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The game takes place somewhere within the timeline of the third season of the American television series The X-Files.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.
The X-Files Collectible Card Game features nine distinct cards types, or suits: X-File: Featuring a case entity from The X-Files television series that symbolizes the dark forces underpinning the cases investigated by Mulder and Scully, each of these cards has four identifying characteristics (Affiliation, Motive, Method, and Result) about which opposing players will pose questions to ...
The X-Files: Resist or Serve is a 2004 survival horror game developed by Black Ops Entertainment and published by Vivendi Universal Games for the PlayStation 2 video game console. It is based on the television series The X-Files (1993–2002), and is the third game based on the series, after The X-Files: Unrestricted Access (1997) and The X ...
The X-Files Collectible Card Game was released in 1996, and an expansion set was released in 1997. [307] The X-Files has inspired four video games. In 1997, Fox Interactive released The X-Files: Unrestricted Access, a game-style database for Windows and Mac, which allowed users access to every case file. [308]
"End Game" is the seventeenth episode of the second season of the American science fiction television series The X-Files. It premiered on the Fox network on February 17, 1995 . It was directed by Rob Bowman , and written by Frank Spotnitz .
There was a mic drop moment at the end of an event in New York City celebrating 30 years of “The X-Files” when series creator Chris Carter reignited the debate around Dana Scully’s pregnancy.
Lamar derided the plot, calling it "Scully and Mulder Do Doom", and expressed surprise that the episode was written by William Gibson. [16] Robert Shearman and Lars Pearson, in their book Wanting to Believe: A Critical Guide to The X-Files, Millennium & The Lone Gunmen, rated the episode one star out of five. [17]
The X-Files Collectible Card Game was released in 1996, and an expansion pack was released in 1997. [13] The X-Files has inspired three video games. In 1998, The X-Files Game was released for the PC and Macintosh and a year later for the PlayStation.