id Software design director Matthew Hooper says images have “nothing to do” with what gamers will find in upcoming shooter.
The pile of supposed Doom 4 artwork posted earlier this week is not representative of the developer’s new shooter, id Software has confirmed.
Today, id Software design director Matthew Hooper took to Twitter to respond to the artwork. He did not directly refute the authenticity of the images but noted they don’t represent what gamers will find in Doom 4.
“Those images have nothing to do with what you’re gonna see in Doom 4,” he said.
Accompanying the images was a rumor that Doom 4 had been cancelled. Parent publisher Bethesda debunked this speculation, saying, “Doom 4 is not cancelled. When we are ready to talk about it, we’ll let folks know.”
That wasn’t the first time Doom 4 was rumored to be shut down. Last October, word spread that Doom 4 was “indefinitely postponed,” but Bethesda was quick to quiet that talk, saying, “Games are done when they are done, and no title under development at id has been postponed–indefinitely or otherwise.”
As for Doom 4, the game’s existence was first acknowledged in May 2008, when the developer sent out a press release stating that production had begun on the game. At the 2011 Electronic Entertainment Expo, id Software head of technology John Carmack said the core team on Rage would move to Doom 4 development following the release of its latest shooter. He also said a sequel to Rage was planned to launch after Doom 4.
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