The Artifact


 * This article is about the item found in Doom 3: Resurrection of Evil. For the items found in Heretic and Hexen, see Artifact.

"Hell reaches out for what is ours!"

- The Maledict

The Artifact, also known as the Heart of Hell and the Bloodstone, is a demonic device available to the player in the Doom 3 expansion pack, Resurrection of Evil. This Artifact, as a powerful device of non-Human origin, is the equivalent of the Soul Cube from Doom 3. It is a demonic heart-shaped device that was initially designed to aid the forces of Hell, but is used by the Marine. It also acts as a gateway between Hell and our dimension. The Ancient Martians captured the Artifact during Hell's first invasion, but were unable to destroy it, so they locked it away in a secret chamber.

When the UAC returns to Mars at the beginning of Resurrection of Evil, a team of Marines - including the game's protagonist - enter the Artifact's chamber and accidentally awaken it. This enables the forces of Hell under the command of Malcolm Betruger, now the Maledict, to invade again. Betruger also sends the three Hunters to kill the Marine and retrieve the Artifact for himself.

Much of the game's plot revolves around the Marine learning the truth about the Artifact and ultimately setting out to return it to Hell where it can be destroyed. At the end of the game, the Marine brings the Artifact to Hell and uses it to destroy the Maledict. The Artifact itself is destroyed in the process.

Properties
"Created by the ancient civilization to defend against the forces of hell."

- PDA Description

The Artifact uses human souls as opposed to demon ones. It is also more efficient, requiring one human soul per use as opposed to five demon souls in the case of the Soul Cube. When used near human corpses, it charges up by absorbing souls (they'll be seen as a red glow on a corpse) and destroying the bodies. The Artifact will absorb souls automatically when needed so long as it is being held over the corpse; it will not absorb a soul if it is already fully charged with its maximum capacity of three souls. Because one soul leaves the Artifact every time it is used, it is recommended to use it mainly in tight spots. Fortunately, it appears that this hellish invasion was somewhat less prone to zombifying humans, as Zombies (aside from Z-Secs) are less common, and many of the killed UAC employees' souls are available.

The Artifact itself has no attack capability, but is more strategic than the Soul Cube. It has the ability to give the player a period in which he manipulates time, gains super strength, and becomes temporarily invulnerable -- very similar to a Berserker. These abilities become available each time the player defeats one of the three Hell Hunters, respectively.

A human heart-shaped object with a large curved handle, the player will gain this at the start of the game but it will be useless until they defeat the Helltime Hunter, at which point the Artifact will absorb its Helltime abilities. Defeating the Berserk Hunter and Invulnerability Hunter allows the Artifact to absorb their abilities as well.


 * Helltime allows the player to move very fast, represented by time appearing to slow down to the point that enemies can not react to your movements.
 * Berserk strengthens all weapons, including punches that can kill a Hell Knight or a Bruiser in one hit.
 * Invulnerability is self-explanatory.

All powers possessed by the Artifact are activated simultaneously when invoked, meaning someone with a charged Artifact later in the game has the potential to become a lightning fast, invulnerable death machine that can effortlessly rip apart a Hell Knight with his bare hands.

Trivia
The Thule Medallion, an artifact from Wolfenstein, has two similar powers - Mire (slows down time) and Empower (similar to Berserker).

The Artifact also has features in common with the One Ring in J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, such as being a long-lost evil device with demonic power that can only be destroyed where it was created (Hell and Mordor, respectively), which gives the user certain magical powers, and possibly which slowly corrupts the user (implied in the Artifact's case, although not made a part of the game).