List of 3D Realms games

3D Realms is an American video game publisher and developer originally based in Garland, Texas and currently based in Aalborg, Denmark. It was founded in 1987 as Apogee Software by Scott Miller to publish his game Kingdom of Kroz. Prior to Apogee's founding, Miller had released a few games he had developed himself, as well as a couple "packs" of games developed by himself and others, under a shareware distribution model whereby the games were distributed for free in return for donations.[1] These games were inconsistently marketed under the name Apogee Software Productions, though after the company was founded they were sold under the Apogee Software name.[2] Miller found that the standard shareware model was not viable for his games such as Beyond the Titanic (1986) and Supernova (1987), and beginning with Kroz the company pioneered the "Apogee model" of shareware distribution, wherein games were broken up into segments with the first part released for free to drive interest in the other monetized portions.[1]

Soon after its founding, Apogee began publishing titles by other developers in addition to titles by Miller; these developers were often companies composed of a single designer. As Apogee expanded to include more people, some of these designers, such as George Broussard (Micro F/X Software) and Todd Replogle (Scenario Software), joined Apogee as employees and designed its later titles; Broussard joined the company in 1991 as a co-owner.[1] In the 1990s, Apogee was best known for popularizing its shareware model and as the creator of franchises for MS-DOS on the personal computer such as Duke Nukem and as the publisher of games such as Commander Keen and Wolfenstein 3D.[1][2]

In 1994, Apogee decided to launch different brand names for each genre of games they published; it created 3D Realms for 3D games, publishing Terminal Velocity in 1995 and developing the 1996 Duke Nukem 3D under the name, with the other titles released in those years still under Apogee.[3] In late 1996, however, Apogee renamed the company itself to 3D Realms to associate their brand with newer, 3D titles.[1] 3D Realms launched a brand for pinball games, Pinball Wizards, in February 1997, but only published Balls of Steel (1997) under the name.[3] Also beginning in 1997, with their licensed Duke Nukem sequels, 3D Realms shifted from episodic MS-DOS titles to non-episodic console and personal computer games. In the process it abandoned the shareware model in favor of a traditional publishing model; it also largely ceased its activities as a developer that same year, releasing only Shadow Warrior (1997).[2] The sole exceptions were Prey (2006), which stayed in development until 2001 when it was transferred to another studio, and Duke Nukem Forever (2011), which famously stayed in development at 3D Realms as vaporware until 2009.[2][4]

In July 2008, 3D Realms licensed the Apogee name to the newly formed Apogee Software, which publishes both older Apogee titles and new games; it was renamed Apogee Entertainment in 2021.[1] In 2009, financial issues drove 3D Realms to shut down their development department and publishing operations, canceling Duke Nukem Forever and its publishing involvement in the already announced Earth No More and Prey 2.[1][5] In 2014, 3D Realms itself, then focusing on licensing its franchises to other developers, was sold to the investment firm backing Interceptor Entertainment, one of those developers;[6] since then it has published two titles for Interceptor and has several more planned under its new name of Slipgate Ironworks.[7][8] In 2017, 3D Realms announced a return to development with a partnership for Shadow Stalkers, expected in 2018 but later canceled.[9] 3D Realms has since published several titles, and is involved in the development of Wrath: Aeon of Ruin. During its history, 3D Realms has developed or published over 50 games, and granted licenses for 10 more. At least 25 games that 3D Realms was involved with were canceled, with some going on to be finished by other companies.

Video games

Many of the games published under the Apogee name were released as a set of separate episodes, which were purchasable and playable separately or as a group. Titles are listed for games that gave individual names to their episodes instead of episode numbers.

List of games
TitleSystem(s)Release dateDeveloper(s)Ref(s)
Puzzle Fun-Pak
(Asteroids Rescue, Block Five, Maze Machine, Phrase Master)[a]
MS-DOS1986Apogee[2]
Adventure Fun-Pak
(Night Bomber, Raiders of the Forbidden Mine, Rogue Runner, The Thing)[b]
MS-DOS1986[2]
Beyond the TitanicMS-DOS1986Apogee (Scott Miller)[2]
SupernovaMS-DOS1987Apogee (Scott Miller, Terry Nagy)[2]
The Kroz Trilogy
("Kingdom of Kroz", "Caverns of Kroz", "Dungeons of Kroz")[c]
MS-DOSNovember 26, 1987Apogee (Scott Miller)[2]
Word WhizMS-DOS1988Apogee (Scott Miller)[2]
Trivia WhizMS-DOS1988Micro F/X Software (George Broussard)[2]
Trek TriviaMS-DOS1988Apogee (Scott Miller)[2]
Next Generation TriviaMS-DOS1988Micro F/X Software (George Broussard)[2]
The Thor Trilogy
("Caves of Thor", "Realm of Thor", "Thor's Revenge")
MS-DOS1989Scenario Software (Todd Replogle)[2]
The Lost Adventures of KrozMS-DOS1990Apogee (Scott Miller)[11]
Monuments of Mars
("First Contact", "The Pyramid", "The Fortress", "The Face")
MS-DOS[d]January 1, 1990Scenario Software (Todd Replogle)[2][12]
The Super Kroz Trilogy
("Return to Kroz", "Temple of Kroz", "The Final Crusade of Kroz")[e]
MS-DOSJune 1990Apogee (Scott Miller)[1]
Pharaoh's Tomb
("Raiders of the Lost Tomb", "Pharaoh's Curse", "Temple of Terror", "Nevada's Revenge")
MS-DOS[d]December 14, 1990Micro F/X Software (George Broussard)[2][15]
Commander Keen in Invasion of the Vorticons
("Marooned on Mars", "The Earth Explodes", "Keen Must Die!")
MS-DOS[f]December 14, 1990id Software[17]
Dark Ages
("Prince of Destiny", "The Undead Kingdom", "Dungeons of Doom")
MS-DOS[d]January 1991Scenario Software[3][18]
Jumpman Lives!MS-DOSJune 10, 1991Shamusoft Designs (Dave Sharpless)[19]
Duke Nukem
("Shrapnel City", "Mission: Moonbase", "Trapped in the Future")
MS-DOS[g]July 1, 1991Apogee[21]
Paganitzu
("Romancing the Rose", "The Silver Dagger", "Jewel of the Yucatan")
MS-DOS[d]October 1, 1991Trilobyte (Keith Schuler)[22]
Arctic AdventureMS-DOS[d]October 9, 1991Apogee[2][23]
Crystal Caves
("Troubles with Twibbles", "Slugging it Out", "Mylo Versus the Supernova")
MS-DOS[d]October 23, 1991[2]
Commander Keen in Goodbye, Galaxy!
("Secret of the Oracle", "The Armageddon Machine")
MS-DOS[f]December 15, 1991id Software[24]
Secret Agent
("The Hunt for Red Rock Rover", "Kill Again Island", "Dr. No Body")
MS-DOS[d]February 1, 1992Apogee[2]
Cosmo's Cosmic AdventureMS-DOS[d]March 1992[2]
Word Rescue
("Visit Gruzzleville and the Castle", "Explore GruzzleBad Caverns", "See the Spooky Haunted House")
MS-DOS[d]March 1992Redwood Games[2][25]
Wolfenstein 3D
("Escape from Castle Wolfenstein", "Operation: Eisenfaust", "Die, Führer, Die!")
MS-DOS[h]May 5, 1992id Software[33]
Math Rescue
("Visit Volcanoes and Ice Caves", "Follow the Gruzzles into Space", "See Candy Land")
MS-DOS[d]October 1992Redwood Games[2][25]
ScubaVenture: The Search for Pirate's TreasureMS-DOS1993Apogee[i][35]
Major Stryker
("Lava Planet", "Arctic Planet", "Desert Planet")
MS-DOS[d]January 15, 1993Apogee[2][36]
Monster BashMS-DOS[d]April 9, 1993[2]
Bio Menace
("Dr. Mangle's Lab", "The Hidden Lab", "Master Cain")
MS-DOS[d]August 3, 1993[2]
Alien Carnage
("Sewers", "Factory", "Office Block", "Alien Ship")[j]
MS-DOS[d]October 10, 1993Interactive Binary Illusions, SubZero Software[2][38]
Duke Nukem IIMS-DOS[k]December 3, 1993Apogee[2][41]
Blake Stone: Aliens of Gold
("Star Institute", "Floating Fortress", "Underground Network", "Star Port", "Habitat 11", "Satellite Defense")
MS-DOS[d]December 3, 1993JAM Productions[42]
Raptor: Call of the Shadows
("Bravo Sector", "Tango Sector", "Outer Regions")
MS-DOS[l]April 1, 1994Cygnus Studios[46]
Hocus Pocus
("Time Tripping", "Shattered Worlds", "Warped and Weary", "Destination Home")
MS-DOS[d]June 1, 1994Moonlite Software[2][47]
Mystic Towers
("Rimm", "Tor Korad", "Nortscar", "Wolf's Den", "Ebonscarp", "Marchwall")
MS-DOS[d]July 15, 1994Animation F/X[48]
Wacky WheelsMS-DOS[d]October 17, 1994Beavis Soft[49]
Blake Stone: Planet StrikeMS-DOS[d]October 28, 1994JAM Productions[50]
Boppin'
("Bothersome Hunnybunz", "Significant Other of Hunnybunz", "Love Child of Hunnybunz", "Hunnybunz Defrocked")
MS-DOS[m]November 15, 1994Accursed Toys[2][52]
Rise of the Triad
("Approach", "Monastery", "Caves Below", "The Slow and the Dead")
MS-DOS[n]December 21, 1994Apogee[2]
Terminal VelocityMS-DOS, Windows[o]May 1, 1995Terminal Reality[57]
Realms of Chaos
("Revolt of the Myraal", "The Goblin Plague", "Foray into Fire")
MS-DOS[d]November 11, 1995Apogee[2]
Xenophage: Alien BloodsportMS-DOS[d]December 29, 1995Argo Games[58]
Duke Nukem 3D
("L.A. Meltdown", "Lunar Apocalypse", "Shrapnel City")
MS-DOS[p]January 29, 19963D Realms[q][2][60]
Death RallyMS-DOS[r]September 6, 1996Remedy Entertainment[74]
Stargunner
("Scout Mission", "Stellar Attack", "Terran Assault", "Aquatic Combat")
MS-DOS[d]November 19, 1996Apogee[2]
Shadow Warrior
("Enter the Wang", "Code of Honor")
MS-DOS[s]May 13, 19973D Realms[q][2][70]
Balls of SteelWindowsDecember 12, 1997Wildfire Studios[77]
Max Payne
("The American Dream", "A Cold Day in Hell", "A Bit Closer to Heaven")
Windows[t]July 23, 2001Remedy Entertainment[u][78]
Max Payne 2: The Fall of Max Payne
("The Darkness Inside", "A Binary Choice", "Waking Up from the American Dream")
Windows, PlayStation 2, XboxOctober 14, 2003Remedy Entertainment[v][80]
Duke Nukem Mobile[w]Mobile phonesJanuary 15, 2004Machineworks Northwest[81]
Tapwave ZodiacMay 2004[81]
Duke Nukem Mobile II: Bikini ProjectMobile phonesSeptember 2005[83]
PreyWindows, Xbox 360July 11, 20063D Realms, Human Head Studios[x][84]
Duke Nukem ForeverWindows, macOS, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360June 10, 20113D Realms, Triptych Games, Gearbox Software, Piranha Games[y][85]
Bombshell[z]WindowsJanuary 29, 2016Interceptor Entertainment[8]
Rad Rodgers: World OneWindowsDecember 1, 2016[7]
GraveballWindowsJuly 31, 2018Goin' Yumbo Games[88]
ZIQWindows, macOS, Nintendo SwitchAugust 1, 2018[aa]Midnight Sea Studios[89]
Ion FuryWindows, macOS, Linux, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch, Xbox OneAugust 15, 2019[ab]Voidpoint[90]
GhostrunnerWindows, PlayStation 4, Xbox OneOctober 27, 2020One More Level, Slipgate Ironworks[ac][92]
CulticWindowsOctober 13, 2022[ad]Jasozz Games[93]
The Kindeman RemedyWindowsNovember 16, 2023Troglobytes Games
Kingpin: ReloadedWindows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo SwitchDecember 5, 2023Xatrix Entertainment, Slipgate Ironworks[ae][94]
GravenWindows, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, Nintendo SwitchJanuary 23, 2024Slipgate Ironworks[af][95]
Wrath: Aeon of RuinWindows, macOS, Linux, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch, Xbox OneFebruary 27, 2024[ag]KillPixel, Slipgate Ironworks[97]
Phantom FuryWindows, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, Nintendo SwitchApril 23, 2024Slipgate Ironworks
Core DecayWindowsTBAIvar Hill, Slipgate Ironworks[98]
SiN: ReloadedWindowsTBARitual Entertainment, Nightdive Studios, Slipgate Ironworks[ah][99][100]
CombustionWindowsTBARetro Dungeon, Slipgate Ironworks
RipoutWindows, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/STBA[ai]Pet Project Games[101]
Tempest RisingWindowsTBASlipgate Ironworks, 2B Games[aj]
Twisted TowerWindowsTBAAtmos Games
BloodlessWindowsTBAPoint N' Sheep

Games licensed by 3D Realms

Several spinoff games and remakes, especially in the Duke Nukem series, have been created with 3D Realms granting a license but without serving as the developer or publisher.

List of licensed games
TitleSystemRelease dateDeveloperPublisher(s)Ref(s).
Duke Nukem: Time to KillPlayStationOctober 12, 1998n-SpaceGT Interactive[102][103]
Duke Nukem: Zero HourNintendo 64September 1, 1999EurocomGT Interactive[104]
Duke Nukem: Land of the BabesPlayStationSeptember 27, 2000n-SpaceInfogrames[105][106]
Duke Nukem: Manhattan ProjectWindows[ak]May 21, 2002Sunstorm InteractiveArush Entertainment[111][112]
Duke Nukem AdvanceGame Boy AdvanceAugust 12, 2002Torus GamesTake-Two Interactive[113]
Prey InvasioniOSJune 7, 2009Machineworks NorthwestHands-On Mobile[114]
Duke Nukem: Critical MassNintendo DSApril 8, 2011Frontline StudiosDeep Silver[115]
Rise of the TriadWindowsJuly 31, 2013Interceptor EntertainmentApogee Software[116]
Shadow WarriorWindowsSeptember 26, 2013Flying Wild HogDevolver Digital[117]
Wacky Wheels HDWindows, macOSOctober 26, 2016Ferocity 2DFerocity 2D[118]
Crystal Caves HDWindows, LinuxOctober 15, 2020Emberheart GamesApogee Software[119]
Secret Agent HDWindows, LinuxJune 30, 2021Emberheart GamesApogee Software[120]
Monster Bash HDWindows, LinuxOctober 29, 2021Emberheart GamesApogee Software[121]
Rise of the Triad: Ludicrous EditionWindows, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, Nintendo SwitchJuly 31, 2023Nightdive StudiosApogee Entertainment / New Blood Interactive[al][124]

Canceled games

Several game projects were begun and abandoned before completion that had Apogee/3D Realms as the developer or publisher. Some of these were later completed by another developer or publisher, though many were not. In addition to these games, there are projects that were conceived but never began development, such as Dino Days (1991) and Commander Keen: The Universe is Toast! (1992), and titles which had preliminary agreements or offers for 3D Realms to publish where a final agreement was never reached either because the project was canceled or another publisher was chosen instead.[125]

List of canceled games
TitlePlanned system(s)Cancelation dateDeveloper(s)Ref(s).
The Underground Empire of KrozMS-DOS1991Apogee[125]
GateworldMS-DOS1992[am]Apogee[125]
Fantasy 3DMS-DOS1993Peter Jungck[125]
Cybertank 3DMS-DOS1993Frank Maddin[125]
TubesMS-DOS1993[an]Absolute Magic[125]
BoulderDash 5000MS-DOS1993[125]
Nuclear NightmareWindows1993[125]
Angels FiveMS-DOS1993[125]
The Second SwordMS-DOS1993Cygnus Studios[125]
Wards of WandaalMS-DOS1993[125]
MegalomanMS-DOS1994Apogee[125]
Monster Bash VGAMS-DOS1995Apogee[125]
Crazy BabyMS-DOS1995[ao]Apogee[125]
FumesMS-DOS1995[125]
Crystal CarnageMS-DOS1995[125]
Ruins: Return of the GodsMS-DOS1995[ap]3D Realms[125]
RavagerMS-DOS1996[aq]Apogee[125]
Cyberboard KidMS-DOS1996[ar]Apogee[125]
Duke Nukem ForeverMS-DOS1997[as]3D Realms[125]
BloodMS-DOS1997[at]Q Studios[125]
Descent: FreeSpace – The Great WarWindows1998[au]Volition[125]
Duke Nukem: Endangered Species HunterWindows2001Action Forms[135]
Duke Nukem: D-DayPlayStation 22003[av]n-Space[136]
Earth No MoreWindows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 3602008[aw]Recoil Games[5][138]
Prey 2Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 3602008[aw]Human Head Studios[5]
Shadow StalkersWindows, macOS, Linux, PlayStation 42018[ax]3D Realms, Zoom Platform[9]

Notes

References

External links