Doom

aka: DOOM95, Doom: Evil Unleashed
Moby ID: 1068
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Description official descriptions

The Union Aerospace Corporation has been experimenting with teleportation technology on Mars' moons Phobos and Deimos. After early successes, something goes wrong. It seems the scientists have opened a gateway straight to Hell. Phobos base is overrun with demonic creatures, and the whole of Deimos simply vanishes. A squad of marines is sent to Phobos, but all except one are quickly slaughtered. It falls to the surviving marine to grab some guns and strike back at the demons.

id Software's follow-up to their genre-defining Wolfenstein 3D, Doom is another first-person 3D shooter: full-on action as seen from the space marine's perspective. Like Wolfenstein, the game consists of distinct episodes, playable in any order. The first episode, Knee-Deep in the Dead, takes place in the Phobos base and is freely available as shareware. The full game continues on Deimos in The Shores of Hell and culminates in Inferno, the final episode which takes place in Hell itself (the Sega 32x version lacks this episode).

The basic objective in each level is simply to reach the exit. Since dozens of enemies stand in the way, the only way to get there is by killing them. Switches and buttons must be pressed to advance at certain points and often color-coded locked doors will block the way - matching keycards or skull keys must be found to pass.

The game's engine technology is more advanced than Wolfenstein's, and thus the levels are more varied and complex. The engine simulates different heights (stairs and lifts appear frequently) and different lighting conditions (some rooms are pitch black, others only barely illuminated). There are outdoor areas, pools of radioactive waste that hurt the player, ceilings that come down and crush him, and unlike Wolfenstein's orthogonally aligned corridors, the walls in Doom can be in any angle to each other. An automap helps in navigating the levels.

Stylistically, the levels begin with a futuristic theme in the military base on Phobos and gradually change to a hellish environment, complete with satanic symbols (pentagrams, upside-down-crosses, and portraits of horned demons), hung-up mutilated corpses, and the distorted faces of the damned.

Doom features a large weapon arsenal, with most weapons having both advantages and drawbacks. The starting weapons are the fists and a simple pistol. Also available are a shotgun (high damage, slow reload, not good at distances), a chaingun (high firing rate, but slightly inaccurate in longer bursts), and a plasma rifle (combining a high firing rate and large damage). The rocket launcher also deals out lots of damage, but the explosion causes blast damage and must be used with care in confined areas or it might prove deadly to the player as well as the enemies. Two further weapons in the game are the chainsaw for close-quarter carnage, and the BFG9000 energy gun, which while taking some practice to fire correctly, can destroy most enemies in a single burst. The different weapons use four different ammunition types (bullets, shells, rockets, and energy cells), so collecting the right type for a certain gun is important.

The game drops some of Wolfenstein's arcade-inspired aspects, so there are no extra lives or treasures to be collected for points, but many other power-ups are still available. Medpacks heal damage while armor protects from receiving it in the first place. Backpacks allow more ammunition to be carried, a computer map reveals the whole layout of the level on the automap (including any secret areas), light amplification visors illuminate dark areas and radiation suits allow travel over waste without taking damage. Also available are berserk packs (which radically increase the damage inflicted by the fists) as well as short-time invisibility and invulnerability power-ups.

The enemies to be destroyed include former humans corrupted during the invasion, plus demons in all shapes and sizes: fireball-throwing imps, floating skulls, pink-skinned demons with powerful bite attacks, and large one-eyed flying monstrosities called Cacodemons. Each episode ends with a boss battle against one or two, particularly powerful creatures.

Doom popularized multiplayer in the genre with two different modes: Cooperative allows players to move through the single-player game together, while Deathmatch is a competitive game type where players blast at each other to collect 'frag' points for a kill and re-spawn in a random location after being killed.

The 3DO and Sega32x ports lack any multiplayer modes, though the other ports retain the DOS versions multiplayer to varying degrees. The various console ports all feature simplified levels and omit some levels, enemies, and features from the original DOS release. The SNES and Gameboy Advance versions of the game actually use different engines and hence feature numerous small gameplay differences.

Spellings

  • ドゥーム - Japanese spelling
  • 毁灭战士 - Simplified Chinese spelling

Groups +

Screenshots

Promos

Credits (DOS version)

15 People

Design
Programming / Software Engineers
Graphics / Artwork
Tech Support
Level Design
Music
Sound Effects
Sound
Tools Programming
Audio Drivers
Model Development
Cover Illustration
Creative Director
Biz / Chief Executive Officer

Reviews

Critics

Average score: 84% (based on 77 ratings)

Players

Average score: 3.7 out of 5 (based on 743 ratings with 39 reviews)

If a game had to become one of the most influential ever, why DOOM?

The Good
This was the must have game of its time, possibly one of the most accessible easy to play games; you simply run and shoot. The game excels in spades in this and little do you have to worry about why you're doing it, mindless monsters seem to have little better to do than threaten you in a variety of predictable mannerisms. What exists of a story involves something going wrong on a Mars research station and opening a doorway to Hell, or something like that. Story isn't exactly the strong point and it's all an excuse to put you in a position of blasting a lot of bad guys in an alien environment, avoiding any need to make it even slightly realistic.

It also spawned the modding community and is probably one of the most modded games ever, not to mention the most ported, pretty much every low power platform has had a DOOM version ported to it. This is good in opening the game world up to the user, though most of the mods just means more levels of blasting.

The Bad
It brought the gore home really, creating the video game nasty, removing any need to ask why you were doing what you were doing, and just shooting. The game holds up poorly to the test of time now, as it becomes boring due to the game designer focusing mainly on shooting monsters with a variety of weapons. Any intellectual elements, such as puzzles and level layouts are really just copies of Wolfenstien 3D, where you have to pick up a blue key to open a blue door, and of course find where the door is.

This kind of simple puzzle, compared with say, System Shock's more complex communicating a clue then you solving the problem, lead to the huge initial separation between action and adventure games that marked the mid-90s and beyond. It also started the decline of the adventure genre, with adventure makers switched off by the pointless brutality, and action gamers getting into shooters and being able to ignore any thinking beyond monitoring their health and ammo.

The modding helped this as it was easier to make new levels and arrange monsters in those levels than it was to try and tie a cohesive story to your mods.

The Bottom Line
This is another historical curio, only really worth playing for the first few levels to get a feel for what the state of the industry was like at the time, and see what the fuss at the time was about. The graphics were good for the time and of course runs smoothly, but with no ambition in terms of storyline, there's nothing left to grab you now that graphics are far better. This shows the true need to invest some thought into games, as even text adventures hold up better now that games that rely purely on technology for their sales. If you want to play an old shooter, play System Shock instead, guaranteed it'll have you hooked for longer.

DOS · by RussS (807) · 2009

Undoubtedly, a classic game.

The Good
It's engine is much better than this from Wolfenstein 3D - maps are no longer enormous mazes, you can at least extinguish rooms, because they have different heights, floors, cellings and shapes. There are also some windows and outdoor areas.

Weaponry is also much bigger than in Wolf 3D. There is shotgun, rocket launcher, plasma rifle or even chainsaw - and obviously there are even more weapons, which you can use against zombies, demons and other monsters. Game is well balanced, you will never run out of ammo in room fulfilled with evil creatures or walk through long, empty corridors without any enemy.

Also, soundtrack is also good - music varies from MIDI powered metal music to scary ambient tracks. Sounds are more realistic than from other games at the time. And last, but not least, Doom, as first FPS in the world, introduced multiplayer - with two types of gameplay (co-op and deathmatch) for max. 4 players.

The Bad
Only two things - I managed to beat it in three hours (however you can download a lot of user-made levels). Also, Doom requires a source port if you want to play it under Windows or Linux. You can run it using DOSBox, but it's too much tweaking and ports add some new features, like 3D models or more detailed maps.

The Bottom Line
It's absolutely classic - it doesn't matter if you play only Solitaire or Minesweeper, you have to get this game and play at least one!

DOS · by Sir Gofermajster (485) · 2009

No-Brain, No-Pain. Surgeon General Warning: Doom is hazardous to your brain!

The Good
Well, I'm not going to tell you much about this, as most of the other review have done a great job of doing that.

But I do know this, I was one of the people who got suckered in playing Doom. Back then (my disclamer) I recall having run out of 'decent' games. Coincidence? Maybe, maybe not, considering suddenly the sudden rush of die hard Doom fans. The fact most serious veteran gamers usually fall under the categories of either RPG, Strategy or Adventure games (as most memorable games were usually that) would consider Doom a 'great achievement' in gaming history a laughing matter.

Why so, because those genres above had one thing in common that made them more a genre or more a 'game' (in my personal subjective opinion) than other genre's or games (e.g. such arcade based games). They had a decent storyline you could related with...personalize with...a message from the developers to the players. Now Doom on the other hand...

Hey, Doom is a fun game. No doubt about that...well to a certain extent (tell you the bad stuff later). But the fact is to obviously arrogant SOB's like myself who dare call themselves a veteran (if not elite, muahahaha) gamer. Doom is just a game, comparible and as groundbreaking as...Space Invaders...Mario Bros. Those Kiddie kind of games. Read: K I D D I E Yes, kid's. Kid's love this game. Because practically it's a brainless game. If I were a parent, games like this would concern me. No educational value what so ever. Yes, educational value. Something you learn from RPG, Strategy, Adventure games: Puzzle solving, Logic, History, etc. Anything. What do you learn from Doom? Yes, I can chainsaw a walking beefsteak into a medium rare Big Mac with lots of ketchup. Now is this what you want your kids to grow up with???

The Bad
Hmmm....I think I overdid the don't like part...hehehehe.

Anyway, there is another thing I would like to point out. This is the first game that after a couple of hours playing (note: I ran out of games, justifies me playing Doom...hehehe), Doom was the first game that made me feel sick. Yes, sick...nausea, dizzy, stomach cramps. Why? Something to do with the graphics, a programmer friend of mine once told me. It seems that games like Doom have 'layers' in their graphics, fast moving later. (Notice King's Quest 1, where the key objects show last?). Most First Shooter games don't have that now (e.g. Counterstrike), it's like one screenshot after another. Well, whatever our visual sensors detect, they report it to the brain and the brain signals the body. The fact that your body starts to feel nausea and dizziness, those reports can't be good.

Well, if the body sub-consciously responses negatively to the game, it says a lot about the game itself, eh?

(Disclaimer: Programmers should understand more 'bout the hell I was trying to explain up there...I'm a lawyer not a programmer)

The Bottom Line
I have more respect for Duke Nukem. At least that game had some 'added humor' in it. I'm against violence in games. But I'm all for educated violence. Muahahaha!!

Windows · by Indra was here (20756) · 2006

[ View all 39 player reviews ]

Discussion

Subject By Date
Listing Mods?? Paul Budd (425) Feb 17, 2021
Happy 20th anniversary! Pseudo_Intellectual (66360) Jan 12, 2014
Doom budget? Johan Smedjebacka (5) Jun 26, 2013
Doom95 Rola (8483) Feb 3, 2013
What gameplay features were first in Doom? hribek (28) Aug 2, 2011

Trivia

1001 Video Games

Doom appears in the book 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die by General Editor Tony Mott.

3DO version

The development of the 3DO port was rushed; it was developed in ten weeks, from August to October of 1995. The 3DO release contains exclusive, CD-quality remixes of the PC's background music. According to the programmer, Rebecca Ann Heineman, hiring a band to record the music was necessary because she had no time to port the original game's music driver.

The 3DO version was originally planned to contain FMV cutscenes; Art Data Interactive created a number of still images (depicting actors in monster costumes) in hopes of convincing investors into giving them funds to film the sequences, but ultimately none were created.

The game was originally going to be distributed by Electronic Arts, but the deal fell through.

The source code of this port was released on GitHub by Rebecca Ann Heineman on November 30, 2014.

Administrator tool

DOOM was proposed for use as a tool for systems administrators in Dennis Chow's paper Doom as an Interface for Process Management; in it, through a modified version of DOOM (PSDoom or the Doom Process Manager), processes are depicted as enemies whose share of systems resources can be diminished by attacking them and which are completely terminated when their avatars are killed. (On a loaded system in which all programs' performances are strained, processes may begin attacking each other, aggressively competing - as in Core War - for system resources).

Bugs

  • When the player picks up a medikit while having 25 HP or less, the game is supposed to display the message "Picked up a medikit you REALLY need!" Due to a bug this message will never display in vanilla DOOM. The code in question does its check on how much health is left only after the medikit is picked up. Since medikits give the player 25 health, they will always have at least 26 health when the check is performed. This bug is corrected in most DOOM source ports.
  • The 1.0 release had a bug that slowed down networks so much that a freeware utility called killdoom was released shortly after. It can be downloaded here.

Cheats

The <tt>SPISPOPD</tt> cheat code (no clipping) stands for "Smashing Pumpkins Into Small Piles Of Putrid Debris". It has nothing to do with the band - rather, it's a reference to an Usenet post joking about a possible alternate title for Doom. More detail can be found at the Doom Wiki.

Demo scene

It was the first game to make a head-first mention in a demo (a 64k intro: Cyboman by Gazebo) a couple of days after DOOM was spread. The uptight demo-scene back then actually accepted the game, especially for its amazing graphics and execution. Until that time, most demosceners considered games to be far behind demos in terms of technology.

Development

  • Data file extension WAD means "Where's All the Data?"
  • American McGee used actual ground beef for some of the textures in the game. A trick that worked so well that he re-used it in American McGee's Alice.
  • In a little known FTP strategy guide bundled with some BBS versions of DOOM, John Carmack is quoted as saying "DOOM is in development for the Sega Mars". The Sega Mars was in fact the codename for the Sega 32X.
  • Alpha and beta versions are available through ftp.cdrom.com in the pub/doom/history directory. Most are crude technology demos, but there are some treasures.
  • The sky background of Episode 1 was taken from a photograph of Yangshuo Cavern made by Tom Atwood.

Doomguy

Although on the box cover of the game the Doomguy carries a weapon in his right hand, in the game, he is left handed - from the first person view, he carries his weapon in his left hand and also punches with his left fist. The hands of the Doomguy, which millions of players believed to belong to themselves, actually are Kevin Cloud's - one of the art developers. In the very early stages of DOOM the DoomGuy's right ear could take damage and turn into flimsy peace of flesh. This was removed in the later versions of DOOM.

Enemies

  • The design of the monster Cacodemon (a floating head with a large maw and a single big eye) is very similar to the beholder, a classic AD&D monster (although the cacodemon has horns instead of eye stalks). Additionally, the Cacodemon's design is almost identical to the head of the "astral dreadnought", an AD&D monster which appears on the cover of the 1987 AD&D book Manual of the Planes.
  • Although the death animations of some monsters (Cacodemon, Baron of Hell) show that their blood is blue or green, these monsters always emit red blood splatters when damaged.

Eric Harris Levels

Columbine High School shooter Eric Harris is known to have created several levels for the game. A few including Thrasher.wad and RealDeth.wad have resurfaced, but a rumoured recreation in the game of the Columbine High School itself (possibly called Realdoom.wad), which would provide a macabre fascination, has yet to be found

Fake Atari 2600 Port

Many people thought there was an Atari 2600 port of DOOM in development when images of the port started spreading around the Internet, including pictures of the cartridge, a magazine ad and screenshots from the game. These turned out to be the results of a college project rendered on an Atari 800 computer by James Catalano, who for a joke posted them on a Usenet newsgroup.

GBA version

The Game Boy Advance port features green blood and removed splatter effects. Additionally corpses disappear almost instantly and all corpses which were used as part of the level decoration were removed.

Graphics

DOOM had a low-res mode (toggled via F5) that doubled the width of the pixels being plotted by messing with the write mask in unchained VGA mode. That, coupled with the triple-buffering used, made the game majorly fast and quite playable on a 386/40. Carmack was experimenting with a Hi-Color mode that allowed more than 256 colors on the screen, but that mode halved resolution. He wanted to see what it would look like because it got rid of the color-banding due to the diminished lighting, but 160-pixels horizontally looked very bad so they removed it. Up to version 1.1, it was possible to run the game on three monitors at once, giving a 270-degree field of vision.

Multiplayer

DOOM was the first game to include a deathmatch mode, in which up to four players can compete over a network or in split screen. Maps used for deathmatch were the single-player levels, made less linear. In December 1993, Intel issued a company-wide memo banning DOOM from their networks. Many big companies issued similar orders, not just because of lost productivity but because it rendered most networks inoperative. Up until version 1.2, the game sent data through high-level broadcast packets that forced every computer on a net (no matter whether they were running the game or not) to transfer the data.

Music

Much of the music in DOOM (and DOOM II) is likely to be inspired by songs of famous heavy metal bands. For example, the music from E1M1 is similar to Metallica's No Remorse (some also say that it is very similar to Master of Puppets), that in E1M4 resembles Rise by Pantera, and the music from E2M1 is similar to AC/DC's Big Gun.

Novels

Dafydd Ab Hugh and Brad Linaweaver wrote a set of four novels about the DOOM universe. They were published between June 1995 and January 1996 by Pocket Books. You can view the covers on this fanpage.

  • Knee Deep in the Dead
  • Hell on Earth
  • Infernal Sky
  • Endgame

In May 1996, Tom Grindberg of Marvel Comics made a comic book about DOOM for a gaming convention.

References

  • John Carmack took the title from the 1986 Martin Scorsese film The Color of Money, from the lines when Tom Cruise enters a pool hall with his favorite cue in a black case:
    - "What you got in there?"
    "In here? Doom."
  • DOOM's cover art, title screen, and chainsaw weapon seem to be inspired by the Evil Dead series of movies, specifically Army of Darkness. In the movie's storyline, the main character loses his hand to evil powers and fights with a chainsaw on his arm, along with a shotgun. It would be the later 3D game Duke Nukem 3D, itself influenced by DOOM, that would quote some of Evil Dead's most memorable one-liners.
  • The layout of E1M8 (Phobos Anomaly) bears resemblance to Liberty Island in New York, although it is not clear whether this is intentional.
  • The name of the last level of episode 2, "Tower of Babel", is an ironic Biblical reference. It is described in Genesis 11:1-9 as a physical pathway to the Heavens. In DOOM, however, the level is the pathway to Hell, as explained in the episode's ending text. On a side note, during that episode, the tower can be seen being built on the intermission screens.
  • The name of the fourth skill level, "Ultra-Violence", very likely comes from Anthony Burgess' novel A Clockwork Orange or its film adaptation by Stanley Kubrick. In the novel and film, the protagonist uses the term to describe the activities of himself and his gang - randomly beating up, raping and killing people.
  • The first retail version-only update of the DOOM engine had the revision number 1.666. This is also a Biblical reference, where 666 is the number of The Beast.

References in pop culture

  • Rammstein used a sample of the DOOM shotgun and some screaming in their song Wollt ihr das Bett in Flammen sehen? on their album Herzeleid.
  • The credits inside the booklet of The Smashing Pumpkins' album Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness (1995) contain "Explosion from DOOM courtesy of id Software, Inc and bobby prince Music". It's used in the first track, Where Boys Fear to Tread.
  • The game makes an appearance in season 5, episode 4 of Family Guy, an animated series. Stevie Griffin is riding his bike through various locations, and one of them is a DOOM level with some imps.
  • In season 2, episode 8, Ross must choose between Rachel and Julie and starts making a list of pros and cons of each. Joey and Chandler are helping him, and Chandler is making the list on his brand new laptop with "Twelve megabytes of RAM, 500 megabyte hard drive. Built-in spreadsheet capabilities and a modem that transmits at over 28,000 BPS". While they're making the list, Ross says that Julie is a paleontologist just like him, while Rachel is just a waitress. To that, Chandler replies: "Waitress. Got it. You guys wanna play Doom? [looks to Ross and Joey, who stare back] Or we could keep doing this. What else?"
  • DOOM was parodied in an episode of "Die Redaktion" (The Editorial Team), a monthly comedy video produced by the German gaming magazine GameStar. It was published on the DVD of issue 12/2011.

Rocket jumping

DOOM was the first game to include rocket jumping. Only, it worked a bit different from later first person shooters - instead of aiming at the ground (which you couldn't do in the game), you shoot a rocket launcher at a nearby object or wall. The resulting blast can proper the player a quite long distance away, allowing to clear otherwise impossible jumps.

Scrapped Features

  • The game was originally going to feature a story-based seamless world, similar to Half-Life. However, everyone hated Tom Hall's story idea (soldiers playing cards? Come on!) and Carmack decided the engine couldn't handle a seamless world.
  • John Carmack once said that he fully intended to add decal support in DOOM (e.g. semi-permanent marks on the walls from bullets, explosions, blood. etc.). It was not implemented, however, since it would raise the game's system requirements.

SEGA 32x version

This version contains only seventeen maps, taken from the "Knee Deep in the Dead" and "The Shores of Hell" episodes. No maps from the third episode, "Inferno", have been included. Maps present: E1M1-E1M8 and E2M1-E2M7, as well as the two secret levels E1M9 and E2M9 (E2M9, renamed to "Dis", acts as the final level of the game). After the end credits, the game concludes by reverting to a fake DOS prompt if the player activated the cheat codes. This screen cannot be exited without shutting off the system. If the game was beaten without cheating, the prompt will not be shown; rather the player will see a montage of enemies encountered in the game, just as in DOOM II.

SNES version

The U.S. SNES version of DOOM was one of the few releases for the console to have a colored cartridge (Killer Instinct being another one), namely a red one. Besides this, due to limitations of the SNES hardware, the enemies in the game do not have sides or backs, and are always facing the player. All blood and splatter effects were removed.

The source code of this port was released on GitHub by Randy Linden on July 14, 2020.

Source code

On 23 December, 1997, id Software released the source code. You can download it here. Numerous source ports were subsequently created by fans.

Text adventure

In 1996, the first level of the first episode was implemented by Piers Johnson in TADS, resulting in FooM - a text adventure game interface for DOOM. Downloadable with source at http://mirror.ifarchive.org/if-archive/games/tads/foom.tar.gz

Version 1.4

With patch 1.4, including all later re-releases and ports, a detail in the "Command Cotrol" level was changed: a few computers laid out into the shape of a swastika were rearranged. Romero referred to this change in a 2013 interview:

[43:11] It was a swastika, but [...] I changed it to this shape because we had people complainin' and really the funny thing is that I wasn't trying to promote Nazism, I was referencing Wolfenstein. [...] [44:21] And we got lots of people, you know, crying over different things about the game, but that was the only thing that we changed. Just because, I think we got a particular, like, letter from someone who was a vet. And so, well, okay, for a vet, we'll do that.

Weapons

  • The images for the pistol in DOOM were most likely created from the Beretta 92FS pistol, which is currently the standard service pistol of the U.S. military.
  • The pistol, shotgun, and chaingun where photos of toy guns, while the chainsaw was the photo of a real chainsaw. It belonged to the girlfriend of one of the art developers, Tom Hall.

Windows 95 Promo

The level E1M2: Nuclear Plant was used for Bill Gates' promo for Windows 95.

Awards

  • Computer Gaming World
    • June 1994 (Issue #119) – Game of the Year
    • April 1996 (Issue #141) – Introduced into the Hall of Fame
    • November 1996 (15th anniversary issue) - #5 Best Game of All Time
    • November 1996 (15th anniversary issue) – #3 Most Innovative Computer Game
    • March 2001 (Issue #200) - #5 Best Game of All Time (Readers' Vote)
  • FLUX
    • Issue #3 - #3 Best Video Game of All Time
  • Game Informer
    • August 2001 (Issue #100) - #5 in the "Top 100 Games of All Time" poll
    • October 2004 (Issue #138) - one of the "Top 25 Most Influential Games of All Time"
  • GameSpy
    • 2001 – #1 Top Game of All Time
    • 2001 – Game Boy Advance Game of the Year (Readers' Choice)
    • 2001 – Game Boy Advance Action/Adventure Game of the Year
  • GameStar (Germany)
    • Issue 12/1999 - #3 in the "100 Most Important PC Games of the Nineties" ranking
    • Issue 12/2007 - one of the "Ten Most Influential PC-Games" (It is the milestone which stands for the change from 2D to 3D graphics. Since DOOM, the licensing of 3D engines is an important business branch in the PC industry.)
  • PC Gamer
    • April 2000 - #12 in the "All-Time Top 50 Games" poll
    • April 2005 - #2 in the "50 Best Games of All Time" list
  • Retro Gamer
    • October 2004 (Issue #9) – #9 Best Game Of All Time (Readers' Vote)
  • The Strong National Museum of Play
    • 2015 – Introduced into the World Video Game Hall of Fame
  • Other
    • 2001 - The Greatest Game of All Time voted by industry insiders (according to GameSpy)

Information also contributed by Adam Baratz, Andrew Grasmeder, Arson Winter, AxelStone, Big John WV, BurningStickMan, chirinea, DarkDante, Echidna Boy, Emepol, IndustrialPope, Jiguryo, John Romero, Kalirion, Maw, Olivier Masse, Patrick Bregger, PCGamer77, Pseudo_Intellectual, ResidentHazard, Roedie, Sciere, Scott Monster, shifter, Silverblade, Steve ., tarmo888, Terok Nor, Ummagumma, WildKard, Zack Green. and Zovni.

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Related Sites +

  • ClassicDOOM.com
    Walkthroughs and guides, game comparisons, passwords, links and more, for game-console and computer-based Doom games
  • Crap Shoot
    A humorous review of the Novelizations on PC Gamer
  • Doom Wiki
    A Wiki site for the Doom series.
  • Doom remix project: The Dark Side of Phobos
    22 (2 CDs) fanmade remixes of original Doom soundtrack, download available including high quality CD covers.
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  • JDoom
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  • Matt Chat 53
    Video interview with John Romero about the development of DOOM
  • OC ReMix Game Profile
    Fan remixes of music from DOOM, including the album "The Dark Side of Phobos".
  • PlanetDoom
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  • Video review of Atari Jaguar games (WARNING: Language)
    The Angry Video Game Nerd, James Rolfe, reviews Atari Jaguar games, including Doom on Jaguar.
  • Video review of the system (WARNING: Language)
    The Angry Video Game Nerd, James Rolfe, reviews the Sega 32X and some games, including Doom for 32X.

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Contributors to this Entry

Game added by MAT.

Linux added by Hamish Wilson. 3DO added by karttu. Game Boy Advance added by Kartanym. Windows, Jaguar, SNES added by Satoshi Kunsai. PC-98 added by Terok Nor. Windows Mobile added by indimopi. SEGA 32X added by quizzley7.

Additional contributors: Tomer Gabel, Terok Nor, Ashley Pomeroy, Xantheous, Ledmeister, Unicorn Lynx, Frenkel, Guy Chapman, WWWWolf, Sciere, Wormspinal, Peter Berndtsson, Martin Smith, Ajan, Havoc Crow, LepricahnsGold, Cantillon, Medicine Man, Rola, Patrick Bregger, Thomas Thompson, Lugamo, Rik Hideto, FatherJack, SoMuchChaotix.

Game added June 14, 2001. Last modified April 16, 2024.