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Duke Nukem 3D 1995

Title screen, circa 1995

The Duke Nukem 3D prototypes are builds of Duke Nukem 3D, Duke Nukem 3D: Atomic Edition, or Duke Nukem 3D: 20th Anniversary World Tour that precede their commercial releases. Several of these builds have either been leaked or officially released as freeware. However, most are only known from screenshots or demo footage.

April 1994

See Also: April 1994 Build Demo

The April 1994 Build Demo showed that Ken Silverman had nearly finished the Build engine used in Duke Nukem 3D. Although the demo footage precedes work on Duke Nukem 3D, the demo could be considered a Duke Nukem 3D prototype because it features a map that would later be incorporated into the December 1994 prototype as E1L9 of LameDuke.

BUILD_Engine_(April_1994)

BUILD Engine (April 1994)

Mid-1994

See Also: Duke Nukem IIID

Official work on Duke Nukem 3D began sometime around the middle of 1994. At this point, Allen Blum was the only level designer on the team.

In 2014, 3D Realms released footage from a mid-1994 prototype. In the video, the name Duke Nukem IIID appears at the top of the in-game menu. Richard "TerminX" Gobeille, who signed a non-disclosure agreement and was given an archive of Duke Nukem 3D development data, has identified this prototype as the earliest build of Duke Nukem 3D. Fans have affectionately nicknamed the prototype LamerDuke because it preceded the December 1994 prototype, officially known as LameDuke.

Duke_Nukem_IIID

Duke Nukem IIID

Sometime after the release of the Duke Nukem IIID footage, Gobeille quizzed forum users on Duke4 as to which level in the commercial game they thought was the oldest. Derelict, which was nearly finished in the December 1994 prototype, was the most popular answer, but this was incorrect. According to Gobeille, the oldest map to appear in commercial copies of Duke Nukem 3D was Stadium. Because Stadium is older than Derelict, this would mean it must have been started in mid-1994.

Gobeille posted a screenshot from the oldest version of the map.

94-01Mid-01

Earliest build of Stadium, circa 1994

94-01Mid-01 comp1

Final 1996 build

November 7, 1994

Early concept art for the Jellyfish is dated November 7, 1994.

November 29, 1994

December 2, 1994

December 4, 1994

Late December 1994

December 30, 1994

See Also: LameDuke

The December 1994 prototype, officially known as LameDuke, was finished and compiled on December 30, 1994.

LameDuke_Playthrough_by_Max_Ylitalo

LameDuke Playthrough by Max Ylitalo

Parts of levels from the final game could be found in LameDuke. These levels include:

  • Hollywood Holocaust: The basis for a large part of this level could be found on E1L6
  • Red Light District: The basis for a large part of this level could be found on E1L6
  • Death Row: A proof-of-concept and the basis for a small part could be found on E3L1 and E3L7, respectively
  • Toxic Dump: The basis for parts of this level could be found on E3L7
  • Lunar Reactor: Areas resembling small parts of this level could be found on E1L4 and E1L6
  • Overlord: Large parts of this level were finished and accessible on E2L8 and duplicated on E3L8
  • Rabid Transit: The basis for parts of this level could be found on E1L5
  • Hotel Hell: An early version of this level was playable as E2L6
  • Derelict: This level was nearly finished and fully playable as E3L2

Early January 1995

95-01EarlyJan-01

Pig Cop by Chuck Jones

95-01EarlyJan-02

Later colorization by Chuck Jones himself

January 24, 1995

95-02Jan24-01

Pig Cop

95-02Jan24-02

Pig Cop

February 27, 1995

March 1995

According to a blog post on 3D Realms' website, Richard "Levelord" Gray joined the team on March 10, 1995. Although no images can be definitively dated to this period, Gray's earliest maps likely date to March, since his prior experience designing maps in the Build engine would preclude the need for much onboarding.

April 4, 1995

January - April 1995

February - April 1995

Duke has a scar on the back of his left hand. The Pistol uses the faded sprite from LameDuke. The Tazer has not yet been replaced with the Mighty Foot.

February - May 1995

Three of these images come from the June 1995 issue of Joystick (#61), and two come from Gobeille. The scar on Duke's hand has been removed, and the Tazer has been replaced with the Mighty Foot.

April - Early May 1995

A scrapped level known as AHB-Space appeared on season 5, episode 14 of GamesMaster, a British TV show. The episode aired on December 21, 1995, but there are several clues that the prototype shown in the episode comes from April or early May. Screenshots dated May 18, 1995 (such as this one) show that the blue HUD from the GamesMaster episode had already been replaced with the green HUD found in many subsequent screenshots. However, the fonts on the signs above the doors are no longer red like in earlier screenshots. Instead, they have been replaced with the tan font found in subsequent images. In addition, the scar has been removed from the back of Duke's hand. Taken together, this means the prototype precedes May 18 but comes after the January - April 1995 screenshots.

GamesMaster_Series_5_Episode_14

GamesMaster Series 5 Episode 14

Except for the starting location and presence of Laser Tripbombs, the map shown in this footage is indistinguishable from the May 9, 1995 demo footage.

May 1995

Numerous promotional screenshots were packaged on a CD with the September 1995 issue of Score Magazine. These screenshots are unusual in that the files on the CD contain precise timestamps, down to the minute. These timestamps concord with other known facts about the Duke Nukem 3D development timeline, and they even track the order of progression within specific levels, exactly as one would expect. Therefore, these timestamps are considered reliable.

In addition, a demo reel dated May 9, 1995 has been made publicly available.


May 9, 1995

In early 2014, Gobeille and Evan "Hendricks266" Ramos signed non-disclosure agreements and were given an archive of Duke Nukem 3D development data. 3D Realms gave them the files because they wanted the two to identify salvageable files and to package them in a distributable form. One of the project's first discoveries was a demo reel dated May 9, 1995. Gobeille recorded his live reactions while watching the reel with his son and posted the resulting video to the Duke4 forums. Shortly thereafter, Ramos uploaded the demo reel to YouTube. However, a lawsuit with Gearbox Software ultimately brought an indefinite halt to the project.

The demo reel below is still available on YouTube.

Duke_Nukem_3D_Beta_1995-05-09

Duke Nukem 3D Beta 1995-05-09


May 10, 1995 @ 2:12:54
95-08May10.02.12

E1L6 of LameDuke


May 10, 1995 @ 2:20:00
95-08May10.02.20

Near the start of Warp Factor, as seen in this video


May 10, 1995 @ 2:20:32
95-08May10.02.20

Unidentified. Possible: AHB-Space or Warp Factor


May 10, 1995 @ 2:23:06
95-08May10.02.23

Area on Warp Factor that was repurposed on It's Impossible


May 10, 1995 @ 2:24:02
95-08May10.02.24

Warp Factor, as seen in this video


May 10, 1995 @ 2:30:10
95-08May10.02.30

Two rooms on AHB-Space that were repurposed on Tiberius Station


May 10, 1995 @ 2:32:24
95-08May10.02.32

AHB-Space, later incorporated into Lunar Reactor (see comparison)


May 18, 1995 @ 20:31:48
95-08May18.20.31

AHB-Space, as seen in this map and later incorporated into Lunar Reactor; first instance of the green HUD


May 18, 1995 @ 20:36:24
95-08May18.20.36

Dark Side; the inside of this structure can be seen here


May 21, 1995 @ 21:32:02
95-08May21.21.32

Dark Side


May 21, 1995 @ 21:33:32
95-08May21.21.33

Dark Side with control panels and a chair added since previous footage; first instance of a flying Trooper; first instance of the Trooper firing a stream of projectiles; first of many instances of a colored light on the player's weapon, possibly meant to distinguish players during multiplayer


May 21, 1995 @ 22:43:44
95-08May21.22.43

RPV piloted by an Enforcer and firing explosives on E1L6 of LameDuke


May 21, 1995 @ 22:50:26
95-08May21.22.50

Alpha Transport on Dark Side


May 21, 1995 @ 22:52:06
95-08May21.22.52

Outside the dissection lab on Dark Side


May 21, 1995 @ 22:57:04
95-08May21.22.57

First instance of the Flamethrower with a blue light, firing at a LameDuke Drone on Dark Side


May 21, 1995 @ 23:00:50
95-08May21.23.00

Unidentified. Possible: Tiberius Station or E1L2 of LameDuke


May 21, 1995 @ 23:11:00
95-08May21.23.11

Dark Side


May 27, 1995 @ 14:09:32
95-08May27.14.09

Test map adapted from part of E3L7 in LameDuke; later incorporated into Death Row, where the railing is turned into a ledge; first instance where the Enforcer no longer fires blue projectiles


May 27, 1995 @ 14:15:10
95-08May27.14.15

E1L6 of LameDuke; Gobeille has confirmed this police car was directly copied-and-pasted onto Freeway


May 27, 1995 @ 15:12:46
95-08May27.15.12

E1L6 of LameDuke and first instance of the Flamethrower with a red light


May 1995, unknown day

Lee Jackson, the musician who composed roughly half of the soundtrack for Duke Nukem 3D, released the following two unused music tracks. The first is an early version of "Plasma," the track that appears on Dark Side in the final game.

Original_Plasma

Original Plasma

The second is "Beehive." An early version of this track can be heard for a couple seconds during a section of the May 9, 1995 demo footage.

Beehive

Beehive

The remaining screenshots come from an unreleased test map, which contains apparently copied-and-pasted elements from E3L7 of LameDuke. Gobeille stated that the map itself is not actually an iteration of E3L7. A couple seconds of video footage from this map can be found in part of the May 9, 1995 demo footage. The area with the cylindrical, yellow gears was incorporated into Death Row in the final game.

February - June 1995

This image is difficult to date.

95-09FebJun-01

Tiberius Station

June 1995

Several screenshots that were packaged with the September 1995 issue of Score Magazine were dated to June, rather than May. Three of these have precise timestamps like the May screenshots, but two do not have reliable timestamps.

The two images with unreliable timestamps have copied-and-pasted messages across the tops. Several of the May screenshots also had these messages (those versions are not shown on this page), but the images with these messages included versions with and without the messages. The versions with the messages all had matching timestamps, indicating they were simultaneously processed in batches to apply the message. Therefore, it cannot be assumed that screenshots with this message across the top have reliable timestamps.

In fact, the images dated June 1 and June 30 come from batches of several images with known May dates that also had this message across the top, suggesting these two may have also come from May.


June 1, 1995

As explained, this image is dated June 1, but because the message across the top was applied as part of a batch with some of the May screenshots, this image may also come from May. However, it was the only file from this batch that did not come with a matching file without the message.

95-10Jun01-01

Dark Side with the "Polaris Outpost" sign taken from AHB-Space


June 4, 1995 @ 19:17:24
95-10Jun04.19.17

E1L6 of LameDuke and last instance of the flashlight


June 4, 1995 @ 19:18:40
95-10Jun04.19.18

E1L6 of LameDuke


June 4, 1995 @ 19:19:32
95-10Jun04.19.19

E1L6 of LameDuke


June 30, 1995

Similar to the June 1 image, this image has a message across the top, suggesting its timestamp may be unreliable. It was processed in a batch with several May screenshots, but unlike the others, there was no version of this image without the message.

95-10Jun30-01

Tiberius Station with most features from the final build, including an indent in the left wall

July 8, 1995

May - August 1995

These screenshots are difficult to date. All of these maps either have not been seen in previous screenshots or have been significantly updated. Novel sprites are introduced for some of the enemies, and the Trooper's jetstream, which was once semi-transparent, is now opaque. The concept art is foreshadowing the Assault Trooper (particularly the alternate sprites used to make the Firefly Trooper), so it likely precedes the Assault Trooper's first appearance.

August 1995

One image dated August 6 was leaked by Gobeille. Another seven were directly posted to the Internet by the developers. Because these screenshots were directly posted to the Internet without the delays associated with printing or publishing, these screenshots are likely representative of the build at that time.

These screenshots depict an updated HUD, and the colored lights that appear on the player's weapon now appear beside the ammo in the HUD.


August 6, 1995
95-14Aug6-01

Last instance of the Jellyfish


August 11, 1995

August - October 1995

Except for the screenshots with HUDs, most of the images from this period are very difficult to date. One crucial assumption is that screenshots depicting blue Assault Troopers must precede green ones. This assumption is based on the observation that even many staged images later use green Assault Troopers.


Stage 1

According to Gobeille, there is no police cruiser on this version of Hollywood Holocaust or on any other maps in his archive; because the cruiser appears again in a later image, the police cruiser screenshots are likely from a separate staging map that has been lost.


Stage 2

At this point in development, the Plasma Cannon fired red projectiles instead of blue. In the image with the red plasma projectiles, there is an explosion on the street in the background that can be matched to the other screenshot taken from the street, indicating these two screenshots were staged simultaneously. Because the edge of the map is visible at the top of the image, this is in fact an early version of Red Light District, after it has already been split-off from E1L6 of LameDuke. Some of the leftover sector geometry from this building can still be found in the out-of-bounds area on Red Light District.


Stage 3

The number "1" corresponding to the Mighty Foot has been removed from the HUD.


Stage 4

The entire line corresponding to the Expander has been removed from the HUD.

November 1995

The developers posted a collection of screenshots to the Internet on November 19, 1995. Because these screenshots were directly posted to the Internet without the delays associated with printing or publishing, these screenshots are likely representative of the build at that time.

In 2021, Gobeille leaked screenshots from a similar build that, based on the placement of the Access Cards in the HUD, must have come after the November 19 build. Gobeille said that his screenshots also came from a November build. In addition, he posted map blueprints for an earlier version of Red Light District and mentioned that these came from a build that was only two weeks older than his other screenshots. Because those map blueprints can be matched to many of the screenshots below, these are all expected to come from an early November build. Moreover, the numbers in the HUD use a "stubby" font in many of these screenshots, indicating they must have come before the November 19 build.


Early November 1995
Duke_Nukem_3D_-_Late_1995_Beta

Duke Nukem 3D - Late 1995 Beta


November 19, 1995

A promotional slideshow released through 3D Realms' website on November 19, 1995 included a small collection of frequently asked questions (FAQs) with answers from developer George Broussard.

Common Duke Nukem 3D questions:

Q: When will it be out?
A: The offical responce is "When it's ready".  We are trying for a pre-XMAS
release, but will hold the game to early January if we don't think it's ready
to go out.  We will NOT rush the game to make some lame deadline.  We are
getting more and more optomistic as the days go by though.

Q: What are the system requirements?
A: 486 DX2/66 (local bus recommended). The basic answer is "What are you happy
playing on?"  We are "happy" with the above system.  8 MEGS of ram and CD will
be required.  Also, a CD-ROM is required for the registered version.

Q: What weapons are there?
A: Still tweaking and working on them, but the basic list is: Kick, High speed
pistol, shotgun, 3 barrel chain gun, rocket launcher, pipe bomb with remote
detonator, shrink ray (really fun), microwave assault cannon, wall mounted
laser trip bomb (plant and forget).  Obviously some will be held back from
the shareware version.  Which ones?  Dunno yet.

Q: How many levels are there and how big is the shareware version?
A: The shareware version will be 5 levels and a secret level.  4 of the levels
are going to be really fun for network play and the other two fairly large,
but slanted towards single play more.  The full game will have another 21
levels or so, depending on time.  At least 18 though.  The shareware version
will likely be between 4 and 5 megs in download size.

Q: Can I be a beta tester?
A: No.  Sorry, but we have all we need at the moment.  We'll post a message
if we need any more.  Please let us get back to work :)


Late November 1995
Late_November_1995_Prototype_-_Hollywood_Holocaust_in_Duke_Nukem_3D

Late November 1995 Prototype - Hollywood Holocaust in Duke Nukem 3D

May - December 1995

The following is an early version of "Stalker," the music track that accompanies Hollywood Holocaust in the final game. Jackson posted the track to his personal YouTube channel, noting that the only significant differences from the final version can be heard at the 1:52 mark and 2:00 mark. Although Jackson dated the track to 1995, he did not provide enough information to approximate a more precise date. The earliest screenshots of Hollywood Holocaust can be roughly dated to sometime in the summer of 1995, and because Hollywood Holocaust had not yet been split-off from E1L6 of LameDuke as of the May 9 demo reel, the earliest possible timing is May 1995.

Stalker_-_Unused_1995_Beta

Stalker - Unused 1995 Beta

December 1995 - January 1996

January 4, 1996

Duke Nukem 3D v0.99 Beta was compiled on January 4, 1996. The image below, which first appears on a screen following the defeat of the Battlelord in beta version 0.99, is from a staging map that was separate from the most recent version of Dark Side. This is known because the stripes on the building are red, which would date it before the August screenshots, yet this image also contains the newer character sprites for Duke, which would date it after the August screenshots.

95-13MayAug-05

The prototype, which is publicly available to download, contains notable differences in the layouts on all maps of L.A. Meltdown, as well as a different roster of levels for the other two episodes. However, only L.A. Meltdown is accessible as part of the leaked shareware.

January 29, 1996

Shareware v1.0 was compiled on January 29, 1996. It contains minor differences in weapon behavior, enemy health, and sprite graphics from the final version. Only L.A. Meltdown was finished and available to play.

January - February 1996

96-25JanFeb-01

Possibly an early concept for the Overlord

February 20, 1996

Shareware v1.1 was compiled on February 20, 1996. This version is nearly identical to the final, except that the Freezethrower or Devastator had not yet been introduced. Also, a few sprites, such as switches and rocket projectiles, had not yet been updated.

January - March 1996

This animated sprite likely precedes the implementation of the Overlord's hitscan attack, which is known to have been implemented in the non-shareware version of the Computer Gaming World Demo of the game that was compiled on March 4.

96-26EarlyMar-01

Overlord

96-26EarlyMar-02

Overlord sprite animation

March 4, 1996

The Computer Gaming World Demo, long known by the nickname "Shareware v1.1+" in online forums, was compiled on March 4, 1996. At this stage of development:

  • The Overlord had a secondary hitscan attack, corresponding to the machine gun in its crotch from pre-release screenshots.
  • The Devastator was referred to as the "Cycloid," likely in reference to the fact that it resembles the weapon wielded by the Cycloid Emperor.

March 26, 1996

August 1995 - April 1996

There is not enough information to date this image. Because it depicts multiple Battlelord Sentries, it likely came after the earlier screenshots where only one is depicted on Occupied Territory, thus providing a lower bound for the date range. However, the screenshot appears to be from a very early version of Overlord, a level that dates back to LameDuke, so there is not enough information to determine an upper bound.

95-96-28AugApr-01

Unidentified. This is most likely the hallway with the Battlelord Sentry on Overlord, a possibility somewhat supported by exploring the out-of-bounds geometry outside the window

March - April 1996

96-29MarApr-01

First appearance of the Devastator, which was briefly called the "Pulverizer"

96-29MarApr-02

Close-up of the Overlord; first instance of the Freezethrower

March 1995 - August 1996

The following collection of map blueprints were shared online by Gobeille. Some of these images contain clues about their timing. For example, images that contain enemy sprites must come from builds that follow the introduction of those corresponding enemies during the development process. Some of these images also contain clear temporal relationships to other images shown above. However, all of these are relatively difficult to date. All but two of these come from maps designed by Richard "Levelord" Gray. It is known from the 20th anniversary developer commentary that Gray had left the team well in advance of August, providing an upper estimate. Moreover, Gray joined the team in March 1995, providing a lower estimate. It is known from the developer commentary that even maps introduced in the Atomic Edition used repurposed materials that were scrapped before the original April release.

The first four images provide crucial information about a longstanding controversy over the authorship of Pigsty. It has long been known that Richard "Levelord" Gray contributed to several levels from The Birth, but for reasons that are unclear, he was never credited for his work on any of them (see The Birth#Disputed authorship for more information). The most hotly debated of these was Pigsty, which Gray cited as his favorite level and "99.44%" his own work. However, the map was ultimately credited solely to Randy Pitchford, whose initials appear on the map in the final version.

The map blueprints below seem to argue strongly in Gray's favor. Although it is unknown whether any of these iterations were modifications by Pitchford in which he failed to remove Gray's signature, the last two versions clearly show that negligible changes were made when Gray's signature ("SUYT" in the top-right corner) was removed from the map.

95-96-30NovAug-01

Early build of Pigsty

95-96-30NovAug-02

Later build of Pigsty

95-96-28MarAug-08

Last build of Pigsty with Gray's signature

95-96-28MarAug-09

Final build from one month later, where Pitchford replaced Gray's signature with his own (not visible in this screenshot)

The following maps were also authored by Gray:

95-96-30NovAug-03

Early build of Shop-N-Bag

95-96-30NovAug-04

Later build of Shop-N-Bag

95-96-28MarAug-11

Early build of XXX-Stacy, titled "El Segundo" in the development files

95-96-28MarAug-12

Later build of XXX-Stacy, which happens to be the last iteration with Gray's signature

95-96-23DecJan-05

Early build of Fahrenheit; Gobeille shared that this map was started very close to the commercial release

95-96-28MarAug-07

Later build of Fahrenheit dated one month before the commercial release

95-96-28MarAug-10

Early build of Critical Mass; Gobeille shared that the map has a development history extending back to LameDuke and was briefly transformed into a space-themed level at one point

95-96-23DecJan-07

Early build of Flood Zone; Gobeille shared that the map file was named "MONICA.MAP"; it was long believed that a map named "Santa Monica Pier" (listed in the CON files of early shareware) corresponded to an early version of Flood Zone

95-96-23DecJan-06

Movie Set; the scrapped area shown in the thumbnail is accessible in the final build using the no-clip cheat

95-96-28MarAug-05

Another view of the same build of Movie Set but with more visible details

95-96-28MarAug-06

Later build of Movie Set

The following maps all come from early builds of Hotel Hell. Except for the comparison images from LameDuke and the commercial version, Gobeille stated that none of these builds contains the swimming pool.

95-96-28AugApr-02 comp1

E2L6 of LameDuke

95-96-28AugApr-02

Early build of Hotel Hell

95-96-28AugApr-03

Later build

95-96-28AugApr-02 comp2

Final build

95-96-28AugApr-04 comp1

E2L6 of LameDuke

95-96-28AugApr-04

Early build of Hotel Hell

95-96-28AugApr-05

Later build

95-96-28AugApr-04 comp2

Final build

95-96-28AugApr-06

Upstairs bar area

95-96-28AugApr-07

Back alley; according to Gobeille, the player would have started in the garage

The following two maps are signed "LEE" and are believed to have been authored by soundtrack composer Lee Jackson. Gobeille stated that most of the level is "around average mid-90s usermap quality." Because the rest of the map is comparatively more "abstract," Gobeille is unsure whether the realistic mail truck that appears at the beginning of the level was designed by the same author or possibly by a different developer on the team. These maps correspond to two iterations of Going Postal, which was further developed by Allen Blum and packaged with the Atomic Edition.

April 1996

See Also: Duke Nukem 3D v1.2


April 4, 1996

Jackson released the following unused track titled "233.778C" that was dated April 4, 1996 and intended to accompany Fahrenheit.

233.778C_0406

233.778C 0406


Version 1.2
DN3Dv1

Loading screen for version 1.2

Stadium prototype

Stadium in version 1.2

Gobeille has shared the following information about the contents of version 1.2:

  • Overall, version 1.2 is nearly identical to the final release.
  • The "Quick Kick" function for the Mighty Foot works like in versions 1.4 and 1.5, without the double-kick glitch from version 1.3d.
  • Battlelord Sentry sprites use palette 19 instead of palette 21.
  • Stadium is significantly different. By comparison, the commercial release reverted to one of the earliest builds of the level, circa 1994.
  • The Overlord uses its original design from pre-release screenshots, with a machine gun in its crotch.
  • Hotel Hell includes a giant mirror along the wall beside the front desk of the hotel, allowing the player to see the Battlelord Sentries before coming around the corner.


Version 1.2+
Stadium (Proto vs Final)

Map comparison, across versions

May - October 1996

See also

Duke Nukem 3D
Episodes L.A. MeltdownLunar ApocalypseShrapnel CityThe BirthAlien World Order
Weapons Mighty FootPistolShotgunChaingun CannonRPGPipe BombShrinkerExpanderDevastatorLaser TripbombFreezethrowerIncinerator
Items Access CardsHealth ItemsHolodukeJetpackNight Vision GogglesPortable MedkitProtective BootsScuba GearSteroids
Enemies Assault CaptainAssault CommanderAssault TrooperBattlelord SentryCycloid SentryEnforcerFirefly TrooperOctabrainOverlord SentryPig CopPig Cop TankProtector DroneProtozoid SlimerRecon Patrol VehicleSentry DroneSharkTurret
Bosses BattlelordOverlordCycloid EmperorAlien QueenCycloid Incinerator
Editions ClassicSharewareAtomic Edition (Plutonium PAK)Megaton Edition20th Anniversary World Tour
Expansions Duke AssaultDuke Caribbean: Life's A BeachDuke It Out In D.C.Duke Nukem 3D Level Design HandbookDuke Nukem's Penthouse ParadiseDuke XtremeDuke: Nuclear WinterDuke!ZONEDuke!ZONE 150Duke!ZONE IIUnofficial Expansions
Community High Resolution PackMods & Total ConversionsSource PortsSpeedrunningUser Maps
Other Build EngineCheat CodesDifficultyDuke Nukem (character)MultiplayerMusicPortsPrototypesQuotesScrapped Content


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