Chex Quest 3 (by one of the designers of the original Chex Quest).4-Ever Doomed (1994 Cypress Software) - 1,200 levels.1001 Nights of Doom (1995 Wicked Sensations) - 1,000 levels for Doom, Doom II, and Wolfenstein 3D.Unofficial games and expansion packs Doom and Doom II Other games using the Doom 3 engine (id Tech 4) Cruis'n Velocity for Game Boy Advance (2001).Towers of Darkness: Heretic, Hexen and Beyond (1997).Chex Quest 2: Flemoids Take Chextropolis (1997).The Original Strife: Veteran Edition (2014).Hexen: Deathkings of the Dark Citadel (1996).Heretic: Shadow of the Serpent Riders (1996).Other games Other games using the Doom engine Doom Eternal: The Ancient Gods - Part Two (2021).
Doom for Sony PlayStation (1995 Williams Entertainment).Doom for Sega Saturn (1997 GT Interactive, Midway).Doom II for Game Boy Advance (2002 Activision).Doom for Game Boy Advance (2001, David A.Doom for 3DO (1996 Art Data Interactive, Logicware).Final Doom ( TNT: Evilution and The Plutonia Experiment) (1996).3.4 Other products with significant Doom content.2.3 Other games using the Doom RPG engine.2.2 Other games using the Doom 3 engine (id Tech 4).For example, Amulets & Armor borrowed the map format to take advantage of existing level editors, but analysis of the engine used in Amulets & Armor revealed that it was not derived from the Doom engine. Differences include modifications to creature designs and game levels, while a number of ports offer levels that are not included in the original version (most notably the Sony PlayStation version, which incorporates Doom II monsters and other elements into levels based on the original Doom and The Ultimate Doom).įinally, note that some games are often believed to use the Doom engine when in fact they did not. Some of the ports are replications of the DOS version, while others differ considerably. See Doom clones and Fan-made Doom games for imitations and spoofs, and sales for information about how much money the games have made.ĭoom is one of the most widely ported computer games: starting with the original DOS version, it has since been released officially for 10 computer operating systems and 12 different video game consoles (with unofficial source ports available for many others). This page lists the known commercial games and expansion packs using or based on the Doom engine or the assets of the original Doom games, those recreating the Doom concept, and those otherwise technically related to any such games.