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Quake

  • Jeu vidéo
  • 1996
  • M
NOTE IMDb
8,2/10
2,7 k
MA NOTE
Quake (1996)
Quake
Lire trailer1:33
1 Video
8 photos
ActionAventureFantaisieHorreurScience-fiction

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMankind discovers the secret of 'slipgates' called teleporters. However, they're misused by some strange force code-named 'Quake', which uses the slipgates to send hordes of warriors to eart... Tout lireMankind discovers the secret of 'slipgates' called teleporters. However, they're misused by some strange force code-named 'Quake', which uses the slipgates to send hordes of warriors to earth to take over the whole world.Mankind discovers the secret of 'slipgates' called teleporters. However, they're misused by some strange force code-named 'Quake', which uses the slipgates to send hordes of warriors to earth to take over the whole world.

  • Réalisation
    • John Romero
  • Scénario
    • American McGee
    • Sandy Petersen
    • John Romero
  • Casting principal
    • J.S. Gilbert
    • Matt Mark
    • David Locke
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    8,2/10
    2,7 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • John Romero
    • Scénario
      • American McGee
      • Sandy Petersen
      • John Romero
    • Casting principal
      • J.S. Gilbert
      • Matt Mark
      • David Locke
    • 26avis d'utilisateurs
    • 1avis de critique
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 3 victoires et 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    Quake
    Trailer 1:33
    Quake

    Photos7

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    Rôles principaux4

    Modifier
    J.S. Gilbert
    J.S. Gilbert
    • Dank
    • (voix)
    Matt Mark
    • Scud
    • (voix)
    David Locke
    • Additional Voices
    • (voix)
    Trent Reznor
    Trent Reznor
    • Ranger
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • John Romero
    • Scénario
      • American McGee
      • Sandy Petersen
      • John Romero
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs26

    8,22.7K
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    10gelziabar

    New Tech. New Theme

    Quake was the first proper FPS to have a fully 3D polygon rendering engine and 16 bit color for dynamic lighting. The theme of the game was also very dark and that could range from moody to strange. While the level design is advanced technically, the themes are just repetitive although the action is frantic. This game also featured a title song by Trent Reznor. On higher difficulty levels, Quake was always fun to play and along with the loads of user maps and addons released for it, had a pretty long life. Quake also offered a 16 player deathmatch capability and quickly became the most popular multiplayer game in the world, during its time.
    demonicu

    The Quake Soundtrack

    The game itself is probably the single piece of software qhich revolutionized 3d-gaming industry forever. But the true unique part of this project is that T.Reznor did the musical score for it. 10 tracks of dark, ambient, densely textured instrumentals ranging from 3:00min to 8:00min in length, give the game life, death, and an eerie, shadowy feeling which adds that extra flavour to the entire experiece.

    Even though the songs were created for the game exclusively, they can be played as normal songs from a cd by simply playing it from a stereo. And believe me, nothing beats a grey December evening than those slowly developing sounds coming out of your surround sound speakers as you watch the light snow fall upon the frozen landscape. (anyone Not from Canada might not get that last comment)
    10Spartan_234

    The best first-person shooter for its time, and still one of the best today.

    Even with other competing shooters like Descent and Duke Nukem 3D around in the mid-90's, Quake lives up to its name: it truly "Quakes" the competition with its fast, non-stop action and excellent level design. Duke Nukem 3D may have had a fully interactive environment, but nothing could match Quake's lightning-fast and tremendously entertaining action. Weapons consist of standard-issued stuff (axe, shotgun, rocket launcher) and innovative weapons for the time, like a nailgun, grenade launcher, and thunderbolt gun (which you shouldn't even think about shooting underwater!) In an attempt to speed up the pace, there aren't any reloading times, and switching from weapon to weapon is very quick.

    Along with the gameplay, the graphics are also Quake's biggest strength. Unlike Doom or Duke Nukem 3D, Quake uses a true-3D graphics engine to create detailed and believable environments. Gone are the choppy animations of enemies and their flat-looking appearances. As in Duke Nukem 3D, you can also swim underwater. All of this at a super-smooth frame rate! (At least, if you have a Pentium or higher processor.) In 1996, once I played Quake, I was fighting the urge not to play anything else. If you're looking for a solid piece of nostalgia to play, then this is exactly what you're looking for. It's a classic.
    9WOZ inOZ

    An all time great.

    The game that evolved Doom into a true 3-D experience and paved the way for a hundred imitations can be considered nothing less than a classic of modern gaming history. Out went the 2-D scaled bitmap graphics and in came a true interactive 3-D engine with dynamic lighting effects, animation and equally creepy 3-D enemies to inhabit this world, something today we all take for granted, but was very much a new milestone back in 1996.

    I.D's game had it's critics in one-player mode, (the Polygon monsters came in lesser numbers than the flat enemies of Doom) but in Multiplayer it was and still could be considered one of the most exciting, immersive combat experiences that you could ever play on a PC. Anyone who's played a 16-man deathmatch amongst friends or acquaintances alike cannot deny the sheer power of this game. The sound was sickly detailed (with the help of one Trent Reznor) and the graphics were dark, earthy and atmospherically unmistakable.

    Quake for many has been the closest thing to experiencing armed warfare (or a close approximation) without having to actually leave your seat, except of course when you need one of those sweaty adrenaline induced toilet breaks after you've just slaughtered your best buddies in over the top (but graphically intense) detail, with the fattest smile on your face, and for that I.D. we salute you!
    rogierr

    think fast and don't forget to eat every 24 hours or so

    The best video game ever made (considering pc-games AND consoles), Quake generated a cult-community with its own idiom and special rules of engagement. Five years after first release, Q1 still lives ferociously and heretic and the thrill of it all is that you can play it on any obsolete pentium system (75 Mhz, 4MB video-card and 60 MB hd-space ran fine for me). And besides that, the Linux-servers where the best of all! There are about 40 levels in the game (incl. multiplayer and secret levels): Quake consists of 4 episodes (like Star Wars and Alien so far), but there are still herds of people who haven't seen the game once (let alone 3dfx accelerated OpenGL Quake).

    'Cheapo' and other downloadable 'cheating' local proxies make it harder for newbies to understand why they were being fragged and to like the flagellating game at all. On top of that, hardcore players construct their own configuration files with pre-written actionscripts (rocketjumping etc.) to climb faster in the ranking, although anybody can check out the console tutorials for miscellaneous commands and scripts. There is no taunting (as in Duke Nukem 3D and Unreal) in Quake, except for the few lines of text on top of the screen where you can spout your indecent proposals and pre-fab messages. Newbies who don't understand the game or have a slow connection (HPW: high ping whiners) are allowed (by consensus) to 'camp' (wait in a corner and shoot unsuspecting passers) to at least prevent a negative end-score (after unintentional suicide etc.). But the lucky few with pings of below 20 ms become the real 3D acrobats (LPB: low ping ba**ards). I'm really not interested in professional gamers, but I would have liked to get some dough for all the time I have spent in those dungeons, arenas, grottos, vaults and oubliettes.

    Q1 is less humourous than Duke3D, in fact: no humour at all. Also less empty and post-apocalyptic, but more macarbe and dismal. I do not only love quake for the looks of it, but especially for the mechanics. That was never topped by Q2 and Q3Arena. Q3A looks infinitely better, but as Q2 it lacks the aggressive and direct gameplay of Q1. Duke Nukem was already addictive, but has flat pictures moving around without changing perspective, in contrast with Q1's 3D entities in a convincing medieval setting or more uplifting futuristic surroundings. This engine proved to be revolutionary although most game-developers were interested to use the Q2 engine (Half-Life, etc.). id software proved itself as the most innovative developer of eye candy and gameplay itself. Funstuff like incorporating your own sounds into the game has become a lot harder with Q3A unfortunately. And there aren't as many hiding places, secret passages and exploitable level bugs anymore. Let's hope those will be back with Quake4 (resurrection?).

    Quake Done Quick is a downloadable (5 MB) speed demo of 90 minutes recorded by several people running through Q1 as fast as humanly possible, for which you also need the full game installed first. You can sit back and relax and watch the protagonist killing everything and opening every secret in first-person view or movie mode. There are people who did a lot of effort choosing the right camera-dynamics and even incorporate some jokes in the 'plot'. Besides that, there is the Q3A movie 'Quad God' that unfortunately never really saw the daylight because of copyright issues (?). These entities will be locked up in there forever.

    Other enthusiasts built their own maps with their own favourite interiors and entities (mods and total conversions like Capture The Flag, Weapons Factory, Malice, Rocket Arena, Team Fortress, Airquake, Future vs. Fantasy, Awesome, Carnage etc for which you'll still need the original game to function). Finally, Unreal and UT are also some of my favourites as they are better than Q2 and Q3A, but the deathmatch multiplay mode of Quake1 is still unsurpassed. HF!

    Vous aimerez aussi

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    Centres d’intérêt connexes

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    Action
    Still frame
    Aventure
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    Fantaisie
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    Horreur
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in L'Empire contre-attaque (1980)
    Science-fiction

    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The cases of nailgun ammo carry the logo for "Nine Inch Nails". Nine Inch Nails is the one-man band of the game's composer, Trent Reznor.
    • Versions alternatives
      The Saturn version of Quakeis the only version with colored lighting, something Lobotomy Software added to the Saturn version.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Team Fortress (1996)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 22 juin 1996 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Fight for Justice
    • Société de production
      • id Software
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

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