Jaguar version doesn't have music
it does...just only during the map screen/end of level score thing.
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Jaguar version doesn't have music
Played a shit ton of doom. My first personal pc when I was 13 was a 486dx4 100 that I spent the $2700 of my own money on back then. Worth every penny.
Wolfe Stein I played but I actually played dooms secret wolf left of Wolfe Stein more
lol, auto correct fun on Wolfenstein?
lol, auto correct fun on Wolfenstein?
No, it was the late 1990's or early 2000's when WASD became the standard control mapping. Back in the DOOM days we used the mouse and the arrow keys. Some people remapped them of course, but that was the default.
I played both back in the day on my 486 DX/2 50Mhz. Wolf 3d was pretty fun but when Doom came out it was leaps and bounds more fun. I'll never forget the first time I played multiplayer over dial-up in the shareware version. It took forever to get the modem working correctly on both ends but once we got it setup I played with a guy from my dad's work until 5am until we beat episode 1 and he had to get ready for work.
Then playing Doom 2 on a local BBS with dwango5.wad for hours on end. I really hope the new Doom has the fast paced deathmatch of the original 2 Doom games. Doom 3 was such a huge step backwards and slow compared to the 2 original ones.
Doom 2 co-op is still my favorite co-op game of all time. All the extra monsters and fighting the Cyber Demon in smaller levels was so intense.
I used a Gravis Gamepad for Doom. Control pad for Fwd/Back L/R, Red+Green for Strafe, Yellow Fire, Green Action if I remember correctly.
Anyone remember poor ole Blake Stone? Thought that game was going to be hot shit.
Until Doom came out the week later. :'(
I remember Blake Stone, had a shareware floppy of the game. I don't remember much about it (which probably speaks of its gameplay), but I think I blew up turrets on a space station.
I also had a Gravis Gamepad, however it was mostly so my grandpa would be able to play Wolf3D comfortably. Wolf3d was one of the only videogames he'd have the patience to play. I think he just really hated Nazis.
As for my control setup for DooM - arrow keys for movement/aim, left mouse to fire, right mouse to use (I think) and holding down shift with an arrow key was strafe. 'Ctrl' might have been run. It's been too long to remember for sure.
I had used the arrow keys combined with the numpad for movement well into Starsiege: Tribes until I finally adjusted myself to a WASD scheme.
Then playing Doom 2 on a local BBS with dwango5.wad for hours on end.
I remember when some DOS based matchmaking program came out that was my first experience with realtime matchmaking "lobbies" and I had my first 4 player matches. Good times.
The thing I remember the most though is when the game crashed, having changed the autoexe.bat to run it instead of Windows (not enough RAM otherwise on that machine) and it got stuck in a loop -- shut the machine off, turn it on, up comes Quake. Dad freaked and had to call in a favor with a friend of his in IT (I wasn't knowledgeable enough to fix it at the time). Needless to say I was never allowed to touch that particular laptop again and the "no games on my computer" rule stood for many years after.
I played Wolfenstein 3D on the Win 3.1 IBM PCs (386 maybe?) in the school computer lab. It was pretty awesome at the time.
So you played using the educational license.
Of course...