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    Doom 3

    Game » consists of 16 releases. Released Aug 03, 2004

    Doom 3, a more story-focused remake of the original Doom, is a sci-fi first-person-shooter that was widely considered the most graphically advanced game available for its time.

    lonelyspacepanda's Doom 3 (PC) review

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    Doom 3

      


    Doom 3's design is rotted to the core and nowhere is this more apparent then the game's story.  The game's story is so pedestrian that you probably spotted it walking across the street last week.  I'll sum it up in a sentence: man goes to mars, and demons spew out of artifact from hell.  The rest you can probably fill in with your imagination so long as you've seen more than 3 B-horror films before.  Although the game starts up with a rather immersive Half-Life sort of intro where you walk through the base and the game fills you with back story through audio logs reminiscent of System Shock 2, the game's plot and pacing never really is justified by these attempts at storytelling.


    This all leads me to the game's biggest problem, which is a problem that has long since plagued the company since the days of John Romero.  Back when Quake 2 was in production, John Romero was pushing hard for ID Software to make a game supported by a plot that supports the action rather then serves as forgettable backstory that is presented as a text screen--which is how the game eventually turned out.  Despite Romero's best intentions, Carmack was the brains behind the company who made the engines and he was the one to dictate where the game would be heading.  Where that was the Quake franchise in 1998, I can't help but see there being a similar conflict going on in this title. 

    The design often rings false.  For example, the game is a classic shooter  with some of the most well balanced weapons and enemies to grace any first person shooter.  In this sense, the game relies on nothing but the player's competence at aiming and moving.  Yet, even when the player is playing to the best of his ability he will often need to hit the quickload key not because he accidentally fired a rocket at a cacodemon standing right in front of him, but because the game is stuffed full of these so-called "monster closets" that spawn an enemy unexpectedly who gets the drop on you.  It's like the distant cousin of a quick time event, because you'll often get your ass handed too you and need to quickload back to your last save because of it.  Yet, what was the player supposed to do?


    ID Software have said time and time again that this is the Doom series re-imagined, and I can understand how these "monster closets" add to the scare factor but it is counter-intuitive to the rest of the game.  This isn't the only evidence of there being a rift in the game's design.  As you progress in the game, you get to bigger, more open areas that offer a pure, fluid FPS experience more akin to Doom and Doom 2.  Needless to say, these are the highlight of the game yet they couldn't be more opposing to everything that came before it.  Which raises the question, why didn't they just make the entire game on this blueprint...you know...the Doom blueprint that garnered the game a huge fanbase a decade ago.


    My point is that Doom 3 just reeks of corporate calculation which I blame on John Carmack's stubbornness to embrace anything new that can't be conceived in 0's and 1's.  You can just see him in his office saying, "Hey, people love this Half-Life game.  Let's do some of that scripted event stuff. ..hmmm and these System Shock 2 reviews are off the charts...people must love audio logs!"  No people don't love fucking audio logs!  People love games that offer an immersive, fluid experience, which Doom 3 isn't.


    For all the shit I talk about the game, I went into Doom 3 expecting very little and came out having played one of the most competent shooters in recent years.  Despite all my bitching, the game is expertly designed when you take out all the previously listed complaints.  I can't think of another shooter where I found myself using every single weapon until the last boss, which I attribute to smart enemy design.  The levels, while redundant,  really take advantage of the game's graphic engine and really put the player in some of the most terrifying situations you could imagine, leading to a handful of memorable scares.  It also must be said that the game's graphic engine might be a bit dated now, but the animation and sound design will forever remain timeless and prime examples for games to come.


    Doom 3 starts off as a Half-Life wannabe but it eventually becomes the Doom you remember with chaotic action mixed with a goofy b-movie atmosphere.  Hell, you even find emails in the tail-end of the game with really lame in-jokes which makes me wonder why didn't ID Software just make the game they wanted to make, rather then trying to appease both their old fanbase and what they perceived the critics wanted in 2004.  Despite all the games faults, Doom 3 is a very solid shooter that may overstay it's welcome at a lengthy 15+ hours of gameplay but the production quality and refined shooting makes the game worth picking up at a bargain bin price.  I just wish ID Software stuck more to their guns...literally. 

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    Other reviews for Doom 3 (PC)

      Looks Amazing and... Looks Amazing 0

      After countless delays and empty promises, Doom 3 is now sitting on a store shelf near you, or hopefully in a CD tray less than 3 feet away from you.  Doom 3 is simplistic at its core, but the way it's presented to the player is anything but simplistic.  The game aims to suck you into the creepiest environment you've ever seen, and it succeeds with flying colors in that regard.  Does the rest of the game live up to super polished exterior?  Yes and no.  Was it worth the wait?  Ehh...  Is it...

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      Some background for some of you, since this game is a few years old:The year was 2001, and not a social networking site made a peep - for in this time, there were no such things as social networking websites. "But how did people get their news, and connect with friends?", you may ask. Well, we had these things called forums, and these websites called fan sites. It just so happens that on one of these fan sites, which I'm not naming names, I saw a small preview for an upcoming id game. "What coul...

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