Kronos

Kronos is the second-to-last boss that the player must defeat in Doom RPG. He is the mastermind behind the invasion of the base, analogous to Dr. Betruger in Doom 3, and Olivia Pierce in the later Doom (2016).

Role
Kronos was a UAC scientist working on teleportation research. He supposedly traveled to a dimension of pure evil, where he combined human technology with demon flesh to create the cyberdemon. In Reactor, the last level of Doom RPG, it is revealed that Kronos has been transformed into a demon.

After the UAC discovered Kronos' research, he was fired and his research buried, but he returned in the guise of Dr. Guerard. Dr. Guerard is encountered early in the game in Sector 1, where he helps the player. However, he sometimes behaves in a suspicious manner, opening doors in apparently impossible ways, for example. Some of the scientists express their suspicions about Guerard, some believing that he is "working for Kronos."

Guerard's true intentions are finally made clear in Sector 6, when he leads the player and Dr. Jensen into a trap. Guerard is encountered again at the entrance to the reactor, where he transforms into Kronos. The player must defeat him to reach the portal and shut it down.

Tactical analysis
The battle with Kronos differs between the J2ME/BREW 2.0 builds of the game and the enhanced BREW 2.1 build. In the former, Kronos will simply transform in-place and attacks in a stationary manner like all other enemies in the game.

In the BREW 2.1 version, the battle with Kronos will begin by displaying a Doom 3-like effect on the walls of the hallway, and the player and Kronos will then be warped away to a Hell-like cavernous area. Kronos attacks like usual, but may also teleport at random on his turns, requiring the player to track him down.

Name
The name "Kronos" is possibly derived from the Greek god of time Chronos, although a titan of similar name (Cronus, the father of Zeus) also exists in Greek mythology. Given the number of geek culture references contained in Doom RPG, it is also possible that the name is a reference to the Klingon homeworld in Star Trek.

The name is coincidentally similar to, and should not be confused with, Cronos, the name of the world on which Hexen takes place.