DOOM? In Your BIOS? More Likely Than You Think!

We’ve seen hackers run DOOM on a variety of appliances, from desk phones to pregnancy tests. Now, the final frontier has been conquered – we got DOOM to run on an x86 machine. Of course, making sure we utilize your PC hardware to its fullest, we have to forego an OS. Here are two ways you can run DOOM without the burden of gigabytes of bloated code in the background.


The first DOOM version, by [nic3-14159], is a coreboot payload. Coreboot is an open-source BIOS/UEFI replacement for x86 machines – [nic3-14159] has put the doomgeneric DOOM engine into a coreboot module, and made it into DOOM playable on your Coreboot-able computer. Some might say it’s imperfect – it has no sound support, only works with PS/2 keyboards, and exiting the game makes your computer freeze. However, it works, and it fits into your BIOS flash chip.


What if your computer hasn’t yet been blessed with a free BIOS replacement? You might like this UEFI module DOOM port instead, originally made by [Warfish] and then built upon by [Cacodemon345]. To play this, you only need to compile the binary and an UEFI shell, then use the “Load EFI Shell” option in your UEFI menu – something that’s widely encountered nowadays. This version also lacks sound, but is a bit more fully featured due to all the facilities that UEFI provides for its payloads.



Of course, with the wide range of devices DOOM can run on, you wouldn’t ever want to actually use your PC for playing it. However, these two pro ..

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