For some folks, this was their first map.

Others are clearly grizzled veterans.

Some maps are very literal with their Brutalist buildings, pouring classic chunky concrete structures.

Exploring concrete hell in a screenshot from Quake’s Brutalist Jam 2 map pack.

Some of my favourite maps do both, transitioning from reality into unreality without changing building materials.

Some very good uncanny concrete otherworlds.

As with the first pack, I enjoyed seeing the different ways people worked with the theme.

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A few classic Brutalist cityscapes, including one estate with concrete cat sculptures.

A good number of unsettling towering unreal spaces cast in mundane concrete.

One world tree whose spiky concrete twigs reminded me more ofthe iconic warning landscape for long-term nuclear waste storage.

Exploring concrete hell in a screenshot from Quake’s Brutalist Jam 2 map pack.

One map ends in an Action Quake 2 joke, which did make me laugh.

A low-gravity space installation.

A map from the original Quake campaign stretched upwards and repoured with concrete.

Exploring concrete hell in a screenshot from Quake’s Brutalist Jam 2 map pack.

Concrete contrasting with meat.

I really enjoyed poking around and seeing the full range of concrete creations.

And I do really appreciate that this time, the hub tracks which levels you have already completed.

Exploring concrete hell in a screenshot from Quake’s Brutalist Jam 2 map pack.

As you finish maps, their glowing white portal in the door room will go dark.

For more free Brutalist fun, do also check outdelightful first-person explorer Babbdi.

Exploring concrete hell in a screenshot from Quake’s Brutalist Jam 2 map pack.

Exploring concrete hell in a screenshot from Quake’s Brutalist Jam 2 map pack.

Exploring concrete hell in a screenshot from Quake’s Brutalist Jam 2 map pack.