cover image Doom Guy: Life in First Person

Doom Guy: Life in First Person

John Romero. Abrams, $30 (384p) ISBN 978-1-4197-5811-9

Video game designer Romero, best known as the creator of Doom, catalogs his personal and professional challenges in this surprisingly moving autobiography. In the 1960s and ’70s, Romero’s family was involved in the drug trade, and his father, who was addicted to “everything from cocaine to alcohol,” abused Romero, his mother, and his younger brother. Romero found refuge in early video games, including Space Invaders, which led him, at age 11, to learn computer programming. He walks readers through the details of his career, from his first gig at the Texas-based Origin Systems when he was 20 up through his triumphs at id Software and Ion Storm in the 1990s. It’s then that Romero developed Doom, realizing his vision for “the fastest, most violent, most immersive computer game in history” and innovating the archiving of gamers’ keystrokes as video files and other advances that changed online gaming. Though some passages get a little too technical (including one on video buffers’ bit depths), Romero mostly manages to appeal to gamers and non-gamers alike with this celebration of triumphing over adversity. Creatives of all stripes will be satisfied. Agent: Marcus Hoffman, Regal Hoffman & Assoc. (July)