Resurrection of Evil cover art
Doom 3: Resurrection of Evil (sometimes abbreviated as RoE) is an expansion pack for Doom 3 developed by Nerve Software and released on April 4, 2005 in North America, and on April 8 of the same year in Europe.[1] The PC version was sold as a dependent product, requiring ownership of Doom 3 in order to install. A stand-alone Xbox version was later released on October 5, 2005, and included ported versions of The Ultimate Doom, Doom II, and the Master Levels for Doom II as bonuses on the disc.
The expansion pack details a return to Mars by a UAC expedition to investigate a faint signal broadcast to an orbital probe from the abandoned Site 1 facility. Everything once again goes to Hell after the accidental discovery of a forbidden relic sealed away by the ancient Martian civilization. The expansion included several new monsters, including a number of unique bosses, as well as three new weapons.
Contents
- 1 Plot
- 1.1 Later storyline and ending
- 2 Differences from Doom 3
- 2.1 Weapons
- 2.2 Monsters
- 3 Legal issues in Germany
- 4 Levels
- 5 Physical media
- 6 External links
- 7 References
Plot[edit]
Overview with the Ionized Plasma Levitator
Two years after the demonic invasion and destruction of Mars City as depicted in Doom 3, research on Mars has resumed, led by whistleblower Dr. Elizabeth McNeil, who previously alerted the UAC to Malcolm Betruger's activities. Once more, strange occurrences haunt the facility. Red Team, a marine search team, breaks into a chamber deep within Mars, finding the Artifact—a weapon from Hell that the Ancients sealed away long ago.
The lead marine, upon touching the Artifact, awakens it. A blast wave kills most of his team and reaches into Hell, alerting the Maledict, Dr. Betruger's new form. The Maledict sends the three Hell Hunters to retrieve the Artifact as Hell begins to invade Mars once again.
Later storyline and ending[edit]
Spoiler Warning: Plot details follow.
Upon defeating the Hunters and gaining their abilities, the marine shuts down four core systems of the Phobos Labs in order to divert power to the old teleporters, sending the marine to the Delta Labs, and then finally into Hell. Battling his way through, the marine eventually reaches the Maledict. After a fierce battle, the cutscene shows the marine fire a rocket at the Maledict, only to miss and end up in the Maledict's jaws.
Betruger's head pops out and demands the Artifact. With his last strength, the marine obliges by shoving the Artifact down Betruger's throat, instantly killing the Maledict and destroying the Artifact, leaving only Betruger's skull behind. The screen fades to white, and Dr. McNeil's voice can be heard saying, "Marine? Marine...Welcome home...", implying that both McNeil and the marine may be dead, and in a better place than Hell for sacrificing themselves for humanity. McNeil may be dead because the life-support in the base had to be turned off so that the portal could be powered, and the marine may be dead from his wounds at the end of the battle with the Maledict. It should be noted that the ending was made deliberately vague and open to interpretation.
Spoilers end here.
Differences from Doom 3[edit]
Resurrection of Evil introduces new weapons and monsters. It also addresses gameplay concerns that were raised after Doom 3 was released.
Weapons[edit]
The new weapons introduced in the expansion are:
- Double barrel shotgun
- Ionized Plasma Levitator, also known as the "grabber gun."
- The Artifact
- On the Xbox version you no longer have a flashlight. You are instead equipped with a pistol with a flashlight attachment.
Most weapons from Doom 3 reappear in the expansion with the notable exception of the chainsaw, which is replaced by the grabber, and the Soul Cube, which is replaced by The Artifact. Weapons also have their maximum ammo count increased by one full magazine size; for example, in vanilla Doom 3, the plasma gun holds a maximum of 500 cells (450 in reserve and another 50 in the chamber), but in Resurrection of Evil, it can hold a total of 550 cells (500 in reserve plus 50 in the chamber).
Monsters[edit]
The expansion includes several new monsters:
- Bio-suit zombie
- Bruiser
- Forgotten One
- The Hell Hunters:
- Berserk Hunter
- Helltime Hunter
- Invulnerability Hunter
- Maledict
- Vulgar
Monsters which do not reappear from Doom 3 include the lost soul, several minor variants of the zombie, the vagary, and the cyberdemon.
In addition to these differences, the PC and Xbox ports are also slightly different in that the Xbox port features health bars for all boss monsters.
Legal issues in Germany[edit]
The game was put on the Index of the Bundesprüfstelle für jugendgefährdende Medien on May 31, 2005. This means that the game can not be advertised, sold, rented, or otherwise given to minors.
On the 27th of August 2019, the Bundesprüfstelle für jugendgefährdende Medien deleted Doom 3: Resurrection of Evil from the Index.[2]
Levels[edit]
- Erebus - Level 1: Main Excavation
- Erebus - Level 2: Erebus Dig Site
- Erebus - Level 3: Erebus Labs
- Erebus - Level 4: Erebus Control
- Erebus - Level 5: Erebus Research
- Erebus - Level 6: Erebus Station
- Phobos Labs - Sector 1: Teleportation
- Phobos Labs - Sector 2: Molecular Research
- Phobos Labs - Sector 3: Main Reactor
- Phobos Labs - Revisited: Teleportation
- Delta Labs - Unknown: Union Aerospace Research Division
- Hell
Physical media[edit]
Box cover back
Disc
Manual
External links[edit]
- id's Resurrection of Evil site (archived 🏛)
- Doom 3: Resurrection of Evil at MobyGames
- Doom 3: Resurrection of Evil manual
References[edit]
- ↑ Staff(8 April 2005). "Doom 3: Resurrection of Evil. Release Summary." GameSpot (archived 🏛). Retrieved 28 June 2023.
- ↑ Bundesprüfstelle für jugendgefährdende Medien - Bekanntmachung Nr. 9/2019 über jugendgefährdende Trägermedien - Vom 16. September 2019 (German)
Games in the Doom series
| |
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Classic Doom | Doom • Doom II • Final Doom • Doom 64 Expansions: The Ultimate Doom • Master Levels for Doom II • No Rest for the Living • SIGIL • Legacy of Rust • The Lost Levels Official ports: 3DO • Acorn RiscOS • Apple Macintosh • Jaguar • Doom 64 (2020 version) • Doom Classic Unity port • Doom + Doom II • Game Boy Advance (Doom, Doom II) • iOS • Linux • NEC PC-9801 • NeXTSTEP • OS/2 • Pocket PC • QNX • SGI • Sega 32X • Sega Saturn • Solaris • Sony PlayStation (Doom, Final Doom) • Sony PlayStation 3 • Super NES • Tapwave Zodiac • WebTV Plus • Windows (WinDoom, Doom95) • Xbox • Xbox 360 Related: Development of Doom • Doom engine |
Doom 3 | Doom 3 Expansions: Doom 3: Resurrection of Evil • The Lost Mission Official ports: Doom 3: BFG Edition • Doom 3 (2019 version) • Doom 3: VR Edition Related: id Tech 4 |
Doom (2016+) | Doom (2016) • Doom VFR • Doom Eternal • Doom: The Dark Ages Expansions: The Ancient Gods, Part One • The Ancient Gods, Part Two Related: Development of Doom (2016) • id Tech 6 • id Tech 7 |
Mobile games | Doom RPG • Doom II RPG • Doom Resurrection • Mighty Doom |
Canceled games | Doom Absolution • Doom 4 1.0 |
Tabletop | Doom: The Boardgame • Doom: The Board Game • Assault on Armaros Station |
Related: Commercial games • Expanded universe • List of books • List of commercial compilations |