Bloody brilliant!!!...
...really is...you can just play it for hours without realising it...very addictive...good old Doom :)
"Psst...it's me, Death...I'll see you soon...ok?"-Manny Calavera
...really is...you can just play it for hours without realising it...very addictive...good old Doom :)
"Psst...it's me, Death...I'll see you soon...ok?"-Manny Calavera
One of the best games ever,i never get bored with it.
shareit is one of the best games of all time. I still play it and its 2008. it just shows how well this game has aged. it is still fun even after all those years. It must have been out for how long now, 14 or 15 years. I dont think it will ever get old.
sharei could do with some more levels for mine anyone know where i can get any?
share[deleted]
I downloaded it for xbox live arcade a week ago, and I still keep coming back to it, myself of the halo generation finds this very weird, it has its teeth in me and it wont let up!
Doom definitely has the undeniable charm of a great game, without being able to put your finger on what exactly makes it so damn great, much like Halo in that respect.
It's amazing how it still after 15 years is so enjoyable. DOOM is the best!
shareI must have completed this game loads of times but I still keep coming back to it after a while, That's how great it is. Plus there's some truly fantastic music in it too!!
shareDefinitely one of the key contributing factors. And E1 was, and still is, one of the most brilliant endings to a game. It (making sure you lose at the end) brought people back to the game over and over and over....
"Andy Dufresne - who crawled through a river of *beep* and came out clean on the other side."
So true. Everytime I decide to play a little bit literally half a day ends up gone.
shareI recently played it in full for the first time and...I'm already on Doom 2 (I'm playing it through the BFG edition on the Xbox 360) and this is by far my favourite FPS series of all time. Sure there are problems but I'd take Doom over the next COD or Halo anyday.
"I have always valued my lifelessness."