
Previously, each game’s campaign contained five chapters split into five stages (stages are split by safe houses to act as the gap between each one) set across areas of Berlin and Germany.

Once again the campaign acts as the main feature of the game, but unlike the previous three titles in the series, the fourth entry steps the campaign up a notch. What that means for the player is a silly throwaway story that is totally B-movie campiness, but enjoyable, and of course, it’s a fine excuse to kill more zombies. Things should have stopped without a leader, but the dead kept on rising, more and more, and worryingly getting stronger, so now it is down to the resistance to travel across Europe and put a stop to any cultists who are trying to carry on Hitler’s undead legacy. Zombie Army 4: Dead War is Rebellion returning to zombies again, but this time it comes with what was learnt in development with Strange Brigade to make this latest Zombie Army the best one yet.įollowing on from the events of the third game, a year later has passed after possessed Adolf Hitler was sent to hell after unsuccessfully taking over the world with his undead army. Rebellion took a break from zombies with Strange Brigade, a game that was structured similar but switched up the zombies for mythological creatures, while making improvements to the gameplay and level design.
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Sniper Elite: Nazi Zombie Army must have done well enough for the British developer, because it gained two sequels, which were eventually bundled together into the package on PC and consoles dubbed Zombie Army Trilogy. It was a dumb premise, but that did not stop the game being a tremendous amounts of fun. Rebellion tested the waters with this with their initial release of Sniper Elite: Nazi Zombie Armyfor PC, a stand-alone game based on Sniper Elite V2‘s engine that had a world where Hitler’s fascination for the supernatural led to the dead coming back to life, making the war rather tough for the Allies.


Killing zombies is not exactly original, but there is a fan base for that kind of stuff that keeps the genre alive.
