Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sonic Robo Blast 2 (often abbreviated SRB2) is a platform game made within id Software's Doom engine. It is a free Sonic the Hedgehog fan game inspired by the original Sega Genesis games that "attempts to recreate their design in 3D", [ 5 ] and was the first fan-made 3D Sonic game created. [ 6 ]
Sonic Robo Blast 2 is a 3D Sonic game that uses a modified version of the Doom Legacy engine and has been in development since 1998. The game gained notability for being the first 3D Sonic fangame, and it continues to be updated by its developers and supported by its community to the present day. [ 10 ]
In the late 2000s, Alex Workman, better known as Xkeeper, reworked the site into a wiki, which launched on 2 February 2010. [3] The site has since specialised in what gaming media, including Edge and Wired , [ 1 ] [ 4 ] have likened to video game archaeology; [ 5 ] [ 6 ] [ 7 ] Kotaku described them as "routinely responsible" for it. [ 8 ]
MyHouse.wad (known also as MyHouse.pk3, or simply MyHouse) is a map for Doom II created by Steve Nelson. It is a subversive horror-thriller that revolves around a house that continues to change in shape, sometimes drastically and in a non-euclidean manner.
Sonic Robo Blast 2 is a Doom modification that uses the Doom Legacy source port to completely change the game from a first-person shooter to a third-person platformer based on Sonic the Hedgehog. [29] In 2018, Sonic Robo Blast 2 Kart, a kart racing game based on the game, was released as a standalone modification. [30]
Shadow Generations [b] is a 2024 platform game developed by Sonic Team and published by Sega.The second mainline Sonic the Hedgehog game to feature Shadow as a protagonist, its plot runs parallel to Sonic Generations (2011) and sees Shadow travel through time as he faces his archenemy, the evil alien conqueror Black Doom.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Help; Learn to edit; Community portal; Recent changes; Upload file
Sega director Fujio Minegishi had connections to the music industry, and suggested his friend Yūzō Kayama write the Sonic score. However, Sonic Team did not think Kayama's music would fit, and so commissioned Masato Nakamura, bassist and songwriter of the J-pop band Dreams Come True.