With Quake and DOOM, id Software pioneered their own brand of game play and created a video game genre. First Person Shooters by the end of 1997 and the release of Quake II had become a somewhat wide genre filled with comic relief, pop culture references, fantasies, a variety of game play and visuals. This competition and variety of choice on the market however did nothing to temper id Software's thirst to push the genre and their own game play brand forward. Quake II certainly does this however it also has a delicacy id Software games lacked before when it comes to refinement. Quake II is a well oil, smooth running, great sounding machine of a video game. It is the id Software game play brand started in DOOM in its most balanced and precise form yet. This blog's chronologically linear path give me an appreciation for these watershed moments like Quake II. It may seem almost cliche both in this blog and in 1997 to say id Software has done it yet again. It may sound repetitive to say Quake II looks unbelievable visually and the awe of its visceral feedback is just as much shock as any other id release so far. However all these things are true. Quake II embodies everything this genre has worked for up until the end of 1997 and it feels good.
If there was ever a "blockbuster" video game until now it was Quake II. DOOM had its cult following termed phenomenon, and Quake felt like it achieved that as well but Quake II feels like a full on polished, massive budget, expected to be awe inspiring kind of product. The game stuns with a full motion video of sci fi marines in drop pods invading an alien planet setting the stage for your war of revenge after an previous unexpected attack on earth. It has nothing to do with Quake I and depending on the level of information access I had at the time in 1997 this may have been confusing to me though I quickly adjusted to the fantastic gritty sci fi story that reminds me very much of Star Ship Troopers in premise. The addition of this in an id game is welcome and really feels that blockbuster feel and expectation I had for a game of this caliber after the "year" this blog has had with 1997. My war with the Strogg quickly felt personal from the botched landing of the marines in the intro video.
Id Software's calling card is fast ground breaking rendering. Throughout the past year of 1997 in this blog I've seen some incredible examples of real time rendering for FPS games and video games as a whole, a welcome refreshment after so many sprite based games. Despite id Tech 2 being just a year old these new technological improvements in both software and hardware in the PC space where not lost on id. Quake II's version of id Tech 2 heavily focused on the user having a discrete 3D accelerator card to assist the CPU in rendering complex 3D games. This hardware was new yet quickly became extremely popular and common enough. With this id Tech 2 now has colored lighting! Walking past different colored lights now cast a light the correct color onto the player or enemy. The dynamic lights in general are significantly improved over Quake I. A tremendous increase in polygon count makes it by far the most detailed game I've seen ('97) including the best textures. Quake II and the improved hardware 3D accelerated id Tech 2 is a tremendous leap for video games in visuals and stuns as much as any of id Software's previous releases. If it's cliche its because John Carmack earned it by now. Because this jump is so big I will refer to this version of the engine as the id Tech 2.5 Engine. Id Tech upped everything including the violent visceral feedback id is known for with enemies having chunks of meat and metal fly from them as you shoot away their health. The depth the colored lighting allowed and the freedom artist had with so many polygons creates environments unrivaled in Quake II.
Visuals aside the bedrock of Quake II to me and what really stuck with me is how smooth and well functioning all it's game play mechanics work with one another. It really is harmonious in a way I don't feel id Software had achieved with their trade mark game play formula. What I mean by previous statement is that the game play of Quake II, all the weapons, enemies, ammo, and movement feel like they work together and off one another in a practical and rewarding way that serves the game play. Everything has a purpose and feels like its there to compliment everything else mechanically. Blood is probably the only other game on this list I would hold is such regard when it comes to such a refined game play formula. Refinement in Quake II comes at the cost of some of my favorite things Quake I did. Qualities such as Quake I's breakneck speed and chaos that often could result in a less that satisfying death but fascination all the same. One fault I find Quake II with is it's power fantasy rarely allows for frustration from the player and its something that brings life to id encounters I severely missed from previous games. Not to say however that the "feeling" of Quake and id Software games isn't alive and well but it lacks that always near death tension previous DOOM and Quake games gave us.
Quake II's symphony relies more on its weapons set than it does it's enemy encounters. DOOM II in this blog is praised for such a great set up of enemy and weapon dynamics. Quake II unlike Quake I and DOOM, offers a weapons heavy balance over enemy variance however the gain of this trade off is each weapon is very unique and has its specific purposes. Its more inline with the 3D Realms approach and I feel its the most enjoyable yet balanced weapons set id Software has presented in a game though Quake II does not satisfy in enemy variety like Quake I and not in enemy encounters like DOOM II. Quake features a pistol much like DOOM however it's dynamic light is a first for video games and cool to see its largely a useless weapon and I fault the game for using more for a graphics gimick than anything else. The shotgun in addition to the pistol is pretty much useless. Again once the incredibly satisfying super shotgun is found its never used again, the super shotgun however being incredibly satisfying in effect and sound across the variety of situations the game gives the player, its an id Software Specialty. The machine gun is fun with it's upward fire overtime but again largely useless after the chain gun is acquired though not completely. The chain gun is where Quake II's arsenal becomes more unique and satisfying to use, an expect in crowd control and going faster and faster until it runs out of bullets the chain gun is a pleasure. Hand grandees work as a slow and physically projected object of explosive quality and only exist for any real purpose because the grande launcher now sadly does not explode on impact a severe set back from Quake I and while the grenades often become satisfying with the tighter areas of level design Quake II offers they are not the most satisfactory. As I get to the toned down rocket launcher of Quake II you may wonder why I even enjoy its weapon set and its because so far the balancing changes create for a more, if less chaotic, enemy encounter than the first game and I feel that flow is ultimately more satisfying in its accomplished pace and compromise. The rain gun however is a new and incredibly precise and powerful weapon. Used even more than my rocket launcher it feels like the rapid precise and powerful weapon a fast game like Quake II has been dying for. Its fits the game and encounters well and is a joy to use. The hyper blaster essentially is the plasma rifle from DOOM and is a poor replacement for the nail gun in Quake I. The BFG 10k. Now a id Software brand item the BFG is as insanely satisfying. The BFG 10k excels at its purpose which is last minute critical crowd control.
I go into such depth on Quake II's weapon set cause it really is the meat of the game play sandwich and where most of the joy of playing the game stems from. Quake II is a harmonious symphony of butchering your enemies in elegant yet enjoyable ways that tantalize the player in a manner the FPS genre was made to do. Id Software at the end of 1997 was not concerned with watering itself down with the times as much as embracing itself and its brand of violence as part of the times. The Strogg of Quake II present a satisfying, and by this point in history ('97), very id Software brand of horror and game design fun. The Strogg are human and cybernetic monstrosities controlled to destroy humans. Using the parts of your fallen comrades in machines and literal meat grinders, the Strogg are gruesome and fit the id Software tropes. The strogg also fall into the id Software design mold mostly set by Quake I and DOOM II before it. Though the enemy set while enjoyable and cool is one of the less satisfying elements of Quake II over time.
The enemies of Quake II really hone in on the strengths of the FPS encounter that has been established in the genre across multiple studios. Some enemies fly and suppress, some charge, some tank, some heal or shield yet all are made to be blow to bits by certain weapons belonging to a specific category or in Quake II's example a specific weapon itself. While DOOM II, DUKE, or even Turok had enemies with particular weaknesses, Quake II centers itself around a rock, paper and scissors game play mentality between enemies and weapons in the game. Quake II's combat loop is not only rewarding but satisfying in the sense a rhyme game or timed thing would be. 2+2 always equals 4 in Quake II and you can always stitch together these different combat rhymes for an extended good time in the game. Moments of this kind of satisfactory height and fulfillment in power fantasy aren't rare while not being all too common. If anything Quake II's biggest fault is that the game is almost too well paced. The ramp up of combat and intensity is present but it lacks the ability to just adjust you quickly to chaos as Blood did or to learn a complicated yet rewarding system as DOOM II. Quake II takes it's time giving the player the full arsenal and presenting them with a full set of enemies, this was so egregious that found the pacing to be borderline boring at first especially in comparison with what I expect from id Software and Quake. When Quake II gets it's legs and speed about it, Quake II soon joins id Software's other efforts in terms of carnage though I miss the funneled rapid chaos of the first game the more tempered approach of the sequel was more satisfactory long term when realizing how cohesive the overall game felt instead of being divided into individual levels. Quake II takes a note from id Software's kin Raven Software. Like Hexen II, Quake II using id Tech 2.0+ has a conjoined over world. Each level and area is joined by the player physically traversing the area even if through gated load screens. Some areas of Quake II are only joined in more or less cinematic form yet much of the game is physically joined in a very impressive manner. Quake II's level design while never reaching the lows of the worst parts of DOOM II or Quake I, rarely hit the heights of Quake I. Quake II instead focuses on presenting a stage and grounding the player though the new geometry density can be hard to navigate and the speed run race feeling of levels all but eliminated. I can't help but feel a little tired of the setting as well. While traversing across the planet Strogg the environments largely look the same and grow a bit samey despite the luster of id Tech 2. 5.
Overall I found Quake II to be a huge departure in feeling from previous FPS games because of its more linear and constricted approach to what are still very much Quake levels. Because of Quake II's updated objectives, connected levels and item collection borrowed from the likes of Hertic and Hexen the shooter aspects feel more grounded in this set stage. Quake II feels like a proper adventure you'd find in a Hollywood war movie and I think that is what id Software was going for. The design choices and changes in Quake II are not just from the id Tech 2.5 engine. The new weapon placement on screen, conjoined level design, slower paced enemy encounters and player speed all are deliberate in taking the player on a top notch action adventure FPS video game. This set stage along with an near perfect weapons set makes for not just a super fun and visceral game like id Software is known for but also for immersion which I don't think we've seen on this level in the FPS genre ('97). Quake II pulls away from the arcade influence carried in from DOOM II. Its a pretty big change up and I welcome it. For the genre it's huge. I think id Tech 2.5 is the first engine that's had the ability to create and FPS like this with a cohesive story and world. In late 1997 this would have been enough to astound me all while setting a new pipe dream expectation of having a cohesive world to enjoy a start to finish grounded FPS campaign. Quake II isn't just remarkable in being a very polished and extraordinary product on its own right but because of the implications the game and id Tech 2. 5 have for what can be achieved by not just video games but the FPS genre specifically. Shooters may be able to tell more than just an 80's action movie premise after all? Maybe not as despite all this, this is what Quake II does. The implication of it's more safe narrative roots doesn't make it any less ground breaking especially from a company that brought us the demon killing simulator.
Quake II as a sequel is a mixed bag and as a FPS game innovative and incredible. While I miss the chaos and fastness of Quake I paired with it's speed run mentality the welcome trade off is having a coherent story, setting and game to play with Quake II. On this blog i criticized the fist game's mixed bag of confused settings and somehow even less coherent story than DOOM II. Quake II may play slower and be more "cinematic" but Quake II is still a farcry from Golden Eye or being anything other than a product of the id Software DNA. Quake II provides the most satisfactory and engaging while immersive campaign of any shooter on this blog yet including id Software's own best of the bunch. Backed by the best weapon set and balance yet from the studio and Quake II is a FPS genre lover's dream. While there are clear things I'm interested in seeing from the genre presented in narrative with games like Dark Forces II or with platforming level design like Turok or with cinematic movie magic like Golden Eye, Quake II stands alone as the undisputed king of genre relying only on tropes from it's own medium to create an enriching and full FPS experience.
Quake II is incredible and edges its way despite its trade offs as being my favorite game on the blog yet. As cliche as it may be to say id Software struck gold yet again and that is a joy I'm not ashamed of. Id Software is second to none when it comes to honing in the serotonin releasing elements of a genre they themselves crafted. Id Tech 2.5 Engine shows the incredible leaps hardware and software of the late 90's was offering. By the end of 1997 the genre, games and real time rendering had changed and Quake II embodied the best of all these traits.













