Review thenewguy729 4/5 · Oct 24, 2025
Badass
Oversimplified opinion: It's badass
Sub-genre: Being a badass
Favorite part: Where you get to be a badass
Rating: Badass/5
Review: Being a badass is fun
PC (Microsoft Windows) · PlayStation 4 · Xbox One
4.14 from 5867 ratings · #228 top rated on Grouvee
13986 members have it in their collection · 823 playing now · 3833 backlogged · 1862 wish listed
How long? Main story 13h · with extras 17h · 100% 30h (from 149 logged playthroughs)
Review thenewguy729 4/5 · Oct 24, 2025
Oversimplified opinion: It's badass
Sub-genre: Being a badass
Favorite part: Where you get to be a badass
Rating: Badass/5
Review: Being a badass is fun
Review Krauzer 5/5 · Sep 22, 2025
This Doom entry successfully reboots the legendary series while keeping the spirit of the original alive. It throws away the slow, cover-based style of many modern shooters and instead forces you into aggressive, high-speed combat. Enemies never let up, and the game rewards you for staying on the move with health and ammo pickups gained through brutal “Glory Kills.” The …
This Doom entry successfully reboots the legendary series while keeping the spirit of the original alive. It throws away the slow, cover-based style of many modern shooters and instead forces you into aggressive, high-speed combat. Enemies never let up, and the game rewards you for staying on the move with health and ammo pickups gained through brutal “Glory Kills.” The gunplay feels fantastic, with each weapon having a distinct weight and impact, and upgrades give you plenty of ways to tweak your playstyle.
The campaign offers large, arena-like levels that encourage exploration for secrets and weapon mods, echoing the design of classic Doom but with modern polish. The visuals are sharp and detailed, and Mick Gordon’s heavy, industrial metal soundtrack perfectly complements the frantic action, often elevating fights into pure adrenaline rushes. The story is light, framing you as the unstoppable Doom Slayer rather than bogging you down with exposition.
One of my favorite aspects of this entry is the attempt to bring some depth and complexity to the progression, adding weapon upgrades, attachments, mods and etc. It doesn't make the game standout in any way compared to other games that has similar mechanics, but this is a first in the Doom franchise, which makes this special. At the same time, there is little to no progression when it comes to the main character itself, which is a bummer, making the weapons the protagonists, like they always were.
Some arenas can feel a bit repetitive toward the end, but this is a trait of almost all single-player FPS games due to it's lack of depth and complexity in most of it's elements besides the combat. This reboot sets new standards for modern shooters, even creating a whole new genre which is heavily inspired by this entry, similar to what the original Doom did back in the day. This is a must-play if you like FPS titles to any extent, one of the best shooters, reboots and games of all time.
Review brettalmur18 5/5 · Feb 27, 2025
Title says it all. If you're looking for this type of game, you're never going to find a better one than this. 10/10 for me, no notes.
Review Gauntlet 4/5 · Dec 1, 2024
Doom was a fun time and a good game to check off the log. The setting between hell and mars is Sci-Fi legitness, felt like playing through a fun 2000's Sci-Fi movie. The visuals and sound are great, the sound is creepy especially before encounters. The graphics up-close during glory kills are fantastic and satisfying. The story is simple straightforward …
Read moreDoom was a fun time and a good game to check off the log. The setting between hell and mars is Sci-Fi legitness, felt like playing through a fun 2000's Sci-Fi movie. The visuals and sound are great, the sound is creepy especially before encounters. The graphics up-close during glory kills are fantastic and satisfying. The story is simple straightforward and compliments the face paced action. I think it mixes well oldschool FPS to the modern day! Defiantly a game to checkout!
Read lessReview CappyAU 4/5 · Nov 12, 2023
Picked up this game in late 2020 after completing Doom Eternal, it definitely isn't as good as the latter game. As good as it is, it is really just a stepping stone for Eternal's success. Don't get me wrong Doom 2016 is really good in its own right, but just doesn't hit the mark like Doom Eternal does. I finally …
Picked up this game in late 2020 after completing Doom Eternal, it definitely isn't as good as the latter game. As good as it is, it is really just a stepping stone for Eternal's success. Don't get me wrong Doom 2016 is really good in its own right, but just doesn't hit the mark like Doom Eternal does.
I finally completed this game this year though earlier this month, and as of 13 minutes ago, 100% the story. Sadly I can't get all the multiplayer achievements, however the Arcade mode achievements are doable at some point but I can't be bothered. I have completed all the story achievements with the exception of "A Toe Into Madness" which I also cbf doing at this time.
Overall experience was great, adrenaline pumping action!
Also! I have to mention Mick Gordon's music again! What a blast!
4/5
Review jackhnatejko 5/5 · Feb 28, 2023
Time spent with Doom over the weekend just reaffirms my feelings towards it - it is a fantastic first person shooter with great visuals. One of the best I've played in fact. It's amazing in its simplicity - it doesn't try to be something else, it doesn't even pretend to be something else. Yes, id Software tried to tell the …
Time spent with Doom over the weekend just reaffirms my feelings towards it - it is a fantastic first person shooter with great visuals. One of the best I've played in fact. It's amazing in its simplicity - it doesn't try to be something else, it doesn't even pretend to be something else. Yes, id Software tried to tell the story here (which is very evident in optional codex entries - which I love) & some of it works, some of it doesn't, but apart from that it is still good, old Doom - with violence cranked up to 11 (on a 1-10 scale).
Pacing works well, new weapons & new enemies are introduced in perfect moments, therefore gameplay never feels stale and boring; surprisingly there is a lot of platforming outside of battles, jumping around, ledge-grabbing - not something I expected at all, but it seems to work so far and is done and implemented very well - it essentially acts as an exploration platformer in a way - especially when you're hunting for the collectibles, and it's fun.

It is a truth universally acknowledged that Doom reinvigorated the genre back in 2016, however I am quite surprised that up to this day there aren't many titles that can successfully replicate the gameplay of series' 2016 iteration, apart from its sequel I guess. This game scratches an old itch that I didn't realise I had & does it perfectly. Feels like renaissance of my old shooter-filled PS1 gaming days.

SnapMap custom maps are a great way to lengthen your playthrough - there's plethora of different types of maps, ranging from puzzle to simple survival and most are very well done.
What an amazing, violent & fun trip to Hell and back... and to Hell again. Easily the best FPS that I played in recent times and one of the best I played... ever. That's how a reboot to a classic should be done. Fantastic - well recommended to all FPS fans out there.

Review DanMaul 4/5 · Dec 24, 2021
I wasn’t sure how much I would enjoy this game. I really enjoyed the first 2 titles and DOOM 3, my favourite one in the franchise, was markedly different in atmosphere, pacing and tone. I looked at 2016’s DOOM differently from anything the franchise had done before. I’m neither a proficient first-person shooter nor one to revel in the …
I wasn’t sure how much I would enjoy this game. I really enjoyed the first 2 titles and DOOM 3, my favourite one in the franchise, was markedly different in atmosphere, pacing and tone. I looked at 2016’s DOOM differently from anything the franchise had done before. I’m neither a proficient first-person shooter nor one to revel in the relentlessly fast-paced adrenaline that this and Eternal are known for. After finishing it, however, I can say that even though the third entry is still my favourite of the bunch, I had a blast throughout the entire experience. This game holds no prisoners almost from the get go, and I could tell my rigid gaming self was already fighting against the relentless rhythm of the game, simply because it’s not something I’m accustomed to. But at a certain point something clicked, and what I had initially perceived as pace became more like a dance which completely changed my relationship with the dynamic. From that moment I started really enjoying my time, to the point of even becoming kind of engaged in the over-the-top storytelling. There’s actually more here in this respect than I had initially thought, and the more obvious transition from DOOM 3’s Marine to the Slayer persona turns this game into a bigger power fantasy. Not to say the game isn’t challenging, however. In fact I had my ass handed to me more times than I care to admit, even on easier difficulties. Still, I guess that’s part of the ride for me.
There is absolutely nothing to criticise DOOM on in the visual and gameplay departments, by far its greatest strengths: it looks and plays phenomenally, and aside the occasional frustration of falling off to my death way too easily or getting stuck in narrow spaces, everything felt great. And even though I still think DOOM 3 has the best iteration of hell in the franchise, this one was quite impressive as well. On top of everything else, it’s just hard not to have fun dispatching horses upon hordes of angry demons and see their guts get spilled all over the place. And fun was exactly what I got. Unless you are absolutely against first-person shooters or blatantly refuse to play something that can be perceived as too speedy, this is a game I can easily recommend to everyone. 8/10.
On DOOM Eternal: I spent over 4 hours on it and soon realised it simply wasn’t for me. In my personal opinion - and I know this will be unpopular - the game is too convoluted and it steers way too far from the simplicity and straightforwardness that make the DOOM games feel so great to play. Some frustrating platforming, poor atmosphere, unremarkable level design, unnecessary bloat, less satisfying shooting, worse balancing, overly colourful palette. It felt too much like a disjointed experience, and I’m left wondering why it seems to have been better received than the 2016 reboot, since I personally don’t think it improved upon anything when compared to it aside from having slightly better graphics. I’m obviously not saying it’s a bad game, because it isn’t. All of this is just how I perceived my own experience. Honestly, I’m kind of baffled that I feel this way about the game, because not only did I really enjoy its predecessor, but most people seem to have the complete opposite opinion. I rarely quit games, but I simply couldn’t bring myself to carry on. Perhaps I’ll revisit it at some point to see if my views on it have changed, but I suppose you can’t win them all.
Review mihai.cosareanu 5/5 · Oct 8, 2021
It took me about 12 hours of play to go through this. I didn't have the time and the patience for a difficulty higher than "easiest". I wanted it to be fast to play and go through. Quite good graphics and a great shooting feeling, I enjoyed it.
Review Mazinkaiser 5/5 · May 21, 2020
Doom (2016) is perhaps the finest version of a series committed to intense gunplay and fast movement and it shows in all of its gorgeous Martian colors.
The plot starts out playing very tongue in cheek as an aerospace corporation that is Obviously Bad is researching into energy from Hell in order to accelerate mankind into the future. An unnamed …
Doom (2016) is perhaps the finest version of a series committed to intense gunplay and fast movement and it shows in all of its gorgeous Martian colors.
The plot starts out playing very tongue in cheek as an aerospace corporation that is Obviously Bad is researching into energy from Hell in order to accelerate mankind into the future. An unnamed space marine found in a tomb is reanimated once again to destroy every single demon that has escaped from Hell to Mars and perhaps within Hell itself.
The game is split into thirteen large levels - there is a linear focus on objectives but most of it is spaced between large arena areas with small little secrets abound. Most arenas are chock full of demons that force the player into very fast and compromising positions to be as aggressive as possible. The player starts out with an itty bitty pistol but soon makes their way through rifles, shotguns, BIGGER shotguns, rail cannons, chainguns, and the delightful BFG. There's also a very large focus on melee, with finishing style moves called Glory Kills that produce a lot of health that chains enemy kill to enemy kill to frantically keep the player alive, as well as a chainsaw to really finish the job on tougher enemies.
Gameplay has plenty of fun upgrades amidst the basics, with weapon mods and suit mods to improve damage resistance, navigation, speed, powerups, and an array of weapon modes that can stun or otherwise totally obliterate enemies. There's also a few hidden challenges to give passive effects via runes if the player takes their time to look, making exploration amidst the battles the most important part of improving the player's arsenal.
Demons that the player fight are the real meat of the game, with an array of gorgeous (read: disgustingly gorgeous) looking enemies to turn into mincemeat. The weaker Imps are still very speedy and pose a significant challenge, with Hell Knights and Barons for up close battles, Revenants for missile barrages, Mancubi for tanky brutes, and some old favorites like the Cacodemon to ensure that the player will always be fiercely challenged at every turn. Especially at higher difficulties there can be some spikes (read: whenever the player goes to Hell) but given that they get a little more used to the weapons they can manage it far better than the older Doom games.
Music and visuals really sell this game like no other. Starting off on the intense reds of Mars and going into the bowels of Hell, Doom has a color palette and a unique style and sticks with it. The music is intense, with harsh electronic and metal that accompanies the intense action of the game. Sound design is menacing and even scary at times with every door and machine sounding like an enemy ready to strike, keeping the player always on edge. It's a treat to play then and it's still a treat to play now.
Doom (2016) proves that there's always more to improve on even the most celebrated FPS series and crafts a swift and challenging game that is absolutely worth playing.
Review Batrice 4/5 · Feb 6, 2020
Doom 2016 is doom-as-a-symbol getting away from Doom as a game, but for once the self-aggrandizing mythos of a series overtaking the actual core of it creates something actually great.
The game plays nothing like Doom (1993), instead resembling a wave shooter fending off hordes of enemies in an arena like Serious Sam but good. The game sounds little like …
Doom 2016 is doom-as-a-symbol getting away from Doom as a game, but for once the self-aggrandizing mythos of a series overtaking the actual core of it creates something actually great.
The game plays nothing like Doom (1993), instead resembling a wave shooter fending off hordes of enemies in an arena like Serious Sam but good. The game sounds little like Doom (1993), the MIDI sounds being replaced with a dynamic djent soundtrack. The game moves little like Doom (1993), replacing ludicrous diagonal speed with double-jumps and paced-out glory kills.
And yet it's so damn fun, so damn fast, and so damn brutal that it feels like Doom. Not Doom (1993), but just plain Doom. It's the game that the media describes Doom as, it's the game that people who played it back in the day remember it as, it's the game that people think Doom is. The icon separates from the source and becomes its own form given flesh, and unlike other so-called retro FPS throwbacks that have nothing to do with the genre outside of surface-level similarities (I promise I don't actually dislike Serious Sam as much as it sounds like I do it's just not a retro shooter it just isn't), Doom (2016) uses its new formula to absolutely incredible effect.
Review XanderCat 5/5 · Jan 5, 2020
Everything was great, I really enjoyed this game. The music was fantastic, the graphics were great and it performed well.
The game was definitely challenging but I managed to do it. (Took me a few years).
I'm happy I pushed through to the end. :)
Review Stickman 5/5 · Mar 26, 2019
Doom is one of the best remakes, if not one of the best games ever. I don't remember the last time playing a videogame gave me such a rush of adrenaline. I haven't even finished the game yet and I can already tell that it's going to be one of my favourite games for many years to come.
Doom is …
Doom is one of the best remakes, if not one of the best games ever. I don't remember the last time playing a videogame gave me such a rush of adrenaline. I haven't even finished the game yet and I can already tell that it's going to be one of my favourite games for many years to come.
Doom is one of the most complex and most simple games I have ever played. It's little more than running around shooting demons but there's so much strategy that you have to put into it. You need to figure out which enemies to prioritise, which weapons to use against who, where to go, there are so many layers to the combat in Doom but it's still beautifully simple and that makes it enjoyable. The enemy design is simple but distinctive - you know who you're fighting and where they are - unlike most other shooters where enemies have two or three universal appearances and you just shoot them willy-nilly. The movement and gunplay is very smooth and dynamic and it flows excellently. Combine all that with one of the best soundtracks in videogame history (Mick Gordon, you are a god) and you have one hell - no pun intended - of an experience.
In terms of story, Doom is pretty lacklustre but the Doomfranchise was never really about story; it was about charging through hell and shooting the shit out of demons with a double-barrelled shotgun. The multiplayer is a bit if a letdown too. It's fun to play but the inclusion of modernised crap like emotes really doesn't fit with this game's style.
Overall, Doom is one of the greatest videogame experiences of the last 10 years and I'm highly anticipating Doom: Eternal.
Review agurczuk 5/5 · May 19, 2017
This got me by surprise. Did not expect to like this game so much as I did.
First thing to note about this game is that is essentially an arena based fps that emphasises mobility, fast paced action and constant strafing. There is no slow approach, no cover based shooting - no reloading even. Just pure adrenaline shootout with waves …
This got me by surprise. Did not expect to like this game so much as I did.
First thing to note about this game is that is essentially an arena based fps that emphasises mobility, fast paced action and constant strafing. There is no slow approach, no cover based shooting - no reloading even. Just pure adrenaline shootout with waves of enemies spawning in an enclosed arena.
The story is minimal - and I felt that it's only reason for being there is to somehow explain the demon enemies you need to face. And those are very familiar doom enemies, just in a modern high-res edition. They look great, they've got distinct attack patterns and fighting them is just pure fun.
The graphics are really well done. Especially the enemy design. But environments are nothing to be ashamed of ass well. Both hell and Mars base are really great looking and well designed.
The soundtrack is amazing. I heard people prising it before but actually experiencing in in-game is an experience of it's own. High paced heavy metal makes your blood pumping. The other sound effects are top notch as well - especially guns sound really satisfying.
Hands down a really really cool game with lots of fun to have.
Review Gondo 5/5 · Nov 25, 2016
It's all about the movement. And no, I don't mean "movement" as almost every First-Person Shooters this last decade has interpreted as wall-running, sliding or tripple boosting. Those are fun additions to a core concept but additions nonetheless. Additions that, and this for me is mostly the problem, cloud the beauty of the simple design principle of a FPS, the …
Read moreIt's all about the movement. And no, I don't mean "movement" as almost every First-Person Shooters this last decade has interpreted as wall-running, sliding or tripple boosting. Those are fun additions to a core concept but additions nonetheless. Additions that, and this for me is mostly the problem, cloud the beauty of the simple design principle of a FPS, the sheer poetic dance between the barrel of a gun and the head/body of an enemy. Doom and Id in extension brought us back to this dance and it is the most fun I've had with a game in a long time.
Read less