Nation Red

It will strain your finger. No, not the middle one

Words: on October 13, 2009

The great zombie game outbreak of the 21st century began with a single byte. It spread quickly, digitally infecting games with unprecedented numbers of undead. Before long, you couldn’t click an executable without launching an outbreak. And then the fightback came. Nation Red is a Diablo-ish take on the battle against the undead. Top-down battles against relentless hordes of pick-up dropping zombies. It’s very mouse-clicky, rhythmically pleasing and appallingly difficult.

It’s set in a dusty unnamed US town. Every level is a small, samey arena, beginning with you in the centre and the zombies flowing in. Initially, it feels like a tactics-free button basher. You’re limited to one weapon (always the one you’ve just picked up), and the backdrops have no effect on the flow of the zombies. You can’t hide, you can only run and shoot, and then run some more.

But you can plan ahead. The weapon limitations are reason enough to consider how you’ll fight for the next few seconds: dare you swap over your shotgun for the nailgun or flamethrower when it means a change in the rate of fire and damage? Can you make it to that perk, or are you too low on health to consider a mad dash?

There are two forms of drops. The guns vary from pistols to flamethrowers, and all of them chew through ammo – which is infinite, but all too quickly you’re forced to back off and reload. Again, it’s necessary to think about this if you can, so that you’re backing off into an empty corner or through a hole in the undead. The other drops are more varied: pickups that drop mines, or a doppelganger, or slow-motion buffs – varying effects that regularly swap provide needed respite. Our favourite is the self-guided turret.

All through this you’re gaining experience, building up points to buy another buff that you select from a menu. The selections are always random. Sometimes they’re not entirely helpful for the situation at hand. You may need to recuperate health, when all you’re given is a choice of different bombs. It seems unfair, but the games are short and the action is satisfying - all things considered, Nation Red ends up being a surprisingly entertaining zom-bomber.

Oct 12, 2009

You'll love
  • Rhythmically pleasing gameplay
  • Intense action
  • Weighty decision making
You'll hate
  • Appallingly difficult
  • Every level is samey
  • Upgrades are random

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Nation Red (PC)

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3 Comments
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  • Memph

    Memph  - 2 years, 4 months ago  - Report

    1 round of the demo was enough for me. It feels rather stale rather soon with no explorable levels, appearing to be no more than the survival mode of Shadowgrounds, which is just one small part of a superior game. 7 seems a little generous for a jazzed-up Smash TV clone that doesn't play as well.
  • gta3mattb

    gta3mattb  - 2 years, 4 months ago  - Report

    I spent a lot of time with the demo. The only thing I did not like was the music. It was too repetitive luckily you can turn it off. After I turned off the music I had a blast.
  • chinesesoldier

    chinesesoldier  - 2 years, 4 months ago  - Report

    Wow, if they released this on PS3, I would buy it.

    LAST! HAHAHAHA, I'm a internet noob!

    I really hate anybody that says first.
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