Five years after shutting its doors, game-industry pioneer 3D Realms is back, including original team members like Scott Miller and Bryan Turner, as well as new additions like CEO Mike Nielsen, with 11 years of experience as CEO and founder of Coolshop.com, the biggest game distributor in Scandinavia, and vice president Frederik Schreiber, CEO of Interceptor Entertainment.
3D Realms’ first order of business is the launch of the 3D Realms Anthology, a massive bundle of 32 historic games – including all-time classics that set new standards for gameplay, like Duke Nukem 3D, Shadow Warrior and Wolfenstein 3D.
Featuring a brand new, re-rockestrated soundtrack from Interceptor Entertainment’s Andrew Hulshult, the 3D Realms Anthology is completely DRM-free, offers partial controller support for all games, and is built to work on modern Windows PCs. The collection is available for the ridiculously low price of just $19.99 via its official website for the next 48 hours, at which point it will return to its regular price of $39.99. Still, that’s cheap.
The 3D Realms Anthology contains the following games:
? Arctic Adventure
? Bio Menace
? Blake Stone: Aliens of Gold
? Commander Keen: Goodbye Galaxy
? Commander Keen: Invasion of the Vorticons
? Math Rescue
? Monster Bash
? Mystic Towers
? Paganitzu
? Monuments of Mars
? Cosmo’s Cosmic Adventure
? Crystal Caves
? Death Rally
? Alien Carnage
? Hocus Pocus
? Major Stryker
? Blake Stone: Planet Strike
? Realms of Chaos
? Pharaoh’s Tomb
? Word Rescue
? Secret Agent
? Raptor: Call of the Shadows
? Terminal Velocity
? Wacky Wheels
? Stargunner
? Shadow Warrior
? Wolfenstein 3D
? Rise of the Triad: Dark War
? Duke Nukem
? Duke Nukem 2
? Duke Nukem 3D
? Duke Nukem: Manhattan Project
John is the founder and Editor in Chief at DSOGaming. He is a PC gaming fan and highly supports the modding and indie communities. Before creating DSOGaming, John worked on numerous gaming websites. While he is a die-hard PC gamer, his gaming roots can be found on consoles. John loved – and still does – the 16-bit consoles, and considers SNES to be one of the best consoles. Still, the PC platform won him over consoles. That was mainly due to 3DFX and its iconic dedicated 3D accelerator graphics card, Voodoo 2. John has also written a higher degree thesis on the “The Evolution of PC graphics cards.”
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