

It’s hard to believe that it’s been 10 years since Slender: The Arrival landed for PCs and consoles. Nor is it known if those who already own the original Quake II on Steam will be getting a free upgrade. It’s also not known if this version of the game will feature ray-tracing support, which was the case when the first RTX cards hit the scene, and Bethesda and Nvidia released Quake II RTX back in 2019. No other real details about the remaster are listed, though you can probably expect things like increased resolution, widescreen and controller support, dynamic lighting, and (hopefully) the inclusion of all of the official expansion packs. While Bethesda hasn’t made any official announcement as of yet (or responded to the leak), similar to how they announced their Quake remaster, they very well could make things official at QuakeCon 2023, which will take place from August 10 to 13.Īccording to the listing, the only platform listed at the moment is PC, though it’s very likely that Quake II will be headed to consoles, as well. Thanks once again to the Korean Media Ratings Board (which has leaked games prior to their official announcements in the past), it would appear that the Quake II remaster is on the way. I'll post some information on alternate player models either later today or later this week depending on when/where I can find what I want.After the Quake remaster that was leaked prior to its official announcement by Bethesda a few years ago, it’s apparently happening again, this time with Quake II. I think DarkPlaces has fully MD3 support (this is the Quake 3 format).Īnd I know JoeQuake has some preliminary Quake 3 multi-model support: There might also be monster transformers at Beatdown Alley ( server).Īs far as other player models go, you can use alternative player models. Rune Quake Plus has monster transformers in 3 or 4 of the maps. It ran Rune Quake Plus by IEEE 802.11.Ĭurrently, IEEE has RQP+ running at the Quake server
