Duke Nukem 3d Atomic Edition Walkthrough Pc
Duke Nukem 3D: Atomic Edition - Walkthrough ____ _ _ _ _ _____ ____ _ _ _ _____ _ _ _____ _ __ ___ ___ / _ / / _ / / _ '_ ` _ _ _ _ .
— Duke, at the beginning of each episode. Duke Nukem 3D is the game of the series. Unlike the previous installments, it's a. It was the most controversial of the installments, due to its portrayal of women and erotic elements. 3D is set after the events of, as Duke returns to Earth to celebrate his victory over the Rigelatins.
However, his space shuttle is shot down by an unknown force, and he is forced to crash land onto the roof of a tower in downtown Los Angeles. He quickly finds out that an army of aliens is in the process of invading the city, and have turned all members of the LAPD into grotesque pigmen-monsters, while abducting women left and right. Duke decide to take matters into his own hands, and starts to repel the alien invasion, street by street.
The game is packed with non-linearity; the player could take shortcuts to the end of the level and find secrets, and there were plenty of usable (and destructible) things, such as hydrants, fountains, toilets (all of which regenerate health) and light switches. While this is, at the time of its release, a fair amount of these elements were a novelty. As an early FPS, it has plenty of weapons (such as kicks, pistols, shotguns, chainguns, rocket launchers, pipebombs, wallmines, and even and a freeze gun) and items (Medkits, night vision goggles, steroids, a hologram device, a scuba gear and protective boots among others).
Oh, and it also has a Multiplayer mode. It was also among the first FPS to use the z-axis and is still one of, if not the, best at integrating it into the majority of gameplay, rather than the occasional sniper and hidden target. 3D has seen a handful of, with only one of these ( Plutonium Pak) being made by 3DRealms. It added a new weapon, (the Expander) two new foes, and a fourth episode, where it's discovered that the aliens were capturing women to produce Queens, which can rapidly give birth to alien drones. An, the Atomic Edition, included both the original game and the Plutonium Pak.
Three official themed level packs made by 3rd party developers were released for the game; Caribbean: Life's a Beach, Nuclear Winter, and Duke it out in D.C. The level packs featured themed palette-swapped weapons (i.e.
A super soaker instead of a shotgun in the Caribbean pack), palette swapped enemies (i.e. Pig Cops wearing hula skirts or Santa outfits), a couple new enemies (a bouncing dinosaur life preserver in Caribbean and uzi-wielding feminist elves in Nuclear Winter), and one new boss (Santa Claus in Nuclear Winter). The game also got several console ports, such as Duke Nukem 64 (), Duke Nukem: Total Meltdown () and versions for the,,, and mobile platforms. On October 13, 2010, an officially-sanctioned indie Unreal Engine 3 reimagination of the game called.
And then put on indefinite hold on September 24, 2011 due to legal issues (). It is probably safe to assume that it was canned. Two years after the incident the project's leader Frederick Schreiber (who founded Interceptor Entertainment) talked about how Gearbox for being better than. Gearbox's Steve Gibson responded with the claim that the game to be developed and released for free as intended.
Let's keep it professional and just say that the project may yet see release now that Interceptor Entertainment has finished work on their remake and may be quite eager to tie up this loose end. In March 2013, an officially sanctioned 3D-accelerated port of the game and all its expansion packs, with support for downloading mods through the Workshop, was released on as the 'Megaton Edition'. The port was done by the indie group Devolver Digital, who are probably best known for publishing the indie hit (and, ironically,, which was known for its at Forever's perennially-delayed release). However, Devolver eventually lost the license for this edition and it was pulled from Steam in early 2016.
In September 2016, Gearbox announced Duke Nukem 3D: 20th Anniversary World Tour for PC,, and: a new re-release featuring all the content of the Atomic Edition (the third-party expansions not included) plus a brand-new fifth episode created by two of the original game's level designers, with a new musical score by the original composer, a new weapon and enemy, new and re-recorded Duke Talk by, and enhanced graphics, released that October. This game shows examples of: •: The Pig Cop riot tanks in the Atomic Edition can take a lot of punishment and sport a wide range of weaponry. If you can get behind one though and press the nuclear trefoil symbol on the back, it self-destructs. •: The Devastator fires a barrage of tiny rockets. Hard to use, but as the name implies, it can be devastating on anyone unfortunate enough to be in their path. •: You have to fight the literal one, the Santa, in order to bring him down to normal in the final stage of Duke: Nuclear Winter. •: At the beginning of each episode you lose all of the weapons and ammo you acquired during the previous episode, except for the pistol and 72 rounds of bullets.
•: In some levels of Lunar Apocalypse. •: Should a monster kill you, it will continue to attack your corpse, even to the detriment to other nearby monsters. •: 'Lunatic Fringe' takes place in a circular room. It takes two laps around the perimeter to get back to where you started, with the scenery changing after one lap.
Welcome to Cheatinfo, your number one source for Gamecheats, Action Games, PC Cheats and Codes along with high resolution game. Cheatinfo is updated everyday. The Feelies trope as used in popular culture. In this age of digital media and Internet deliverables, the idea that 20 years ago people were shelling out $30.
A cylindrical room in the middle could be entered by several doors and windows. Alternating entrances looked out on alternate versions of the outer room.
• 'Tier Drops' has four rooms occupying the same space, connected by a ring around the outside and by chutes leading to the other rooms. •: At the end of 'L.A. Meltdown', the first episode, the boss asks Duke, 'Who the hell are you?' Duke shoots his head off and announces that 'I'm Duke Nukem and I'm coming to get the rest of you alien bastards!'
• Sometimes, Duke will quip after gibbing an enemy with the RPG. •: • The first boss of the original three episodes, the Battlelord, has a lot of long hallways prior to his large room (some canyon halls, then three halls inside his palace; the last of these is behind the essential boss door, and walking across a certain point towards the end of the hall shuts the door behind you; if you fly over it, you can retreat back to the room just prior to the Battlelord if things get too hot).
• The fourth episode's last level and the final level of the extended main game, The Queen, forces Duke to run across a river of magenta plasma that will sap his health rather quickly (you will want Boots and you should take Steroids before attempting to cross the river), followed by a dry cave and then an underwater cavern passage with RPG ammo and Atomic Health, the second of which is in front of a hidden door that opens into the Queen's room, starting the fight of the extended game (hope you have Scuba Gear). • Life's A Beach and Duke it Out in D.C.
Also have corridors just prior to the rooms with the Cycloid Emperor rematches at the end of the expansions' last stages. •: There's only one boss-only stage in the main game, which is the 'Stadium' at the end of EP3; Duke starts in an elevator that carries him up into a football field with the Cycloid Emperor and a handful of Troopers behind him; this is outside, you can blow up a blimp high in the sky for refills, and accidentally killing the cheerleaders is possible (this will summon the fat Commanders onto the field).
The N64 version, however, has all three of its boss fights in their own levels that are separate from the levels preceding them; the falls at the end of 'The Abyss' and 'Overlord' now end the stage when you take them and go to a smaller area (the 'Battlelord' level for EP1, and the 'Overlord' level for EP2; the stage before the Overlord was renamed 'Dreadnought') for the boss fight. The Cycloid Emperor's stage starts with you staring him in the face right away, is now in an indoor stadium, and you can't kill the cheerleaders. •: • The PC version added a parental control system (with password), which hid some of the sexual content. This made the women invisible, causing Duke to bump against invisible objects, allow him to drop money at random positions, and to cause aliens to spawn when a rocket hits thin air. • 64, on the other hand, took this trope, removing the nudity, alcohol, drugs, swearing and religious references note One example is the game's second level; the porn shop and 'Gentleman's Club' were replaced with a gun shop and a walk-in Duke Burger restaurant (the layout was the same except for adding a door to the Duke-Burger out near the start of the level), and the level was renamed 'Gun Crazy'; it ends the same unless you find the Secret Exit near the main exit (which goes to the Duke-Burger level from EP4, which has been moved up to this point since there's no EP4 on this version). The 'Death Row' level also removes the chapel and replaces it with an additional cell block that also contains as a new; making the weapons have no effect on women; and toning down the gore as well.
Duke had to save the women instead of leaving them, or killing them if one's aim is really bad. The attire and remained, though. Fortunately, the outcry over this and the similarly Bowdlerized port of helped put a permanent end to 's overbearing censorship policies. •: One of the monsters is Octobrain, a large floating brain-like creature with tentacles hanging down beneath, 3 red eyes and a large mandibled mouth. •: Duke fakes a German accent briefly in one part of Hotel Hell when he says, 'Ve meet again,.' •: • The Derelict map from The Atomic Edition's Episode 4 is a reworked (as in actually functional) level from an early beta of the game called Lameduke.
• Some ideas and design from Lameduke's prison (E3L1) and city level with a bar and a strip club (E1L6) were reused in Death Row and Red Light District of the final game, respectively. • In the beginning of Hollywood Holocaust (E1L1), the spacecraft Duke operates is shot down and he says, 'Damn!
Those alien bastards are gonna pay for shooting up my ride!' The Movie Set map (E3L5) begins with the helicopter Duke pilots being shot down and him saying, 'Damn! That's the second time those alien bastards shot up my ride!' •: The first mission has Duke on a rooftop, loading his pistol, and grousing 'Damn! Those alien bastards are gonna pay for shooting up my ride!'
Duke's fun begins when he kicks out the fan on a roof vent and climbs into the shaft, falling three of four stories to the alien-infested street below. This barely gets a grunt out of him, and has no effect on his health because he lands on a pair of medkits which instantly heal the damage from the fall. •: Duke's Mighty Foot, which is both an equippable weapon (except in the Live Arcade version, provided you have ammo of any kind), and available separately while you're holding another weapon, which led to. The precursor to the found in many newer video games. •: Duke's line to open E3L1. •: Only against bosses. Killer doors are also the bane of all games.
Duke: My name's Duke Nukem! After a few days of R&R, I'll be ready for more action! Woman: Aww, come back to bed, Duke! I'm ready for some action, nowww! •: In Duke 3D, the bullet based enemies (pig cops etc) are capable of hitting you with pin-point accuracy, no matter how far across a large open space they happen to be, while the player may not even be able to see them. • This is due to the hitscan weapons having no travel time (which was common in older FPS titles). You can also get great accuracy with the pistol at longer ranges too because of this.
•: Several, including E4L9 (Critical Mass). •: The Sega Saturn port of Duke3D was one of only three games to bear, which was used for games meant only for adults and/or mature audiences.
•: In E1L2, a building must be demolished by entering the correct sequence. •: At the end of each episode. •: In the XBox Live Arcade version, it was found that E4L9 (Critical Mass) had an scenario; that level involves getting past a room which collapses behind you, so that there's no way back. Unfortunately, dying sends you back to the start of the level and you are thus required to get past the collapsing room again — which in multiplayer is no longer possible as the level doesn't reset. In deathmatch this isn't a problem as there's a switch which opens a teleport to bypass the collapsing room, but the designers forgot to make this available in co-op.
When the was written, this mistake was found and corrected. •: • The Battlelord re-appears throughout the other three episodes. He's much weaker, but those who just finished playing. He still retains the deadly firepower, though, and you can potentially fight two or more at a time. (especially in custom maps). • The N64 version also degrades the Overlord; he reappears in this port's 'Hotel Hell' and 'Freeway' levels, which are the last stages one can play in this version prior to confronting the 3D Cycloid Emperor in an indoor stadium (there's no EP4 on the; the game ends after the Emperor is defeated). The mini-Overlord only appears once in each of these levels (in spots occupied by mini-Battlelords in the other ports) and only on the 'Come Get Some' and 'Damn I'm Good' difficulties.
He's still a handful here. • The 20th Anniversary World Tour degrades all three main bosses from the original 3 episodes for Episode 5, and in one level, 'Bloody Hell', a cathedral has at least one mini version of each of the bosses (the Battlelord, Overlord and Cycloid Emperor) stationed outside it. The level ends with a full-sized Cycloid Emperor, but he's not counted as a full boss and an exit panel is right behind him (a full-sized Battlelord follows in a later level). •: Stray pipebombs and grenade rounds in Duke Nukem 3D can be blown up by shooting them. •: Immediately after destroying an alien empire and having his ride back to Earth shot down, he declares war on this new alien menace.
In Plutonium, he breaks his vacation to do it all over again. •: Many of the props can be destroyed. •: Typing 'DNBETA' causes the game to display the message, 'PIRATES SUCK!' Note This is a to the leaked beta version which became public shortly before version 1.0 of the game was released. •: In the first two episodes, every level leads logically to the next. In episode three, this is only the case once or twice. They discard level-to-level continuity completely for the Plutonium Pak episode.
•: The Plasma Rifle in 64, if an enemy happens to die from a shot.: if the last shot is with the plasma rifle, they will turn into sparkly silhouettes before fading away. •: Enemies can't shoot and move at the same time. •: A big part of E2L1 in Lameduke takes place in the L.A.
•: In the Pigsty map, one security monitor shows an image of a duck accompanied with an exclamation mark. Right after Duke has seen it, a rocket fired by an enemy flies towards him. •: Duke threatens the end boss of Episode 2 with. Sure enough, a cut scene after you kill the boss shows Duke doing just that, ending off with him sitting on the alien's neck reading a newspaper while he takes a good long dump. • In the outro text for Episode 2, he states that the last thing that will go through the Cycloid Emperor's mind when he dies, is his size-13 boot.
The final cutscene is just that. • The most common is 'You're not supposed to be here' found in The Abyss.
Probably intended to be unvisitable, but visible in plain view if you collect the on the. Most others need the no-clipping cheat entered. • The • Using the automap cheat reveals the level designer's name created as rooms in the shape of each letter. • On any level with a non-surveillance image on the security camera, it's possible to visit the place where this image is set up using no-clip mode. • The 'How did you get here?' Message in Toxic Dump. • 'Duke was here 2017' in Hotel Hell.
•: Parodied in Lameduke: When you exit the game, a message 'Game Over, or is it?' Appears on the screen.
•: In order to complete E4L11, the player must launch two missiles in the end by entering a code which is revealed in another part of the level. Contoh Soal Integral Partial Dan Pembahasannya Pdf. •: In The Abyss, a major route is blocked. To open it, you need to stand near the sign for the San Andreas fault, and watch the terrain ahead collapse.
•: • Gas cylinders.. • Barrels that (usually) are mostly red and explode when damaged. They are even named 'EXPLODINGBARREL' in the game data.
•: The player suffers this fate if he turns clipping off and enters outer space. •: The Protozoid Slimer, who provides some disturbing while jumping at Duke's face. •: Penthouse Magazine actually released their own Duke Nukem 3D map which added scanned images of nude penthouse pets into the game. •: The Cycloid Emperor fills this role in the original three episodes and two of the expansion packs; he touts Devastator ammo in all three fights. In 'The Birth', the Queen is the last enemy and the hardest since she can electrify the water you're swimming in and birth reinforcements. As for the Christmas expansion, Santa Claus himself appears in the last level of the pack when you enter his office, and he's similar to fighting a Dukematch opponent. The Alien World Order Episode 5 for the game's 20th anniversary has a reskinned Cycloid Emperor with a flamethrower.
•: A major one in the genre. •: • Almost all of the episode bosses can or will have some help with them when confronted. The Battlelord initially attacks solo, but there are three babes in his arena that, if killed by accident, will summon other enemies. The Overlord on all versions has a bunch of Slimer Pods in his room (they can be destroyed before he appears), the Cycloid Emperor has Troopers behind him in the main game (killing a cheerleader will bring out Alien Commanders) and the Life's a Beach expansion also can have him assisted by the bouncing rubber monsters, and the Queen has Aliens and Octobrains and can birth more. The reskinned Cycloid Emperor in Alien World Order has Pig Cops in flying cars around him. • The exceptions are Santa Claus in Nuclear Winter, the Cycloid Emperor rematch in Duke it out in D.C., and all bosses in the N64 version; the Overlord still has the Slimer Pods on the harder difficulties, but the others are fought solo.
•: Toilets and urinals can be used (the way they're typically used.) every few minutes to restore 10 health points, and they can also be destroyed to yield a stream of water that can heal the player to maximum, though very slowly. •: Introduced in the level 'Death Row' and is common in space-themed levels. •: The Freezethrower. •: 'This is KTIT. Playing the breast—uh. The best tunes in town!' •: The second level in Nuclear Winter soft locks upon trying to update the leaderboard on the Playstation Vita version, making it impossible to even have the game register the level as completed.
•: Like Doom, there are a whole slew of custom maps for this game. •: Several levels have reactors that must be destroyed (with explosive results, naturally) before the player could progress in the game. The level 'Critical Mass' plays this straight. •: The shrink ray works on the mini-Battlelords if you use it to do this. • Duke also finishes off the Alien Queen by shoving a pipe bomb up her birth canal. •: The 'Damn, I'm Good' difficulty setting, which disables cheat toggles and resurrects any fallen enemies that aren't gibbed.
•: The sound of a Protozoid Slimer crawling around when you don't know where it is. •: The pistol, the shotgun, and the chaingun shoot bullets that instantly 'teleport' to their target. •: The freeze ray.
Frozen enemies would if kicked or shot, even with a single round from the pistol. •: Named after catchphrases that Duke sometimes utters in-game: • 'Piece of Cake': The easiest. • 'Let's Rock' • 'Come Get Some' • 'Damn, I'm Good':, roughly equivalent to 's Nightmare difficulty. The enemies respawn on this difficulty if the player does not destroy their corpses. •: If Duke is left alone for some time, he will crack his knuckles and say either 'Come on!'
Or 'What are you waiting for? •: In the beginning of 'Hollywood Holocaust', the very first level, Duke's ride is shot down as he's returning to Earth after defeating the Rigelatins. This trope is apparently played even straighter in the beginning of Lameduke where he has just arrived into a space station, i.e. Presumably travelled a shorter distance than in the final game. In general, this beta version also is stylistically closer to its prequels. •: Reduced to slightly more realistic jumping height in the less-platformy third one. • •: The is the alien queen, who gives birth to a dangerous drone every thirty seconds.
Extra difficulty comes from the battle being underwater: once the player's air tank runs out, he's compelled to surface for air periodically, during which one or two new drones will be spawned. •: Useful items are commonly found inside garbage bins. •: The Devastator.
•: Hookers and captured women. •: There might be keys you need to get to unlock the way to the exit, but (with the exception of boss levels) reaching the exit will take you to the next level with full health.
•: It's also the first FPS to implement one. •: The new Alien World Order campaign from the 20th Anniversary World Tour adds a flamethrower weapon, as well as a new enemy type and new final boss that both use the flamethrower as their primary weapon. •: The Protozoid Slimers have mouths like these, which •: Duke Nukem himself. One of the largest video game hams,.
•: Appears in Duke's pistol in Lameduke but is in the final game. •: Combined with.
'I'm coming back to town, and the last thing that's gonna go through your mind before you die. Is my size-13 boot!' •: Not in the main title, but in the Nuclear Winter expansion pack, where the first two levels are the first two from the standard edition, played backwards and. •: The game features an overhead map view (with an untextured and a textured mode) which shows the areas you have explored (or the whole map if you use cheat code).
•: When Duke Nukem threatens to tear off your head and shit down your neck, he will in fact, literally tear off your head and shit down your neck. •: Using the freezethrower will result in this.
•: At least one in almost each level; usually opened with a blue, yellow or red keycard, but some are unlocked with a switch or a. •: Explosive weapons would send pieces flying, and getting squished by a ceiling/floor would leave a stretchy patch of gore connecting the floor and ceiling. The game's objects were also scripted, meaning it was more than possible to make the gibs MORE ludicrous. (Or, if you used one of the given examples, made enemies ) • Notably, reducing an enemy to (which can include blowing up the corpse) is the only way to prevent an enemy from resurrecting on the difficulty •: While the shrink ray is primarily used to attack enemies, there are at least three parts of the game which require Duke be shrunk to get into another part of the level. (One can be by taking a route through one of the secret areas, which also means that the blue key is not needed, but the standard route is arguably easier.) •: Santa Claus in the Nuclear Winter level pack. In stark contrast to all the other enemies and bosses in the series, he fights like a multiplayer opponent; moving and jumping around quite fast, equipped with multiple weapons (a shotgun, chaingun, and rocket launcher, as well as a kick attack) and is even able to use a jetpack to counter you if you try to use one. •: Many examples, many of which could be avoided by using the jetpack to quickly fly over the.
•: An area of the Hollywood level includes a movie set containing fake lunar scenery with an American flag and the lunar module standing there. •: Whenever a player uses the quick-kick key, the game displays a message saying, 'Mighty Foot Engaged.' •: The first level of Alien World Order takes place in Amsterdam, complete with a 'coffee' shop where Duke must.ahem. Partake to reach the end of the level, which causes him to hallucinate (depicted via clever design tricks in the level editor). Duke: Whoa, that's some good.' •: Aside of the Duke, it applies to some of the weapons like the Devastator.
•: Duke is stripped of all of his weapons and inventory after being captured two levels into the first episode, and starts the third level of the game, 'Death Row', with zilch. However, a resourceful player will only spend only a maximum of a minute or so with only Duke's size 13 boot as a weapon, and will only need to kick one Pig Cop to death with it before he can reclaim his pistol and acquire a new shotgun. •: Strangely enough, while Duke Nukem I names the main enemies the Techbots and Duke Nukem II names the aliens he faces the Rigelatins, the alien race in Duke Nukem 3D is never given a real name. One for them seems to be ' Alien Bastards', after what he calls them for shooting up his ride at the start of the game. •: The freeze thrower is basically the shrink ray except that it requires sustained shots instead of disabling a foe right away and the ammo for it is rarer. The fourth episode's exclusive spawn normally takes a lot (two direct to kill) and is fast, plus immune to the shrink ray. It is not immune to the freeze thrower and is stunlocked by its shots.
•: The 'Damn, I'm Good' difficulty will disable all the cheats. At the same time it can also be worked around if you know how to use the mapwarp and Godmode code right. •: • Assault Troopers and their slightly stronger Assault Captain counterparts, sometimes don't die right away but get on their knees and die moments later - unless they're killed in other ways before natural death. Any Trooper/Captain dying this way has a chance of coming back to life at the worst possible moment, and the only way to be sure it won't happen is to gib the body. Killing them before they die on their own does not influence this chance! • This trope applies to every single non-boss monster on the 'Damn I'm Good' difficulty, the main difference being that they will keep getting resurrected unless you gib them. •: Since Duke 3D was one of the first 'Doom clone'-era shooters where any of its weapons - the pistol in this case - required an actual reloading animation, this was bound to happen.
And it's done rather oddly - rather than individually tracking the twelve bullets, the weapon is simply coded to play the reloading animation when the ammo counter for it is brought down to a multiple of twelve. This means that at full ammo Duke carries around a good number of fully-loaded mags, plus one that's down-loaded to eight rounds which he'll load first - and if you can consistently kill enemies who drop pistol mags within those eight shots, he can continue firing far more bullets than he should be able to from the mag that's supposedly carrying less ammo.
•: Protozoid Slimers attack Duke by crawling either up his leg or down from the ceiling onto his face, which translates to your screen being filled with a horrific toothy maw. Luckily, you can get rid of them either by shooting or kicking them off (). •:, appropriately enough, published by 3D Realms and features a 'Duke' table in its collection. •: The Alien World Order episode from the 20th Anniversary edition adds new troopers with flamethrowers (these guys will self-destruct when killed), and the new Cycloid Emperor at the end of the episode also has a flamethrower. The episode also adds a flamethrower for Duke to use.
Torching a non-boss enemy will sap their health down quickly (it will kill the weaker enemies), but stepping on flamethrower fire or getting hit yourself will send your health plummeting. •: Duke is practically the when it comes to video game characters. Duke hates aliens, loves booze and strippers, and couldn't care less if people are offended by his antics.
•: Implied in the level 'XXX-Stacy' which has a comedy club where you can see a tomato thrown on the wall behind the stage. •: The fourth episode 'The Birth', opens with Duke grousing, 'Someone's going to pay for screwing up my vacation.' He then loads and cocks a pistol vengefully. •: And beyond. •: The Pig Cops have red eyes, which actually makes it possible to see them in the dark.