Singleplayer / Multiplayer
Simple mods:
(of weapons, monsters, features (think a radar or double jumps))
Complex mods:
New gamemodes / altered game play / different game:
(True total conversions where nothing of the original media is left? Where is the borderline?)
Engine requirements:
What is Zerstörer, what is Nehahra, what is Quoth, what is Qonquer, what is e1m1red, what is X-Men.
What about Darkplaces mods/games?
What about Bots?
idgames2 was rather stupid with its partial conversions vs QuakeC/, right?
QuakeC is a term for programmers, not Quake players.
Speak now or be silent forever.
]]>http://expo2011.quakewiki.net/
My booth is here, so far I released a bunch of old finger .plan files. Those were a twitter/blog like technology which game developers used to share knowledge, shout insults and talk about llamas in the nineties. A lot of Quake’s and id Software’s history as well as the whole FPS development scene of those days is covered in those. I started collecting them a while ago and will continue to do so. Once I am done, I will make a big huge super mega über article about it. The release is a work-in-progress dump, so it might not make much sense to anyone but me. If you read this and you do have archived .plan files, please contact me! Also do so if you archived old IRC logs from the #quake channels when developers talked (apart from this bloody amazing list).
[email protected]
2/18/97
4:04pmHmmm, it seems Mr. Giggler’s PPro 200 isn’t quite fast enough for
him. He’s unhappy that WinQuake is slightly choppy when he’s
running a VIS as a background process.Pooooor baaabyyyyy….
;)
Upcoming things to expect from me: A long interview with one of Quake’s developers, oh gee! A paginated fancy (with screenshots!) browse function for the map list. And maybe other things, I sadly do not have much time at the moment. I meant to have ditched WordPress and moved to another server by now…
]]>The domain expired. Right now it is held in some kind of grace period. If I recall correctly it has happened before, 2-3 years ago. The owner renewed it. If the owner will not renew it this time, one could enter a “backordering” process (see the placeholder site) and try to buy the domain before any domain grabbing spam filth, that would cost a considerable amount of money though. I would give up to 100$ (from the bounty fund) to that if we can finally get the domain into the active community (and only if there is a sensible backup strategy). I mirrored the site 6 weeks ago, so theoretically a loss would not be as devastating as the quakesrc.org one.
I am quite confident that everything will turn out alright. There will be no armageddon.
PS: inside3d.org is available.
]]>The A Roman Wilderness of Pain maps spent ten years in development, on and off. The project began in 1999 as a series of 13 short maps, each basically a setpiece surrounded by a few small hallways. The first 12 maps each featured a roman numeral marking the map number, and the final map had a Quake-style Q. These maps were eventually scrapped, the lighting in particular was annoying and generally too dark, though the scrapped maps were generally playable, featuring items and monsters (I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII, Q). A while later I returned to the maps with the intent of remaking the same layouts with a much greater level of architectural detail, and explicitly trying to develop a very gruesome style with flesh, skulls, spikes, blood and so forth. This effort produced NewI and NewII, the first with totally revamped architecture, the second with just a few rooms revamped. I then abandoned the maps again and released all of the map sources.
In 2004, five years after the inception of the maps, Mike Woodham released A Roaming Wildebeest In Spain his second level based on my scraps (the first one was FMB8, a large open Egyptian temple map). The story behind this map is its own epic saga; Mike Woodham had been trying to create a large terrain map called “Caves and Canyons” for months, and was having a very tough time of it due to engine and compiler limitations. Mike writes, “I lost weight, friends and the will to live many times during the last several months and I wont be doing another terrain based map.” The result of this was Mike combining one of his terrain sections with Roman Wilderness of Pain maps i, ii, viii, ix. He explains, “I removed all lights in the individual maps and re-lit, changed 95% of the textures and only changed brushwork to make joining the individual sections easier.” The new texture theme was sunny and Egyptian, rather than dark and metallic, with lava rather than blood.
In the meantime I had been trying to string together most of the Roman Wilderness scraps into a single map (BigRome). The layout was very flat, but I did manage to get most of the maps into a single map. Luckily, this map was so huge that I could not get it to work properly. aguirRe had a few laughs at this map. The outside of the map was surrounded with rockwork, which he advised me to keep and cut other parts of the map. I eventually decided to chop up this large map into four maps, so that each one could have a more coherent design and theme. The first map, CanyonRome, kept a lot of the terrain work, and had only the gatehouse structure in terms of manmade architecture (a combination of VI and VII). The second map began where the first one ended, and consisted of everything after the gold key door in the final Roman1 (this is why, as many players noted, the second section of Roman1 is not really linked with the first section, and has a distinct style). After having trouble with getting this outdoor terrain and rockwork to vis properly, I rebuild the entranceway to the first map as a smaller, enclosed canyon with a bridge in the centre. I then realized that the second map was quite small, and could be pasted onto the first map as a second section, and the whole thing would still compile faster and better than the version with wide open terrain at the start. I had now moved from four maps to three. Roman1 now incorporated I, II, VI, and VII. The theme of the first half of Roman1, “A Roman Wilderness of Pain,” was more runic-metallic, with a brick temple sitting on top of a metallic fortress with a sewer and a dock. I included tech monsters as well to reflect the Doom 1 or Quake 3 style of mix-n-match evil. The second half was a series of rooms and hallways which mixed flesh and metal.
Roman2 incorporated only maps IV and IX, but it was important to stick to these two sources only for this map, as it had a very specific theme, a “Venice of Blood,” and only IV and IX of the original Roman Wilderness maps had architecture overtop pools of blood. The pools were on different levels so I had to adjust the level of blood to fit the two maps together. The final raft ride at the end leads to the entrance to Roman3, a section I built from scratch. Roman3 incorporates V, X, XII, and Q. There is a fair amount of totally new architecture in the map, especially the higher levels, huge arches have been stacked on top of the V map for example. Thematically, I decided to go for a slightly gothic look, using some flying buttresses and spiked arches right alongside the usual Roman architecture with metallic details and flesh/blood wherever possible. I was particularly happy with the player’s ascent in this most vertical of the three maps. The final confrontation might be too difficult, with two boss characters, however.
A Roman Wilderness of Pain was released in December of 2009, ten years after the maps were first started, and five years after Mike Woodham released his map based on the scraps. It was very nice to be able to use most of the good architecture from the original project and build it into three coherent subthemed levels.
BSPs and map sources for all of the versions of the maps here mentioned can be downloaded here. Mike Woodham’s FMB100 can be downloaded here. The Quake episode, A Roman Wilderness of Pain, can be downloaded here.
Written by Tronyn
]]>Anyways, here it is: http://www.quaddicted.com/engines/files/quake-flash.swf
Apparently the shareware is bundled inside. You can mouselook by holding the left mouse button.
I hate Flash and am not posting for visitor whoring so it is not embedded. Just open the file with your Flashplayer-using browser.
PS: I totally missed that the Quake Silverlight port was released too. Thanks Randy! (Yay, more proprietary browser crap :P )
Update: The source is available at http://github.com/mkr3142/QuakeFlash/
]]>PS: Also check out the (Half-Life centric) SP Map Corner.
]]>Make sure you read them wholly before you start contributing. It is not as easy as one might wish. :(
]]>*wiki wegame com /Quake_Bots/ is a blatant ripoff from Megazoid’s Quake Bots page.
*wiki wegame com /Quake_Weapons/#1 is ripped from http://quake.wikia.com/wiki/Category:Quake_1_Weapons . Yeah, “damagwe”. They are violating the GNU Free Documentation License here.
Such scum. You know, I was recently thinking about putting all the content on this site under some free license. Needless to say that my enthusiasm to do so has faded. I was also thinking about having a contest with people uploading Quake custom map gameplay videos to wegame, ha-ha…
* Links scrambled to not give search engines any false hope. Add dots and remove the space if you want to see the sites.
]]>Update: UMNFGHH! If you are on Windows, don’t bother with this. If you are on Linux, here is the basic installation. You will need to download the 80 megabyte nacl_linux_0.1_9308700.tgz, sdlquake-1.0.9.tar.gz and quakesw-1.0.6.tar.gz. You will need Firefox. Install the plugin. Then read and follow nacl/googleclient/native_client/tests/quake/README.nacl . When you are done open nacl/googleclient/native_client/tests/quake/quake.html in Firefox. Taadaa.
Update #2: I am getting no sound and ~40fps (it’s 640×480, about half of the truly native sdlquake performance for me), it constantly burns 100% cpu. +mlook in the console works, but as the mouse is not captured in the window it is pretty useless. ;)
Well, nice techdemo!
Update #3: It is now 3 years later and Google Chrome has Nacl support builtin or something like that. Anyone tried Nacl Quake in it?
]]>They were standing in the middle of the room, huddled together in a circle, and playing the most intricate multiplayer game [...].
I am glad they are not using the vastly inferior QuakeWorld for multiplayer, after all we all know that only Netquake is \m/ TRUE \m/.
PS: Quake Multiplayer, quite overloaded with fancy blingbling stuff, but you can simply remove that if you like.
]]>