D!ZONE

D!ZONE was a series of CD-ROMs produced around 1995 by WizardWorks, Inc., a shareware and low-budget software distributor. The discs contain WADs and utilities collected from the Internet for DOOM, DOOM II, and other related games. These discs were popular in the early to mid 1990s when household Internet access was less common and access speeds were low.

D!ZONE series
There were several entries in the D!ZONE series, each one containing an increasing number of files. These included D!ZONE, D!ZONE 150, D!ZONE 2, and D!ZONE Gold. The latter three of these discs include approximately 150, 1000, and 2000 files respectively, with some possible overlap in contents.

D! frontend
All of the D!ZONE series discs included the newest version of the D! frontend, which was developed by Simply Silly Software and sold to WizardWorks for inclusion on the discs. The D! frontend was highly polished and functional: it could randomize levels, recombine and deconflict resources from any number of wad files to create one new wad, connect and manage netgames, convert levels between DOOM, DOOM 2, and (in v2.0 only), Heretic and Hexen, and more.

The D! frontend is a Borland Turbo Pascal 7.0 program, and thus it suffers from a well-known problem on machines with CPUs faster than 233 MHz. An error in an delay timer initialization routine causes the message "Runtime Error 200" to appear and aborts the program. This can be repaired with a widely available patch, however.

Controversies
The D!ZONE series, along with other more generic DOOM level discs, was controversial due to a number of its aspects.

Licensing
First was the fact that, in violation of id Software's EULA and Data Utility Licenses, user add-ons and editor utilities were being used to promote the sale of a commercial product. This immediately earned the ire of many authors, some of whose works explicitly denied the right to distribute on CD but were included anyway. The discs do include text files for levels that originally had them, and these can be viewed in the included frontend, but WizardWorks' copyright notices do not seem to exclude the wads on the discs and thus seem to attempt to exert rights over others' properties.

False advertisement
The number of levels on each disc is in some cases rounded up, or counts many levels twice because they have been provided in both a DOOM and DOOM 2 compatible form. The boxes for the products included "simulated screenshots" which made it appear to less experienced users that use of D!ZONE would provide significant graphic and gameplay enhancements, or that new total conversions were included on the discs. Small print on the back of the boxes disclaimed this, but excited players were unlikely to notice it.

Quality
Many of the levels on the discs are of extremely poor quality, and some will even crash Vanilla Doom upon loading or during play. Additionally, some of the DOOM 2 levels simply seem to be DOOM levels converted to DOOM 2 by randomly changing some monsters and weapons into new ones, which leads to terribly unbalanced gameplay even in the better maps.

Wraith
D!ZONE Gold included demo versions of the partial conversions Hell to Pay and Perdition's Gate, created by Wraith. These modifications were also in violation of the DOOM EULA and Data Utility Licenses, which forbade commercial profit from DOOM modifications.

Related products
WizardWorks created other products in their "!ZONE" line, one of which was H!ZONE for Heretic and Hexen.