DuckReconMajor Posted October 28, 2009 I looked at a couple Doom 2 themed wads and I started to wonder... Does anyone even know what a gantlet is? 0 Share this post Link to post
lupinx-Kassman Posted October 28, 2009 If I am not mistaken a gantlet is supposed to be some sort of obstacle course. 0 Share this post Link to post
Snarboo Posted October 28, 2009 One of the definitions listed is "an attack from all sides", so I'm guessing that's the meaning id intended. 0 Share this post Link to post
GreyGhost Posted October 28, 2009 DuckReconMajor said:Does anyone even know what a gantlet is? Heh - I've played too many turn-based RPG's to not know that. 0 Share this post Link to post
Nomad Posted October 28, 2009 I remember watching some medieval type movie in which there was this big mechanical obstacle course called the gauntlet, with all sorts of hazards that people would attempt to brave to show their toughness. I don't recall what it was. Maybe it was a television show; Hercules and/or Xena sounds about right, but who knows. I'm pretty sure that's the inspiration for the name of the map, though. Snarboo and Lupinx are both right. [edit] Ah, here's something relevant: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Running_the_gauntlet This is likely the basic inspiration for the name. 0 Share this post Link to post
Gez Posted October 28, 2009 Word History: The spelling gauntlet is acceptable for both gauntlet meaning "glove" or "challenge" and gauntlet meaning "a form of punishment in which lines of men beat a person forced to run between them"; but this has not always been the case. The story of the gauntlet used in to throw down the gauntlet is linguistically unexciting: it comes from the Old French word gantelet, a diminutive of gant, "glove." From the time of its appearance in Middle English (in a work composed in 1449), the word has been spelled with an au as well as an a, still a possible spelling. But the gauntlet used in to run the gauntlet is an alteration of the earlier English form gantlope, which came from the Swedish word gatlopp, a compound of gata, "lane," and lopp, "course." The earliest recorded form of the English word, found in 1646, is gantelope, showing that alteration of the Swedish word had already occurred. The English word was then influenced by the spelling of the word gauntlet, "glove," and in 1676 we find the first recorded instance of the spelling gauntlet for this word, although gantelope is found as late as 1836. From then on spellings with au and a are both found, but the au seems to have won out. 0 Share this post Link to post
Catoptromancy Posted October 28, 2009 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ms_beCckGc 0 Share this post Link to post
PhilibusMo Posted October 28, 2009 I read somewhere that a gantlet is something to do with junction boxes on railways. Although I very much doubt that is the meaning id intended. 0 Share this post Link to post
Kyka Posted October 28, 2009 Gez said:The earliest recorded form of the English word, found in 1646, is gantelope, Somehow, I don't think "The gantelope" quite cuts it as a Doom level name. 0 Share this post Link to post
printz Posted October 28, 2009 I think it's the main yard in map03 that represents the gantlet. 0 Share this post Link to post
DuckReconMajor Posted October 28, 2009 PhilibusMo said:I read somewhere that a gantlet is something to do with junction boxes on railways. Although I very much doubt that is the meaning id intended. I thought it was. Not like anything in Doom 2 resembles real life anyway. 0 Share this post Link to post
Super Jamie Posted October 29, 2009 It's a misspelling of gauntlet, used in the context of an obstacle course rather than a glove. E3M2 could have also been called the gauntlet :P 0 Share this post Link to post
Colusio Posted October 29, 2009 printz said:I think it's the main yard in map03 that represents the gantlet. Millions of space marines died there... 0 Share this post Link to post
myk Posted October 29, 2009 Various areas are gantlet-like. Right after the start you can get attacked by the shotgun zombies behind the crusher windows and the zombies in the switch room, getting on the lift in the crate room can get you surrounded by imps, and the final area opens up to reveal chaingun zombies on each side. Super Jamie said: It's a misspelling of gauntlet, A misspelling is a spelling that's not accepted, like mispeling or something. One (Funk & Wagmalls) dictionary I have specifically applies gantlet to the punishment (and thus by extension "attack from two or all sides") and train related acceptations, and gauntlet for the glove. Others just assume either variant in any context. 0 Share this post Link to post
Gez Posted October 29, 2009 myk said:Various areas are gantlet-like. Right after the start you can get attacked by the shotgun zombies behind the crusher windows and the zombies in the switch room, getting on the lift in the crate room can get you surrounded by imps, and the final area opens up to reveal chaingun zombies on each side. You seem to be talking about MAP04: The Focus here, not MAP03: The Gantlet. 0 Share this post Link to post
Phobus Posted October 29, 2009 Likewise, E3M2 is to be questioned in the same way, simply because having looked up what a Slough is, you get two basic choices: 1) A muddy, swamp-like landscape. 2) A place in England Neither of these would be "Grey, bleak stone maze" :P I think a lot of the titles are just what sounded cool at the time. 0 Share this post Link to post
PhilibusMo Posted October 29, 2009 Phobus said:Likewise, E3M2 is to be questioned in the same way, simply because having looked up what a Slough is, you get two basic choices: 1) A muddy, swamp-like landscape. 2) A place in England However Slough is a pretty hellish place. 0 Share this post Link to post
myk Posted October 29, 2009 It refers to the Slough of Despond. Maybe the sand is quicksand :p 0 Share this post Link to post
Super Jamie Posted October 29, 2009 Phobus said:1) A muddy, swamp-like landscape. 2) A place in England "Grey, bleak stone maze" But these are all the same thing! :P 0 Share this post Link to post