Doom
Coverage of Doom in the Nexus archive.
- Doom developer id Software is reportedly losing half its staff
id Software, the developer of Doom, is reportedly losing half its staff amid shakeups at Xbox.
- Why a Neo Geo port of Doom is functionally impossible
The Neo Geo, a 1990s game console, cannot run Doom due to architectural limitations despite having a CPU similar to the Commodore Amiga, which has supported homebrew Doom ports. A video from Modern Vintage Gamer explains why the console's design makes a Doom port functionally impossible.
- Listen to the new Steam Controller buzz to the tune of Doom
Valve's new Steam Controller can produce audio like songs from Super Mario Bros. 2 and Portal, as well as the game Doom, using open-source software developed for its discontinued predecessor. The controller lacks a built-in speaker but leverages creative programming to generate sound.
- Show HN: I built a RISC-V emulator that runs DOOM
A RISC-V emulator implementing the RV32IM instruction set and a minimal syscall interface was developed to run DOOM. The project used newlib for C program execution, added ELF loading with single `PT_LOAD` segment support, and leveraged doomgeneric for porting DOOM to the emulator.
- It runs Doom: AI chatbot edition
The article discusses the latest development where an AI chatbot can now run the game Doom, answering the recurring question about its capability. This highlights advancements in AI technology's ability to handle complex tasks.
- DOOM running in ChatGPT and Claude
The article discusses how the classic video game DOOM has been successfully run within AI models like ChatGPT and Claude. It references a blog post by Chris Nager and a Hacker News comment thread with limited engagement.
- Doom, Played over Curl
The article discusses a project titled 'Doom, Played over Curl' which involves running the classic video game Doom using the cURL library. It highlights the project's discussion on Hacker News with 4 points and no comments.
- Why a startup is teaching human brain cells to play “Doom”
A startup is teaching human brain cells to play 'Doom,' potentially leading to a new type of computing. This breakthrough could revolutionize computational methods by integrating biological processes with technology.