The Feeble Files is a 1997 adventure video game developed and published by Adventure Soft for Microsoft Windows, and republished by MacPlay for Macintosh in 2001 in Europe and 2002 in the United States. The game is a comedic science fiction title in which players assume the role of Feeble, an alien tasked with burning crop circles across the galaxy. Adventure Soft began development of the game after seeking different subject matter to their Simon the Sorcerer series of adventure games. The studio pivoted to 3D computer graphics, creating animations using Silicon Graphics hardware. Drawing from sciene fiction literature and television as inspiration, the studio hired Red Dwarf actor Robert Llewelyn to provide voice acting for the titular protagonist.
Upon release, The Feeble Files received a generally positive reception, with reviewers praising the game's writing, sense of humor and performances, and criticism directed at its puzzle design, difficulty and interface. Some reviewers of the Mac version remarked that the game's visuals had dated poorly by the time of release. The game was republished for GOG.com in December 2008.
For interaction the game uses a point-and-click navigation system synonymous with adventure games. The player is in control of the main character, Feeble, and must solve various puzzles to advance through the game and complete his quest. The player later gets the opportunity to use SAM, a robot with a penchant for genocide, to solve certain puzzles in the game. When using SAM the players cursor changes and different options are available to interact with objects in the environment, adding more depth to the gameplay.
At one point during the game the player must win several arcade games in order to advance, but these games use completely different gameplay methods and often proved to be difficult for players. In the end Adventure Soft released a saved game just after the arcade section to allow people to carry on playing.
The story and puzzles within the game are all of a linear nature.
The Feeble Files is loosely based on elements of the dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell which describes a government and society similar to Feeble's and features a protagonist with similar ambitions as Feeble's.
The Feeble Files was developed by Adventure Soft, a British game development company created by Mike and Simon Woodroffe, who had previously released the Simon the Sorcerer series of games. Simon stated that The Feeble Files was conceived shortly after release of ' as a subtler and more mature concept, as a means to expand his horizons as a writer, and "have a break" from the series to explore new characters and ideas. It was inspired by science fiction literature including The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, 1984 and Brave New World. British science fiction television was also an influence; Simon was influenced by Blake's 7, Doctor Who, and Red Dwarf, and the game featured the voice acting of Red Dwarf actor Robert Llewellyn as the protagonist.
Development of The Feeble Files was undertaken by Simon and Michael Woodroffe as leads, with additional staff including programmer Alan Bridgman and a team of twelve graphic artists. The studio incurred great cost in investing in Silicon Graphics workstations and staff training to implement the 3D computer graphics for the characters and backgrounds, which were some of the earliest in an adventure game. These were rendered in 3D in Super VGA, animated using PowerAnimator, and converted into 2D sprites in a method similar to Donkey Kong Country. The title of The Feeble Files was satirical and influenced by the film Meet The Feebles and the television show The X-Files; in Germany the game and its protagonist were renamed to Floyd: There are Still Heroes.
The Feeble Files was released in Europe in 1997. A Macintosh-only United States release was published by MacPlay in 2002. Simon stated that the game was not a commercial success, and it and the commercial failure of its successor Simon the Sorcerer 3D exhausted the company's internal funding. In 2006, the game was included as part of the open-source program ScummVM, allowing users to play the game on various systems. The game was remastered and rereleased on GOG.com in 2008.
The Feeble Files received generally positive reviews. Critics generally enjoyed the game's writing and sense of humour, and praised its distinctly British voice acting and accents. 'Writing that British accents complemented the "drily humorous" tone of The Feeble Files, Adventure Gamers enjoyed the comic relief of the game and praised its worldbuilding and attention to detail. John Altman of Computer Games Strategy Plus praised the game's charm and wit, highlighting the game's variation between satire, slapstick, and "deliciously edgy" and "darker" undertone. In contrast, PC Zone found the game's irony and pop-culture references tiresome, stating its "heavily referential" nature indicated its creators were "short on original ideas".
Reviewers expressed a mixed assessment of the graphics, with some praising it, and others finding them lacking; reviews of the 2003 Mac version noting the graphics had dated poorly. The game's interface also received criticism, with Adventure Gamers stating inventory navigation and use of separate menus for picking up, using, and combining objects "totally unnecessary and counter-intuitive".
However, the gameplay and puzzle design garnered a generally negative reception, with critics highlighting their difficulty; PC Gamer UK called them "downright obscure and completely unfathomable". Atman wrote that the puzzles were unfair, overly difficult and not integrated into the game's plot. Gareth Jones of PC PowerPlay remarked that the hint system "could have been a little more explicit" due to their vague instructions. Several critics felt the player character's movement speed slowed the pace of the game. The minigames also were critiqued.
Describing the game as "funny" but "an overwhelmingly difficult, massively frustrating experience that points to nearly everything that was wrong with adventure game design", Kurt Kalata of Hardcore Gaming 101 critiqued The Feeble Files, finding that its interface design, difficulty, and the tedium of the puzzles outweighed the quality of its visuals or writing. In a separate analysis of the game's opening puzzles, Kalata critiqued its design for involving too many secondary goals with solutions that did not make sense. Richard Moss of Ars Technica wrote that the game "had a fantastic concept and great humor, although its overall design was less impressive".