Doom II RPG

Doom II RPG is a sequel to  and Doom RPG. It was released for on November 23, 2009,  on December 11, 2009,  on February 1, 2010,  and  on February 8, 2010. It uses the Wolfenstein RPG mobile engine. It was developed by id Software partners Fountainhead Entertainment via merger with id Mobile. The iPhone version of Doom II RPG contains a digital comic book.

Gameplay
Doom 2 RPG is a turn-based shooter. There are 2 sides involved in the main gameplay: the main hero (who is controlled by a player) and monsters (NPCs). The player takes turns to perform specific actions: go north/south/west/east, ransack a corpse, attack, talk to somebody, skip a turn, drink a potion, pick up an item etc. Turning left or right spends no turns. When there are some enemies near the player, each character takes his own turn. After you have performed an action, you wait until each monster nearby performs its action(-s). Then you take a turn again. There are no time limit for turns, so you are free to build up your strategy and execute it. For example, when you are surrounded by monsters, it's more reasonable to rush towards a hallway or a corner. Then you will take less damage after each turn.

Another main feature are cutscenes. They often show some real-time footage where the characters bypass turn-based mechanics. For example, a scientist approaches you, gives you something and walks away from your field of view; or monsters break in from somewhere and surround you.

Like in Doom RPG, you can find secret areas, which look like displaced walls, and obtain ammo, armor, medkits (usually, inside blue crates). Unfortunately, you can't find weapons and spheres there.

Plot


Secret experiments have taken place and incidents have happened on various UAC Bases located on Mars, the Moon, Earth, Phobos, Deimos, and elsewhere. While there's not much known about the monster invasion in UAC bases on Mars, another monster invasion happened on Earth's moon. A team of soldiers accompanied by a scientist have ventured to the UAC bases on the Moon to investigate. (According to the included digital comic present in the iPhone version of the game, the Scientist was not a planned member of the expedition; rather, his ship was commandeered by the Marines in order to quickly reach the Moon. This is not confirmed within the plot of the game itself, though.)

At the beginning the group splits up and the player is on his/her own. The player is briefed by a UAC employee named Caldex, who informs the team about the invasion and provides tips on how to proceed. Immediately noticed are conflicts between a UAC computer designated SAL and another unknown entity, designated VIOS. SAL (whose name is a play on from 2001: A Space Odyssey) is an AI developed by the UAC to assist in day-to-day operations within UAC research facilities. VIOS (whose name stands for Virtual Icon of Sin) is a malevolent entity from Hell who is invading the UAC's computer networks. VIOS' motives are unclear, but SAL warns you not to trust it or assist it in any way.

Conflicts with VIOS appear frequently in the game (beginning with Map 2, and also occurring in maps 4, 5, and 7). At each encounter, VIOS will request the player to make a decision - MALLOC or DELETE. MALLOC will allocate "resources" to VIOS, thereby assisting it; DELETE will delete these "resources", angering VIOS and requiring the player to do combat with VIOS. Whether the player chooses to assist VIOS or not determines whether (and how often) the player needs to fight VIOS. By choosing MALLOC, you avoid an immediate battle with VIOS; however, VIOS will become stronger when confronted at the end of the game, a confrontation which is unavoidable. (Although the game never explains exactly what the "resources" are, it is believed that they are human souls that VIOS can feed off of.) Choosing MALLOC to avoid conflict in the short term will therefore cause the end-game battle to be more difficult.

After the player traverses the first three maps comprising the moon base (periodically encountering Caldex, one of the unused player characters, or other NPCs), s/he will briefly need to pass through a cavern in Hell, where s/he encounters the Pinkynator, a creature that spawns Pinkies. After defeating the Pinkinator, a portal is revealed which transports the player to a UAC base on Earth.

Upon reaching the UAC base on Earth (comprised of Maps 4 through 6), s/he quickly finds out that the UAC base on Earth is overrun by demons as well. The player is also introduced to a Dr. Zanax, a scientist who seems to be attempting to help facilitate the invasion of demons. The player fights his/her way through the base, and encounters another teleporter guarded by a Spider Mastermind. After defeating the Spider Mastermind, Dr. Zanax forcibly teleports the player to Hell.

Hell comprises Maps 7 through 9. The player battles through the caverns and lava pits of Hell, briefly encountering one of the other player characters (whose identity changes depending on the player's current choice of character) who gives the player the BFG. The player continues to battle through Hell where s/he encounters the Cyberdemon (in Map 8) and finds out VIOS is the brain of another Icon of Sin. VIOS is finally confronted in Map 9. After the VIOS is defeated the game ends with an ominous sign off, letting the player know the fight is not over. The fate of the remaining player characters, Caldex, and Dr. Zanax is not explicitly made clear.

Playable characters


Three player characters are available:


 * Loosely based on the  character "Major".
 * Doomguy, descendant of William "B.J." Blazkowicz from .

Weapons


Doom II RPG has a new set of weapons, complete with new graphics.
 * Chainsaw
 * Assault Rifle
 * Scoped Assault Rifle
 * Super Shotgun
 * Chaingun
 * Plasma Gun
 * Rocket Launcher
 * BFG
 * Holy Water Pistol (can be refilled in basins and toilets)
 * Shooting Sentry Bot (comes in green and red versions; green being weaker, and red being stronger)
 * Exploding Sentry Bot (comes in green and red versions; green being weaker, and red being stronger)
 * Soul cube (only obtained in Hell)
 * Toilets (can be thrown)

Each weapon has its own characteristics and various degree of efficiency when fighting with different monsters. This is an incomplete speadsheet that shows the level of damage that you deal to monsters while using different weapons. Where "1" means very low damage, "6" - enormous damage and "5/6" - variation between "5" and "6".

'* - tested only at close ranges (0-1 steps away from an enemy) when there are no penalties to damage.

'** - level of damage to surrounding enemies from explosion

Monsters
Doom II RPG uses the same hierarchical system for monsters as the previous Doom RPG installment, with classes of monsters individualized by colors. In addition to the classes in Doom RPG (with the exception of the zombieman, hell knight/baron of hell and the hellhound, the former is replaced by the zombie), Doom II RPG adds some new classes:

Watcher class
Brier, Watcher and Sentinel

Bosses
In addition to the new classes of enemies the game has three new bosses as well as the boss's minions; the Pinkynator, the Spider Mastermind, and VIOS. The Pinkynator is a boss level entity, capable of spawning a room full of Pinkies.

The Spider Mastermind (not featured in the original Doom RPG) splits into three Arachnotrons upon death.

VIOS (Virtual Icon Of Sin) is the new Boss Brain inside the new Icon of Sin.

Cut content
Some content was cut from Doom II RPG during development. This is evident by comparing the game and the game trailer.
 * the original name of the Sawcubus was Chainsaw Goblin
 * Zombie names were similar to Doom RPG
 * The Sentinel was originally depicted as a robed Heretic-style enemy (as seen in a trailer for the game); its artwork was changed before release

Cheat mode
Similar to Doom RPG and Wolfenstein RPG cheat mode is activated on the menu screen by pressing 3666 for phones while the iPhone and iTouch has this sequence: touch the top left corner, top right, bottom left, bottom right, bottom left, bottom right. From there you can choose cheats such as invincibility mode (aka God mode), walking through walls (noclip), full inventory (give all), complete level overview (give map), level skip (change map), and so on.

Levels



 * 1) Luna (the Earth's moon)
 * 2) Tycho Station
 * 3) Cichus Base
 * 4) Kepler Site
 * 5) Earth
 * 6) UAC Administration
 * 7) UAC Labs
 * 8) UAC R&amp;D
 * 9) Elsewhere
 * 10) Gehenna
 * 11) Abaddon
 * 12) VIOS