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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn American P.O.W. is trying desperately to escape from the Nazi prison Wolfenstein during World War II.An American P.O.W. is trying desperately to escape from the Nazi prison Wolfenstein during World War II.An American P.O.W. is trying desperately to escape from the Nazi prison Wolfenstein during World War II.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Tom Hall
- Gretel Grösse
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
- …
Scott Miller
- Mecha Hitler
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
Bobby Prince
- Enemies
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
John Romero
- Enemies
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
You play as B.J. Blazkowicz, a US secret agent soldier tough guy who is sent to uncover Nazi secret and turn the tide of World War II. That means everything from breaking out of a Nazi dungeon to thwarting Hitler's war machine and even the Fuhrer himself.
This is quite possibly the most influential game of its time. That's because it literally inspired obsession. Many games existed at the time and even more do today, but every so often you get a real grabber. This is one of them. Just like Tetris before it and more recently GTA III in 2002. Yes, Doom is better in almost every respect, but the shots heard around the world which led to one of gaming's biggest tidal waves were fired by B.J. Blazkowicz. The Space Marine, Duke Nukem, Max Payne, Serious Sam, John Mullins, JC Denton, Agent 47, Gordon Freeman and legions of others owe their existence to the guys at ID. Whether directly or, in most cases, indirectly, but they still do.
Even with its old look, very aged graphics, super simple gameplay (this is really a game, games now border on the "experience level") and highly rectangular levels, the scope of all six episodes provides lots of fun. Especially discovering those secrets with treasure and a chaingun in them.
Also: "Halt!" *bang! bang! bang!* "AARRRGH!!!" never grows old. --- 8/10
Voluntarily rated PC-13 for "profound carnage." However, it's exceptionally tame when compared to what games have today.
This is quite possibly the most influential game of its time. That's because it literally inspired obsession. Many games existed at the time and even more do today, but every so often you get a real grabber. This is one of them. Just like Tetris before it and more recently GTA III in 2002. Yes, Doom is better in almost every respect, but the shots heard around the world which led to one of gaming's biggest tidal waves were fired by B.J. Blazkowicz. The Space Marine, Duke Nukem, Max Payne, Serious Sam, John Mullins, JC Denton, Agent 47, Gordon Freeman and legions of others owe their existence to the guys at ID. Whether directly or, in most cases, indirectly, but they still do.
Even with its old look, very aged graphics, super simple gameplay (this is really a game, games now border on the "experience level") and highly rectangular levels, the scope of all six episodes provides lots of fun. Especially discovering those secrets with treasure and a chaingun in them.
Also: "Halt!" *bang! bang! bang!* "AARRRGH!!!" never grows old. --- 8/10
Voluntarily rated PC-13 for "profound carnage." However, it's exceptionally tame when compared to what games have today.
This was one of the first games I beat as a snot-nosed punk kid. It was violent, hardcore, scary, and I LIKED IT.
I loved shooting and killing the dogs. They tried to mess with me and I didn't play around.
This game had some sweet fire arms such as a pistol, machine gun and a bazooka. There is an ammo limit, therefore you must always stay stocked up. Every NPC has a weapon, though you can go through a few levels with your knife only.
The game was mainly trying to escape a Hydra Base, going through various levels versus various bots that were mostly unintelligent yet funny.
I liked the health bar of William Joseph "B. J." Blazkowicz.of him going from healthy to beat up.
Another cool thing is the secret entrances in every level. Some were small others were big others were creative.
The graphics were great for its time. The gameplay was also phenomenal.
W3D is a legend and a father of 1st person shooters.
I loved shooting and killing the dogs. They tried to mess with me and I didn't play around.
This game had some sweet fire arms such as a pistol, machine gun and a bazooka. There is an ammo limit, therefore you must always stay stocked up. Every NPC has a weapon, though you can go through a few levels with your knife only.
The game was mainly trying to escape a Hydra Base, going through various levels versus various bots that were mostly unintelligent yet funny.
I liked the health bar of William Joseph "B. J." Blazkowicz.of him going from healthy to beat up.
Another cool thing is the secret entrances in every level. Some were small others were big others were creative.
The graphics were great for its time. The gameplay was also phenomenal.
W3D is a legend and a father of 1st person shooters.
In today's video game culture, first-person shooters reign supreme, from the classic "Goldeneye" of Nintendo '64 fame to current titles such as Halo and the Call of Duty series. There was a time (early 1990s), however, when this was not the case, and it took one game to begin the revolution...Wolfenstein 3D.
Set in a prisoner-of-war camp in the heart of Nazi Germany, early 1990s gamers were introduced to the FPS genre in the form of one B.J. Blazkowicz and this single sentence: "You crouch over the guard's body, hoping that the others didn't hear his muffled scream...". From there, gamers were given almost total control of the character in order to complete each stage (primarily accomplished by finding the elevator door after taking out room after room of Nazi baddies).
In hindsight, the game had a few flaws, primarily being the maze-like environment that turns some levels into nothing more than prolonged searches for keys to enter the locked doors, as well as some levels that will test even the most patient of gamers with their enormity. But all told, it was nothing short of revolutionary in its treatment of the video game platform. It even "guessed right" in using a wartime scenario to detract from some criticism (the same reason why COD is so popular, yet other FPS's are so demonized).
Thus, this game (provided you have a computer old enough to run it, or know how to install DOSBox!) really can be enjoyed by two different types of gamers: 1. For nostalgic purposes; and 2. For those who currently enjoy the genre to see how it all began (and still play a heckuva game in the process!).
Set in a prisoner-of-war camp in the heart of Nazi Germany, early 1990s gamers were introduced to the FPS genre in the form of one B.J. Blazkowicz and this single sentence: "You crouch over the guard's body, hoping that the others didn't hear his muffled scream...". From there, gamers were given almost total control of the character in order to complete each stage (primarily accomplished by finding the elevator door after taking out room after room of Nazi baddies).
In hindsight, the game had a few flaws, primarily being the maze-like environment that turns some levels into nothing more than prolonged searches for keys to enter the locked doors, as well as some levels that will test even the most patient of gamers with their enormity. But all told, it was nothing short of revolutionary in its treatment of the video game platform. It even "guessed right" in using a wartime scenario to detract from some criticism (the same reason why COD is so popular, yet other FPS's are so demonized).
Thus, this game (provided you have a computer old enough to run it, or know how to install DOSBox!) really can be enjoyed by two different types of gamers: 1. For nostalgic purposes; and 2. For those who currently enjoy the genre to see how it all began (and still play a heckuva game in the process!).
In my opinion, this was the first role playing game that deserved attention. I remember playing this at work, and boy, I remember how my boss nearly fired me! In Wolfenstein 3D you are BJ Blazkowicz, and in the most known episode, you have to escape Castle Wolfenstein after being taken P.O.W. For nostalgic players like me, this still has soft spot in my heart for when I first played it 11 years ago. I'm still more used to playing Doom (which I still do all the time), but Wolfenstein 3D was the game that triggered amazing feats like Doom. I remember being terrified by zombies in this game, but then I look at the year after (1993) and when I was scared out of my socks by man eating Demons in Doom.
Wonderful game, and it will get 10/10 from me.
Wonderful game, and it will get 10/10 from me.
Wolfenstein 3D is one of the best and one of the most enduring games ever. the graphics are good(for that time) and the tension and excitement is perfect. Of course the idea behind it is very effective,killing of Nazi's in all their forms even the evil AH himself.
I've played this game millions of times but it still doesn't get boring or easy because of the difficulty levels. This game was the starting point of 1st person shooters and made other classics like Doom and Unreal(my personal favorite!) possible.
TRIBUTE!! 10/10
I've played this game millions of times but it still doesn't get boring or easy because of the difficulty levels. This game was the starting point of 1st person shooters and made other classics like Doom and Unreal(my personal favorite!) possible.
TRIBUTE!! 10/10
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesE2M8 is impossible to complete with 100% in all categories, due to there being a push-wall maze on the maps that was intended to be part of a contest, which required a sign to be found saying "Call Apogee Say 'Aardwolf'". However, the contest was aborted when the game came out, but the sign was left in. In hindsight, the developers said that they should've removed the sign before release, because they were flooded with calls and mails by players asking what it was about. In later versions, it was replaced with a standard prop from the game.
- GaffesAlthough Wolfenstein 3D takes place during World War 2, the enemy soldier getting knocked down by B.J. Blazkowicz on the box cover of the game, is carrying an M16. That weapon didn't exist until 1960.
- Crédits fousVoluntarily rated PC-13
- Versions alternativesThe Apple, 3DO, and Jaguar versions all featured improved sound effects and music, and high-resolution graphics. Most notably, the Apple and PC version had different introduction and end level screens. The 3DO and Jaguar versions featured weapon sprites from Doom (1993) and Doom II: Hell on Earth (1994), respectively.
- ConnexionsEdited into Doom II: Hell on Earth (1994)
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