Doom 3 (PC)
Manufacturer: Activision Part number: 32377
- More product information:
- Editors' review
- User reviews
- Specifications
- Manufacturer info
- Description:
- Doom 3 - id Software's terrifying battle with the forces of Hell. A massive demonic invasion has overwhelmed the UAC's Mars Research Facility leaving only chaos and horror in its wake. As one of the few survivors, you must struggle with shock, fear, and an all-out assault on you senses as you fight your way to Hell and ... Read more
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Gamespot editors' review
Doom 3 (PC) price range: $28.99
- Reviewed by: Greg Kasavin
- Reviewed on: 08/04/2004
- Updated on:11/11/2004
- Released on: 08/03/2004
Extremely impressive from a technical standpoint yet behind the times from a first-person-shooter design standpoint: This is the dichotomy that is Doom 3, the long-awaited sequel from well-known Texas-based developer id Software. Doom 3 is quite possibly the best-looking game ever, thanks to the brand-new 3D graphics engine used to generate its convincingly lifelike, densely atmospheric, and surprisingly expansive environments. At the same time, when you look past the spectacular appearance, you'll find a conventional, derivative shooter. In fact, if you played the original Doom or its sequel back in the mid '90s (or any popular '90s-era shooter, for that matter), you may be shocked by how similarly Doom 3 plays to those games. The legions of id Software's true believers will celebrate this straightforwardness as being deliberately "old school," especially since Doom 3 is packed with direct references to its classic predecessors. However, the truth of the matter is that Doom 3's gameplay structure and level design are behind the times and very much at odds with the game's cutting-edge, ultrarealistic looks. Yet the quality of the presentation truly is remarkable--enough so that it overwhelms Doom 3's occasional problems.

There's no debating one thing about Doom 3: It looks absolutely, positively phenomenal.
Doom 3 is essentially a remake of the original Doom, though series fans will find reimagined versions of almost every monster from both Doom and Doom II in the new sequel. You play as a nameless, voiceless 22nd-century space marine called by the Union Aerospace Corporation to its Mars research facility beset with mysterious problems--the forces of hell, to be exact. You'll end up single-handedly fighting back legions of hellspawn using weapons like shotguns, machine guns, and rocket launchers. As in the classic Doom games, your foes here are liable to strike at any time--often just as you round a corner, grab a much-needed power-up, or set foot into a new area. So, while your enemies will materialize without notice, and may occasionally startle you as they leap out of the darkness, Doom 3 cannot easily be described as scary or suspenseful. On the contrary, it's very predictable, and more or less it just goes through the same types of paces that you've probably gone through before in any number of other similar games.
Over the course of the game, you'll fight your way through a series of linear levels filled with locked doors, and you'll gradually find new weapons and occasionally meet new types of monsters. Early on, your apparent goal is to meet up with your squad, but as you might expect, you'll never actually get to fight alongside any human forces (no thanks to the omission of a co-op mode for multiple players, which was a signature element of past Doom games). Despite the game's cinematic trappings, it follows a formula that generally lacks drama or tension. Occasionally, the game presents to you a shocking or surprising scene--a hallucination or some hellish, otherworldly image. These moments are effective, but are too few and far between in the context of a single-player shooter that's of above-average length (somewhere between 15 to 20 hours). Fortunately, the campaign definitely picks up during the last several hours, once you finally reach (and keep going past) the point when you confront the enemy on its own turf. Getting to that point may be your primary motivation for trudging through some of the repetitive middle portions of the game, though.
Part of the issue is that Doom 3's storyline and narrative technique are ineffectual. Since the main character has no identity whatsoever (for whatever reason), the game tries to get you interested in everyone else on the base. You'll frequently find voice recordings and e-mail from various characters, but not only is a lot of this stuff bone dry, having to stop and read or stand around and listen to a rambling monologue jarringly disrupts the flow of the action. Unfortunately, if you choose to focus on the action by ignoring the seemingly extraneous story elements, you'll find that some of them aren't optional--you'll need to sift through those e-mails and listen to some of those voice recordings to get passcodes for locked doors and storage chests.
For what it's worth, the game's premise seems very fleshed out, and the game gives an amazing first impression. As you explore the UAC base, eavesdropping on various conversations and observing great, little details here and there, you'll get the impression that Doom 3 takes place in a fully realized world. Of course, all hell quickly breaks loose, and from that point onward you'll encounter scarce few creatures that you won't want to instantly shoot. The premise of the game will continue to unfold through occasional cutscenes and the aforementioned e-mails and recordings.

Don't expect the actual gameplay to be as cutting edge as the visuals; Doom 3 plays like shooters from the good, old days.
Since Doom 3 purports to have a plausible premise, suddenly, aspects of the game that you might not normally question will start to stick out as being annoyingly inconsistent. You'll undoubtedly find time to wonder about these logic gaps as you fight throughout the UAC base, especially if you've played other recent first-person shooters that do a better job of justifying their plots. Why would a 22nd-century space marine be sent into action in a darkly lit area without night vision goggles of some sort, or even a helmet? Why wouldn't any of his weapons have light-amplification modules built into them when even today's weapons frequently do? Why, instead, is he stuck carrying around a very weak flashlight with unlimited battery life? Why is he unable to hold a gun and the flashlight at the same time? Why are the UAC's small, spiderlike sentry drones so incredibly powerful? You'll see these helpful little guys rip through droves of hellspawn even faster than you can. If the base's defenses are so tough, then why is everyone so worried, and why is everyone getting killed? Doom 3's central gameplay conceit simply doesn't fit in with the premise of the game, and this is a problem only because Doom 3 chooses to try to make you feel like you're in a believable, fully realized world. Doom-inspired shooters, such as Serious Sam and Painkiller, wisely followed the classic game's arcadelike nature by never even purporting to be plausible and simply focusing on run-and-gun action. So it's ironic that Doom 3's ambitions to be a story-driven game mostly just end up getting in the way and weakening the overall experience.
User reviews
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Awesome and Very Scary
by DoomedQuake on September 27, 2009
Pros: Very Scary, Great Controls, Fantastic Graphics, Superb Sound, Great online, Good Script
Cons: 2nd half is too easy, online is laggy, reloading takes a long time
Summary: This game is a really awesome game. Sure it's dark as half the people say about the game but it was INTENDED to be dark! The game has many ...
Summary: This game is a really awesome game. Sure it's dark as half the people say about the game but it was INTENDED to be dark! The game has many brill weapons. I recommend this to every FPS and Horror fan
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awesome it rocks
by teenagekid2 on November 4, 2008
Pros: i played this at least 3 times after it was installed i didnt want to stop i say get it it is worth the money
Cons: no comment
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A straight forward, almost completely agreeable summary of Doom 3
by Suicide Owen on December 27, 2005
Pros: Unbelievable graphics, challenging, doesn't hold anything back. (Meaning that it deserved every bit of a mature rating.)
Cons: (just like every review) Too dark, Long loading.
Summary: I downloaded this game on a imac g5 with 2.1 ghz. I thought for sure this game would load fast and have no glitches. I was wrong. The loading ...
Summary: I downloaded this game on a imac g5 with 2.1 ghz. I thought for sure this game would load fast and have no glitches. I was wrong. The loading screens take long and there are plenty of glitches. Overall, the game puts you in the mood to scare you with the graphics and satanic sounds, but the darkness is a little boring after a while and it is definetely a repetitive shooter. These are all smart comments, so heres something that the rest of us can handle. The chainsaw and chaingun are unbelievable, but the shotgun has no range. Get close to the zombies and use the shotgun, thats when you know why I gave the game an 8.
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A glorified graphics demo that is usually too dark to see
by vegcrow on July 12, 2005
Pros: Pretty (when the lights are on)
Cons: repetitive, dark, boring, no co-op mode, and bad sound
Summary: I wanted so much to love this game. But it was just boring. The entire game takes place in narrow, metal hallways. It takes forever to load a level, even ...
Summary: I wanted so much to love this game. But it was just boring. The entire game takes place in narrow, metal hallways. It takes forever to load a level, even if you're reloading a level that you are already playing! (Where's the cache???) If all you want is a graphics demo, then go ahead and get it, but make SURE you have the best hardware possible. This game is not worth looking at unless you have the most expensive hardware.
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Plan old fashing, upgraded Graphics
by addyman on April 2, 2005
Pros: Graphic is Super great. It is a Challenging game. Game play fun. Nothing comes close to this. HL2 good but short.
Cons: Had to completely up date my Pc.
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Very Nice Looking But Thats It...
Pros: Top Notch Graphics no matter what quality you use, though nothing beats High and Very High. Low and Medium still looks nice if your 3D card can handle any settings. Neat to see old Classic Doom monsters in real 3D. Great to play in the dark with headphone
Cons: Where to Start.. Storyline (can we say HalfLife), Dark, very dark game (if you don't use MODS). To much switching from Flashlight to weapon and shooting blindly. Game gets repetitive as you have read, open door, shoot, open door, shoot. I would of liked t
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kind of buggy
Pros: good graphics (but half-life2 graphics is better)
Cons: very very VERY buggy. i play thing game with my friend. we like to find bugs in it :) the character 'rag doll' (if you can call it that) is very buggy and funny. you can get very funny screenshots when you step on a dead zombie and punch right into his he
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Lame gameplay, dark & predictable
Pros: There are moments where it's not so dark and you can see the graphics and they are cool, but these moments are rare.
Cons: boring game. bad guys popping out of dark place all the time. I only played the first shapter but what I saw did not make me want to buy it.
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Tremendously Scary Fun (but not perfect).
Pros: Not unlike the Star Wars movies, the latest incarnation of the Doom series is surely what the designers were dreaming of when they came up with the original. Killer graphics and sound capabilities (providing your system can match them), heart-stopping sur
Cons: Crank up the brightness setting, because you're going to need it. This game is dark as hell (no pun intended). Of course it's all part of the intended atmosphere, but you can't help but wonder if they went too far. Also, since the game is really a polishe
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The Bomb!!!
Pros: simply the best game, ever. Graphics are mind-blowing. The action is almost too intense. No effort was spared in detail and depth. Words cannot describe this awesome game. I was sooo sad when I reached the end, but replayed it 3 times so far. I bought
Cons: No ad on games yet.
Specifications
- Manufacturer: Activision
- Part number: 32377
- Description: Doom 3 - id Software's terrifying battle with the forces of Hell. A massive demonic invasion has overwhelmed the UAC's Mars Research Facility leaving only chaos and horror in its wake. As one of the few survivors, you must struggle with shock, fear, and an all-out assault on you senses as you fight your way to Hell and back, in an epic clash against pure evil.
Product Basic Spec
- Platform PC
- ESRB rating Mature - Intense Violence,Blood and Gore
- Genre Action
- Elements First-Person Shooter
- Context Sci-Fi
- Number of players 1-4 Players
- Number of online players 4 Players Online
- Connectivity Online
- Difficulty Medium
- Stability Stable
- Learning curve About a half hour
- DirectX version v9.0
- Operating system Microsoft Windows XP, Microsoft Windows 2000
- Offline modes Team Oriented,Competitive
- Online modes Team Oriented,Competitive
Minimum
- CDROM 8x
- DVDROM 0
- Disk 2200 MB
- Other 384MB RAM, English version of Microsoft Windows 2000/XP, 3D hardware Accelerator Card Required
- RAM 512 MB
- VRAM 64 MB
Game
- Developer id Software
- ESRB Mature
- ESRB descriptors Intense Violence,Blood and Gore
- Max number of players 4
- Min number of players 1
- Release date 2004-08-03
Manufacturer info
- Activision
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse Activision products on Shopper.com
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- Website: http://www.activision.com/
- Address:
3100 Ocean Park Blvd., Santa Monica, CA 90405 - Phone: 1-310-255-2000







