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Deathmatch



Deathmatch (DM) is a widely-used gameplay mode very well integrated into first-person shooter computer games. The goal of a deathmatch game is to kill (or "frag") as many other players as possible in the time given; until the level is completed or until the frag limit or time limit is reached. Once one of these conditions is met the match is over and the winner is whoever has accumulated the most frags. === Background === It has been suggested that in 1983, Drew Major and Kyle Powell probably played the world's first deathmatch with Snipes, a text-mode game that was later credited with being the inspiration behind Novell Netware. The term was originally coined by John Romero in 1993 during the development of ''Doom''. In a Team deathmatch, the players are organised into two or more teams, with each team having its own frag-count. Friendly fire may or may not cause damage, depending on the game and the rules used - if it does, a player that kills a teammate (called a team kill) usually decreases their own score and the team's score by one point. The team with the highest frag-count at the end wins. Aliases: Slayer and Team Slayer (''Halo (video game series)'' for Microsoft Xbox), Combat (Rare (video game company) ''Perfect Dark'' for Nintendo 64) Other forms of Deathmatch, though not necessarily for a first person shooter, include the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series' "K.O. Fest" mode. Computer and video game terminology


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Words begining with Deathmatch:

Deathmatch
Deathmatch_Classic
Deathmatch_wrestling


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