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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Game/Visual Design Students and FPS fans will LOVE this!
I purchased both this book and the Half-Life 2 'Raising the Bar' book together for a discounted price. Both are exceptional and both I HIGHLY recommend owning.

The Doom 3 book is far heavier on word count and focuses on the entire production of Doom 3 as opposed to the sporadic comments and captions grouped with pictures in 'Raising The Bar'. Having said that...
Published on April 3, 2005 by Jake Stollery

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14 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars No meat romp
This book was an utter let-down. I was pumped up ready to dive into this book after reading the previous reviews here on Amazon. The reviews made it sound like it was a solid book with a lot of detailed information regarding the actual "making of doom 3". This book in reality is a half-assed, piece-mailed collage of hype and fluff. There is no meat here. Steven Kent...
Published on May 28, 2005 by Eric Rayl


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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Game/Visual Design Students and FPS fans will LOVE this!, April 3, 2005
By 
Jake Stollery (Brisbane, Australia) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Making of Doom(r) III: The Official Guide (Paperback)
I purchased both this book and the Half-Life 2 'Raising the Bar' book together for a discounted price. Both are exceptional and both I HIGHLY recommend owning.

The Doom 3 book is far heavier on word count and focuses on the entire production of Doom 3 as opposed to the sporadic comments and captions grouped with pictures in 'Raising The Bar'. Having said that both are different and will appeal to everyone interested regardless.

Both are printed on very high quality paper, 'Raising The Bar' even having a hard cover, a sore omission from The Making Doom 3. The content is brilliant with hundreds of images gracing throughout and insights into the making of these games. I particularly liked reading about the ideas, monsters and objects that were cut from the final games. Seriously, every gamer or visual artist/designer should own these, awesome and inspirational 'picture' books to have laying around.

SO! If you are a fan-boy or girl of either game, get both, they are EXCEPTIONAL READING and I cannot recommend them highly enough.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Giid Job Guys, November 23, 2004
This review is from: The Making of Doom(r) III: The Official Guide (Paperback)
Steven Kent was given extraordinary access to the creative team doing Doom 3 while the project was under develoment. In this book he charts that development from early conception and the development of details like a new graphics engine that would do the actual on screen graphics. He then moves on to the development of characters, locations, and sounds that make the game what it is. One by one the developers are introduced, often by interview. And the developers get to say their prospective on the game and their part in it. The book is profusely illustrated showing the characters in the sceens where they belong.

It is surprising, no incredible to me that the game of Doom 3 was created in total by a team of some 22 peop.le.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars small problem, July 20, 2005
This review is from: The Making of Doom(r) III: The Official Guide (Paperback)
Great book by the writer Mr. Kent! The only problem that I came across was the that the pages fall out with minimal use. Warnig!!! Don not treat this book as a standard book!
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14 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars No meat romp, May 28, 2005
This review is from: The Making of Doom(r) III: The Official Guide (Paperback)
This book was an utter let-down. I was pumped up ready to dive into this book after reading the previous reviews here on Amazon. The reviews made it sound like it was a solid book with a lot of detailed information regarding the actual "making of doom 3". This book in reality is a half-assed, piece-mailed collage of hype and fluff. There is no meat here. Steven Kent is not David Kushner, and this is not "The Masters of Doom" (part 2)... very unfortunately.

What I was expecting from this book was stuff about how the team created what they created (which the book does, to some extent), but more importantly, WHY. What were the reasons for making certain decisions, what were the challenges they had to overcome, what technological barriers did they break, and how did they persevere together, as a team? I also wanted to know about the personal stories and the inner happenings of the game in production. I wanted to learn about the conflicts between the developers and the motivations for doing things they way they did. I wanted to know what kind of pizza they ordered after working 80+ hours a week, and how many liters of Mountain Dew they consumed as a whole. None of this was even pretended to be addressed.

What the book does is a cheap, glossed-over summary of doom 3. It talks about the doom story mostly and tells some basic information about how things were created. (Anyone already in game development will surely recognize the provided information as elementary and immediately self-evident.)

About the only good thing in this book is the Question and Answer Section with John Carmack. As always, John provides a real treat by articulating his knowledge of technical issues and world view opinion in the most elegant way. The author, Steven Kent, gets one point here for not editing Carmack's dialogue; for Carmack, on a number of occasions, seems to poke fun at the interviewer's most obvious lack of game development knowledge.

Get this book if you are interested in game design (but have no previous knowledge) and/or if you are a die-hard id fanboy.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book, March 11, 2009
By 
SkykingUSA (Southern CA, USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Making of Doom(r) III: The Official Guide (Paperback)
Great book with impressive quality pictures and great information. Any Doom buff will love it.
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great insight into ID software, January 2, 2005
This review is from: The Making of Doom(r) III: The Official Guide (Paperback)
This book gives a great insight on the inner workings of ID software. The paper used in the publication of this seems to be extremely high quality. My only gripe is the book is not hardcover. Overall Steven Kent does a great job as usual. If you want to understand how ID works this book will explain alot.
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The Making of Doom(r) III: The Official Guide
The Making of Doom(r) III: The Official Guide by Steven L. Kent (Paperback - October 20, 2004)
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