

Apogee (a new brand name was made, 3D Realms in 1994) grew from a small startup to a successful corporation. While Miller was quiet, with a head for business, Broussard was an enthusiastic "creative impresario". George Broussard, whom Miller met while he was in high school, joined Miller at his company, Apogee, which published and marketed games developed by other companies. Miller found that gamers were not willing to pay for something they could get for free, so he came up with the idea of offering only the opening levels of his games players could purchase the game to receive the rest of the game. By 1988 the shareware business was a $10 to $20 million a year market, but the distribution method had never been tried for video games. Scott Miller was a lifelong gamer who released his text-based video games as shareware in the 1980s.

The case was settled with prejudice and details undisclosed in May 2010. 3D Realms retorted that Take-Two's legal interest in the game is limited to their publishing right. Take-Two Interactive, which owns the publishing rights to the game, filed a lawsuit in 2009 against 3D Realms over their "failure to finish development". Statements by the company indicated that the project was due to go gold soon with pictures of final development. In May 2009, 3D Realms was downsized for financial reasons, resulting in the loss of the game's development team.


Originally in development under 3D Realms, director George Broussard, one of the creators of the original Duke Nukem game, first announced the title's development in April 1997, and promotional information for the game was released in one form or another from 1997 until its release in 2011.Īfter repeatedly announcing and deferring release dates, 3D Realms clarified in 2001 that it would be released simply "when it's done". Intended to be groundbreaking, it has become infamous in the video games industry and was considered vaporware due to its severely-protracted development schedule the game has been in development since 1997. It's a sequel to the 1996 game Duke Nukem 3D, as part of the long-running Duke Nukem video game series. Duke Nukem Forever is a first-person shooter video game for Playstation 3, Xbox 360 and PC, developed by 3D Realms, Triptych Games, Piranha Games, and Gearbox Software.
