In series 6, during The Impossible Astronaut, the age difference between the two Doctors we see (the Tesselecta and the Envelope #1 Doctor) is said to be 200 years old. In the Time of The Doctor, when the TARDIS returns, The Doctor says that it has been 300 years. My question is, during The Impossible Astronaut, he hasn't aged a day in 200 years between 2 versions of himself. And yet, here, in 300 years, he is suddenly all old and wrinkled. So how come he ages so ripe in Time of The Doctor and not in The Impossible Astronaut? Is this a discrepancy, or is there some aspect of TimeLord ageing process that I'm unaware of ?
Answer
We don't know, but we can make educated guesses.
We've seen one other Time Lord hit the end of his regeneration cycle: The Master, in Old Who. When he reached the end of his last body, the Master fell apart. Almost literally:

So when the Doctor reaches the tail end of his last lifespan and appears to suddenly age rapidly, there is precedent for it being just because he's finally actually reaching the end of his life: after aging 200 years in Impossible Astronaut, he then added another 300+ years on top of that.
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