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Zombie Army Trilogy

Zombie Army Trilogy

Rebellion Developments·Released Mar 3, 2015·Single player

Platforms
PS4PCXbox OneSwitch
Genres
ShooterStrategyAdventure
Critic64/100
Across 4 reviews
AgreementData pendingNo votes yet
About

Zombie Army Trilogy is a third-person tactical shooter stealth video game developed and published by Rebellion Developments. It is a spin-off to the Sniper Elite series, released on March 6, 2015 for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. The premise of the game is that, in an alternative version of the final days of World War II, with the German army close to defeat, Adolf Hitler deploys a last resort plan to raise the fallen as zombies through occult rituals and turn them against Allied forces, thus causing Germany to become overrun with the undead.

Reviews

4 reviews
Nintendo Life logo
Critic70/100
Agreement

Zombie Army Trilogy is a solid co-op shooter with a fantastically pulpy set-up that does exactly what it sets out to, pitting you and up to three other players against an almost endless army of gloriously gory undead Nazis and letting you snipe, shotgun and kick every last one of them to pieces. It may be of somewhat limited appeal when played solo, but gather together a crew or join forces with randoms online and this one springs to life, providing countless hours of admirably straightforward skull-smashing fun.

Read full review at Nintendo Life
No vote recorded.
Push Square logo
Critic60/100
Agreement

Zombie Army Trilogy is an enjoyable co-operative shooter that's a lot of fun when played with others. Unfortunately, it runs out of steam all too quickly, giving you a severe dose of déjà-vu once you realise that you're playing very similar encounters, with only the backdrop changing. As a result, you'll have had enough of shooting zombies in the noggin well before you reach the end of its campaign, and while you'll look back fondly on the early hours that you spent with this title, you'll wonder if it was really worth bringing it back from the dead on the PS4.

Read full review at Push Square
No vote recorded.
Pure Xbox logo
Pure Xbox
Ken Barnes·Mar 6, 2015
Critic50/100
Agreement

There's no doubt that some will be hooked and will love it – it's certainly therapeutic fare – but with the issues it contains, there's a much greater chance that you'll feel the opposite way.

Read full review at Pure Xbox
No vote recorded.