Chocolate Doom
Doom engines closely-compatible with Vanilla Doom
Chocolate Doom is a conservative, historically-accurate Doom source port, which is compatible with the thousands of mods and levels that were made before the Doom source code was released. Unlike other source ports, the goal is to preserve the original look, feel, limitations, and bugs of the original DOS executable.
Full support for single- and multi-player games is provided, for all of the original Doom games, Chex Quest, and Hacx. Unlike the original executable, network play is implemented on the IP network stack, allowing it to function on modern LANs and the Internet.
Chocolate Doom aims to accurately reproduce the original DOS version of Doom and other games based on the Doom engine in a form that can be run on modern computers. Unlike most modern Doom engines, Chocolate Doom is not derived from the Boom source port and does not inherit its features (or bugs). . This package contains:
- Chocolate Doom, a port of Id Software's "Doom" (1993)
- Chocolate Heretic, a port of Raven Software's "Heretic" (1994)
- Chocolate Hexen, a port of Raven Software's "Hexen" (1995)
- Chocolate Strife, a recreation of Rogue Entertainment's "Strife" (1996) . These games are designed to behave as similar to the original DOS version as is possible. . Chocolate Doom supports all flavors of Doom, including The Ultimate Doom, Doom 2 and Final Doom as well as Chex(R) Quest, HacX, Freedoom: Phase 1 and Phase 2 and FreeDM. . All Chocolate game engines require game data to play. For Chocolate Doom, free game data is available in the freedoom package. Commercial game data for all four engines can be packaged using "game-data-packager".
How to install Chocolate Doom in Ubuntu
If you are on a supported distro, you can install the application through software center by clicking the below link.
If the above link not working, run the below command in terminal to install chocolate-doom in Ubuntu
sudo apt install chocolate-doom
Chocolate Doom Screenshots