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The X-Files Game

The X-Files Game
Thexfilesgamecover.jpg
Developer(s) HyperBole Studios
Publisher(s)
Director(s)
  • Greg Roach
Producer(s)
  • Phil Peters
Designer(s)
  • Greg Roach
Programmer(s)
  • Pete Isensee
  • Melanie McClaire
Artist(s)
  • Jeanne Franz
Writer(s)
  • Richard Dowdy
  • Greg Roach
Composer(s)
Platform(s)
Release date(s) Microsoft Windows
  • NA: May 31, 1998
  • EU: September 29, 1998
Mac OS
  • NA: June 1998
PlayStation
  • NA: October 13, 1999
  • EU: January 09, 1999
Genre(s) Interactive movie, point-and-click adventure
Mode(s) Single-player
Aggregate scores
Aggregator Score
GameRankings (PC) 59.97%
(PS) 53.00%
Metacritic (PC) 56/100
Review scores
Publication Score
Adventure Gamers 4/5 stars
AllGame (PS) 3.5/5 stars
(PC) 2.5/5 stars
CVG 3/10
Game Informer 3.75/10
Game Revolution C−
GameSpot (PC) 5.1/10
(PS) 4.2/10
IGN 5/10
OPM (US) 3/5 stars
PC Gamer (US) 35%
PC Zone 40%
The Cincinnati Enquirer 2.5/5 stars
Entertainment Weekly B+

The X-Files Game is an interactive movie point-and-click adventure video game developed by HyperBole Studios and first published by Fox Interactive. The game was released for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS and PlayStation in 1998, and is based on the television series The X-Files. A second, but unrelated game, The X-Files: Resist or Serve, was released for PlayStation 2 in 2004.

The game takes place somewhere within the timeline of the third season of The X-Files series. The story follows a young Seattle-based FBI agent named Craig Willmore (played by Jordan Lee Williams) who is assigned by Assistant Director Walter Skinner to investigate the disappearance of agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully, who were last seen in the Everett, Washington area. Agent Willmore must use his state-of-the-art spy tools: night vision goggles, a digital camera, PDA (an Apple Newton), lock picks, evidence kit, a standard issue handgun, a pair of handcuffs, and a badge to follow their trail. Along the way, he is partnered with a Seattle Police Department detective named Mary Astadourian (played by Paige Witte) and a minor subplot involves a relationship developing between the two.

Several of the actors from the TV series reprise their roles in the game, including David Duchovny (Mulder), Gillian Anderson (Scully), Mitch Pileggi (Skinner), Steven Williams (X), Bruce Harwood, Tom Braidwood and Dean Haglund (The Lone Gunmen) and—very briefly and depending upon the outcome of the game—William B. Davis (The Smoking Man). The game is set and was filmed in Seattle. The TV series actors filmed their relatively brief appearances in the game just before entering production on the feature film. The game's plotline involves aliens taking over the bodies of humans and contains many references to the show's extraterrestrial mythology. During the course of the game the "present day" date of April 1996 is displayed alongside certain locations, placing this "episode" after the season three episode "Avatar" and before "Wetwired" , which take place March 7 and April 27 respectively. This time is also after the first incident with the alien black oil in the episode "Piper Maru" of the third season.


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