![]() The story takes place on Mars in the 22nd century, much like DOOM 3 did. Because DOOM‘s singleplayer campaign is stellar. With that said, I’m not one to not give a product the benefit of the doubt and speak for itself, and I’m glad I did. The reason why being Id Software and Bethesda’s continuous neglect to show off their own campaign and subpar presentations of what little they had decided to show. I’ve not made a secret that leading up to the release of DOOM I had practically no faith in the singleplayer delivering any satisfying content. But does it do the DOOM brand justice, or is it an icon of sin upon Id Software’s very clean record? And now, in 2016, we get the first flagship release in twelve years. From the original two games, to the strange spinoffs to the polarizing but stellar DOOM 3, I’ve loved almost everything put out in the way of games within this franchise. Ever since then, I’ve had Id Software’s classic series in my blood and have never let it go. I first played the original DOOM from 1993 when I was four years old, far too young for it but so intrigued by the angry Cacodemon icon I spotted on our brand new Windows 95 computer that I had to try it. Reviewed on PC (also available on PlayStation 4 and Xbox One)ĭeveloped by Id Software and Certain Affinity / Published by Bethesda Studios For the purposes of making this review easier to read I have decided to split the gameplay segments into three separate sections for the three different modes DOOM can be played in Singleplayer, Multiplayer and SnapMap.
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