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FPS: First Person Shooter the Definitive FPS Documentary

2023

R

4 h 35 m

United Kingdom

Dokumentaryo

Aksyon

The largest ensemble of gaming icons ever assembled on screen, FPS: First Person Shooter is a documentary that takes fans on a nostalgic journey through the creation some of the greatest videogames ever made.
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7.5 /10

364 people rated

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Nangungunang Cast(19)
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Greg Thompson
Self - Co-Creator, Maze War
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Dave Lebling
Self - Co-Creator, Maze War
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Rebecca Ann Heineman
Self - Programmer, Interplay
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David Alan Smith
Self - Creator, The Colony
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Seamus Blackley
Self - Co-Creator of Xbox
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Tim Willits
Self - Level Designer, Quake (Series)
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Mike Wilson
Self - Marketing, ID Software
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John Romero
Self - Co-Founder, id Software
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Tom Hall
Self - Co-Founder, id Software
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John Carmack
Self - Co-Founder, id Software
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Adrian Carmack
Self - Co-Founder, id Software
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Scott Miller
Self - Co-Founder, Apogee Software
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Scott Miller
3D Realms
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David Kushner
Self - Author, Masters of Doom
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Randy Pitchford
Self - CEO, Gearbox Entertainment
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James Rolfe
Self - Creator, Cinemassacre, Angry Video Game Nerd
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Cliff Bleszinski
Self - Co-Creator, Unreal, Unreal Tournament
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Dave Oshry
Self - CEO, New Blood Interactive
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Levelord
Self - Level Designer, 3D Realms

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Assane HD

04/12/2023 16:18
This documentary clocks at 4 and a half hours, of which the first 2 hours are about the absolute birth of computer shooter games (Wolfenstein, DOOM and Quake) and the second 2 hours are about the more recently released widely popular games like Halo etc. I was confronted with Wolfenstein in the early eighties and I had a fun blast. But a few years later I underwent "DOOM" and that really blew my mind! And I still think DOOM is one of the best shooter games ever made! It's simplicity, combined with ultimate shock effects, still freak me out some 30 years later. What a thrill ride! Especially the really early development of 3D visuals on the computer (back in the late seventies) is fun to watch. The guys who invented all these wonderful programs are being interviewed and what achievements they have made for the world of computer gaming. Nice watch, although quite long, but one can choose what to watch. Interesting insights into this massive virtual world which is the biggest grossing part of the entertainment industry nowadays. Lots of reviews by the makers themselves of all the most popular shooter games. What's not to like?
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Emma Auguste

16/11/2023 16:01
source: FPS: First Person Shooter
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Mïäï

15/11/2023 16:47
FPS: First Person Shooter_720p(480P)
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Olamide Adedeji

15/11/2023 16:02
source: FPS: First Person Shooter
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Samche

15/11/2023 16:01
I was pretty excited to learn that CreatorVC, the people behind the In Search of Darkness series, were going to a documentary on First-Person Shooter games. I've been a fan of the genre all the way back when Wolfenstein 3D and Blake Stone were released. Clocking little over 4 hours & 30 minutes, the documentary starts off great. Covering the origins such as Maze War, Battlezone, and Catacombs 3D, before getting to Wolfenstein 3D and Doom. The coverage for id Software games were insightful and a lot of fun to hear stories from legends like John Carmack and John Romero. A lot of people from id Software were interviewed as well as folks from Apogee and 3D Realms. Once the documentary gets to the era of Quake 2 and Unreal, it kinda of loses focus. The documentary seems to rush and trying to cover everything up to 2016's Doom. In doing so, they miss other important FPS games like Soldier of Fortune, Red Faction, the Far Cry series, Crysis, and the list goes on. The documentary skims through Call of Duty and Battlefield 1942. Medal of Honor Allied Assault gets the spotlight and totally forgets about the first Medal of Honor game. Goldeneye for the N64 gets attention, while Perfect Dark is mentioned but not well covered as Goldeneye. Both Half-Life and Half-Life 2 gets solid coverage, as well as Team Fortress Classic and Team Fortress 2. Portal is mentioned as well but no one behind the game were interviewed. In fact, only the creators of Team Fortress were interviewed. No one else from Valve Software, past or present, are in this documentary. Randy Pitchford is the only person from Gearbox Software to be interviewed for the Half-Life add-on Opposing Force (as well as other Gearbox-related games such as Borderlands) Mods were mentioned for Doom/Doom 2 but skimped on when we get to the Quake 2 and Half-Life era. Both origins for Team Fortress and Counter-Strike were either barely mentioned or not mentioned at all. Like I said, this documentary tries to cover everything but misses the, big and small, important stuff. The creators of this documentary should've stick to the timeline and maybe stopped at Half-Life, saving the other games for another documentary. If they put the same amount of time, energy & money from the first half onto the last half of the documentary, I would've given it a 10 out of 10. If you're a fan of id Software's games like Wolfenstein 3D, Doom, and Quake, you're in for a treat. Even the coverage for Duke Nukem 3D and Unreal were fantastic. After that, the documentary loses focus and rushes through the titles, missing other important games in the process. I give it a 6 out of 10.
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