Its release directly spawned Doom and Quake, and influenced an entire genre still enjoying ludicrous popularity to this day. Wolfenstein 3D would still happen, though. id was willing to sell-even going so far as to create a cute little piece of artwork to celebrate the purchase-but wrangling over payments, with John Romero requesting $100,000 up front alongside a letter of intent, meant ultimately Sierra backed out of the deal. It shouldn't surprise you to hear that, in the end, Sierra's offer wasn't followed through. There were first-person games before id's effort, there were better games with more longevity since-most from id itself-but Wolfenstein 3D was the game that kickstarted everything, and made established publishers have a ‘holy shit' moment that made them slap $2.5 million dollars down on the table. It's difficult to understate how impactful a game Wolfenstein 3D was-how much it changed things, how it raised the bar, decided it still wasn't high enough and so tore it off and threw it over a mountain. Wolfenstein 3D was so good that, when id Software took an early version to Sierra in 1992, the publisher quickly tabled a $2.5 million offer to purchase the pre-Doom dev studio.
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