Game Quake 2

Quake II is a first-person shooter video game released in December 1997. It was developed by id Software and published by Activision. It is not a direct sequel to Quake; id decided to revert to an existing trademark when the game's fast-paced, tactile feel felt closer to a Quake game than a new franchise. Quake 2 is a first person shooter game released back in 1997 on various gaming platforms including the Nintendo 64 (N64) gaming console. The single player game takes place in a science fiction environment where you play the role of a marine in a dangerous operation to defeat the enemy alien overlord. Dec 14, 2010  Quake II takes place in a science fiction environment. In the single-player game, the player assumes the role of a Marine named Bitterman taking part in 'Operation Alien Overlord', a desperate. Game Description Quake 2 is an online N64 game that you can play at Emulator Online. This free Nintendo 64 game is the United States of America region version for the USA. Quake 2 is a single title from the many arcade games, shooting games and action games offered for this console. Quake ii Shortly after landing on an alien surface, you learn that hundreds of your men have been reduced to just a few. Now you must fight your way through heavily fortified military installations, lower the city's defenses and shut down the enemy's war machine.

Quake II
Developer(s)id Software
  • Hyperion Entertainment(AmigaOS)
  • Raster Productions (N64)
  • HammerHead (PS)
  • Nvidia LightSpeed Studios (RTX remaster)
  • Various (Linux)
Publisher(s)Activision
Bethesda Softworks(GOG.com release)
Nvidia(RTX remaster)
Director(s)Kevin Cloud
Designer(s)Kevin Cloud
American McGee
Tim Willits
Programmer(s)Brian Hook
George John Cash IV[1]
John Carmack
Artist(s)Adrian Carmack
Kevin Cloud
Paul Steed
Composer(s)Sonic Mayhem
SeriesQuake
Engineid Tech 2[2]
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows
AmigaOS
Classic Mac OS
Nintendo 64
PlayStation
Linux
Xbox 360
Zeebo
Release
  • Microsoft Windows
    • NA: December 9, 1997
    • WW: August 3, 2007 (Steam)
    • WW: June 6, 2019 (RTX remaster)
  • Nintendo 64
  • PlayStation
    • NA: September 30, 1999
  • Xbox 360[3]
Genre(s)First-person shooter
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Quake II is a first-person shootervideo game released in December 1997. It was developed by id Software and published by Activision. It is not a direct sequel to Quake; id decided to revert to an existing trademark when the game's fast-paced, tactile feel felt closer to a Quake game than a new franchise.[4] The game is followed by Quake 4.

The soundtrack for Quake II was mainly provided by Sonic Mayhem, with some additional tracks by Bill Brown; the main theme was also composed by Bill Brown and Rob Zombie, and one track by Jer Sypult. The soundtrack for the Nintendo 64 version of the game was composed by Aubrey Hodges, credited as Ken 'Razor' Richmond.

  • 1Gameplay
  • 3Development
    • 3.1Ports
  • 4Release
  • 5Expansions
  • 6Reception

Gameplay[edit]

The single-player mode in Quake II involves gun-battles often with multiple enemies in large, outdoor areas.

Quake II is a first-person shooter, in which the player shoots enemies from the perspective of the main character. The gameplay is very similar to that featured in Quake, in terms of movement and controls, although the player's movement speed has been slowed down, and the player now has the ability to crouch. The game retains four of the eight weapons from Quake (the Shotgun, Super Shotgun, Grenade Launcher, and Rocket Launcher), although they have been redesigned visually and made to function in slightly different ways. The remainder of Quake's eight weapons (the Axe, Nailgun, Super Nailgun, and Thunderbolt) are not present in Quake II. The six newly introduced weapons are the Blaster, Machine Gun, Chain Gun, Hyperblaster, Railgun, and BFG10K. The Quad Damage power up from Quake is present in Quake II, and new power-ups include the Ammo Pack, Invulnerability, Bandolier, Enviro-Suit, Rebreather, and Silencer.

The single player game features a number of changes from Quake. First, the player is given mission-based objectives that correspond to the storyline, including stealing a Tank Commander's head to open a door and calling down an air-strike on a bunker. CGI cutscenes are used to illustrate the player's progress through the main objectives, although they are all essentially the same short piece of video, showing a computerized image of the player character as he moves through game's levels. Another addition is the inclusion of a non-hostile character type: the player character's captured comrades. It is not possible to interact with these characters, however, as they have all been driven insane by their Strogg captors.

The game features much larger levels than Quake, with many more wide open areas. There is also a hub system that allows the player to travel back and forth between levels, which is necessary to complete certain objectives. Some of the textures and symbols that appear in the game are very similar to some of those found in Quake. Enemies demonstrate visible wounds after they have taken damage.

Multiplayer[edit]

The multiplayer portion is similar to that of Quake. It can be played as a free-for-all deathmatch game mode, a cooperative version of the single-player game, or as a 1 vs 1 match that is used in official tournaments, like the Cyberathlete Professional League. It can also be played in Capture the Flag mode (CTF).The deathmatch game benefited from the release of eight specifically designed levels that id Software added after the game's initial release. They were introduced to the game via one of the early patches, that were released free of charge. Prior to the release of these maps, players were limited to playing multiplayer games on the single-player levels, which, while functional as multiplayer levels, were not designed with deathmatch gameplay specifically in mind.

As in Quake, it is possible to customize the way in which the player appears to other people in multiplayer games. However, whereas in Quake, the only option was to change the color of the player's uniform unless third party modifications were used, now the game comes with a selection of three different player models: a male marine, a female marine, and a male cyborg; choice of player model also affects the speech effects the player's character will make, such as exhaling in effort while jumping or groaning when injured. Each model can be customized from in the in-game menu via the selection of pre-drawn skins, which differ in many ways; for example, skin color, camouflage style, and application of facepaint.

Plot[edit]

Quake II takes place in a science fiction environment. In the single-player game, the player assumes the role of a Marine named Bitterman taking part in 'Operation Alien Overlord', a desperate attempt to prevent an alien invasion of Earth by launching a counterattack against the home planet of the hostile Strogg civilization. Most of the other soldiers are captured or killed as soon as they approach the planned landing zone. Bitterman survives only because another Marine's personal capsule collided with his upon launch, causing him to crash far short of the landing zone. It falls upon Bitterman to penetrate the Strogg capital city alone and assassinate the Strogg leader, the Makron.

Game Like Action Quake 2

Development[edit]

Unlike its predecessor, Quake II's engine allows for colored lighting effects and skyboxes.

Originally, Quake II was supposed to be an entirely new game and IP; titles like 'Strogg', 'Lock and Load', and even just 'Load' were toyed with in the early days of development. But after numerous failed attempts, the team at id decided to stick with 'Quake II' and forego the gothic Lovecraftian horror theme from the original in favor of a more sci-fi aesthetic.

2018

It was a conscious decision [to change Quake II's direction] and controversial inside the company. We weren't happy with the [original] Quake story. [John] Romero was gone, so there was no one left to defend it. Kevin Cloud headed up Quake II and he wanted to make it story-driven.

— Todd Hollenshead[5]

Artist and co-owner Adrian Carmack had said that Quake II is his favorite game in the series because 'it was different and a cohesive project.'[5]

Unlike Quake, where hardware accelerated graphics controllers were supported only with later patches, Quake II came with OpenGL support out of the box. Later downloads from id Software added support for AMD's 3DNow! instruction set for improved performance on their K6-2 processors, and Rendition released a native renderer for their V1000 graphics chip. The latest version is 3.21. This update includes numerous bug fixes and new levels designed for multiplayer deathmatch. Version 3.21, available as source code on id Software's FTP server, has no improved functionality over version 3.20 and is simply a slight modification to make compiling for Linux easier.

Quake II uses an improved client–server model introduced in Quake. The game code of Quake II, which defines all the functionality for weapons, entities, and game mechanics, can be changed in any way because id Software published the source code of their own implementation that shipped with the game. Quake II uses the shared library functionality of the operating system to load the game library at run-time—this is how mod authors are able to alter the game and provide different gameplay mechanics, new weapons, and much more. The full source code to Quake II version 3.19 was released under the terms of the GNU GPL on December 22, 2001. Version 3.21 followed later. A LCC-friendly version was released on January 1, 2002 by a modder going by the name of Major Bitch.[6]

Since the release of the Quake IIsource code, several updates from third-party projects to the game engine have been created; the most prominent of these are projects focused on graphical enhancements to the game such as most notable 'Yamagi Quake II', Quake2maX, EGL, Quake II Evolved, and KMQuake II. The source release also revealed numerous security flaws[7] which can result in remote compromise of both the Quake II client and server. As id Software no longer maintains Quake II, most third-party engines include fixes for these bugs. The unofficial patch 3.24 that fixes bugs and adds only meager tweaks is recommended for Quake II purists, as it is not intended to add new features or be an engine mod in its own right.[8] The most popular server-side engine modification for multiplayer, R1Q2, is generally recommended as a replacement for the 3.20 release for both clients and servers. In July 2003, Vertigo Software released a port of Quake II for the Microsoft .NET platform, using Managed C++, called Quake II .NET.[9] It became a poster application for the language, showcasing the powerful interoperability between .NET and standard C++ code. It remains one of the top downloads on the Visual C++ website. In May 2004, Bytonic Software released a port of Quake II (called Jake2) written in Java using JOGL. In 2010 Google ported Jake2 to HTML5, running in Safari and Chrome.[10]

Quake II's game engine was a popular license, and formed the basis for several commercial and free games, such as CodeRED: Alien Arena, War§ow, SiN, Anachronox, Heretic II, Daikatana, Soldier of Fortune, Kingpin: Life of Crime, and UFO: Alien Invasion. Valve Corporation's 1998 video game Half-Life, which went on to sell over eight million copies, was originally going to use the Quake II engine during early development stages. However, the final version runs on a heavily modified version of the Quake engine, GoldSrc, with a small amount of the Quake II code.

Ports[edit]

Ports of Quake II were released in 1999 on the Nintendo 64 (ported by Raster Productions) and PlayStation (ported by Hammerhead) video game consoles.[citation needed] In both cases, the core gameplay was largely identical; however, changes were made to the game sequence and split-screen multiplayer replaced network or Internet play. A Macintosh port was developed by Logicware and released in 1999.[citation needed]Quake II: Colossus (Quake II with both official add-ons) was ported to Linux by id Software and published by Macmillan Digital Publishing in 1999.[citation needed]Be Inc. officially ported Quake II: Colossus to the BeOS to test their OpenGL acceleration in 1999, and provided the game files for free download at a later date—a Windows, Macintosh, or Linux install CD was required to install the game, with the official add-ons being optional.

Jake2 is a Quake II port shown by the JOGL team for JavaOne 2004, to present an example of Java-OpenGL interoperability. Jake2 has since been used by Sun as an example of Java Web Start capabilities for games distribution over the Internet.[citation needed] In 2009, Tectoy Digital ported Quake II to the Brazilian gaming console Zeebo.[citation needed] The game is available for free, but does not feature CG movies or multiplayer support of any kind.

Quake II on the PlayStation

The PlayStation version contains abridged versions of Units 1, 3, 6, 7, 8, and 10 of the PC version, redesigned to meet the console's technical limitations.[11][12] For example, many short airlock-like corridors were added to maps to provide loading pauses inside what were contiguous areas in the PC version. In addition, part of the first mission of the N64 port is used as a prologue. Some enemy types were removed and two new enemies was added: the Arachnid, a human-spider cyborg with twin railgun arms, and the Guardian, a bipedal boss enemy. Saving the game is only possible between levels and at mid-level checkpoints where the game loads, while in the PC version the game could be saved and loaded at any time. The game supports the PlayStation Mouse peripheral to provide a greater parity with the PC version's gameplay. The music used in this port is a combination of the Quake II original music score and tracks from the PC version's mission packs, while the opening and closing cut-scenes are taken from the Ground Zero expansion pack.

The PlayStation version uses a new engine developed by Hammerhead for their future PlayStation projects[12] and runs at a 512x240 resolution at 30 frames per second.[11] The developer was keen to retain a visual parity with the PC version and avoid tricks such as the use of environmental fog. Colored lights for levels and enemies, and yellow highlights for gunfire and explosions, are carried across from the PC version, with the addition of lens flare effects located around the light sources on the original lightmaps. There is no skybox; instead, a flat Gouraud-textured purple sky is drawn around the top of the level. The game uses particles to render blood, debris, and rail gun beams analogously to the PC version.

There is also a split-screen multiplayer mode for two to four players (a four player game is possible using the PlayStation's Multi-tap). The only available player avatar is a modified version of the male player avatar from the PC version, the most noticeable difference being the addition of a helmet. Players can only customize the color of their avatar's armor and change their name. The twelve multiplayer levels featured are unique to the PlayStation version, with none of the PC multiplayer maps being carried over.

The Nintendo 64 version has completely different single player levels and multiplayer maps, and features multiplayer support for up to four players. This version also has new lighting effects, mostly seen in gunfire, and also uses the Expansion Pak for extra graphical detail. This port also features an entirely new soundtrack, consisting mostly of dark ambient pieces, composed by Aubrey Hodges.

A port of Quake II was included with Quake 4 for the Xbox 360 on a bonus disc. This is a direct port of the original game, with some graphical improvements.[13] However, it allows for System Link play for up to sixteen players, split-screen for four players, and cooperative play in single-player for up to sixteen players or four players with split-screen alone.

Unofficial[edit]

On December 20, 2018, Polish programmer Krzysztof Kondrak released the original Quake 2 v3.21 source code with Vulkan support added. The port, called vkQuake2, is available under the GPLv2.[14][15]

Mods[edit]

As with the original Quake, Quake II was designed to allow players to easily create custom content. A large number of mods, maps, graphics such as player models and skins, and sound effects were created and distributed to others free of charge via the Internet. Popular websites such as PlanetQuake and Telefragged allowed players to gain access to custom content. Another improvement over Quake was that it was easier to select custom player models, skins, and sound effects because they could be selected from an in-game menu. Two unofficial expansions were released on CDs in 1998: Zaero, developed by Team Evolve and published by Macmillan Digital Publishing,[citation needed] and Juggernaut: The New Story, developed by Canopy Games and published by HeadGames Publishing.[citation needed] Other notable mods include Action Quake 2, Rocket Arena, Weapons Factory, Loki's Minions Capture the Flag, and RailwarZ Insta-Gib Capture the Flag.

Release[edit]

Despite the title, Quake II is a sequel to the original Quake in name only. The scenario, enemies, and theme are entirely separate and do not fall into the same continuity as Quake. id initially wanted to set it separately from Quake, but due to legal reasons (most of their suggested names were already taken), they decided to use the working title.[citation needed]Quake II was also adopted as a name to leverage the popularity of Quake according to Paul Jaquays.[16]Quake II has been released on Steam, but this version does not include the soundtrack. The game was released on a bonus disc included with Quake 4 Special Edition for the PC, along with both expansion packs. This version also lacks the soundtrack. Quake II is also available on a bonus disc with the Xbox 360 version of Quake 4. This version is a direct port featuring the original soundtrack and multiplayer maps.

In 2015, Quake II: Quad Damage, a bundle containing the original game with the mission packs has been released at GOG.com, unlike the previous releases, this one contains a new customizeable launcher and the official soundtrack in OGG format which was made possible to play in-game, making it the only digital release to include music.

The game has also been included in the following official compilations:

  • Quake II: Quad Damage - contains Quake II and all three official expansion packs.[17]
  • Quake II: Colossus - a Linux compilation that contains Quake II and two mission packs.[18]
  • Ultimate Quake - a compilation including the original Quake trilogy.[19]

Quake II RTX[edit]

Game-data-packager Quake 2

A remastered version of the game, titled Quake II RTX was announced by Nvidia on March 18, 2019[20] and was released on June 6, 2019 for Windows and Linux on Steam. This remastered version requires an Nvidia RTXGPU, as it has been developed to utilise these cards' hardware ray-tracing functionality.[21][22]The game, provided free of charge, includes the three levels present in the original Quake II demo, but can be used to play the full game if its data files are available.[23]

Expansions[edit]

Quake II Mission Pack: The Reckoning[edit]

Quake II Mission Pack: The Reckoning is the first official expansion pack, released on May 31, 1998. It was developed by Xatrix Entertainment.[24] First announced in January 1998,[24] it features eighteen new single player levels, six new deathmatch levels, three new weapons (the Ion Ripper, Phalanx Particle Cannon, and Trap), a new power-up, two new enemies, seven modified versions of existing enemies, and five new music tracks. The storyline follows Joker, a member of an elite squad of marines on a mission to infiltrate a Strogg base on one of Stroggos' moons and destroy the Strogg fleet, which is preparing to attack. Joker crash lands in the swamps outside of the compound where his squad is waiting. He travels through the swamps and bypasses the compounds outer defenses and enters through the main gate, finding his squad just in time to watch them get executed by Strogg forces. Next, Joker escapes on his own to the fuel refinery where he helps the Air Force destroy all fuel production, then infiltrates the Strogg spaceport, boards a cargo ship and reaches the Moon Base, destroying it and the Strogg fleet. Notably, the section of the game that takes place on the Moon Base has low gravity, something that was previously used on one secret level of the original Quake.

The Reckoning received mixed reviews. It holds 69.50% from Gamerankings and Gamespot given a score of 7.4/10.[25][26]

Quake II Mission Pack: Ground Zero[edit]

Quake II Mission Pack: Ground Zero is the second official expansion pack, released on September 11, 1998.[27] It was developed by Rogue Entertainment.[28] It comes with fourteen new single-player levels, ten new multiplayer maps, five additional music tracks, five new enemies, seven new power-ups, and five new weapons.[29][30][31] In the expansion's story the Gravity Well has trapped the Earth Fleet in orbit above the planet Stroggos. One of the marines who managed to land, Stepchild, must now make his way to the Gravity Well to destroy it and free the fleet above and disable the entire defenses of the planet.

The Ground Zero received average to mixed reviews. It holds 65.40% from Gamerankings.[32][33] Patrick Baggatta of IGN gave the expansion 7.5/10, describing it as similar to the original, but noting occasionally confusing map design.[29] Elliott Chin of GameSpot gave the game 7.9/10, citing it as decent for an expansion and praising the monsters and enhanced AI.[30] Johnny B. of Game Revolution rated the expansion D+, citing bad level design and few additions to the original game, and noted the multiplayer power-up gameplay as the only fun feature.[31]

Quake II Netpack I: Extremities[edit]

Quake II Netpack I: Extremities contains, among other features, 11 game mods and 12 deathmatch maps.[34]

Game Quake 2

Reception[edit]

Sales[edit]

Quake II entered PC Data's monthly computer game sales rankings at #2 for December 1997, behind Riven.[35] The game's sales in the United States alone reached 240,913 copies by the end of 1997,[36] after its release on December 9.[citation needed] According to PC Data, it was the country's 22nd-best-selling computer game of 1997.[36] The following year, Quake II secured fifth place on PC Data's charts for January and February 1998,[37][38] then dropped to #8 in March and #9 in April.[38][39] It remained in PC Data's top 20 for another two months,[40] before exiting in July 1998.[41]Quake II surpassed 850,000 units shipped to retailers by May 1998,[42] and 900,000 by June.[43]

According to PC Data, Quake II was the United States' 14th-best-selling computer game during the January–November 1998 period.[44] It ultimately secured 15th place for the full year, with sales of 279,536 copies and revenues of $12.6 million.[45]GameDaily reported in January 1999 that Quake II's sales in the United States had reached 550,000 units;[46] this number rose to 610,000 units by December of that year.[47] Worldwide, Quake II sold over 1 million copies by 2002.[48]

Critical reviews[edit]

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
GameRankingsPC: 87%[49]
N64: 81%[50]
PS: 80%[51]
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGame[52]
GameSpot9.0/10[53]
Next Generation[54](PC)
[55](N64)
Macworld[56]

Next Generation reviewed the PC version of the game, rating it four stars out of five, and stated that 'All in all, id should be commended for the advancement of its technology and improvement in its single-player level design, but it's going to be up to mod designers to provide the necessary additions to the multiplayer game in order to make it stand out from Quake.'[54]

Quake

Quake II received positive reviews. Aggregating review website GameRankings gave the PC version 87%,[49] the Nintendo 64 version 81%,[50] and the PlayStation version 80%.[51]AllGame editor Michael L. House praised Quake II by stating 'the beauty of Quake II is not in the single-player game, it's in the multi-player feature'.[52]GameSpot editor Vince Broady described Quake II as 'the only first-person shooter to render the original Quake entirely obsolete'.[53]

Daniel Erickson reviewed the N64 version of the game for Next Generation, rating it four stars out of five, and stated that 'A good first-person shooter with a great multiplayer mode; GoldenEye is no longer the only game in town.'[55]

Quake II won Macworld's 1999 'Best Shoot-'Em-Up' award, and the magazine's Christopher Breen wrote, 'In either single-player or multiplayer mode, for careening-through-corridor-carnage satisfaction, Quake II is a must-have.'[56] It also won Computer Gaming World's 1997 'Action Game of the Year' award. The editors wrote that 'for pure adrenaline-pumping, visceral, instantly gratifying action, Quake II is the hands-down winner. No game gave us the rush that Quake II did.'[57]

In 1998, PC Gamer declared it the 3rd-best computer game ever released, and the editors called it 'id's gun-happy masterpiece is the most sensational and subtle shooter ever, and one of the best games of any type ever created'.[58]

Notes[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Fragmaster. 'An Interview with id Software's John Cash'. quakewiki.net. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  2. ^Perry, Douglass. 'THE REAL QUAKE II INTERVIEW'. IGN.com. IGN.com. Retrieved February 10, 2018.
  3. ^'Quake 4 Release Information for Xbox 360'. GameFAQs. November 18, 2005. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  4. ^Lien, Tracey (December 7, 2012). 'Quake 2 turns 15-years-old today'. Polygon. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  5. ^ abRetro Gamer (2016). '20 Years of Quake'. Retro Gamer (154): 18, 27.
  6. ^Thompson, Pete. 'Quake II Engine Source for LCC Compiler'. Archived from the original on October 14, 2012. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  7. ^R1CH. 'List of vulnerabilities in Quake II 3.20 (Server)'. Archived from the original on October 3, 2011. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  8. ^knightmare (July 19, 2012). 'Quake2 3.24 Unofficial Patch: Released!'. The Quake2 Café. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  9. ^'Vertigo: Quake II .NET'. Vertigo Software, Inc. July 2003. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  10. ^Ramsdale, Chris (April 1, 2010). 'Look ma, no plugin!'. Google Web Toolkit. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  11. ^ abPerry, Douglass (November 25, 1998). 'Exclusive Quake II Interview'. IGN. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  12. ^ abPerry, Douglass (December 30, 1998). 'The Real Quake II Interview'. IGN. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  13. ^Linneman, John (February 15, 2015). 'Quake 2 on Xbox 360: the first console HD remaster'. Eurogamer. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  14. ^Kondrak, Krzysztof (December 20, 2018). 'Quake 2 Gets A Vulkan Renderer 21 Years After Release - Phoronix'. phoronix.com. Retrieved December 20, 2018.
  15. ^'vkQuake2 on GitHub'.
  16. ^'The Unofficial Quake II FAQ'. October 10, 1998. Archived from the original on April 12, 2009. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  17. ^'Quake II: Quad Damage'. MobyGames. 1999. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  18. ^'Quake II: Colossus'. MobyGames. 1999. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  19. ^'Ultimate Quake'. MobyGames. September 25, 2001. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  20. ^'Quake II RTX: Re-Engineering a Classic with Ray Tracing Effects on Vulkan'. NVIDIA.
  21. ^Burnes, Andrew (May 27, 2019). 'Quake II RTX Available On Windows and Linux June 6th'. Nvidia. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  22. ^McWhertor, Michael (May 27, 2019). 'Quake 2 with ray-tracing support coming June 6, for free'. Polygon. Retrieved June 6, 2019.Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |website= (help)
  23. ^Lilly, Paul (June 6, 2019). 'Quake 2 RTX with ray-traced graphics is now available, first 3 levels are free'. PC Gamer. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  24. ^ abSaltzman, Marc (January 13, 1998). 'Quake II Mission Pack Revealed'. gamecenter.com. Archived from the original on January 21, 1998. Retrieved July 13, 2019.
  25. ^https://www.gamerankings.com/pc/55402-quake-ii-mission-pack-the-reckoning/index.html
  26. ^https://www.gamespot.com/quake-ii-mission-pack-the-reckoning/
  27. ^https://www.mobygames.com/game/windows/quake-ii-mission-pack-ground-zero
  28. ^'Quake II Mission Pack: Ground Zero'. GameSpot. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  29. ^ abBaggatta, Patrick (October 19, 1998). 'Quake II: Ground Zero'. IGN. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  30. ^ abChin, Elliott (September 30, 1998). 'Quake II Mission Pack: Ground Zero Review'. GameSpot. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  31. ^ abJohnny B. (September 1, 1998). ''It's Christmas at Ground Zero' Review'. Game Revolution. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  32. ^https://www.gamerankings.com/pc/198380-quake-ii-mission-pack-ground-zero/index.html
  33. ^https://www.gamespot.com/quake-ii-mission-pack-ground-zero/
  34. ^Sluggo (December 13, 1998). 'The Unofficial Quake II: Extremities FAQ'. quakewiki.net. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  35. ^Ocampo, Jason (January 20, 1998). 'December's hottest games'. Computer Games Strategy Plus. Archived from the original on May 2, 2005.
  36. ^ abStaff (April 1998). 'The Best-Selling Games of 1997'. PC Gamer US. 5 (4): 44.
  37. ^Staff (May 1998). 'READ.ME; PC Data Best-Sellers'. Computer Gaming World (166): 35.
  38. ^ abOcampo, Jason (April 21, 1998). 'Do the PC Data figures prove lower is better?'. Computer Games Strategy Plus. Archived from the original on April 6, 2005.
  39. ^Ocampo, Jason (May 13, 1998). 'The top selling games of April, according to PC Data'. Computer Games Strategy Plus. Archived from the original on February 8, 2005.
  40. ^Ocampo, Jason (July 21, 1998). 'StarCraft scores a hat trick with its third month at No. 1'. Computer Games Strategy Plus. Archived from the original on May 2, 2005.
  41. ^Ocampo, Jason (August 18, 1998). 'SWAT 2 debuts at No. 5'. Computer Games Strategy Plus. Archived from the original on April 6, 2005.
  42. ^Staff (May 2, 1998). 'Merchants & Marketing; newsline ...'. Billboard. Vol. 110 no. 18. p. 65.
  43. ^Ocampo, Jason (June 26, 1998). 'Activision notes more than 900,000 copies of PC version have shipped'. Computer Games Strategy Plus. Archived from the original on May 15, 2005.
  44. ^IGN Staff (January 4, 1999). 'Best Selling Games of 1998'. IGN. Archived from the original on September 1, 2000.
  45. ^Staff (April 1999). 'The Numbers Game'. PC Gamer US. 6 (4): 50.
  46. ^Staff (January 1999). 'GameDAILY Interviews ION Storm's John Romero'. GameDaily. Archived from the original on April 25, 2001.
  47. ^Ajami, Amer (December 13, 1999). 'Quake III Sales Through the Roof'. GameSpot. Archived from the original on March 4, 2000.
  48. ^'id Software Background'. id Software. Archived from the original on December 11, 2002.
  49. ^ ab'Quake II for PC'. GameRankings. CBS Interactive. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  50. ^ ab'Quake II for Nintendo 64'. GameRankings. CBS Interactive. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  51. ^ ab'Quake II for PlayStation'. GameRankings. CBS Interactive. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  52. ^ abHouse, Michael L. 'Quake II Review'. AllGame. Archived from the original on December 11, 2014. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  53. ^ abBroady, Vince. 'Quake II Review'. GameSpot. Retrieved May 19, 2017.
  54. ^ ab'Finals'. Next Generation. No. 39. Imagine Media. March 1998. p. 118.
  55. ^ abErickson, Daniel (October 1999). 'Finals'. Next Generation. Vol. 2 no. 2. Imagine Media. p. 108-109.
  56. ^ abBreen, Christopher (December 1999). '1999 Macworld Game Hall Of Fame'. Macworld. Archived from the original on June 11, 2001.
  57. ^Staff (March 1998). 'CGW Presents The Best & Worst of 1997'. Computer Gaming World (164): 74–77, 80, 84, 88, 89.
  58. ^The PC Gamer Editors (October 1998). 'The 50 Best Games Ever'. PC Gamer US. 5 (10): 86, 87, 89, 90, 92, 98, 101, 102, 109, 110, 113, 114, 117, 118, 125, 126, 129, 130.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)

External links[edit]

  • Quake II on idsoftware.com at the Wayback Machine (archived August 24, 2011)
  • Source code for Quake II, version 3.19 on GitHub
  • Quake II at PlanetQuake
  • Quake II at MobyGames

Quake 2 Gameplay

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