
Given its kiddie nature, Chex Quest is, not surprisingly, quite easy. The only major problem was a nasty bug upon startup, easily remedied by simply using Boom as the.


Well, you're probably asking, how does Chex Quest play? Surprisingly well, actually. It's probably the strangest thing you'll ever see. You have numerous super-powerful weapons at your disposal, all with vomit-inducing names like the "Zorcher," the "Rapid Zorcher," and the ultra-powerful "Phasing Zorcher." With these weapons, you are able to return the Flemoids to their home dimension - that's right, you don't kill anything in Chex Quest, everything disappears in a flash of light, and with a strange sparkly noise.

Your mission is to kill a wide variety of strange, green soggy creatures known as "Flemoids," probably ex-Chex pieces which were transported through the Milk Dimension and came back mutated and dripping. The general plot? You are a giant piece of cereal. but hey, I'm sure everyone loves Chex cereal anyway ))ĭoomWorld gave the following great review of this underdog that I'd like to quote here in full: Chex Quest, a game made specifically for distribution with specially marked packages of Chex cereal about half a year ago, accomplishes its primary mission of plugging Chex cereal through countless wall decals and carefully located billboards, but also does so with a sense of its own silliness. (Okay, so the game isn't really "freeware," since you do need to buy cereal to play it.

This promotion lasted only for half a year before it was discontinued. Undoubtedly the strangest and most complete conversion of all DOOM engine licensees, Chex Quest was a free CD-ROM action game released by General Mills on a CD stuffed free into boxes of Chex Cereals.
