Doom II: Hell on Earth (1994)

4.18 from 152 votes
After the events of Doom, Hell has found its way to Earth. The last living scientists develop a plan to evacuate what's remaining of the human race with enormous space ships. Unfortunately, the demons have taken control of the only spaceport, and it's up to the nameless space marine to take it back.
First released
Oct 10, 1994
Aliases
Doom 2
Franchises
Doom
Developed by
id Software, Nerve Software, LLC, Torus Games Pty. Ltd., Infinity Co., Ltd., Rage Software
Published by
id Software, GT Interactive Software Corp., Bethesda Softworks, Zenimax Media Inc, Virgin Interactive Entertainment, Inc., Softbank Corp.
Platforms
Game Boy Advance, Mac, PlayStation, Zodiac, Xbox 360 Games Store, PC, iPhone, NEC PC-9801, Android, Xbox One, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch
Genres
First-Person Shooter
Themes
Horror, Sci-Fi, Post-Apocalyptic
Rating
BBFC: 15, ESRB: M, ESRB: T, CERO: D, PEGI: 16+, OFLC: MA15+
Releases
  • GBA - DOOM II United States
  • GBA - DOOM II: Hell on Earth United Kingdom
  • MAC - DOOM II: Hell on Earth United States
  • MAC - DOOM II: Hell on Earth United States
  • NSW - Doom II (Classic) United Kingdom
  • NSW - Doom II (Classic) United States
  • PC - DOOM II: Hell on Earth United Kingdom
  • PC - DOOM II: Hell on Earth United States
  • PC - DOOM II: Hell on Earth United States
  • PC - DOOM II: Hell on Earth (Steam) United States
  • PC - DOOM II: Hell on Earth United Kingdom
  • PC - Depths of Doom Trilogy United States
  • PS4 - Doom II (Classic) United States
  • XBGS - DOOM II Japan
  • XBGS - DOOM II United States
  • XBGS - DOOM II United Kingdom
  • XBGS - DOOM II Australia
  • XONE - Doom II (Classic) United States
  • ZOD - DOOM II: Hell on Earth United States

Community reviews

 
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*Warning: Spoilers* Epic sequel to an already great classic.
DOOM II is an great follow up of the first DOOM game and offers some new features like new enemies, a new weapon, and a many more levels.

The principle is still the same as the first game. You choose one of the five campaigns and complete all the levels. Instead of fighting demons on Mars however, they now have invaded earth via the open portal that was left behind on Mars, and it is your job to sweep the streets clean of demon scum.

Story wise, DOOM II is simple but dark as ever. The invading demons have slaughtered almost all people on earth and the few that survive, have build space ships to get away from earth, into space. You help disable the barrier that the demons put up to prevent them from leaving and, when all survivors eventually escaped, you are literally the only human left on earth.

Although you saved humanity, you accept your fate that earth is lost and you wait for your inevitable fate. However, then, a message from the survivors from space is transmitted to you, revealing the location of the demon portal, where the invasion is coming from. You fight your way to the portal but discover that it cannot be destroyed from the earth side. You enter the portal, straight into hell itself and defeat the biggest demon you have ever seen. After this, you close the portal and you saved humanity once again.

Graphically, DOOM II looks the same as the first game. But with a series like this, that is no issue and I did not expect (especially at the time) some revolutionary change in visuals. Same goes for the sound, unchanged, but still as badass as ever. The new enemy designs were really cool and added to the overall experience.

I really liked the “earth setting” of DOOM II instead of space stations and factories, it really enhanced the experience for me and gave the game a unique feel. The levels were diverse and looked great.

The addition of the Double Barreled shotgun was great, and I used this badass weapon a lot. The sound feedback you get from this thing alone, was worth it to play DOOM II.

The Master Levels for DOOM II DLC contained twenty new levels, making DOOM II the biggest and longest 2,5D shooter I ever played when compared to DOOM I, Duke Nukem and Wolfenstein.

In conclusion, DOOM II did not disappoint and, along with several other classics, is one of those games that I can boot up anytime and complete for the fun of it, without it ever boring me.

Definitely recommend this blast from the past!
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