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Revision as of 02:56, 19 June 2020

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Oremor nhoj em llik tsum uoy emag eht niw ot.
~ The Icon of Sin's reversed alert sound. Un-reversed: To win the game, you must kill me, John Romero.
Born from the tortured spirit of the Betrayer's son, it was by Hell's unholy design that the Icon of Sin was given flesh. The fearsome Titan, forged from the essence of mortal suffering, once bore a human soul - a soul now transmogrified and entombed within the still beating heart of its former self.
~ VEGA Data Entry on the Icon of Sin.

The Icon of Sin is the final boss in Doom II and Doom Eternal. It is one of the main antagonists of the Doom franchise.

Appearance

The Icon of Sin is a gigantic, grotesque head of a [demon embedded on a wall. It's forehead is open, exposing it's brain. The eyes are white without pupils. Even though the Icon of Sin talks, it's mouth doesn't move. The Icon of Sin appears as a massive, goat-like bio-mechanical head on a wall, with a surgically exposed brain that allows it to spawn endless scores of demons. Although only its head is visible, the endgame text indicates that the entity has a gigantic body as well.

In Doom II, the boss is not referred to by any specific name. The Doom II Official Guide refers to it as the "Dark One". It is known in the Final Doom manual introductory story as Baphomet.

The final boss is not an actual monster in the technical sense, since it does not count towards the monster kills percentage at the end of a level, and is not affected by the command line parameters that affect standard monsters.

Biography

Doom II

The Icon of Sin unleashes an endless amount of monsters except for Cyberdemons, Spider Masterminds, and zombies. The Icon of Sin will launch a cube towards the surface next to the player. When the cube hits the surface, it spawns into a random monster. The boss will launch another cube whether or not the player is still fighting the current monster. This means the player can fight a multitude of enemies at once. When defeated, the Icon of Sin along with the spawned monsters disintegrates.

Doom (2016)

The Icon of Sin makes a minor appearance in the 2016 reboot of the Doom franchise as a dormant demonic entity found within the depths of the Necropolis. Tablets in Argent D'Nur describes it as a weapon of infernal mass destruction which is "brought upon the heathens" of other worlds after their defenses have fallen to the forces of Hell, with "swift and merciless" vengeance, and having a role in the fall of Argent D'Nur that is briefly detailed.

There is also a small easter egg relating to it as well. Shooting the Icon of Sin in the forehead will make it say its classic line from Doom II, and then shoot a cube that holds a Doomguy figurine.

Doom Eternal

The Icon of Sin returns as the final boss of Doom Eternal. The Icon was the son of the Night Sentinel Commander known as the Betrayer, who lost him in a battle against the demons. The Betrayer made a pact with the Hell Priest Deag Grav, who had him lead the forces of Hell to revivie his son. Instead of giving back his son as promised, the son was damned to be resurrected in the form of the Icon, and Argent D'Nur was crushed and absorbed into Hell afterward. The son's soul is said to be bound only to its former humanity by his disembodied, still-beating heart, which ties connected to the Titan.

Informed of Khan Maykr's plans to revive the Icon of Sin by Samuel Hayden to consume Earth (and if the resulting black hole is left unchecked, the universe), Doomguy sets off to Urdak to stop the ritual the Maykrs are planning to control the beast once awakened. Once he destroys the heart of the Betrayer's son and frees his soul, all control over the Icon of Sin is lost, and the Titan travels to Earth via portal, rampaging the city it arrived at. After killing Khan Maykr and returning to Earth, Doomguy battles the Icon of Sin atop a ruined skyscraper.

In the first phase of the fight, the Icon of Sin is guarded by a suit of Maykr-designed armor that must be destroyed to get to its flesh. There are eight sections to this armor plating, which each of the sections being divided to one on its head and stomach and two on its arms and chest. After these are destroyed, the body parts become invulnerable for the rest of the phase. The Icon's movements also become faster and more aggressive as its parts are broken, so the smaller parts that move around more frequently should be targeted early before they become more difficult targets. The arena is also littered with items to help the player, such as ammo, healing items, and charges for the Blood Punch and Crucible to deal with the monsters it summons. For attacks the Icon of Sin directly delivers, it can punch and slam into the player for extreme damage, shoot fireballs from its head, spray fire from its hands, electrify some parts of the arena, and fire a somewhat heat-seeking blast of energy from its head. Once all of its armor is destroyed, it calls down a meteor shower before fleeing. The player must follow it through a portal to a new arena to continue the fight.

The second phase of the fight moves to a different building and remains similar to the first phase, with the goal now to destroy the exposed body of the beast in the same spots the armor was. The demons that spawn are more dangerous than the first phase's roster, and the Icon of Sin can not only angle its attacks by moving across the arena, but it can also use two new attacks (summoning meteors to rain down that leave rings of flame where they land and fire a beam of energy from its head) as well as its previous attacks.

Once the player defeats the Icon of Sin, the Icon of Sin collapses from the battle, and the Doomguy jumps on it to deliver a fatal Crucible stab to its exposed brain, breaking off the blade to finish off the beast.

Gallery

Trivia

  • In 2016, John Romero revealed to a Twitter user that Icon of Sin was the official Doom II boss name since 1994.
  • The Icon of Sin is on Earth gets increasingly powerful as long as it resides on Earth.

Concept

It was a late night and the walls were shaking at ID Software. Why? There could be only one reason: Romero is in the building! Otherwise, it was a quiet, unassuming office. Better yet, a library. Then things quieted down, and I supposed that Romero had left. In fact, everyone but Romero had left. As I discovered when he came into the room I was using for "sound development." He sat down next to me and said that we needed a sound for the final boss to make when a player enters that level. I said that I had some possibilities roughed out and since he was there we could plug them into the code to see how they'd work. We went into John's office to look at the level (he had the only 21" screen). While he was whizzing around the level, all of a sudden he said, "Wait, what's that?" He had clipping off, which means that he could walk through otherwise "solid" objects. He had walked into the wall where the final boss head was attached. Low and behold, there inside the brain of the boss was Romero's head on a stick! We both laughed a while and Romero decided that the artists (Adrian Carmack and Kevin Cloud) had put it there as a joke. As it turned out, John Carmack had programmed the code so that Romero's head was the object that a player had to hit in order to kill the boss. And this head was down a shaft inside of the wall so it was normally out of sight. It was at that point that Romero and I decided to record his voice and use it as the final boss sound. We went back into the sound room and John started saying different things in a very pumped up voice. He finally said "To win the game, you must kill me, John Romero." I took that phrase and put some phasing on it and then reversed it. Shades of the rumors of "Satan" on different pop recordings! We decided not to tell anyone else what it said. We had the fun of seeing the artists' expressions when they first entered the level with this sound going. We made them sweat a long time before we played the phrase in its original form. Can you tell that we always had a great time doing this stuff?
~ Robert Prince on the Icon of Sin.

Navigation

           78-782068 doom-logo Villains

Classic
Cyberdemon | Demons | Former Humans | Icon of Sin | Kronos | Mother Demon | Spider Mastermind | VIOS

Doom 3
Cyberdemon | Demons | Dr. Malcolm Betruger | Former Humans | Guardian of Hell and Seekers | Hell Hunters (Hell Time Hunter, Berserk Hunter & Invulnerability Hunter) | Sabaoth | Vagary

Reboot
Cyberdemon | Dark Lord | Demons | Doom Hunters | Former Humans | Gladiator | Hell Guards | Hell Priests (Deag Grav, Deag Ranak, Deag Nilox) | Icon of Sin | Khan Maykr | Marauders | Maykrs | Night Sentinels | Olivia Pierce | Order of the Deag | Samuel Hayden | Spider Mastermind

Films
Doom: Dr. Todd Carmack | The Infected | Sarge
Doom: Annihilation: Demons | Stanga | Dr. Malcolm Betruger