of the range thus far. Follow our Twitter feed for faster news and bad jokes right here. And be our Facebook chum here.