Dream Lord

"You are a Time Lord. I would be a Dream Lord"

- The Dream Lord identifies himself to the Doctor

The Dream Lord was a villain in the TV series Doctor Who. He was an antagonist of the Eleventh Doctor where he confronted him in deep space onboard the TARDIS.

Confrontation
The TARDIS has come to a complete standstill, whereupon the Doctor, Amy Pond and Rory all attempt to fix it, and suddenly the Dream Lord steps out of the shadows. He reveals his identity and explains what has happened: there are two different realities, and in each one danger awaits. The Doctor and his allies must find the correct reality otherwise they will never be free. The Dream Lord is toying with the Doctor because he knows the Doctor is insecure and imperfect and wants to challenge Amy and Rory's faith in the Doctor. The Dream Lord then vanishes as mysteriously as he had come.

The Doctor and his companions awake in a reality in 2012 in Ledworth, Amy's village, where she and Rory are with child, and the Doctor has visited them. They all believe this to be the real reality, but the Doctor isn't so sure. Soon enough, trouble manifests when aliens possess the bodies of all the old folk in the town and kill various citizens. The aliens then chase Rory and Amy. The Doctor, pursued by the aliens, runs into the? butchers' and the Dream Lord mockingly insults his? fears and insecurities.? One of the aliens? manages to kill Rory. Amy, now sure this is the fake reality, smashes her car against the wall of her house, forcing her and the Doctor back into the TARDIS.

The Dream Lord awakens the Doctor, Amy and a living Rory and reveals that the village world was fake and also, the world they're currently in is fake too. He says he was toying with them and clicks his fingers to send them back into the real world, where no disaster is present. The Doctor then sees the Dream Lord's mocking face in his console where he realizes that the Dream Lord is in fact a representation of all the evil feelings he has bottled inside him - namely, a dark version of himself.