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Once your little zombie mob starts growing, it doesn't feel like "just" anything.
Developer: Kiz10
- 4.3
- Score
There's something oddly satisfying about leading a parade of wobbling zombies through a city that clearly wasn't built with the undead in mind. Zombie Tsunami Online turns pure nonsense into something that somehow feels strategic, and honestly, I love that. Sure, it's technically just an endless runner - but once your little zombie mob starts growing, it doesn't feel like "just" anything. One second, you're clearing gaps with perfect timing, and the next, you're flying off a rooftop with exactly one survivor left, yelling at the screen like it betrayed you. It's messy, clumsy, occasionally unfair - and kind of brilliant because of that. What I didn't expect was how emotionally attached I'd get to this ridiculous brain-eating conga line. Every new zombie you collect feels like a tiny victory. You see a group of pedestrians and go "yes, dinner!" like that's a completely normal reaction. But then something stupid happens - maybe you clip a mine, maybe you misjudge a roof - and suddenly half your crew is gone. You're frantically watching your last three zombies struggle to lift a bus you probably should've avoided, and somehow you still try. That's the magic. It's not about being flawless. It's about surviving long enough to laugh at your mistakes, then pushing forward anyway. Even when your last zombie dives into a pit because you double-jumped out of panic, you're already reaching for the restart button. Not out of frustration, but because it was genuinely funny. It's dumb, fast, and weirdly hard to let go of. And that's kind of the charm of Zombie Tsunami Online. It's not trying to impress you with deep mechanics or sleek design. It just wants you to have a good time, whether you're steamrolling through streets or failing spectacularly every 30 seconds. The visuals are cartoony in the best way, the power-ups are completely ridiculous, and the whole game moves like it's had five energy drinks and no sleep. But you know what? That's exactly why it works. It doesn't pretend to be more than it is - and that honesty, combined with the constant chaos, makes it strangely addictive. It's the kind of game where even failure feels like progress. And in a world full of polished, serious titles, sometimes what you really need is a bunch of goofy zombies jumping off rooftops together.