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Profile picture of Doom Ii Hell On Earth


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    Profile picture of Doom II: Hell on Earth

    Doom II: Hell on Earth

  • First released on 30 September, 1994 for PC DOS
  • The continuous 30 levels are divided into four areas; UAC Underground, UAC's Starport (Hellish Outpost), City, and Hell. Immediately following the events in Doom, the player once again assumes the role of the unnamed space marine. After defeating the demon invasion of the Mars moon bases and returning from Hell (the manifestation of Hell where the Deimos moon floats over), Doomguy finds that Earth has also been invaded by the demons, who have killed billions of people.[10][11] The humans who survived the attack have developed a plan to build massive spaceships which will carry the remaining survivors into space. Once the ships are ready, the survivors prepare to evacuate Earth. Unfortunately, Earth's only ground spaceport gets taken over by the demons, who place a flame barrier over it, preventing any ships from leaving.[10] The marine then battles hordes of demons and is able to deactivate the force field, allowing the remaining humans to escape. Once all the survivors escape Earth, the marine is the only human left on the planet.[12] Just as he sits down to await death, knowing that he saved mankind, the marine then receives an off-planet transmission from the survivors in orbit, who have managed to find out where the armies of Hell are coming from. The message reveals that the demonic base is in the center of the marine's own hometown. He then fights through the city until he reaches the base, but sees there is no way to stop the invasion on that side. He then decides to step into the portal to try deactivating it from the other side, entering Hell (a different Hell than the one that the Deimos moon floats over in the first Doom). After fighting through the hordes of Hell, the marine reaches the location of the biggest demon he has ever seen, called the Icon of Sin (Baphomet). He kills the Icon of Sin by firing rockets into its exposed brain. Its death causes devastation on Hell, and the portal to Earth has been sealed. Now with Hell defeated, the marine joins with the other humans in an effort to rebuild and restore life on Earth.

    Action
    Science fiction
    Horror
    Shooter

    Part of the

    Doom

    game universe.

  • First released on 30 September, 1994 for PC DOS
  • The continuous 30 levels are divided into four areas; UAC Underground, UAC's Starport (Hellish Outpost), City, and Hell. Immediately following the events in Doom, the player once again assumes the role of the unnamed space marine. After defeating the demon invasion of the Mars moon bases and returning from Hell (the manifestation of Hell where the Deimos moon floats over), Doomguy finds that Earth has also been invaded by the demons, who have killed billions of people.[10][11] The humans who survived the attack have developed a plan to build massive spaceships which will carry the remaining survivors into space. Once the ships are ready, the survivors prepare to evacuate Earth. Unfortunately, Earth's only ground spaceport gets taken over by the demons, who place a flame barrier over it, preventing any ships from leaving.[10] The marine then battles hordes of demons and is able to deactivate the force field, allowing the remaining humans to escape. Once all the survivors escape Earth, the marine is the only human left on the planet.[12] Just as he sits down to await death, knowing that he saved mankind, the marine then receives an off-planet transmission from the survivors in orbit, who have managed to find out where the armies of Hell are coming from. The message reveals that the demonic base is in the center of the marine's own hometown. He then fights through the city until he reaches the base, but sees there is no way to stop the invasion on that side. He then decides to step into the portal to try deactivating it from the other side, entering Hell (a different Hell than the one that the Deimos moon floats over in the first Doom). After fighting through the hordes of Hell, the marine reaches the location of the biggest demon he has ever seen, called the Icon of Sin (Baphomet). He kills the Icon of Sin by firing rockets into its exposed brain. Its death causes devastation on Hell, and the portal to Earth has been sealed. Now with Hell defeated, the marine joins with the other humans in an effort to rebuild and restore life on Earth.


    Game image #1 of Doom II: Hell on Earth
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    Game image #3 of Doom II: Hell on Earth

    About

    Let the Obsession begin. Again. This time, the entire forces of the netherworld have overrun Earth. To save her, you must descend into the stygian depths of Hell itself! Battle mightier, nastier, deadlier demons and monsters. Use more powerful weapons. Survive more mind-blowing explosions and more of the bloodiest, fiercest, most awesome blastfest ever!

    Platforms

    PC DOS, Mac, PC, Game Boy Advance, Tapwave Zodiac, Xbox Live Arcade

    Modes

    Single-player

    , 

    Multi-player

    , 

    Co-operative

    , 

    Split screen

    Player perspectives

    First person

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    id Tech 1

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    Image of id Software
    id Software
    We are a studio guided by the basic principle of making the most innovative and immersive worlds possible, powered by leading-edge technology, to deliver an intense gaming experience.
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    Image of Imagineer
    Imagineer
    A Japanese software company. They published games (developed by other companies) for various console systems, and ported various Western games for Japanese systems, such as SimCity, Populous, Might and Magic, and Wolfenstein 3D, among others.
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    Atari, Inc.
    Have You Played Atari Today?
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    Activision Publishing
    For more than 30 years, Activision has been changing the way people play
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    Bethesda Softworks
    Publisher of DOOM Eternal, Elder Scrolls, Fallout, DEATHLOOP, Ghostwire: Tokyo, Wolfenstein & more!
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    Image of Virgin Interactive Entertainment
    Virgin Interactive Entertainment
    A UK game developer and publisher and part of the Virgin Group. Was originally known as Virgin Games Inc until 1994 when it was renamed Virgin Interactive Entertainment.
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