

On April 14 2010, Graf Zahl announced on the Doomworld forums that development of GZDoom had halted. An official release of ZDoom was made on February 14, 2008, and version 1.1.0 of GZDoom was released shortly afterward incorporating the changes from that version.
Gzdoom tutorial code#
On January 19, 2008, development of the port was put on hold until another official release of ZDoom is made, due to highly extensive changes to the ZDoom renderer (which consequently require extensively changing the OpenGL rendering code for compatibility) coming more frequently than Graf Zahl could catch up. The port was from then on tied to the ZDoom codebase. In 2005, Graf Zahl ported his renderer to the ZDoom Community Build, and this marked the first official release of GZDoom. GZDoom started as a new renderer for PrBoom, but this early version was never publicly released. This includes over a dozen Cacoward winners.

Many maps and mods, plus some total conversions and stand-alone games, have been exclusive to GZDoom. In particular, the ZScript language unique to GZDoom, combined with ACS and DECORATE inherited from ZDoom, enables a high level of gameplay modding and special mapping features. GZDoom remains a popular port due to both its unprecedented modding capability and graphical optimizations for modern hardware. First released in 2005, it has versions for Windows, Linux, and MacOS. GZDoom is a fork of the ZDoom source port created by Christoph Oelckers (Graf Zahl), who still oversees its development. Previously Doom Source License, 3-point BSD, others.
