Outlines the basic and advanced principles involved in creating interactive games, including flight simulators, three-dimensional walk-through games, and various multimedia utilities, with an accompanying CD that includes shareware games and commercial demos. Original. (All Users).
I have the 1994 edition. Bought it brand new with disc. I used to stay up all night reading through this book and dreaming. I couldn't afford the compiler to run the code. Nor did I have a computer with enough memory or speed. I only had a 486sx (not even the dx with the math coprocessor). I had an IBM PS1 Consultant. 4 or 8 megs of RAM. that I bought in '91 for like $1,200 (by the time I added all of the accessories and printer, etc.). Later added an external CD ROM drive kit that I ordered from DAK. I think I paid around $300 for that. I was proud of that computer though. First real computer that I ever owned. Windows 3.11 I believe. Of course, I had owned a Texas Instruments TI99 back in the day. And then a Commodore 64. But like I said, the 486sx was the first "real" computer, though the others had been fun to play with. I'll have to look, but I want to say this book came with a full copy of Doom on the disc. I never was a big Doom fan though. I did love Wolfenstein 3D. Mostly, I was interested in the code behind the games and it was sheer torture to not be able to experiment. Didn't have the big bucks.
Bought this book used in 2026 to read about how the classics from the 90's were programmed but it's mostly technical information like VGA, the Soundblaster and interrupts, which was already easy to look up at the time and trivial now. Very few tricks and hardly guru level.
Quite outdated in 2015. Touches on older technology including simple Wolfenstein-style raycasting. There's much better educational resources out there nowadays.