Doom 64 (1997)

Midway Studios San Diego

Nintendo 64

3.60 from 401 ratings

2187 members have it in their collection · 56 playing now · 1104 backlogged · 118 wish listed

How long? Main story 9h · with extras 8h · 100% 17h (from 11 logged playthroughs)

You killed the Demons once, they were all dead. Or so you thought... A single Demon Entity escaped detection. Systematically it altered decaying, dead carnage back into grotesque living tissue. The Demons have returned - stronger and more vicious than ever before. You mission is clear, there are no options: kill or be killed!
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Release dates

  • Apr 04, 1997 (Full Release) (North_America) Nintendo 64
  • Aug 01, 1997 (Full Release) (Japan) Nintendo 64
  • Dec 02, 1997 (Full Release) (Europe) Nintendo 64

Also available on

  • Doom 64 (2020) · STAD, NSW, PC, PS4, XONE
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Featured in lists

Nintendo 64 by KiingShady · 76 games · 0

Rating distribution

5 stars
67
4 stars
164
3 stars
125
2 stars
33
1 star
12
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Community All Reviews Statuses

Krauzer

Review Krauzer 5/5 · Aug 7, 2025

This particular Doom title is a faithful remaster of the 1997 Nintendo 64 classic, brought to modern systems by Nightdive Studios, a renowed studio when it comes to these kinds of adaptations. Rather than a simple port, the game received visual enhancements, smoother controls, and QOL improvements like widescreen support and quick saving. It retains the gritty, hellish atmosphere that …

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This particular Doom title is a faithful remaster of the 1997 Nintendo 64 classic, brought to modern systems by Nightdive Studios, a renowed studio when it comes to these kinds of adaptations. Rather than a simple port, the game received visual enhancements, smoother controls, and QOL improvements like widescreen support and quick saving. It retains the gritty, hellish atmosphere that set it apart from other classic Doom entries, with a darker, more oppressive tone reinforced by moody lighting and eerie sound design. Particularly this is one of my favorite Doom entries simply because of it's atmosphere alone, very different from it's predecessors, this is also the reason why I like the hated Doom 3, I feel both of them have the very same proposal when it comes to the feeling it tries to provoke from the player.

The gameplay remains tight and responsive, preserving the series' hallmark fast-paced combat and maze-like level design. And even though the previous entries also had similar formulas, the level of "maze-like" is very high on this this one, starting from the first few levels, and never changing until the last level, which can be a bummer for some. The levels are more puzzle-oriented than in Doom or Doom II, which gives the game a slower, more methodical feel, which not everybody is a fan of, so I would only play this one if you can enjoy both approaches. Weapon feedback is satisfying, and combat retains its classic rhythm without feeling outdated.

A notable addition is the new “Lost Levels” campaign, which acts as an epilogue and ties into the lore of Doom Eternal, making this version more than just a nostalgia trip. Critics and fans alike praised the remaster for its atmosphere, improved visuals, and the care put into updating it for PC. Particularly I was not interested in playing this part of the content, but I advise fans don't skip this section. However, some noted that the game can be excessively dark by default, requiring manual brightness adjustments, which was also a thing in the original game, but more easily fixed on this remaster. A few quirks from the original remain, but they don’t detract significantly from the experience.

I would also advise trying to play the secret levels, in order to make the final one way easier, this way to unlock some secrets that makes the final boss less challenging, and it can be very challenging, unfortunately for me I didn't followed my own advise. Another standout for me is that this one feels harder than other Doom titles, at least for me, even while not playing at the highest difficulty level, you can easily die at least once on every single level. Overall, Doom 64’s 2020 release is a strong, atmospheric shooter that respects its roots while feeling polished on modern hardware, it is a must play for fans of FPS titles in general, even more so now that it is more easily playable on modern platforms, no excuse to skip this one.

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BadBoyBule

Review BadBoyBule 3/5 · Mar 5, 2025

Uglier, messier and scarier

Doom 64 is a sort of a kooky epilogue in the classic Doom continuum.

Even though Doom 64 sounds like it could be just Doom on Nintendo 64, it's completely its own game. Sure it has most of the same weapons and enemies as Dooms I and II but the levels, gameplay feel and vibe are pretty different. And the …

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Doom 64 is a sort of a kooky epilogue in the classic Doom continuum.

Even though Doom 64 sounds like it could be just Doom on Nintendo 64, it's completely its own game. Sure it has most of the same weapons and enemies as Dooms I and II but the levels, gameplay feel and vibe are pretty different. And the graphics are completely new (and mostly uglier excluding nifty lighting effects).

Gameplay is the most familiar feeling out of the three aforementioned. It's mostly good. Guns and enemies behave mostly the same but there's some differences and additions. There's a new lame gun, for example, and Pain Elementals are now absolutely hideous looking and a total... pain to kill.

The levels are also mostly good and quite reminiscent of the orginal games. The levels are ambitious and complex, which is to be applauded, but here and there they make you realize just how well thought out levels were in Doom I and II. In Doom 64, monster closets are a lot more common and deadly, and there's more infuriating "platforming". It's easier to not know where to go too, and the levels don't feel like they were designed to be completed after restarting. The Xbox version I played of course had saves so I was able to use those, but in the first two Dooms I typically try to amp up the stakes by not loading the game after dying. Here? Not a good time. Especially since in Doom 64, you also seem to take a lot more damage (on the highest difficulty at least).

Also, the final boss fight is horrible. I would say it's the stupidest boss fight I have seen in a long time but having played through No More Heroes 2 recently I have to be careful wit these statements.

While I may seem quite harsh on many aspects of the game, Doom 64 still is pretty fun to play. That's the main thing that matters, right? And while it falters in gameplay, graphics and level design, it at least delivers on the atmosphere. The game sounds positively demonic with its dark ambient soundtrack. Lots of alien and unnerving sounds abound. This goes a long way of transforming the original Doom's power fantasy spectacle into a horror tinged experience. And the horror tones are underlined by the moody lighting effects and darker environments.

Doom 64 may not be perfect and it may feel like a cheap substitute for the real thing but it's still Doom at its heart. Thus, it can't be all that bad.

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R0R0

Review R0R0 4/5 · Dec 17, 2024

#DNF This was very slowly but surely becoming my favourite game I'd played all year until I found a game breaking bug that completely halted my momentum. Bravo though. It reminds me of a rule of writing, "if you write great characters you can tell any story"; With Videogames I feel like that applies to game loops because though technically …

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#DNF This was very slowly but surely becoming my favourite game I'd played all year until I found a game breaking bug that completely halted my momentum. Bravo though. It reminds me of a rule of writing, "if you write great characters you can tell any story"; With Videogames I feel like that applies to game loops because though technically simple the feel of shooting a demon in the face was so great and satisfying that it made me completely forget the sometimes wonky platforming and the non-existent progression systems and story that it forces you to go through

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Toupaloops

Review Toupaloops 3/5 · Jan 11, 2024

Not the best Doom experience

Doom 64 is solid but not as fun as Doom 1 and 2. The fun, catchy soundtrack of previous games is replaced with a darker, moodier ambience. The level design just isn't as tight - there were many frustrating occasions where I had to consult walkthroughs because the game just straight up fails to teach you things. The basic shooting …

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Doom 64 is solid but not as fun as Doom 1 and 2. The fun, catchy soundtrack of previous games is replaced with a darker, moodier ambience. The level design just isn't as tight - there were many frustrating occasions where I had to consult walkthroughs because the game just straight up fails to teach you things. The basic shooting feels good, although they seriously nerfed the chaingun. If Doom (2016) and Eternal are succesors to Doom 1 + 2, then Doom 3 would be this one's descendent.

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V1CGaming

Review V1CGaming 3/5 · May 4, 2023

It's another solid set of demon slaying levels.

It’s dated, sure, but it's on Game Pass so you can’t really go wrong with it. There’s just under 10 hours of solid gameplay here, and many might return to tackle the game’s harder difficulty levels. It won’t get your heart racing in the same way that more modern DOOM titles do, but if you have a penchant for retro …

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It’s dated, sure, but it's on Game Pass so you can’t really go wrong with it. There’s just under 10 hours of solid gameplay here, and many might return to tackle the game’s harder difficulty levels. It won’t get your heart racing in the same way that more modern DOOM titles do, but if you have a penchant for retro shooters there’s plenty to like. It’s perhaps the best of the classic DOOMs, if you don’t mind that its soundtrack doesn’t have tunes that you can tap your feet to, that is.

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anarchistica

Review anarchistica 1/5 · Aug 29, 2022

Nostalgia required

Playtime: 18 minutes

Review

I'm old enough to have owned a PC that didn't even have Windows and i remember playing Doom (the shareware version) back in the day. No up/down aiming, arrow keys as the default for movement (i didn't even have a mouse at first), no reloading, no jumping. Just shooting, picking up items and getting lost because …

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Playtime: 18 minutes

Review

I'm old enough to have owned a PC that didn't even have Windows and i remember playing Doom (the shareware version) back in the day. No up/down aiming, arrow keys as the default for movement (i didn't even have a mouse at first), no reloading, no jumping. Just shooting, picking up items and getting lost because you can't find some stupid key. After all, that's what you want from a quick-paced action game right? Trying to figure out which brown-grey squares you can interact with to find a key?

The game also has an unavoidable second-long delay between each menu screen. So going back from settings, controls, input takes forever. Ugh.

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XanderCat

Review XanderCat 4/5 · Sep 19, 2020

After taking a break I came back and finished the last few levels of this great 64 shooter.

I had a lot of fun with this one. I felt my money was well spent and that I got a great value out of my purchase. I was actually surprised myself to get a little spooked on a couple occasions when a monster would appear behind me or right next to a door.

This is an older shooter and …

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I had a lot of fun with this one. I felt my money was well spent and that I got a great value out of my purchase. I was actually surprised myself to get a little spooked on a couple occasions when a monster would appear behind me or right next to a door.

This is an older shooter and I really needed to use the quicksave feature to get past some of the harder rooms and bosses. I was playing on the 2nd from hardest difficulty. I was looking into the save features of the Nintendo 64 version and as far as I can tell you can't save mid-level, only at the end of a map. I would not have been able to finish this game on the original 64 at the difficulty I played!

I recommend this game to any Doom fans and fans of classic shooters in this sort of style. The game is very atmospheric, and it has some great music. Graphics are pretty good.

I also will admit that I may prefer to play this with a mouse (though I haven't tried Doom 64 on PC.) I imagine that is a lot easier to control. Don't get me wrong, the controller is just fine and I'm used to playing the original Doom with a controller too it completely works.

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GigaDeathNullGolem

Review GigaDeathNullGolem 3/5 · Aug 1, 2016

Better than I expected

For a doom game not made by ID it's not bad.

When Doom 64, Quake 64, and Quake2 (N64) had come out, I was rather busy playing all the subsequent second/third generation shooters of Doom such as Quake2, SiN, Unreal Tournament and (eventually) Half-Life on my PC nonstop. I never liked console FPS (with the exception …

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For a doom game not made by ID it's not bad.

When Doom 64, Quake 64, and Quake2 (N64) had come out, I was rather busy playing all the subsequent second/third generation shooters of Doom such as Quake2, SiN, Unreal Tournament and (eventually) Half-Life on my PC nonstop. I never liked console FPS (with the exception of maybe Goldeneye 64, mostly due to local co-op) so I had little incentive to purchase or even rent something that I figured would play like a port on second rate hardware. I just now am checking these out. I have to say, I am somewhat impressed.

Though it is of course very dated, this game shines in several ways. It's got a great haunting atmospheric sountrack that really fits the mood of a Doom game. While the orignal doom was more of a NIN Pretty Hate machine feel (Bobby Prince), this brings back that original feel of the Dark Ambient Classic OST of Quake (Trent Reznor). The textures and art style in the early maps are also very authentic and feel like the Quake era of ID. Later Maps are stylized in a way reminiscient of Doom 2. There are lots of gothic looking textures and portraits that remind one of Hexen as well. As far as the art/textures is concerned this is top notch for fans of ID's classics. The maps themselves are also quite good, containing both secrets and enough variety to have kept me interested, and not too terribly puzzling as to warrant a great 'find the switch' scavenger hunt. There are a few run-strafe puzzles which require you to know how to RUN (C-Left) and this was not immediately obvious to me as you walk rather fast.

The weapons in Doom64 are rather unintentering. But more or less emulate what one might expect. For me personally almost every game ID has ever made since Doom2 has always been about the SUPER SHOTGUN. Limited control and accuracy on a console controller make this even more true. a powerful weapon with large spread and enough gusto to take a few baddies out in one peek around the corner is an instant winner, and the recipe for spelling out your foes' DOOM has not been expanded upon with any refinement until Unreal Tournament brought us the Flak Cannon (but that's another story)

In any case this is a pleasing game that is not a painful degenerative hand me down of a PC title. It has it's own maps and is interesting in it's own way, has not been heavily censored or adulterated by nintendo's standards (I find this suprising) has a decent soundtrack, has hidden secrets and maps, has it's own 'cheat' system, has enough ID references to keep a fan entertained. But most importantly, it actually 'feels right' in every way classic doom game ought to. you can strafe and attack, whip around corners, and do all the things one would wish to do in a setting that feels the way doom should feel. The experience is complete with a compatible haunting Dark Ambient soundtrack, phantasmagropic imagery, and other little details (wall 'clipping' is present if you get too close to walls, which while unintended i felt was a nice touch) all these things are important in my opinion to provide a authentic doom experience. Curiously enough the game was not made by ID but only under the franchise, yet this feels right. There are some things that are a bit weird. Most of the weapons dissapoint me, and there is no multiplayer (but i wasn't looking to play with others so i am fine with that), and there isn't a freelook with the joystick, which would very much have been possible in this era, but imo the gameplay does not suffer for it, and it even may feel more 'original' with it not being present.

I would recommend it for a single play one night if you're not afraid of looking to relive some moments of Doom, hexen, heretic, quake and all that jazz albeit in a refreshed way.

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