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more about #id more comments → anticon: Funny this is news...Android was running doom and associated expansions years ago...Iphone gets too much praise. #apple more » junglemindstate: hey, how's that Pre working out for you guys? more » cardboredbox: but can it officially run Crysis? #apple more » bagellord: I love Doom. But not the movie. Ugh. I wonder if I could get it to run on Windows 7? That and Dark Forces. That would be fun. #apple more » strider_mt2k: Props for having Quake 2. Enjoy folks. It's a serious classic. more » Serolf Divad: In that video the cross hairs seem to move like they're caught in molasses. Not an auspicious sign, IMHO. more » weatherman: Sure it looks good for an iPhone game, but it still looks pretty crappy - no better than a DS. And I have no doubt that the controls will be frustrati... more » -
#appstore
The iPhone Now Officially Runs Doom
id's classic shooter has finally been (officially) ported to the iPhone. And thanks to oversight from John Carmack himself, there are a number of improvements that make it worth a purchase even for Jailbreakers. More » -
#iphoneapps
Doom Resurrection for iPhone Hits the App Store, Costs $10
Doom Resurrection, the first properly new title in the Doom franchise since Doom III, has finally landed in the App Store, and it's not cheap. But is it sufficiently Doom-y? Dark? Graphically lush? Good? More » -
#iphoneapps
A Whole Lotta Quake Will Be Blowing Up Your iPhone
John Carmack says that not one, but three Quake games are coming to the iPhone—1, 2, and Arena—though his involvement will mostly be to "make sure certain specific things are done the way I want them to be." More » -
#iphoneapps
Doom Resurrection for iPhone Due Next Week; Here's the Trailer
Doom Resurrection, the first full title in the series since Doom III, will be coming to the App Store next week, and iD has cut a trailer. (Spoiler: It looks great.) More » -
#piracy
PC Manufacturers See Piracy As A Hidden Benefit, Says id Software
Todd Hollenshead, CEO of id Software (think Doom and Quake), accuses PC hardware manufacturers of implicitly supporting piracy of all kinds because they see it as a "hidden benefit" when you buy a PC. This came up in an interview with Gamesindustry.biz, and was part of a larger point aimed at answering the question of why PC manufacturers aren't doing more to stop piracy with hardware measures. When asked if these companies are secretly happy about piracy, Todd says: More » -

