I prefer my zombies slow. Not at a snails pace, just regular walking speed. To compensate they're impervious to anything short of a headshot, decapitation or complete incineration.
Well take 28 days/weeks later as an example. They get filled with rage so shouldn't they just attack whoever is closest to them? Not just the closest uninfected person?Keith Reedy said:I suppose that depends on how whatever infected them behaves and alters the personAstoria said:Yeah I agree with you. Pretty much all zombies are 'infected' now not actual zombies. Fast zombies are a lot scarier in my opinion because they combine their speed with their numbers. They make less sense though because shouldn't they turn on each other too?
LIke I said it depends on how it affects them another infected may be changed to give of a scent that keeps other infected from attacking them while inciting attacks and rage against the non-infectedAstoria said:Well take 28 days/weeks later as an example. They get filled with rage so shouldn't they just attack whoever is closest to them? Not just the closest uninfected person?Keith Reedy said:I suppose that depends on how whatever infected them behaves and alters the personAstoria said:Yeah I agree with you. Pretty much all zombies are 'infected' now not actual zombies. Fast zombies are a lot scarier in my opinion because they combine their speed with their numbers. They make less sense though because shouldn't they turn on each other too?
I quoted you just to say; Holy shit dude, you have 61105 posts!?VaudevillianVeteran said:I believe slow, if only because that's how traditional zombies are portrayed, while the scarier/faster zombies are seen as 'infected', still good though.
Hmmm I didn't think of that. The infection could spread to animals too though so would it still work? Anyway it's all much more complicated than just the living dead.Keith Reedy said:LIke I said it depends on how it affects them another infected may be changed to give of a scent that keeps other infected from attacking them while inciting attacks and rage against the non-infectedAstoria said:Well take 28 days/weeks later as an example. They get filled with rage so shouldn't they just attack whoever is closest to them? Not just the closest uninfected person?Keith Reedy said:I suppose that depends on how whatever infected them behaves and alters the personAstoria said:Yeah I agree with you. Pretty much all zombies are 'infected' now not actual zombies. Fast zombies are a lot scarier in my opinion because they combine their speed with their numbers. They make less sense though because shouldn't they turn on each other too?
I have a small point about this scene, if the cops fired on the zombies lower parts(legs) the bullets would either break the leg bones or shred enough muscle to stop the zombie from walking and since they're slow anyway they will have ample time to do this and can then calmly finish off the undead with headshotz, the lack of speed simply allows for better tactics on the surviving sideTuesday Night Fever said:I voted slow.
While I don't hate fast ones (I love 28 Days Later!), I feel like the slow ones are actually more menacing.
Like Maddness666 said, they represent a sense of inevitability. That death is slowly coming for you, it's not going to stop, and the longer you wait to do anything about it, the more futile escape is going to be. Add on top of that the fact that slow zombies are typically shown as being incredibly durable to weapon damage that doesn't directly destroy the brain. Though the game series is incredibly campy, I always liked the moment in the introductory cutscene to Resident Evil 3 where you see the Raccoon City Police Department and S.W.A.T. deploy themselves and their vehicles as to create a wall across the road and an effective firing line. The police open fire on the wave of approaching slow zombies with handguns, shotguns, and submachine guns doing very little visible damage to the approaching zombies. Despite their best efforts, the police are completely overrun, one of the last moments of the cutscene being the reflection on a bloody S.W.A.T. helmet visor of a zombie shambling through the police barricade. To me, THAT is what slow zombies are all about, and what makes them (in my opinion), more threatening than the fast-but-incredibly-fragile variant.
depends on how long they have been dead. If the zombie contagion got them while they still lived it could make them dead and they're body still be fresh flexible and strong allowing them to runBrinnmilo said:How could a dead man run? Having said that, how could a dead man walk? Meh, I would rather they walk/shamble as they probably lack the coordination required for running.
And then I saw this http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-15268321
Well it depends on what happens to the brain. I don't think there is any definitive soft science to go either way on the topic but if they are the "undead" then that means they have suffered brain death, which would stop all movement, yet they've been re-animated by something. So I guess it depends how much brain activity being a zombie gives you.Keith Reedy said:depends on how long they have been dead. If the zombie contagion got them while they still lived it could make them dead and they're body still be fresh flexible and strong allowing them to runBrinnmilo said:How could a dead man run? Having said that, how could a dead man walk? Meh, I would rather they walk/shamble as they probably lack the coordination required for running.
And then I saw this http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-15268321
Makes sense if the zombification does prevent or death by zombification not cause damage to the motor sections of the brain then they could runBrinnmilo said:Well it depends on what happens to the brain. I don't think there is any definitive soft science to go either way on the topic but if they are the "undead" then that means they have suffered brain death, which would stop all movement, yet they've been re-animated by something. So I guess it depends how much brain activity being a zombie gives you.Keith Reedy said:depends on how long they have been dead. If the zombie contagion got them while they still lived it could make them dead and they're body still be fresh flexible and strong allowing them to runBrinnmilo said:How could a dead man run? Having said that, how could a dead man walk? Meh, I would rather they walk/shamble as they probably lack the coordination required for running.
And then I saw this http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-15268321