
| Console | Nintendo 64 |
| Publisher | GT Interactive |
| Developer | Midway |
| Genre | First-Person Shooter |
| Region | World |
| Size | 64 MB |
Overview
Quake is a first-person shooter that id Software created and released for PC in 1996. Midway brought this acclaimed title to the Nintendo 64 in 1997 under GT Interactive’s publishing, giving console players a chance to experience one of the most influential games of its era. The game drops players into a dark, gothic world filled with monsters, traps, and twisted architecture that blends medieval and science fiction settings. Unlike many shooters of its time, Quake built its world in true three-dimensional space, meaning levels had genuine height, depth, and non-linear layouts that players could freely move through in any direction. Players take on the role of a lone marine fighting through four distinct episodes packed with enemies ranging from shambling zombies to powerful knights and deadly fiends. The Nintendo 64 version retained the core feel of the original while adding a two-player split-screen mode that the original PC version lacked, making it a noteworthy port for its time.
The Nintendo 64 version of Quake gives players access to a full single-player campaign spread across four episodes, each containing multiple levels that grow in difficulty and complexity. Players pick up an arsenal of weapons as they progress, starting with an axe and shotgun before finding more powerful options like the nailgun, rocket launcher, and thunderbolt. Health and armor pickups scatter the levels, and players must search carefully through each map to find secrets, power-ups, and keycards that open new areas. One of the biggest draws of this version is the two-player split-screen multiplayer, a feature Midway added specifically for the N64 release that lets two players battle through deathmatch arenas together on one screen. The game also supports three difficulty settings, letting newcomers enjoy the campaign at a manageable pace while veterans can push into the hardest mode for a serious test of skill. With its dark atmosphere, satisfying weapons, and surprisingly capable port work, Quake on the Nintendo 64 stands as a solid and memorable entry in the console’s shooter library.
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