Compare Spy Fox in "Dry Cereal" prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Humongous Entertainment. Published by Humongous Entertainment. Released on 4/17/2014. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Adventure, Casual.

Pure nostalgia bait for anyone who grew up on Humongous Entertainment, and a genuinely solid kids' point-and-click for those discovering it fresh - spy parody humor included at no extra charge.

My first thought booting this up was: does a 1997 kids' adventure hold up when you know exactly what it is? Mostly yes, and in one specific way it holds up better than you'd expect. Spy Fox in Dry Cereal is a point-and-click aimed squarely at children around ages 8-11, built on Humongous Entertainment's Junior Adventure format but with noticeably more mechanical depth than stablemates like Putt-Putt or Freddi Fish. The setting is a Greek island called Acidophilus, the villain is a goat named William the Kid running a corporation called Nectar of the Goats (N.O.G.), and the entire tone is a Get Smart and James Bond parody filtered through a cartoon animal world. The puns come fast and they are genuinely funny. On the mechanical side, Dry Cereal steps things up from the average Humongous title. You carry a standard item inventory plus a separate gadget loadout supplied by Professor Quack, and you can only hold four gadgets at a time, which means occasionally trekking back to the Mobile Command Center to swap them out. That back-and-forth can feel slow, but it creates real puzzle logic: figure out which gadget applies to which situation, then go get it. Talk Balloons let you interrogate specific NPCs rather than just clicking through generic conversation, and some puzzles are timed - copying the party invitation to board the S.S. Deadweight while distracting the concession stand owner is a good example of the game demanding actual attention. The randomized branching structure means the story path changes between playthroughs, with the "White Water" route involving latitude-longitude navigation being the harder of the main paths. A single run clocks in around an hour, maybe a bit more if the puzzles trip you up. What the game does exceptionally well is tone. The writing is loaded with wordplay, the flat clipart-style visuals have genuine character, and Bob Zenk's nasal, snarky voice performance as Spy Fox lands most of its jokes. The world is slightly rougher-edged than other Humongous games - NPCs aren't always friendly, the stakes feel real for a kids' game - and that gives Dry Cereal a distinct personality. There is a built-in minigame called Happy Fun Sub accessible via the SPY Watch that is honestly skippable; it is a shallow shoot-em-up that outstays its welcome almost immediately and does not add much. For adults buying this solo: it is a short, charming ride but not a deep one. The audience here is kids aged roughly 8 and up, or adults sharing it with those kids, or people with genuine nostalgia for the Humongous catalog. If you fall into any of those three categories, the low price of entry makes it a reasonable pickup. If you have never heard of Humongous Entertainment and are not hunting for retro adventure gaming, this is not the place to start your genre education. Two sequels followed, and the general consensus is the series gets stronger as it goes, so think of Dry Cereal as a confident but not fully realized opener. Alex, Scout Team

Spy Fox in "Dry Cereal"

Spy Fox in "Dry Cereal"

Apr 17, 2014Humongous Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Pure nostalgia bait for anyone who grew up on Humongous Entertainment, and a genuinely solid kids' point-and-click for those discovering it fresh - spy parody humor included at no extra charge.

PCMacLinux
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum
Best Price Available
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GamerScout Verdict

Best for families with young kids or adults chasing Humongous Entertainment nostalgia - solo adults will find it over in an hour.

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About Spy Fox in "Dry Cereal"

My first thought booting this up was: does a 1997 kids' adventure hold up when you know exactly what it is? Mostly yes, and in one specific way it holds up better than you'd expect. Spy Fox in Dry Cereal is a point-and-click aimed squarely at children around ages 8-11, built on Humongous Entertainment's Junior Adventure format but with noticeably more mechanical depth than stablemates like Putt-Putt or Freddi Fish. The setting is a Greek island called Acidophilus, the villain is a goat named William the Kid running a corporation called Nectar of the Goats (N.O.G.), and the entire tone is a Get Smart and James Bond parody filtered through a cartoon animal world. The puns come fast and they are genuinely funny. On the mechanical side, Dry Cereal steps things up from the average Humongous title. You carry a standard item inventory plus a separate gadget loadout supplied by Professor Quack, and you can only hold four gadgets at a time, which means occasionally trekking back to the Mobile Command Center to swap them out. That back-and-forth can feel slow, but it creates real puzzle logic: figure out which gadget applies to which situation, then go get it. Talk Balloons let you interrogate specific NPCs rather than just clicking through generic conversation, and some puzzles are timed - copying the party invitation to board the S.S. Deadweight while distracting the concession stand owner is a good example of the game demanding actual attention. The randomized branching structure means the story path changes between playthroughs, with the "White Water" route involving latitude-longitude navigation being the harder of the main paths. A single run clocks in around an hour, maybe a bit more if the puzzles trip you up. What the game does exceptionally well is tone. The writing is loaded with wordplay, the flat clipart-style visuals have genuine character, and Bob Zenk's nasal, snarky voice performance as Spy Fox lands most of its jokes. The world is slightly rougher-edged than other Humongous games - NPCs aren't always friendly, the stakes feel real for a kids' game - and that gives Dry Cereal a distinct personality. There is a built-in minigame called Happy Fun Sub accessible via the SPY Watch that is honestly skippable; it is a shallow shoot-em-up that outstays its welcome almost immediately and does not add much. For adults buying this solo: it is a short, charming ride but not a deep one. The audience here is kids aged roughly 8 and up, or adults sharing it with those kids, or people with genuine nostalgia for the Humongous catalog. If you fall into any of those three categories, the low price of entry makes it a reasonable pickup. If you have never heard of Humongous Entertainment and are not hunting for retro adventure gaming, this is not the place to start your genre education. Two sequels followed, and the general consensus is the series gets stronger as it goes, so think of Dry Cereal as a confident but not fully realized opener.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

singleplayertrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Point-and-ClickKids AdventureSpy ParodyRandomized PathsFully Voice ActedGadget PuzzlesScummVMFamily Co-opShort Playthrough

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 / 8.1 / 10
Memory
512 MB RAM
Storage
512 MB available space
Graphics
100% DirectX compatible graphics
Processor
1.0 GHz Processor
Sound Card
100% DirectX compatible card or onboard sound

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
1 GB RAM
Storage
512 MB available space
Graphics
100% DirectX compatible graphics
Processor
1.5 GHz Processor
Sound Card
100% DirectX compatible card or onboard sound

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Game Info

Developer
Humongous Entertainment
Publisher
Humongous Entertainment
Release Date
Apr 17, 2014

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What platforms is Spy Fox in "Dry Cereal" available on?

Spy Fox in "Dry Cereal" is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Spy Fox in "Dry Cereal" released?

Spy Fox in "Dry Cereal" was released on 17 April 2014.

Who developed Spy Fox in "Dry Cereal"?

Spy Fox in "Dry Cereal" was developed by Humongous Entertainment.