Multi-Arena HeadQuarters: Custom Maps for RA2 — MAHQ Screenshots Page

"Welcome to the MAHQ Screenshots page. Below you will find screenshots from the various maps found here at MAHQ, as well as links to download those maps and also check out the RA2IO review if one is available. Click on the map name (i.e. RA2CAB1) to download. You can also click the images to see a larger version. The maps are listed in reverse chronological order. So the most recently released maps are towards the top."

The Engines of Creation: Stronghold Opposition for Q3A (V.2) — by Remco SithLord Mooijweer

"q3strongholdv2.bsp — Stronghold Opposition for Q3A, version 2.0, by Remco SithLord Mooijweer, April 12, 2001, for Quake III Team Arena. Stronghold Opposition for Q3A is a CTF map based on Quake 2 CTF's q2ctf2.bsp — Stronghold Opposition, but built from scratch. Additional credits to id software for Quake III Arena & Quake III Team Arena — Kiltron for his texturepacks — Evil Lair for the crate textures — Dave 'Zoid' Kirsch for the original mapdesign — Eraser, Lynx, Mr SDI, Menno de Benno, Nerdshuntress, r3tina, Unrevocable History and WayWard for play-testing and design tips."

Quake 2 Clan: Base of the Pillar — UsUL Clan: Founded in 1998

"Founded in 1998, UsUL is a Quake clan based on very simple principals: We enjoy the game and the online experience. We enjoy the friendship of our clan members. We don't get much sleep. Egos and bad attitudes are not welcome, but friendship, honor, and trust are. So what is a UsUL anyway? Usul is a term taken from the Dune series by Frank Herbert. It literally means the "base of the pillar", but also refers to the underlying principals that form the base of the universe. (Just like UsUL forms the basis of everything Quake. Well, OK, maybe not, but there it is.)"

1997: Manhattan Memorial Marathon Photos, by David crt Wright — crt’s M3 Pictures

"M3: Manhattan Memorial (day) Marathon. m3 was a quake LAN party in NYC, May 23-May 26, 1997. m3 was free, and was held at Pseudo Online (home of quakecast). although m3 was byoc, many quakers graciously left their computers on, explicitly allowing those without computers to play quake. m3 was sponsored by the cyberweb cafe, pseudo online, and planetquake."