![]() ![]() Without direct control of your zombies, doing anything that requires precision feels onerous. When levels escalate to time challenges or things that require a lot of quick reactions to stuff, it becomes a lot more infuriating. Zombie Night Terror is at its best when its levels focus on laidback puzzles and traversal. For instance, there may be times where you need to create powerful zombies to take down armed guards or speed up your horde to avoid being run over by a train. Many levels in Zombie Night Terror revolve around balancing your use of powers in service of overcoming specific puzzles or winning fights. You can't just use these powers willy-nilly though, you have to kill humans, sacrifice your own zombies, or pick up powerups to manage a meter that lets you use them. Things like being able to jump, create sneaky climber zombies, and make your zombies scream to demoralize enemies are among the full suite of things you end up getting to use. The basic structure of the game has you indirectly piloting a zombie horde through increasingly complicated and difficult environments while also granting you new zombie powers to overcome new obstacles. Using a suite of nifty zombie powers and commands, you can issue orders to help your zombies spread the outbreak. When left to their own devices, these corpses helplessly wander around on their own, bump into walls, fall off cliffs, etc. In Zombie Night Terror, you are put in control of a braindead horde of zombies. There are times when this formula really works to create fun challenges around maneuvering various forms of walking dead, but there are just as many times where the game's tools and controls leave you feeling like a helpless victim. It describes itself as Lemmings-meets-zombies, and that's exactly what it is, for better or for worse. Zombie Night Terror doesn't pretend it's something it's not.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |