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QuantumBranching — World War Z: Aftermath

Published: 2011-04-09 22:14:48 +0000 UTC; Views: 96852; Favourites: 417; Downloads: 1194
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Description Hokay, decided to do a map for the aftermath of Brook’s “World War Z” at the time the “oral history” is supposedly going to press.

(The Zombie plague seems to be occurring starting 2008, given the talk in the book about “cleaning up eight years of mess”, the thinly disguised president Colin Powell and VP Howard Dean, although the tech level seems in some ways more advanced than you’d expect only three years or so after Brooks wrote the book, so the “Panic” would be starting in 2009. Judging from a Cuban character commenting on the difference between Cuba today and 20 years ago, I put the date at 2029).

Warning: massive walls of text.

The US has regained control over all of its territory, although there still are dangers from Zombies occasionally walking out of the ocean or defrosting in mountain ice as the weather warms up from the post-Panic “nuclear autumn” conditions. Although poorer per capita than Cuba, its overall economy is still the world’s largest. It managed to save nearly a third of its population, an unusually high percentage for non-island nations.

Most US emigrants went home from Cuba after the troops were demobilized, but others came from Latin America and elsewhere: Cuba now has nearly twice its pre-war population.

Poor and ill-prepared for anti-zombie warfare, and with no cold season for Zombie activity to cease, most of Central America was badly devastated, and absorbed by Mexico post-war: the new greater Mexico has been renamed Aztlan (part of a creepy “Aztec revival” movement in Mexico, obsessed with death and warfare in art, culture, personal Machismo, etc.)

Brazil screwed up badly, and only managed to create a safe zone in the south: while they did pick up Uruguay (and a nasty military dictatorship), their population losses were the highest of any American nation maintaining a functional government post-war, and most of the north remains thinly governed if at all.

The few surviving Jamaicans voted to join the US (its immigrants making it the largest Jamaican nation on earth).

The Irish were initially sufficiently unpopular as a refuge to manage to contain their outbreaks, and what with refugees they now have half again OTLs population: the UK was not as successful, and their old islander suspicions of the mainland have revived, leading them to break with the post-war EU when it moved to become something closer to a “united states of Europe”, many populations having become mixed and reshuffled in the various refuge areas. Although losses varied (with Switzerland doing best, surprise surprise), overall they were higher than the US, given the greater population density, a largely unarmed populace, and a lot of flat land (zombies, unless they sense prey, tend to drift downhill in a “path of least resistance” manner), on the average losses were not as bad as such places as China or India or Brazil.

Sicily also became a refuge, but less secure than the mountains, suffered a severe outbreak, the political fallout of which persists. (For once in their existence, the Mafia performed heroically, their macho self-image not allowing them anything but the most determined effort to be the one to cap the most Zed-heads).

The Ukraine survived the war, barely. It is still looking very shaky, and is struggling to avoid falling under Russian control: efforts to become an EU associate have led to Russian threats (the EU nations don’t really know if the Russians have been able to maintain any of their nuclear arsenal over 20 years of chaos, but they’d rather not find out the hard way.), and the EU doesn’t particularly like the dictatorial Ukrainian government, or the restrictions on travel it has imposed to prevent further a drain of population to the west. Of course, there are those who demand standing up to Russian bullying. There is a lot of debate as to whether the Russians are really crazy, or just indulging in Nixonian “madman” posturing: what is known is that the Holy Russian Empire is a dictatorship of Stalinist nastiness, with control so tight that it has been able in a decade to bring up birth rates to 1980s third world levels, increasing population by a third from post-war lows (not that the war is entirely over in Russia: Zombies continue to thaw out every Siberian spring).

US Talking Heads gravely ruminate that at current growth rates Russia will surpass the US in population in 40 years: other Talking Heads grumble that the likelihood of the Russian state maintaining current levels of repression for that length of time are, to say, the least, remote.

Africa remains a mess: although a surprising number of individual Africans managed to survive (already used to dealing with deadly disease, murderous killers, living off the wilderness, and with lots of Cold War surplus weapons at hand…[1]) few of the ramshackle governments survived, and while tropical zombies rotted fast enough that by the time more developed nations were ready to give a hand they were mostly already “non-functional”, much of the interior remains a chaos intermittently controlled by various petty warlords. The UN controls the coasts and prevents marine zombies from passing inland (mostly) but it is stretched thin over a vast area and member nations still remembering how much better they had it before World War Z are reluctant to pony up more funds. Some South African politicians have ambitions of unifying the whole continent.

The French managed to avoid accusations of racism by rescuing blacks and Muslims in percentages comparable to their share of the total population pre-war: some grumble that their encouragement of French Algerians and Tunisians in their efforts to restore their depopulated nations is, however, just a means of getting the Africans out of France for good and all. Much of the Middle East was heavily depopulated, although there were pockets of survivors in the Yemeni mountain fortresses, in the Bedu wastelands, and especially in the mountains of Turkey, Kurdish and otherwise: Kurds and Turks managed to sink their differences in fighting the living dead, and since the war Turkey has expanded greatly into the depopulated lands of Syria and Iraq.

The heroic defense of the Kaaba in Mecca, resupplied by Arab pilots on begged, borrowed, and stolen fuel for two years until some reinforcements finally arrived from Turkey and Indonesia, is an epic tale: still, world Islam has been particularly badly hit by the war. The loss of Egypt, with its thin line of population in the midst of a refuge-free desert which also allowed endless “flanking” possibilities by the undead, was a particularly hard blow, as was the suicidal nuclear exchange between Iran and Pakistan which helped bring about the collapse of both nations.

Palestinians have done quite well with their fixer-upper of a nation, so much so that a number of Israeli Arabs have emigrated. Mutterings similar to those re the French are often heard.

India suffered very high losses, both from Zombie attack and from starvation in the safe zones: efficient organization and quick perfection of new technologies not being India’s strongest points. Still, enough survived that with the absorption of the remnants of Pakistan, eastern Iran and Bangladesh India is now the world’s most populous nation. The economy remains shambolic, but nobody is starving anymore, and Indian commercial instincts remain unblunted.

Tibet is dominated nowadays by immigrants, the majority Chinese, but also Burmese, central Asian, Xinjiang Muslims and Indians and Nepalese who didn’t feel they were far enough away from the Living Dead. Many more came, but died of cold or hunger in the anarchic first years. Over a quarter of the population lives in the sprawling, 60%-slums, filthy, but very lively capital of Lhasa: with nearly three and a half million inhabitants, it is currently the world’s largest city (if not urban area), most major world cities having been overrun by Zombies and either burned or very slowly resettled since. The Dalai Lama, returned from India, has played a vital role in reconciling the immigrants with the native Tibetans, and has accepted the results of the election (in which a fair number of immigrants actually voted Lamaist out of admiration for him, but the Social Democrats still won by a big margin) with good grace.

China, where the government flatly refused to follow any version of the Redeker Plan and instead tried to fight the Zombies everywhere at once through a policy of truly universal mobilization, (and then fought a civil war while still fighting zombies) suffered the worst losses of any major nation, over 90% of its population dying, although there has been a bit of a postwar baby boom with the elimination of the pre-war One Child policy and the settlement of destitute peasants on newly available land. Politics are turbulent, and assassinations of the “guilty” are not infrequent, in spite of the observation of democratic forms.

Australia and New Zealand suffered from nasty outbreaks of their own, and are busily trying to attract European and North American immigration.

Indonesia lost most of densely populated (and too close to China by air) Java, and the government is currently dominated by religiously conservative types from Sumatra: the breakaway of the Moluccas rankles.

Japan only managed to get about a third of the population out to eastern Siberia, Taiwan, South Korea and the islands before things went truly pear-shaped, and the distinctly unhelpful attitudes of the Russian government let to a lot of Japanese freezing or starving to death. Since the idea of foreign immigration is less popular than ever (they might be plague-carriers!), Japan, along with several other countries, is attempting to encourage reproduction through legislation (some foreigners compare this to Holy Russia, but that doesn’t discourage the Japanese government), most recently through tax measures that shrink your taxes with every extra child you have (and increase them for every child less, people grumble) and punish those who don’t marry by twenty-five.

Japanese men, and some women, are bearing swords in public again.

Nobody knows where the hell the North Koreans went, (underground, presumably) but nobody really wants to be the one that opens the door and lets out 23 million hungry Zombies. Joint South Korean and Chinese patrols along the coasts make sure nobody sets foot in North Korea and starts digging around. Something will be done eventually, of course, but there is a lot of debate as to what, starting with sending in robot remotes and going up to building a Zombie-proof wall all along the border before doing anything else.

Technology has undergone some changes: self-sufficiency, large stocks of supplies, energy-efficiency and simplicity are all in, as are self-renewing energy and recycling. Biofuels, solar power, wind power, etc. are all big: nuclear power has not been helped by the meltdowns of various reactors abandoned by panicky employees, the Pakistan-Iran nuclear exchange, and the atomic decapitation attack ending the Chinese civil war. (This will eventually become a problem, but not yet, since demand is so shrunken from 2008). Space industry has come back online, mostly for satellite monitoring and communications. (Speaking of monitoring, everyone has close circuit cameras and plenty of them to, say, make sure something isn’t lurking outside the garage).

The environment is a mess: what with all the extra fishing while farmland was overrun with zombies, fish stocks have hit new lows, and huge areas of the ocean have suffered from what are essentially total collapses of the local ecosystem: some thinkers mutter uneasily about a “Permian extinction event.” Most large land animals have also been eaten by humans or zombies (although a few elephants have survived). Birds, much harder for zombies to catch, have generally done better. Rodents have multiplied horribly.

And still nobody can figure out how Zombies work.

[1] I think sapient Africans can do better than Quislings and Ferals, no?
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Comments: 145

QuantumBranching In reply to ??? [2012-03-19 05:17:59 +0000 UTC]

Unfortunately, Hungary lacks much in the way of good defensive areas, being mostly an inland plain. Most of the population that survived fled to more mountainous areas outside the country, and a depopulated country is only slowly being reconstructed by returning refugees and some foreign imigrants (also Hungarians from Transylvania)

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thefirstfleet In reply to QuantumBranching [2012-03-19 18:41:31 +0000 UTC]

It's a shame. Well, at least I'm prepared

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Saint-Walker [2012-02-18 02:51:08 +0000 UTC]

I could see northern Mexico doing alright as people turn to the Cartels for protection, heavily armed, very loyal, battled hardened, they'd make good, if very brutal, leaders, might even see a real 'Narco state' or two appear, new nations run by the cartels. For some reason I imagined Brazil might become a monarchy again, in is birth Emperors Pedro I and II helped to stabilize Brazil and stop it falling apart into chaos, I could see an ambitious general doing the same, breaking the Imperial crown out of its museum and using it to justify his rule over the country. I could also see the Turks reclaiming Greece too

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AmongTheSatanic In reply to Saint-Walker [2013-01-29 00:58:09 +0000 UTC]

Greece is easy to slice into self-sufficient survival zones; Brazil isn't.

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bLAZZE92 [2012-01-08 07:50:04 +0000 UTC]

I don't get the Aztlan thing, was that Aztec revival mentioned in the book? cuse as far as I know is just some dumb, obscure movement between mexican-americans on the US and I completely doubt it'll get widespread acceptance at all in Mexico... anyway, not my book, not my ideas XD

One thing that I can't really stomach is the outcome of Cuba... given how sh*tty their healthcare actually is, how every Cuban younger than 40 hates the government and how armed they actually are (old soviet union weapons) I highly doubt they'll fare that well, more than likely they'll take a similar approach to North Korea but only the elite going underground leaving the general populace at the mercy of the zombies...

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QuantumBranching In reply to bLAZZE92 [2012-01-16 04:06:03 +0000 UTC]

The book really didn't mention Mexico at all, so I just made some shit up. After all, they presumeably suffered horrendous casualties, which does bad things to societies...


Cuba has the advantages of being an island, fairly isolated,and too far from China for the first-generation infected to get there while still carriers, so it presumeably missed out on the original outbreaks and only had to deal with sea-zombies stumbling ashore, not massive swarms. Re the north Korea thing, Cuba lacks a pre-dug extensive underground survival system, so it's hang together or shuffle seperately. Old Soviet weapons work just fine, as long you aim for the head..

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TrickyCreature In reply to QuantumBranching [2013-05-19 17:47:23 +0000 UTC]

It's nearly impossible to aim correctly with an AK-47, but the bullets and firepower are so strong, they would shred a zombie to pulp.
A good soviet arm to use for aiming exactly is the Makarov pistol.

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QuantumBranching In reply to TrickyCreature [2013-05-21 06:01:57 +0000 UTC]

Well, if you can cut it in half or shred the legs off, that will slow it down to where a headshot or a good ol' shovel blade are relatively non-risky. No amount of anatomical damage below the neck will stop this sort of zombie from continuing to try to bite you.

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AmongTheSatanic In reply to QuantumBranching [2013-01-29 00:58:41 +0000 UTC]

Actually, Aztlan was mentioned as the new name by Todd Wainio, but never went into detail since he was talking about killing zombies

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bLAZZE92 In reply to QuantumBranching [2012-01-29 04:28:08 +0000 UTC]

Good points.

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agrajag6x9 In reply to ??? [2011-10-18 22:39:40 +0000 UTC]

Awesome. I've been looking for a map of World War Z. I'm surprised it didn't come with the book.

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zalezsky In reply to ??? [2011-10-05 05:03:06 +0000 UTC]

"crapsacky ukraine"

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QuantumBranching In reply to zalezsky [2011-10-08 05:19:02 +0000 UTC]

Sorry: but then, much of this world is crapsacky...

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zalezsky In reply to QuantumBranching [2011-10-08 16:03:28 +0000 UTC]

lol i know my country's a shit hole

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ZhaneAugustine In reply to ??? [2011-10-05 04:51:59 +0000 UTC]

Interesting

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BloodAndBones In reply to ??? [2011-09-30 18:56:33 +0000 UTC]

sweet

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Mister-Ed-Fan [2011-09-29 23:59:52 +0000 UTC]

Impressive! Must've taken a long time to work out the details of this! Love it!

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Laiqua-lasse In reply to ??? [2011-09-29 20:04:18 +0000 UTC]

Why did Lithuania, Slovakia and Bosnia remain unpopulated enclaves among the EU states?

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Dark-Hyena In reply to ??? [2011-08-17 10:18:21 +0000 UTC]

I imagine the Ethiopian government used the threat of zombie attacks as a weapon against its people, much like the derg used famine to scare people into submission during the 80s

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QuantumBranching In reply to Dark-Hyena [2011-08-19 05:07:50 +0000 UTC]

Well, the current-day Ethiopian government is hardly as bad as the Derg. I imagine, however, that the more restive nationalities didn't exactly get their notice of where to evacuate in as timely a manner....

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Destructinthespring [2011-06-09 19:14:07 +0000 UTC]

Demographics in this world have got to be strange. I imagine in America the accents would shift towards West Coast as far as the Midwest.

Lowlanders all over the world would be mostly wiped out, to be replaced by Mountain-folk and Islanders.

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CountessMorgana In reply to ??? [2011-05-24 17:27:22 +0000 UTC]

"Shortly after the publication of the oral history of the war, Vostok Station was destroyed by a guided missile. As yet, nobody has taken responsibility."

Huh. I did wonder what happened to that moron once his lease was up. He WAS still there, right? Hadn't been evicted yet?

I really shouldn't, but still... *snickers* Serves the whining self-serving little bastard right.

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felneymike In reply to CountessMorgana [2015-08-22 17:08:57 +0000 UTC]

More like EVERYBODY would claim responsibility XD

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QuantumBranching In reply to CountessMorgana [2011-05-25 03:44:37 +0000 UTC]

Yep, he was there. I really didn't think much of his chances of long-term survival after his "self-justification" was published.

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freivolk In reply to ??? [2011-05-12 21:23:04 +0000 UTC]

Great map like always!
How many Germans did you think survived?
Maybe in Bohemia the Czech were so decimated, that with lot of german, polish, slovakian and hungaryan refugees in the bohemian mountains they have no majority anymore.
And in Ukrania the numbers of survivers must propably be higher, because the mostly russian populated Crimea was the blue Zone. With just 6 million survivers the Ukrania would propably already have a russian majority.

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QuantumBranching In reply to freivolk [2011-05-13 22:56:41 +0000 UTC]

Germans? Well, I assumed something over 20% for the EU area as a whole...given German efficiency, I would imagine they don't fall much below that!

Hard to say re the Czech republic: one wonders what the Czech armed forces had to say about Germans, Poles etc. taking refuge in _their_ mountains.

As for the Crimea, there are (in our world) about 2 million inhabitants with 58% Russians, so how many Ukranians are ethnic Russians depends still on what proportion of the refugees who made it to safety were from the west or the more Russian east of the country. Local Russian's favored option is probably to try to go west to the EU and maybe America rather than stay and push for Ukrainian incorporation into Holy Russia.

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freivolk In reply to QuantumBranching [2011-05-14 21:00:06 +0000 UTC]

The Czech Army is rather small. I don´t think they couldn´t fight the Zed and at the same time hold back refugees from other countrys. Especially if this would piss of their two big neighbours.
In the book its mentioned that Prague Castle (seat of the president) was stormed by Zeds. It doesn´t seem impossible, that the army was destroyed by the attemptet to save Prague. I mean that a nation change his name reqiers a bit more then just medivial revival.

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QuantumBranching In reply to freivolk [2011-05-21 05:14:20 +0000 UTC]

Mayhaps.

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ZemplinTemplar In reply to QuantumBranching [2014-11-07 17:37:28 +0000 UTC]

Hi, Bruce.

Nice map, but based on the rules established in the novel, isn't it weird that the Czech lands survived rather well, but Slovakia got a lot more battered ? I mean, the Czech lands are much less mountainous, particularly in terms of elevation and how you can navigate between the ranges. I would expect a greater die-off of locals to the Zeds over there, not in Slovakia. Not to mention the fact that the Czech lands have twice the population and particularly a much higher population density. 
Or did you leave the area rather blank on the map since Brooks just doesn't provide much info on some of the central European states ? I've thought of that as a possible explanation. (Can't say I blame you, the novel isn't exactly super-detailed when it comes to events in every region of the world, so filling in the blanks is vital if you want to make a map of the whole scenario.)

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ilikecustard [2011-05-01 22:14:53 +0000 UTC]

He mentions that northern Ireland (or at least part of it) had been ceded from the UK to the Irish republic, how do you think this has happened? Although he mentions that many british refugees fled to ireland during the war I wouldve assumed that britain as a stronger military power and owner of cold mountainous areas north of the antione line ideal for zombie defense would have weathered the crisis better than the Irish. Perhaps the two nations cooperated, the british providing miitary support and territory in exchange of a save haven for britons fleeing the infection?

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QuantumBranching In reply to ilikecustard [2011-05-13 22:45:56 +0000 UTC]

I didn't remember that! Perhaps Ireland avoided a full-blown outbreak? Under such circumstances, refuge in exchange for territorial concessions post-war makes some sense...

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AmongTheSatanic [2011-04-10 02:19:09 +0000 UTC]

By the way, you seem to forget Iran and India had a nuclear exchange, and Pakistan just sorta collapsed in between. Afghanistan, with no functioning government, would be a patchwork of states or just empty valleys cleared out by Solanum.

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QuantumBranching In reply to AmongTheSatanic [2011-04-10 03:03:30 +0000 UTC]

Iran and Pakistan had a nuclear war: India was not involved.

Afghanistan after all has a lot of mountains and an armed populace accustumed to surviving under pretty ghastly conditions: most of it _was_ emptied out, but I assumed that enough people could hole up in the mountains until winter for there to be sufficient survivors to reestablish a state at some point at some point.

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AmongTheSatanic In reply to QuantumBranching [2011-04-10 03:52:09 +0000 UTC]

Aye, mixed those two. However, after the "end" of the war, India is likely not in a position to assert authority; If anything, it is likely a gray area of anarchy. The government had been centered in the far north, of the Hindu Kush and the Himalaya's. The rest of the Indian's were literally driven into the ocean.

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QuantumBranching In reply to AmongTheSatanic [2011-04-10 04:44:45 +0000 UTC]

The map is a decade or so after the war, when the fellow is doing the book: by that time the Indian government will have reestablished its authority(it's not like there will be many survivors in the south to _be_ anarchic )

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AmongTheSatanic In reply to QuantumBranching [2011-04-10 04:47:50 +0000 UTC]

Ah, that makes more sense. Also, what of North Korea ? He never specified IF the North Korean underground was full of zombies. I personally think opening it and finding a dead Kim and a bunch of pissed off Koreans wanting democracy would be more interesting than a flood of zombies.

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QuantumBranching In reply to AmongTheSatanic [2011-04-12 03:16:12 +0000 UTC]

if Kim is dead and the Koreans are pissed, why haven't they made it out on their own? Personally, I was thinking it would be interesting to have both Zombies and live Koreans: they want out,but the Zombies hold the upper tunnels...

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mustafa931 In reply to QuantumBranching [2012-06-21 08:13:57 +0000 UTC]

someone should do a animated movie about this section.But isnt it wierd that they didn't tried to establish contact with the surface

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QuantumBranching In reply to mustafa931 [2012-06-21 14:21:57 +0000 UTC]

Perhaps they think it's all Zombies up here?

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AmongTheSatanic In reply to QuantumBranching [2011-04-14 00:22:44 +0000 UTC]

That would suck.

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AmongTheSatanic In reply to ??? [2011-04-10 02:17:00 +0000 UTC]

I made a map based on World War Z, only I placed the infection right in the middle of World War 2, for the fun of it.

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QuantumBranching In reply to AmongTheSatanic [2011-04-10 03:04:23 +0000 UTC]

Ouch.

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AmongTheSatanic In reply to QuantumBranching [2011-04-10 03:50:45 +0000 UTC]

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Parhe In reply to ??? [2011-04-10 01:09:36 +0000 UTC]

hows korea doing

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QuantumBranching In reply to Parhe [2011-04-10 03:10:41 +0000 UTC]

Serious losses, but they managed to get safe zones established and saved a goodly percentage of their population, more than the Japanese. Still a democracy (if, as pretty much everywhere, more authoritarian than before the war).

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