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Cube 2 Engine zlib License (code), Individual licenses (media) Quake style deathmatch, includes built in level editor. Single/Multiplayer. The Dark Mod: Team Dark Mod 2009 2015-02-08 (2.03) Windows, Linux, OS X: id Tech 4 engine CC-BY-NC-SA: First person stealth game in the style of the Thief series games (1 and 2) using a modified Id Tech 4 engine
The full source code to Quake II version 3.19 was released under the terms of the GNU GPL-2.0-or-later on December 22, 2001. Version 3.21 followed later. An LCC-friendly version was released on January 1, 2002, by a modder going by the name of Major Bitch. [24]
Players of Quake and Quake II created programs to alter the game's demo files, which contained records of the game's user input and events. The actors would control their characters live—creating the demo file—and editors would "re-cam" by revisiting the scene from a new point of view or swapping between pre-selected camera angles.
Source distantly originates from the GoldSrc engine, itself a heavily modified version of John Carmack's Quake engine with some code from the Quake II engine.Carmack commented on his blog in 2004 that "there are still bits of early Quake code in Half-Life 2". [1]
In 1997 a contest was held to rename the software and QuArK, which stands for "Quake Army Knife", was selected. [23] It is named so in reference to the game engine series it supported, the Quake engines, and for Swiss Army knife, because it could not only edit maps, but included a model editor and texture browser as well. Version 3.0 was the ...
The Quake II engine (id Tech 2.5 [citation needed]), is a game engine developed by id Software for use in their 1997 first-person shooter Quake II. [1] It is the successor to the Quake engine . Since its release, the Quake II engine has been licensed for use in several other games.
2Fort is a symmetrical map, with each team's intelligence located in an underground fortress beneath the two buildings. The design allows players to "come together and battle it out along the center bridge". [1]
This expansion CD was released in the U.S. on November 26, 1998, included was the final version 1.0c of Action Quake, along with 11 other publicly available mods, a collection of Quake 2 deathmatch maps, and player skins. Members of the development team would later go on to work on titles such as Action Half-Life and Counter-Strike. [2]