This game had so much potential and delivered on a lot of points. The controls were hard to get used to but once you learn it, you'll beat it so well. I've put way over 100 hours into this game and still haven't put it down. Melee is fantastic, the higher your skill, the more likely it is you'll hit, same with guns. You have to make a well balanced character and learn what to do. Avoid shooting zombie and use melee whenever possible. The AI in this game isn't the best, but they will do as you say most of the time. It's a fantastic RPG and I would absolutely love to see a sequel to it one day. I like to think of State of Decay as a distant cousin of the game for sure.
Fun little Zombie survival horror game that is begging for a sequel. Definitely belongs in your game library if you like running away from zombies and all that deathly fun.
This game is a bit buggy but boy is it challenging. You have to have a character build in mind and a starting plan to go before you even start. So it may take a few play-throughs before you have some idea where it's going. It's definitely the most challenging zombie survival game I have played, though it can be more due to somewhat broken game-play. If you're looking for a game with ease of access, try State of Decay.
Seen this game on a digital distribution site, and reading its description, I fell in love with it instantly. Zombie apocalypse. Action-RPG. Random missions in a randomly generated town. Forming squads of rescued survivors then equip them with weapons to help you while you search for other survivors, food, tools, base-building materials, weapons and ammo. Training survivors in combat, carpentry, medicine and other skills and keep them happy and well-fed, at least so that they wouldn't find the company of zombies more favorable than yours. Build and upgrade the defenses of your base (traps, barricades) from the materials you find in town.
Yikes, if it's not the game of the millennium I don't know what could be! Well, sadly, it isn't.
The most obvious issue is graphics. The game is ugly. And has about the same fps as Crysis.... Okay, I have a good old Pentium4 D (that means: single core with hyperthreading), but I bet games from P3 era are better looking than Fort Zombie. No kidding. Very low polycount, medium quality textures, almost no effects, and I still get fps lower than 10 most of the time.
I won't write about sounds, because there are almost no sounds. Your ears will get the absolute minimum treatment.
The controls are ... interesting. I wouldn't say it's crap, because if you give the game an hour you'll get used to it, but sometimes you'll question the human origins of the designers.
The AI is quite simple, which could be satisfying taking into account that your enemies are mindless walking chewmachines, but unfortunately your supposedly more intelligent companions could do the same mistakes (not being able to avoid obstacles, for example), which could really hinder teamworking with them.
All in all, Fort Zombie is not a shining diamond of the gaming world; if you take into consideration only how the game looks like, it should hardly get a score of 2. I admit, when I first played it, I quickly uninstalled and swore to never buy a low-budget game again. Next day I reinstalled it, played a bit, and then deleted it cursing myself for not being smart enough to learn from my first experience. So why have I given it a 5? Because it got installed the third time, and stayed on my HD for a few weeks. I played it everyday, and begun to enjoy it, however not so to play it to the end. The basic idea, and the atmosphere saved the game for me, even so that I think after I finish the review I'll install it again.
Hypothetically you get 14 days to build up the defenses of your chosen base to endure the massive assault when those two weeks expire. If you survive that, you won. (Never got there; the saves are in plain text format, and I always rewrote the current time, so it was always Day 2 for me...) In the meantime you get 3-4 available missions everyday to gather food, supplies, weapons and survivors. You can't do every one of them, because you have only around (can't remember exactly) 16 hours per day to act, and you have to get to the scene, then do the chosen mission, then get back to base, and it all takes time. If you already rescued some survivors, you can assign them on various tasks: base-building, repairing broken equipment, healing the wounded, or you can take them with you on the missions for some extra firepower (not exactly advised, but with some micromanagement it can be done) or as packmules (which is a more sensible and time-saving decision).
Once you get to the scene of your chosen mission, pause the game. Really. On many occasions there will be a few zombies who see you, and will attack after a few seconds. And it's time to mention a few things about them. First, they are _hard_ to kill. Headshots are very effective, but to achieve that you need a decent skill in your chosen weapon, and a good amount of luck because of the controls. Second, even those who don't see you still can _hear_ you. So even if you kill a single attacking zombie, the noise of the weapons can draw a much larger mob to you. Oh, and they are not only tough guys, they are also fast... So, basically, no matter how much ammo you have, your best option is always to run from cover to cover. When they don't see you, and are not too close, they will forget you.
Running out of space, so a few tips.
- When you're on a rescue mission, reach the survivor(s) as fast as you can, because the zombies target them as well if they see them. (A bug: sometimes the survivors spawn in the same room with some zombies. In that case, you can't be fast enough, but the game won't tell you....) - Avoid the military zombies if you can. They have firearms, and they are not afraid to use them, but on the plus side they are not exactly sharpshooters....
- If you absolutely must fight (which will happen, especially near your objectives), kill the medic zombies first if present, or else they will reanimate their fallen comrades.
- A reminder: the saves are in plain text format... *wink-wink*
Fort Zombie is difficult to describe. It is simultaneously one of the best zombie games ever made, and one of the worst. It captures all of the elements that you want in a zombie survival game better than almost every other zombie game available. It has the fort, the zombie traps, the survivors, the foraging for supplies and guns and **** has everything. Everything, that is, except for a competent technical execution. The game is a mess, and stutters down in frame rate as the number of zombies rises. And since the end of the game culminates with a massive battle with a horde of zombies, the final moments become unplayable. So the end of the game can't be enjoyed, even though the build up is all for that moment. Four years after release, the problem remains, and Kerberos seems to have abandoned the game, and any attempt to fix it.
This game has all the right ideas but it's completely unplayable. Everything about this game is awful, it has the right ideas but it's made really badly. The AI is awful they constantly walk into walls. The game has awful crash problems it's almost as if they designed the game to crash as much as possible.
This game has the ideas but it is completely unplayable.
SummaryYou're trapped in a small town with a whole city of zombies headed your way! When they get there, will you be ready to fend them off? Choose a stronghold. Get help. Find food. Secure weapons. Hold back the tide of undead. Try and survive to see the dawn. [Paradox Interactive]