"Feelie" is a term first used by Infocom to refer to the extra content included with the boxed versions of their interactive fiction computer games. Feelies differed from game to game and were of the same theme as the game they came packaged with. For example, Wishbringer, a fantasy game with magic, came with a "Magick glowing stone." These extra objects and documents sometimes served as a form of copy protection, as several games were impossible to solve without information found in their feelies. Although the term was first used by Infocom, it can refer to similar content found in any company's games.
"Feelie" is a term first used by Infocom to refer to the extra content included with the boxed versions of their interactive fiction computer games. Feelies differed from game to game and were of the same theme as the game they came packaged with. For example, Wishbringer, a fantasy game with magic, came with a "Magick glowing stone." These extra objects and documents sometimes served as a form of copy protection, as several games were impossible to solve without information found in their feelies. Although the term was first used by Infocom, it can refer to similar content found in any company's games.
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Some of Infocom's games and their feelies are listed below:
After the demise of Infocom, Activision became responsible for the Zork franchise. The first editions of the three graphical Zork games they produced each included printed feelies.
Feelies were most common in roleplaying games of 1980s and 1990s, but have since been omitted from most games regular releases, and items akin to feelies are now mostly found in various games' special editions. For example, Catherine was released in a deluxe edition which included a pillow case and clothing items like those the main characters wore, while the game itself came in a mock-pizza box from a fictional, in-game store. Likewise, a special "Zombrex Edition" of Dead Rising 2 included a fake syringe (a functional pen), an accompanying safety information card, a steel case, a sales brochure, and a prescription pad. In the European release, this was expanded to include a making-of documentary DVD.[2]