

Here, Monkeypenny hands Spy Fox some drachmas and a special laser toothbrush for cutting through thick steel. Ah, I had forgotten about the fortune cookie Monkeypenny mentioned - it came with our airplane meal, and contains an entrance code, 555-4023, which sends the phone booth down to an underground command center. It seems we have nowhere else to go, so we'll have to take a look at inventory. The door to an unidentified building up a staircase is also locked, though we get a brief glimpse of its interior while SPY Fox is knocking - the desk has a nameplate indicating it would normally be occupied by one Grande Fromagio, the Big Cheese as it were. The Greek Cantina in the town square is also closed at the moment. This is in keeping with the Humongous tradition of providing plenty of fun, non-essential point-and-click gags for the player, though this joke is a little more complex with sardonic commentary from Fox ("Your mother must be so proud") and quite a few different animations are available with repeated clicks.Ī trinket shop nearby is closed, as we have arrived unfashionably early we can dial random numbers on a nearby pay phone, with random responses, including one at the offices of Amalgamated Moo Juice indicating the staff is "all tied up." There's a Feta Factory down the pier, but it's locked up tight behind a solid steel door. After safely landing using a remarkably well-damped pogo-stick, we're supposed to meet up with Miss Monkeypenny at the Mobile Command Center, but we'll do a little exploration first.Ī salty penguin (who sounds like Bobcat Goldthwaite) is eager to show off his chest tattoo, with animations including a dolphin that leaps from pectoral to pectoral. Beyond this point, I'll be detailing my own experience, so there are sure to be.Īs we plummet to earth, we're allowed as much time as we need to pick one of Spy Fox's pen gadgets for a safe landing, though he (in a Don Adams-inspired voice) urges us to do something at frequent intervals. Interested readers are encouraged to spend some time with SPY Fox #1 before proceeding here - the animation is loose and energetic, some of the writing and voice work is genuinely funny (especially if you're about 10 years old), and it's a perfectly pleasant round of old-school point-and-click adventuring.

Then our hero parachutes down to the Greek island of Acidophilus to begin his mission. As the curtain rises, in a pun-heavy bit of exposition, our Bond-inspired hero SPY Fox learns that an evil goat named William the Kid has stolen the world's milk reserves in an effort to subvert the bovine dairy industry and replace it with goat's milk.
