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The gameplay is similar to [[Wikipedia:Narbacular Drop|Narbacular Drop]] by Nuclear Monkey Software, an indie game that won the IGF 2006 Student Showcase. Members of the development team who created the game were hired by [[Valve]] in 2005. | The gameplay is similar to [[Wikipedia:Narbacular Drop|Narbacular Drop]] by Nuclear Monkey Software, an indie game that won the IGF 2006 Student Showcase. Members of the development team who created the game were hired by [[Valve]] in 2005. | ||
In 2022, {{nvidia|4}} released [[Portal with RTX]], a remastered version of {{portal|3.1}} which takes advantage of newer hardware and adds ray-tracing support, PBR textures, new high-poly models and much more. | |||
== Content == | == Content == | ||
* Portal (<code>portal</code>) | * Portal (<code>portal</code>) |
Revision as of 23:20, 19 June 2023
Portal (2007) is a puzzle video game using the Orange Box engine. Taking place in the mysterious Aperture laboratories, the game operates as a puzzle-based shooter, allowing you to create portals that link to one another on any flat and large enough surface.
The gameplay is similar to Narbacular Drop by Nuclear Monkey Software, an indie game that won the IGF 2006 Student Showcase. Members of the development team who created the game were hired by Valve in 2005.
In 2022, Nvidia released Portal with RTX, a remastered version of Portal which takes advantage of newer hardware and adds ray-tracing support, PBR textures, new high-poly models and much more.
Content
- Portal (
portal
) - Source 2013 shared (
hl2
) - Source shared (
hl2
) Source 2013 Singleplayer engine branch
Trivia
- For some reasons, Valve decided to use Beta version of Portal as screenshots on the Steam page.
See also
External links
- Portal article on Wikipedia
- EA Summer Showcase trailer: FileFront.com, GameSpot
- My Aperture Innovations (custom maps)