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NOT-BUGS.md

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The aim of Chocolate Doom is to behave as closely to Vanilla Doom as possible. As a result, you may experience problems that you would also experience when using Vanilla Doom. These are not “bugs” as Chocolate Doom is behaving as intended.

This is not intended to be a comprehensive list of Vanilla Doom bugs. For more information, consult the “engine bugs” page of the Doom Wiki.

Game exits after title screen with message about game version

The game may exit after the title screen is shown, with a message like the following:

Demo is from a different game version!
(read 2, should be 109)

*** You may need to upgrade your version of Doom to v1.9. ***
    See: https://www.doomworld.com/classicdoom/info/patches.php
    This appears to be v1.0/v1.1/v1.2.

This usually indicates that your IWAD file that you are using to play the game (usually named doom.wad or doom2.wad) is out of date. Chocolate Doom only supports versions 1.666 through 1.9.

To fix the problem, you must upgrade your IWAD file, preferably to 1.9. The URL in the message has downloadable upgrade patches that you can use to upgrade.

Game exits in demo loop when playing Final Doom

When playing with the Final Doom IWAD files (tnt.wad, plutonia.wad), if you leave the game at the title screen to play through the demo loop, it will eventually exit with the following error message:

W_GetNumForName: demo4 not found!

This is the same behavior as the Vanilla executables that were bundled with Final Doom. When Ultimate Doom was developed, a fourth demo was added to the demo loop, and this change was retained in the Final Doom version of the executable. However, the Final Doom IWADs do not include a fourth demo, so the game crashes.

An alternate version of Final Doom was included in the Id Anthology boxed set, and this version of the game fixed this bug. However, this version also changes the teleport behavior, so the default is to emulate the most commonly distributed version of the game. To use the alternate version, run with:

chocolate-doom -gameversion final2

Game exits when accessing the options menu

The game may exit with the message “Bad V_DrawPatch” when accessing the options menu, if you have your mouse sensitivity set high.

The Doom options menu has a slider that allows the mouse sensitivity to be controlled; however, it has only a very limited range. It is common for experienced players to set a mouse sensitivity that is much higher than what can be set via the options menu. The setup program allows a larger range of values to be set.

However, setting very high sensitivity values causes the game to exit when accessing the options menu under Vanilla Doom. Because Chocolate Doom aims to emulate Vanilla Doom as closely as possible, it does the same thing.

One solution to the problem is to set a lower mouse sensitivity. Alternatively, all of the settings in the options menu can be controlled through Doom’s key bindings anyway:

Option Key
End game F7
Messages on/off F8
Graphic detail high/low F5
Screen size smaller/larger -/+
Sound volume menu F4

Game exits with “Savegame buffer overrun” when saving the game

If you are playing on a particularly large level, it is possible that when you save the game, the game will quit with the message “Savegame buffer overrun”.

Vanilla Doom has a limited size memory buffer that it uses for saving games. If you are playing on a large level, the buffer may be too small for the entire savegame to fit. Chocolate Doom allows the limit to be disabled: in the setup tool, go to the “compatibility” menu and disable the “Vanilla savegame limit” option.

If this error happens to you, your game has not been lost! A file named temp.dsg is saved; rename this to doomsav0.dsg to make it appear in the first slot in the “load game” menu. (On Unix systems, you will need to look in the .chocolate-doom/savegames directory in your home directory)

Game ends suddenly when recording a demo

If you are recording a very long demo, the game may exit suddenly. Vanilla Doom has a limited size memory buffer that it uses to save the demo into. When the buffer is full, the game exits. You can tell if this happens, as the demo file will be around 131,072 bytes in size.

You can work around this by using the -maxdemo command line parameter to specify a larger buffer size. Alternatively, the limit can be disabled: in the setup tool, go to the compatibility menu and disable the “Vanilla demo limit” option.

Game exits with a message about “visplanes”

The game may exit with one of these messages:

R_FindPlane: no more visplanes
R_DrawPlanes: visplane overflow (129)

This is known as the “visplane overflow” limit and is one of the most well-known Vanilla Doom engine limits. You should only ever experience this when trying to play an add-on level. The level you are trying to play is too complex; it was most likely designed to work with a limit removing source port.

More information can be found here (archived link): https://archive.is/s6h7V

IDMUS## cheat doesn’t work with shareware/registered Doom IWADs

The IDMUS cheat allows the in-game music to be changed. However, in the original v1.9 this cheat didn’t work properly when playing with the Doom 1 (shareware and registered) IWADs. This bug was fixed in the Ultimate Doom and Final Doom executables.

Chocolate Doom emulates this bug. When playing with the shareware or registered Doom IWADs, the IDMUS cheat therefore does not work properly. If you are playing with the Ultimate Doom IWAD, the Ultimate Doom executable is emulated by default, so the cheat works properly.

Some graphics are wrong when playing with BFG Edition IWADs

If you are playing using the IWAD files from Doom 3: BFG Edition, you may notice that certain graphics appear strange or wrong. This includes the title screen, and parts of the options menu.

The IWAD files in the new BFG Edition have had some significant changes from the IWAD files in older releases. Some of the graphics lumps have been removed or changed, and the Doom 2 secret levels are also censored. Chocolate Doom includes some small workarounds that allow the game to run, but for the best experience, it’s best to get a copy of the classic versions of the IWADs. These are still available to buy from Steam or GOG.com.