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Todd Jason Replogle (born 1969) [citation needed] is an American video game programmer best known as the co-creator of the Duke Nukem series. He wrote six 2D action games for MS-DOS released as shareware by Apogee Software between 1990 and 1993. This includes Duke Nukem and Duke Nukem II, which are multidirectional scrolling platform games.
Like most FPS games of the day, Duke Nukem 3D features three-dimensional environments with two-dimensional sprites standing in for weapons, enemies, and breakable background objects. Duke Nukem 3D was released for MS-DOS, Mac OS, PlayStation, Sega Saturn, game.com, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive, Nintendo 64, and later re-released during 2008 for Xbox ...
Game engine recreation is a type of video game engine remastering process wherein a new game engine is written from scratch as a clone of the original with the full ability to read the original game's data files. The new engine reads the old engine's files and, in theory, loads and understands its assets in a way that is indistinguishable from ...
Duke Nukem is a 1991 platform game developed and published by Apogee Software for MS-DOS. The 2D, multidirectional scrolling game follows the adventures of fictional character Duke Nukem across three episodes of ten levels each. The game's first episode was distributed as shareware. [5] The name was briefly changed to Duke Nukum to avoid ...
This is a list of media related to the Duke Nukem series of video games. Duke Nukem was originally created by Apogee Software . This list contains all officially released, scheduled, and canceled Duke Nukem media, as well as some fan-made games.
Apogee is a video game developer responsible for creating the Duke Nukem series of computer games. [1] The game studio developed Duke Nukem 3D under their new name 3D Realms, with support from software publisher FormGen. [2] Released in 1996, Duke Nukem 3D was acclaimed as one of the best video games of all time by PC Gamer. [3]
In Summer of 2005, this game was ported to mobile phones as Duke Nukem Mobile 3D and enhanced to include a mode where the enemies are rendered as polygonal models. In spring of 2007, the game was re-released for mobile phones again, under the title Duke Nukem Arena. It added a new survival mode and up to 4-player multiplayer Deathmatch.
Jedi is a game engine developed primarily by Ray Gresko for LucasArts. [3] It is very similar to the Build engine used in Duke Nukem 3D.While not a true 3D engine, it supported a three-dimensional environment with no limitations in the 3rd dimension (Z).