Amiga

The Amiga home computer platform was fairly popular during the late 1980s and 90s, but it was widely considered that it was not possible to do a game like Doom on this platform due to technical restrictions of the standard Amiga graphic chipset, which was built to do scrolling sprite based games, not pixel-based rendering. However, this did not stop many eager developers from trying.

Ports
Quickly after the release of the source code, several people jumped on the bandwagon and ported Doom to the. This resulted in several different ports which competed for the Amiga userbase. In recent years, several more modern ports arrived on the system, derived from the PC versions. These new ports also include support for, which allow standardized resolutions and true colour screens to be available through common adapters. The two most common API's used in RTG are Picasso96 and.

Ports for the Amiga

 * ADoom (1998-2011)
 * AmiDoom
 * AmigaDoom
 * Boom (Version 2.02. AGA and RTG versions, requires an 020)
 * Chocolate Doom (Version 2.3.0, requires an 060 and RTG)
 * DoomAttack (1998-2004)
 * EDoom (An obscure port based off ADoom 1.2 with a different compiler and small fixes, resulting in a slightly faster port)
 * Odamex (Version 0.6.4. AGA and RTG versions, requires an 060)
 * PsiDoom
 * VDoom68K (By Frank Wille)
 * ZDoom (Version 1.22. AGA and RTG versions, requires an 020)
 * ZhaDoom68K

Ports for the Amiga
Amiga PowerPC ports require a PowerPC processor upgrade.
 * ADoomPPC
 * Chocolate Doom (for )
 * Crispy Doom (for MorphOS)
 * VDoomPPC
 * VaxenPPC, a port of Hexen
 * ZhaDoomPPC

Dread
Dread is the name of a Doom-like game that uses Freedoom assets and a custom engine, similar to the Super NES version to run on a stock Amiga 500 in OCS and 1 MB ChipRAM.