While in transport, Rose was able to relate what she knew about the darkness, and the disappearing universes. After they arrived on the Dalek Crucible, the TARDIS was apparently destroyed with Donna on it, and Jack was apparently killed. Rose and the Doctor were taken prisoner and shown down to Davros.
Davros and the Daleks' ultimate plan was a weapon, unifying the power of 27 planets to create an explosion strong enough to destroy every universe. The Darkness Rose had been working to warn the Doctor of was the work of the Daleks themselves. Martha, Sarah Jane, Jack, Mickey, and even her mother attempted to stop the reality bomb, but in the end all of them, including Rose and the Doctor, were powerless to stop Davros and the Daleks from using the Reality Bomb after all.
Seconds before the end of the universe, the TARDIS reappeared with Donna and somehow the Doctor. Another one of him. With the second Doctor as a distraction, Donna was able to stop the Reality Bomb and disable the Daleks, turning the tide. With the two Doctors' help, she also sent all the planets back to their proper places, except for Earth.
After a hurried reunion with Sarah Jane, Rose was ushered back into the TARDIS, as the second Doctor set the Dalek fleet to explode, and with the Doctor's instruction, Torchwood's help, and K-9's calculations, Rose helped pilot the TARDIS in dragging the Earth back to its proper place.
The celebration and joy of saving the world was not to last. After only a short trip to drop people off, Rose found herself back on Bad Wolf Bay, in the wrong universe, reliving the worst day of her life all over again. The day ended differently than the last. The second Doctor shared all of the Doctor's memories and feelings, but half of Donna's human DNA, giving him one heart, and one human lifespan. He finished the sentence he hadn't before, and even though one of the Doctors vanished just like before, the second Doctor remained, and they were given a chance at the forever she'd hoped to have.
Personality: The first thing one would likely notice about Rose is her genuine kindness and her compassion for all things, whether or not others would consider them worthy of compassion. When she first met a Dalek--who was thought to be the last of the killing machines who ravaged the universe--she felt sympathy for its plight, and even after witnessing it kill several people, she still appealed to its reason to stop the killing. Because of her compassion, the Dalek actually absorbed some of her DNA, and became capable of reason and mercy itself. In the same way, her belief in the Doctor's better side, even when he tried to kill the repentant Dalek, dragged him out of his dark depression and made him a better person, and the sort of hero she saw in him.
Rose has a strong moral center, and an equally strong will. She will not deviate from what she believes is right even if the culture and morality of the times around her are different. She will fight with anyone, even the Doctor, to maintain that. When the Doctor wanted to give up Cardiff's corpses for the Gelth's use, she challenged him and refused to give way even when he insisted her morality was inferior. Likewise, she refused to accept that the Ood of the Sanctuary Base could want to be slaves, despite the base residents', the Doctor's, and even the Ood themselves' insistence that they really did live to serve. Similarly, when the Doctor appeared indifferent about Mickey's possible death, or the danger her mother was in by the Slitheen, she was quick to remind him that the two were important to her as much as they weren't to him.
Rose Tyler | Doctor Who | 9/...13
Davros and the Daleks' ultimate plan was a weapon, unifying the power of 27 planets to create an explosion strong enough to destroy every universe. The Darkness Rose had been working to warn the Doctor of was the work of the Daleks themselves. Martha, Sarah Jane, Jack, Mickey, and even her mother attempted to stop the reality bomb, but in the end all of them, including Rose and the Doctor, were powerless to stop Davros and the Daleks from using the Reality Bomb after all.
Seconds before the end of the universe, the TARDIS reappeared with Donna and somehow the Doctor. Another one of him. With the second Doctor as a distraction, Donna was able to stop the Reality Bomb and disable the Daleks, turning the tide. With the two Doctors' help, she also sent all the planets back to their proper places, except for Earth.
After a hurried reunion with Sarah Jane, Rose was ushered back into the TARDIS, as the second Doctor set the Dalek fleet to explode, and with the Doctor's instruction, Torchwood's help, and K-9's calculations, Rose helped pilot the TARDIS in dragging the Earth back to its proper place.
The celebration and joy of saving the world was not to last. After only a short trip to drop people off, Rose found herself back on Bad Wolf Bay, in the wrong universe, reliving the worst day of her life all over again. The day ended differently than the last. The second Doctor shared all of the Doctor's memories and feelings, but half of Donna's human DNA, giving him one heart, and one human lifespan. He finished the sentence he hadn't before, and even though one of the Doctors vanished just like before, the second Doctor remained, and they were given a chance at the forever she'd hoped to have.
Personality: The first thing one would likely notice about Rose is her genuine kindness and her compassion for all things, whether or not others would consider them worthy of compassion. When she first met a Dalek--who was thought to be the last of the killing machines who ravaged the universe--she felt sympathy for its plight, and even after witnessing it kill several people, she still appealed to its reason to stop the killing. Because of her compassion, the Dalek actually absorbed some of her DNA, and became capable of reason and mercy itself. In the same way, her belief in the Doctor's better side, even when he tried to kill the repentant Dalek, dragged him out of his dark depression and made him a better person, and the sort of hero she saw in him.
Rose has a strong moral center, and an equally strong will. She will not deviate from what she believes is right even if the culture and morality of the times around her are different. She will fight with anyone, even the Doctor, to maintain that. When the Doctor wanted to give up Cardiff's corpses for the Gelth's use, she challenged him and refused to give way even when he insisted her morality was inferior. Likewise, she refused to accept that the Ood of the Sanctuary Base could want to be slaves, despite the base residents', the Doctor's, and even the Ood themselves' insistence that they really did live to serve. Similarly, when the Doctor appeared indifferent about Mickey's possible death, or the danger her mother was in by the Slitheen, she was quick to remind him that the two were important to her as much as they weren't to him.