Duke nukem 3d rts and grp files download






















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Images Donate icon An illustration of a heart shape Donate Ellipses icon An illustration of text ellipses. Duke Nukem 3D v1. EMBED for wordpress. Want more? Advanced embedding details, examples, and help! Reviewer: SebstaBro7 gmail. Unlike in Doom, you could now create platforms on top of platforms, drive vehicles Sorta , ride on moving platforms, better exploding enemies This created the concept of "gibs" , and now up to 9 weapons could be found and selected ranging from the simple pistol to the fantastic devastator weapon.

This game also featured interactive environments, such as using a payphone, playing on a pool table, even interacting with the NPC's and enemies, stuff not found in Doom.

The only real down side is that it is still the same old gameplay. Shoot the bad guys, find the exit. Along with that, it featured multiplayer on an epic scale. Most of you will think this a pointless experiment but I was just curious to see if it could be done in AutoIt. The 3D shooter, Duke Nukem 3D, that came out in the mid 90's, used a type of archive for storing it's resource files. Quake has the greater legacy, eventually paving the way for online multiplayer, but Duke Nukem 3D was a great evolution of iD's other major shooter, a little game called Doom.

Like Doom, Duke 3D was first and foremost about blasting nasty mosters in the face. But there was a bit more to it than that. Duke Nukem 3D brought in interesting levels to explore and mechanics like the HoloDuke and shrinking enemies. And then, of course, there were the jokes: tongue-in-cheek references to everything from Doom to Army of Darkness, with Duke playing the epitome of the brash action hero.

It's by turns silly and tasteless, but nearly 20 years later Duke Nukem 3D remains surprisingly fun to play. Thanks to some modern download service releases and a still-active modding community, Duke 3D runs well on modern PCs and looks better than you may expect. Sure, the enemies are pixelated 2D sprites, but with a high-res texture pack those pixels are deliciously clean and sharp. And blasting aliens? Still fun. Once Duke's code was open sourced, it was made to run on OpenGL, so it plays well with modern machines.

That's the version I played, paired with the fan-created High Resolution texture pack that I recommend below. Then head to Duke4. You want the full version, which weighs in at MB as of version 5.



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