Duke Nukem 3D, one of the undeniable kings of shooter games of the nineties, has arrived on Android devices. And he does it in style: with a 'port' which is true to the original, free (like the 'shareware' version that came out afterwards), and with some perfectly adapted controls for the needs of touchscreens.
The Alien invaders are stealing Earth's women, especially the hot ones! And they drank Duke's beer. Time to bring the pain. Speaking of multiplayer games: Duke Nukem 3D's Dukematch features are impressive. Not only can you play over a local network, you can play against one to seven enemies over IPX, AppleTalk, or TCP/IP. Head-to-head play over the Internet required only getting a competitor's IP address and typing it in to a dialog box. Barcode producer 6 8 – create high resolution bar codes. Description of Duke Nukem. 1991, the year Duke Nukem was released on DOS. Made by Apogee Software, Ltd. And published by PC-SIG, this action game is available for free on this page.
Per-pixel dynamic lighting and realtime shadows.. groovy! Polymer renderer requires a bad-ass video card.
More Polymer greatness.
Hollywood Holocaust with classic textures
Come get some!
EDuke32 is an awesome, free homebrew game engine and source port of the classic PC first person shooter Duke Nukem 3D— Duke3D for short—to Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, several handhelds, your family toaster, and to your girlfriend's vibrator. We've added thousands of cool and useful features and upgrades for regular players and additional editing capabilities and scripting extensions for homebrew developers and mod creators. EDuke32 is open source software that is completely free to use for all non-commercial purposes.
Created by Duke4.net community leader Richard 'TerminX' Gobeille and a team of elite ninja programmers including Pierre-Loup 'Plagman' Griffais, Philipp 'Helixhorned' Kutin, and Evan 'Hendricks266' Ramos (based on work by Todd Replogle/Ken Silverman/Jonathon Fowler/Matt Saettler), EDuke32 is the undeniable king of Duke Nukem 3D ports.
EDuke32 is licensed under the GNU GPL and the BUILD license.
Join us on Discord or visit our forums.
Hollywood Holocaust with classic textures
Come get some!
EDuke32 is an awesome, free homebrew game engine and source port of the classic PC first person shooter Duke Nukem 3D— Duke3D for short—to Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, several handhelds, your family toaster, and to your girlfriend's vibrator. We've added thousands of cool and useful features and upgrades for regular players and additional editing capabilities and scripting extensions for homebrew developers and mod creators. EDuke32 is open source software that is completely free to use for all non-commercial purposes.
Created by Duke4.net community leader Richard 'TerminX' Gobeille and a team of elite ninja programmers including Pierre-Loup 'Plagman' Griffais, Philipp 'Helixhorned' Kutin, and Evan 'Hendricks266' Ramos (based on work by Todd Replogle/Ken Silverman/Jonathon Fowler/Matt Saettler), EDuke32 is the undeniable king of Duke Nukem 3D ports.
EDuke32 is licensed under the GNU GPL and the BUILD license.
Join us on Discord or visit our forums.
Once you've downloaded EDuke32, you'll probably want to read our wiki page on installation and configuration, as well as the FAQ if you have any problems.
Duke Nukem Games Ranked
- EDuke32 runs natively without relying on emulation of any kindWindows XP, Vista, Windows 7, 8, 10, whatever -- it'll run on it. Linux is also well supported, both via the native SDL version or with Wine.
Note: 'Linux is well supported with Wine' does not mean get drunk and install Ubuntu. - EDuke32 runs at crazy resolutions like 3072x2304.
- EDuke32 allows you to choose between two different hardware accelerated OpenGL renderers, or the classic, warped software mode you grew up with
- EDuke32 fixes an insane amount of programming errors which were harmless in the days of DOS but are fatal with modern protected memory models; translation: EDuke32 crashes less
- EDuke32 has been the only actively developed and maintained Duke3D port for years
- EDuke32 has a huge number of new extensions to the game's scripting system, allowing gameplay mods that rival even modern games.
- EDuke32 runs the HRP with support for all features, most of which require EDuke32; no other port can run the HRP with all features enabled
- EDuke32 adds a full-featured console, including Quake-style key bindings, command aliases, advanced tab completion, comprehensive command history, colored text and more
- EDuke32 has hundreds of code rewrites, optimizations and fixes for rare or annoying bugs in the original code
- EDuke32 adds tons of optional new features that make the player's life easier including modern status display/HUD, support for loading mods from the startup window, and modern, WSAD-based controls with thoroughly reworked mouse aiming
- EDuke32 supports Ogg Vorbis sound and music
- EDuke32 is developed by people who have been in the Duke3D scene since the beginningI first saw Duke3D running on a computer in a Wal-Mart in late December of 1995. I was 11 years old. Unknown to me, it was an illegally distributed beta of what was to become Duke Nukem 3D 1.0, released in January of the next year.
After seeing Duke in action for the first time, I was hooked! I had seen games like Wolfenstein 3D, Doom and Heretic before but this was different. Not long after that, we got the first family computer, and I got the first episode of Duke on CD-ROM.
I immediately got nosy and said 'hey, what are these 'CON' files?' Atomic Edition came for Christmas that year. The rest is history! - EDuke32 lets you play that game called 'NAM' you saw at the dollar store 10 years ago
- EDuke32 makes sandwiches!
BUILD engine technology originally created by Ken Silverman, non-GPL rendering and engine technology used in EDuke32 available under BUILDLIC.