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New DOOM level, yes THAT DOOM

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  • New DOOM level, yes THAT DOOM

    I'm waxing a bit nastolgic as I remember this being my first POV shooter and introduced me to NULL modem cables. Man that was some good times nerding out and playing DOOM H2H!!

    John Romero, one of the developers behind seminal computer game Doom has released a new level for the 23 year old game.


    John Romero, one of the developers behind the seminal computer game Doom, has released his first new level for the title in 21 years.

    He is offering the new material for free via the file-sharing site Dropbox.
    Mr Romero told the BBC he had made it as a "warm up" for a new project.
    Doom was released in 1993 and had 10 million players by 1995. It has retained a cult popularity, and still has a dedicated community of players who also create their own content.
    The source code - the computer program that powers the game, written in a human-readable computer language - has been available for some time.
    As a result, Mr Romero estimates there are about 30 alternative versions of the entire game, and more than 100,000 add-on levels created by Doom fans.
    "Every day people are still making new levels for it," he said.
    His new level, Tech Gone Bad, is a boss level that offers an alternative climactic fight.

    It ends in a massive complex with a huge computer room that links to different portals and "hell cracks" in the floor, he said.

    The original final level was made by the developer Sandy Peterson and not Mr Romero.
    The new version is mostly based outdoors.
    Mr Romero said that distinguished it from the original game, which was largely based on indoor play, with the exception of Mount Erebus in level six (E3M6 in the Doom register).
    "Doom mapping is pretty easy to do compared with 3D engines," Mr Romero said of his own creation.
    "But I did worry... the community that's been playing it for 20 years would tear [the new level] apart."
    However the reaction from players has been positive, he added.
    "It's been out for four days and it's exploded. It's crazy that a game that's 23 years old has so many people still super-excited about it."
    He added he had no idea Doom would become such a perennial favourite back in the early 1990s.
    "With Doom, it was mouse and keyboard-controlled on the PC when it was released, and you can still play it that way," he said.
    "People remember how much fun they had a long time ago and I hope they will have that much fun again."
    Originally posted by Taya Kyle, American Gun
    There comes a time when honest debate, serious diplomatic efforts, and logical arguments have been exhausted and only men and women willing to take up arms against evil will suffice to save the freedom of a nation or continent.

  • #2
    Wow. I assume you need some sort of emulator to even run Doom now?
    "Self-government won't work without self-discipline." - Paul Harvey

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    • #3
      Playing Doom on the Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 10, and 11 operating systems can be problematic. Games based on the Doom engine originally ran under DOS. Modern Microsoft Windows versions have limited to no support for DOS programs, and the Doom and other Doom engine games may run poorly, have serious issues (sound support is especially affected), or not run at all, especially if the system is 64-bit.
      Originally posted by Taya Kyle, American Gun
      There comes a time when honest debate, serious diplomatic efforts, and logical arguments have been exhausted and only men and women willing to take up arms against evil will suffice to save the freedom of a nation or continent.

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      • #4
        Brutal Doom

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        • #5
          New release scheduled May 13th

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