Quake (video game)
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Quake (video game)
Summary
Quake (video game) is a video game[1]. Quake (video game) has Wikipedia articles in 44 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Quake (video game)'s instance of is recorded as video game[3].
- Quake (video game) was directed by John Romero[4].
- Quake (video game)'s composer is recorded as Trent Reznor[5].
- Quake (video game)'s composer is recorded as Aubrey Hodges[6].
- Quake (video game) was published by Atari, Inc.[7].
- Quake (video game) was published by Q200491[8].
- Quake (video game) was published by Bethesda Softworks[9].
- Quake (video game) was published by ClickBoom[10].
- Quake (video game) was published by MacSoft Games[11].
- Quake (video game) was published by Q122741[12].
- Quake (video game) was published by Midway Games[13].
- Quake (video game) was published by Macmillan Inc.[14].
- Quake (video game)'s genre is first-person shooter[15].
- Quake (video game)'s genre is science fiction video game[16].
- Quake (video game) was followed by Quake II[17].
- Quake (video game)'s developer is recorded as id Software[18].
- Quake (video game)'s developer is recorded as Nightdive Studios[19].
- Quake (video game)'s part of the series is recorded as Quake[20].
- Quake (video game)'s copyright license is recorded as shareware[21].
- Quake (video game)'s copyright license is recorded as GNU General Public License[22].
- Quake (video game)'s designed by is recorded as American McGee[23].
- Quake (video game)'s designed by is recorded as John Romero[24].
- Quake (video game)'s software version identifier is recorded as 1.08[25].
- Quake (video game)'s Commons category is recorded as Quake[26].
- Quake (video game)'s platform is recorded as Q47604[27].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
Body
Definition and Type
Quake (video game)'s instance of is recorded as video game[3].
Why It Matters
Quake (video game) has Wikipedia articles in 44 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]