The Apogee Throwback Pack
The Apogee Throwback Pack is a collection of four classic Apogee Software titles all in one kick ass package. Blast your way across the galaxy as British Special Agent Blake Stone in "Aliens of Gold" and "Planet Strike", then take on an ancient evil menace as the H.U.N.T in "Rise of the Triad".Key Features:
Four classic games that offer hours and hours of nostalgia ridden gameplay. Full widescreen support for modern Windows and Mac operating systems. All wrapped up in one sleek package that allows for easy modding.
- Blake Stone: Aliens of Gold
- Blake Stone: Planet Strike
- Rise of the Triad
- Extreme Rise of the Triad
Many players wondered how Apogee would follow the success of Wolfenstein 3D in 1992. The answer was "Blake Stone: Aliens of Gold"! Where Wolf3D took you into the past; thrust into a world at war – Blake rockets you into the future where a sinister madman, Dr. Pyrus Goldfire, is using genetics to create an army of bizarre creatures and wage war on Earth.
In "Planet Strike", once again, British agent Blake Stone will find himself in a life or death struggle for the control of humanity’s future. After a five year manhunt for the elusive Dr. Goldfire, the search has finally ended on Planet Selon at the abandoned STAR Institute Training Complex. If the reports are correct, then Dr. Goldfire is alive and has once again created a fiendish army of evil mutants. Blake is going to need all his wits, skill, and the best firepower money can buy to put an end to Goldfire’s plans.
"Rise of the Triad" thrusts you into the world of an elite group of operatives called the HUNT (High-Risk United Nations Taskforce). Together you must stop a maniacal cult leader from killing millions of people.
While scouting a remote island, you are suddenly surrounded by enemy troops with guns blazing. In the distance you see your boat–your only chance to escape–explode into matchsticks. In front of you is a huge fortress monastery, and your only way out… is in. You’re equipped with awesome, high-tech weaponry like heat-seeking missiles, split missiles, and the Flamewall cannon, which leaves a trail of charred skeletons in its wake. You’ll also find magical instruments and weapons so incredible they defy description.
"Extreme Rise of the Triad" ups the ante with over 40 new levels as the HUNT returns to take on even more maniacal Triad madness. Not enough for you? There’s even a RandROTT level randomizer so the ludicrous fun never ends! What are you waiting for?!
Steam User 8
This Apogee package is a gift for fans! Because these games are very good, each one is fun, and they work 100% well in DOSBox.
And of course, for those who enjoy FPS games like Wolfenstein 3D, DOOM, Duke Nukem 3D, Catacomb 3D... You're in for a treat!
The wait was worth it!
Steam User 8
A good set of four games, they have old controls and the graphics make your eyes bleed.
Steam User 1
"Just think: All SIX Blake Stone games for $59.95--that's less than $6 per game!"
--- Blake Stone, Ordering Info Menu, Screen no.3
Steam User 0
this has a number of classic fps games that are enjoyable, if you can afford it pick it up
Steam User 1
The Apogee Throwback Pack, developed by Apogee Software and published by Apogee Entertainment, is less a simple compilation and more a curated snapshot of the formative years of PC first-person shooters. It gathers four titles—Blake Stone: Aliens of Gold, Blake Stone: Planet Strike, Rise of the Triad: Dark War, and Extreme Rise of the Triad—into a single modern package, offering both convenience and historical context. For anyone who grew up playing shareware discs or browsing BBS catalogs filled with Apogee promos, the collection immediately evokes a specific era of PC gaming, one defined by experimentation, technological breakthroughs, and a willingness to push beyond what was considered possible on consumer hardware. These games weren’t just products; they were stepping stones that helped shape the future of the shooter genre, and the Throwback Pack openly embraces that legacy.
Blake Stone, which consumes half of the collection, represents an interesting transitional moment, building on Wolfenstein 3D’s foundation while pushing toward a more ambitious, sci-fi direction. Its maze-like levels, secret passages, robotic enemies, and corporate-horror aesthetic demonstrate how developers began layering story and worldbuilding into shooters without sacrificing pace or accessibility. While its engine limitations are apparent today—no vertical aiming, rigid geometry, repetitive textures—there is a charm in its structured simplicity. Enemy animations, weapon feedback, and sound effects all serve the fantasy of being a lone agent infiltrating a dystopian facility. The sequel, Planet Strike, sharpens pacing, difficulty, and environmental variety, making it feel like an early attempt at refining FPS campaign structure rather than merely expanding the original. For retro-minded players, both remain surprisingly engaging, provided one accepts the rhythm and design philosophy of the time.
Rise of the Triad, meanwhile, represents a more audacious leap. Instead of following the realism-leaning evolution that would soon dominate shooters, ROTT embraces excess. It features explosive weapons capable of vaporizing enemies, bouncing projectiles, jump-pads, destructible glass, surreal power-ups, and a knowingly absurd narrative about cultists and the elite paramilitary tasked with stopping them. Movement is slippery and fast, firefights escalate quickly, and the game’s willingness to break rules gives it an anarchic personality many modern shooters lack. Extreme Rise of the Triad pushes that even further with brutal difficulty, additional levels, and a design philosophy built around replayability and skill mastery. Together, they represent an alternate evolutionary branch of the FPS—one where creativity, humor, and spectacle mattered more than realism or polish.
Technically, The Apogee Throwback Pack succeeds primarily through accessibility. Instead of requiring players to navigate DOS prompts, configuration files, legacy drivers, or abandonware forums, the bundle launches cleanly on modern operating systems with DOSBox handling the under-the-hood emulation. It is not a flashy remaster—there are no rebuilt assets, rebalanced encounters, or dramatic visual enhancements—but that restraint works in its favor. The goal here is preservation, not reinterpretation. Players still get the original MIDI soundtrack, sprite-based art, and chunky audio effects, all faithfully intact. Some users may need to adjust control inputs, mouse sensitivity, or display scaling to suit contemporary expectations, but once configured, the games run smoothly and authentically.
Because this compilation is deeply rooted in nostalgia and historical appreciation, reception depends heavily on a player’s relationship with retro shooters. Those who expect modern fluidity, narrative complexity, or advanced aiming systems may find the grid-based level design, lack of verticality, and repetitive enemy encounters archaic. Yet that simplicity is exactly what others find appealing. These games reward spatial memory, secret hunting, quick reflexes, and pattern recognition, and they rarely waste time with cinematic interruptions or elaborate onboarding sequences. The purity of the gameplay loop—enter, survive, explore, escape—remains intact, and for players who enjoy dissecting early-FPS design, the Throwback Pack becomes a fascinating learning tool as much as entertainment.
What ultimately makes The Apogee Throwback Pack valuable is its respect for its own history. Instead of hiding its age, it celebrates it. Players get to experience the awkward yet exciting adolescence of the shooter genre, complete with ambitious mistakes, eccentric experimentation, and innovations that would later influence Doom, Duke Nukem 3D, and countless future games. The collection feels like a museum exhibit you can touch, bend, and shoot your way through, and that tactile connection to the past is increasingly rare in modern digital storefronts.
For retro enthusiasts, game preservation advocates, and anyone curious about the origins of the FPS genre, the pack is a worthwhile and affordable investment. It offers hours of content, historical insight, and a reminder that creativity thrives even under strict technical constraints. It may not convert players who have no interest in vintage design or pixel-era presentation, but for those who appreciate gaming’s roots, The Apogee Throwback Pack remains an essential, lovingly assembled time capsule of PC shooter history.
Rating: 8/10
Steam User 0
Anything that allows me to play Blake Stone is 10/10
Steam User 0
Classic games. A remaster would be nice.