Compara los precios de Quake III Arena en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por id Software. Publicado por id Software. Lanzado el 3/8/2007. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Action. Puntuación Metacritic: 69/100.

Pure aim, pure movement, zero padding. Q3A still cuts through modern shooters like a railgun slug through drywall, if you know where to find the servers.

I've spent more hours than I care to admit with a 400 DPI mouse on maps that have no right to still feel this fast in 2026, and the honest answer is that Quake III Arena remains one of the tightest movement shooters ever shipped. The whole design philosophy is stripped to the bone: pick up the rocket launcher or railgun, control the quad damage spawn, master strafe-jumping, and out-frag everyone else. There is no ability kit, no loadout screen, no battle pass drip-feeding you dopamine. What you get instead is a game where every kill comes directly from your hands, your timing, and your knowledge of the map geometry. The weapon suite is small but deliberately balanced. The railgun is a hitscan one-shot-to-half-health tool that punishes anyone standing still, the rocket launcher rewards splash-damage prediction and is the backbone of movement tech through rocket-jumping, the plasma gun melts at close range, and the shotgun is a panic-button you will either love or despise depending on whether its spread works in your favor at a given moment. That last point is a real inconsistency. The shotgun has always felt like it follows its own rules. The rest of the arsenal though has a clarity to it that modern shooters routinely fail to match. Time-to-kill is aggressive, which keeps rounds short and decisions meaningful. The modes on offer are Free for All, Team Deathmatch, Tournament 1v1, and Capture the Flag, bundled now with the Team Arena expansion which adds the Chaingun, Nailgun, and Prox Launcher alongside team-clan gameplay. The single-player ladder pits you through seven bot tiers of escalating difficulty, culminating in Xaero. It is not a campaign in any meaningful sense, but the bots at higher difficulties are genuinely good practice for learning area control and pickup timing, two skills that translate directly into multiplayer. The maps themselves, thirty-five of them across gothic dungeons, techno-industrial corridors, and platforms floating in the void, are designed entirely around movement flow. There is no camping geometry worth sitting in. Here is the part you need to know before buying in 2026: the in-game server browser is essentially non-functional. The active community exists, and it is small but real, but you will need to install the Quake3e engine fork and look up servers through external sites like q3a51.com or q3retro.com. That is a few extra steps that will immediately filter out anyone not already motivated. If you clear that hurdle, you will find FFA, CTF, and even freeze-tag servers running regularly. If you are coming in completely cold expecting a plug-and-play online shooter, manage expectations. The bot ladder will carry you far, but the real game is online and getting to it takes a small amount of homework. From a performance and config standpoint, the id Tech 3 engine is extremely configurable. FOV, texture detail, and model settings are all exposed. You will want a guide to sort out resolution and framerate cap on modern hardware, as the default Steam build needs a few console tweaks, but nothing that takes more than ten minutes. A 144hz monitor is not required but the engine's frame timings absolutely reward it. This is a mouse-heavy game, low sens with a bit of surface area to work with, and anything above 500 polling rate on a lightweight mouse will feel immediately comfortable. Fred, Scout Team

Quake III Arena

Quake III Arena

3 ago 2007id Software
GamerScout opina

Pure aim, pure movement, zero padding. Q3A still cuts through modern shooters like a railgun slug through drywall, if you know where to find the servers.

PC
Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Gold
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I've spent more hours than I care to admit with a 400 DPI mouse on maps that have no right to still feel this fast in 2026, and the honest answer is that Quake III Arena remains one of the tightest movement shooters ever shipped. The whole design philosophy is stripped to the bone: pick up the rocket launcher or railgun, control the quad damage spawn, master strafe-jumping, and out-frag everyone else. There is no ability kit, no loadout screen, no battle pass drip-feeding you dopamine. What you get instead is a game where every kill comes directly from your hands, your timing, and your knowledge of the map geometry. The weapon suite is small but deliberately balanced. The railgun is a hitscan one-shot-to-half-health tool that punishes anyone standing still, the rocket launcher rewards splash-damage prediction and is the backbone of movement tech through rocket-jumping, the plasma gun melts at close range, and the shotgun is a panic-button you will either love or despise depending on whether its spread works in your favor at a given moment. That last point is a real inconsistency. The shotgun has always felt like it follows its own rules. The rest of the arsenal though has a clarity to it that modern shooters routinely fail to match. Time-to-kill is aggressive, which keeps rounds short and decisions meaningful. The modes on offer are Free for All, Team Deathmatch, Tournament 1v1, and Capture the Flag, bundled now with the Team Arena expansion which adds the Chaingun, Nailgun, and Prox Launcher alongside team-clan gameplay. The single-player ladder pits you through seven bot tiers of escalating difficulty, culminating in Xaero. It is not a campaign in any meaningful sense, but the bots at higher difficulties are genuinely good practice for learning area control and pickup timing, two skills that translate directly into multiplayer. The maps themselves, thirty-five of them across gothic dungeons, techno-industrial corridors, and platforms floating in the void, are designed entirely around movement flow. There is no camping geometry worth sitting in. Here is the part you need to know before buying in 2026: the in-game server browser is essentially non-functional. The active community exists, and it is small but real, but you will need to install the Quake3e engine fork and look up servers through external sites like q3a51.com or q3retro.com. That is a few extra steps that will immediately filter out anyone not already motivated. If you clear that hurdle, you will find FFA, CTF, and even freeze-tag servers running regularly. If you are coming in completely cold expecting a plug-and-play online shooter, manage expectations. The bot ladder will carry you far, but the real game is online and getting to it takes a small amount of homework. From a performance and config standpoint, the id Tech 3 engine is extremely configurable. FOV, texture detail, and model settings are all exposed. You will want a guide to sort out resolution and framerate cap on modern hardware, as the default Steam build needs a few console tweaks, but nothing that takes more than ten minutes. A 144hz monitor is not required but the engine's frame timings absolutely reward it. This is a mouse-heavy game, low sens with a bit of surface area to work with, and anything above 500 polling rate on a lightweight mouse will feel immediately comfortable.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

Shooters

Etiquetas

singleplayermultiplayercloud-savesArena FPSStrafe-JumpingRocket-JumpingBot Ladderioquake3Freeze TagCPMAHigh Skill CeilingServer Browser Required

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

3-D Hardware Accelerator with full OpenGL® support, Pentium® 233 Mhz MMX®processor with 8 MB Video Card or Pentium II 266 Mhz processor with 4 MB Video Card, or AMD® 350 Mhz K6®-2 processor with 4 MB Video Card, 64 MB R…

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
69

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
id Software
Distribuidora
id Software
Fecha de lanzamiento
3 ago 2007

Modos de juego

singleplayer
multiplayer

Idiomas

Subtítulos (1)
English

Características

Cloud Saves

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Quake III Arena?

Quake III Arena está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Quake III Arena?

Quake III Arena se lanzó el 3 de agosto de 2007.

¿Quién desarrolló Quake III Arena?

Quake III Arena fue desarrollado por id Software.

¿Merece la pena comprar Quake III Arena?

Quake III Arena tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 69/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Action. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.