id Software’s second FPS only brought in $5,000, and the studio might not have made Wolfenstein and Doom if the game hadn’t made a dev fall out of his chair: ‘That was just one of the craziest things in a videogame I’d ever seen’



In celebration of the 35th anniversary of Doom developer id Software’s founding, co-founder John Romero has released a video retrospective on one of id’s most unsung games: Catacomb 3-D.

The video featured Romero’s own recollections, as well as those of id vets Tom Hall, John Carmack, and Adrian Carmack⁠—no relation on those last two, by the way. I only found that out embarrassingly recently.



Source link

  • Related Posts

    Become the Boss (Literally!) in Delta Force’s New Extraction Update

    Summary Delta Force’s latest season, Morphosis is now live and players get to play as an in-game boss in the new Fiery Owl Hunt mode. Fiery Owl Hunt is a…

    Stardew Valley 2 continues to remain a hypothetical, but ConcernedApe did actually consider making it at one point

    You know, sometimes I wonder if Eric “ConcernedApe” Barone ever sleeps. At any given moment it sounds like he’s working on something, whether that be yet another update for…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Become the Boss (Literally!) in Delta Force’s New Extraction Update

    Become the Boss (Literally!) in Delta Force’s New Extraction Update

    Google court filings suggest ChromeOS has an expiration date

    Google court filings suggest ChromeOS has an expiration date

    Greenwich and Kent announce merger to become UK’s first ‘super-university’ | Universities

    Greenwich and Kent announce merger to become UK’s first ‘super-university’ | Universities

    South Korea Questions Cram School Culture and Childhood Stress

    Laws of Cricket: MCC allow bats which were previously ‘illegal’

    Laws of Cricket: MCC allow bats which were previously ‘illegal’

    June Ambrose’s World: From Iconic Styling Moments to Good Shoes

    June Ambrose’s World: From Iconic Styling Moments to Good Shoes