GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers. The quest to port games to unusual platforms continues, as Australian hackers have found a way to get the original Doom running on an automated teller ...
It’s hard to make ATMs more thrilling then they already are, seeing as how they’re designed to spit money at you. But a team of tinkering Australians has done just that by modifying an ATM to play ...
There is this long standing gamer belief that a computer is not a computer unless it can run, and play, DOOM. Taking that philosophy to heart, two Australian hackers have embarked on a perilous ...
Fiscal convenience takes a backseat to murderous hellbeasts as hackers have added an Automated Teller Machine to the long, long list of devices capable of running id Software's classic first-person ...
It seems you can play id Software's iconic shooter Doom on just about anything according to a team of Australians (via Engadget), who have torn open and modified an ATM to play the classic ...
Doom. Credit: Id Software, Louis Roots. An Australian game developer has hacked up an ATM and got it in a position where you can play Doom on it. Louie Roots is best known for SK Games – an ...
Normally when you hear about hackers and ATMs, you think of someone attempting to steal your credit card details or make the machine spit-out some bills. This time however, it is more fun than drama, ...
Sure, most ATMs use some kind of Windows-based operating system, but can they run Doom? Evidently, yes. A couple of tech wizards over in Australia in pursuit of that age old question (can you run Doom ...
Two Australian gamers - who clearly have a lot of time on their hands - have converted an old ATM into a popular 1990s video game. YouTuber Ed Jones and his mate Julian bought an old cash machine ...
Why can’t every ATM play DOOM as well as dispense cash? Who wouldn’t want that? There’s no mistaking the accents in this one — although Ed Jones’ username “Aussie50″ is also something of a giveaway.
It has become a bit of a meme: Doom runs on everything. It's been played on an LED billboard, the Vic-20, a calculator, smartphones (and yes, computers). But these Australian hackers managed to tear ...