yes yes yes i know zombie media is inherently reactionary because it symbolizes the 3rd world hordes rising up to take back our undeserved products of exploitation
but fuck me if this game hasn't given me some of the most memorable multiplayer experiences ever. There's just something about driving down the highway in a sprinter van with your friends smoking cigs, reloading guns and reading books in the backseat as the rain comes down that's such a fucking vibe. Roadtripping across the map to the new city addition after scouring countryside towns for food and weapons is an adventure and a half every time. Covering each other's backs as you make your way into an infested part of town is somehow the most tense and exciting experience I've had in a multiplayer game in a long time.
Another big draw for me is that after the first few days of a run when you've gotten fully established the game can be as intense or relaxed as you want it to be. Don't feel like killing zeds? Stay inside and read, work out, listen to the radio, go fishing, build a fort, maintain your car, organize your loot, etc. The simulation depth of this game very consistently allows you to follow the "if you can do it in real life you can probably do it in the game" thought process. That's how I discovered that you can poison any prepared food with small amounts of bleach, that getting an open wound while you're covered in blood increases the likelihood of getting an infection, that drinking several bottles of wine and taking sleeping pills is not a good combo, and the list of needlessly detailed aspects of this game goes on.
The game has been in development since like 2011 and as a result the modding scene is starting to rival that of Skyrim or Minecraft. Something you want to do that isn't in the game? Almost certainly a mod for that.
The only games I've really played in the last 3 months have been this and Halo Infinite. It's on sale right now, ten bucks, get it now before the devs increase the price.
Night of the Living Dead can be summed up as about a black man who survived being attacked by a mob of bloodthirsty white people, only to be gunned down by an all-white vigilantes.
Haha, funny out of context plot summary. Then you go to Dawn of the Dead, the original, which have an entire subplot of the cops using the zombie outbreak as a pretext to literally commit pogrom on the urban poor. And of course, the well known anti-consumerism/capitalism subtext with the whole mall thing.
And to stretch it a little bit more, the Land of the Dead is basically about rich people living in luxury walled of from the rest of society being overran by an army working class zombies who have just recently regained their intelligence. Which is probably a metaphor for class consciousness or something. Well, there's also the non zombie working class who I think got away safely in the end while leaving the rich to get fucked, so there's that.
If Romero is politically left, then he's really good at hiding his power level. Or maybe the curtain is just blue.
deleted by creator
Don't forget Day of the Dead which codes all the US military guys as Nazis and makes the zombies the good guys
Fantastic soundtrack too