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The OpenArena project was established on August 19, 2005, one day after the id Tech 3 source code released under GNU GPL-2.0-or-later license. OpenArena was officially released for Microsoft Windows, Linux, and macOS. Third parties have also ported the game to FreeBSD, [1] OpenBSD, Android [2] and iOS. [3]
Quake III Arena is a 1999 multiplayer-focused first-person shooter developed by id Software. The third installment of the Quake series, Arena differs from previous games by excluding a story-based single-player mode and focusing primarily on multiplayer gameplay. The single-player mode is played against computer-controlled bots.
Linux, OS X, Windows: ioquake3 id Tech 3: GNU GPL (code), Proprietary license (media) A free Quake 3 like comical FPS game Xonotic: Team Xonotic 2010-12-23 2023-06-20 (0.8.6) Linux, OS X, Windows: DarkPlaces Quake engine: GNU GPL: Fork and direct successor of the Nexuiz Project. Team Fortress 2: Valve: 2007-10-7 2019-3-28 Windows, Mac OS, Linux ...
Quake is a series of first-person shooter video games, developed by id Software and, as of 2010, published by Bethesda Softworks.The series is composed of Quake and its nonlinear, standalone sequels, which vary in setting and plot.
Challenge ProMode Arena (CPMA, formerly Challenge ProMode [CPM], unofficially Promode) is a freeware modification for id Software's first-person shooter computer game Quake III Arena (Q3A). CPMA includes modified gameplays that feature air-control, rebalanced weapons, instant weapon switching and additional jumping techniques.
1999 – Windows, Linux, macOS [72] [73] 2000 – Dreamcast [72] 2001 – PlayStation 2 [72] 2010 – Xbox 360 [72] Notes: First-person shooter; Published as a retail title by Activision [72] An official expansion pack was released in 2000: Quake III: Team Arena, developed by id and published by Activision [74]
On August 3, 2007, at QuakeCon 2007, id Software publicly announced their plans to release a free browser-based Quake III game titled Quake Zero. [9] In early 2008, the title was officially renamed to Quake Live due to a domain squatting issue. [10] During late 2008 and early 2009, Quake Live was in an invitation-only closed beta. A handful of ...
Quake 4 is a 2005 first-person shooter video game developed by Raven Software and published by Activision.It is the fourth title in the Quake series, after the multiplayer Quake III Arena, and a sequel to Quake II.