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Look up in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.Zombi may refer to:., traditionally an person in Haitian folklore and is regularly encountered in fictional horror and fantasy themed works. or Dawn of the Dead, a 1978 film by George Romero., a space rock band from Pittsburgh.

You can help ZombiU Wiki by expanding it. The following is a complete timeline of events in the ZombiU universe. Note that ZombiU takes place, until 2012, within the same timeline as our own. Thus, only major events that tie into the plot that occurred in real life will be mentioned.

'Zombi', a song by P-MODEL from the album., a computer game published in 1986 by Ubisoft., a video game first published as ZombiU in 2012 by Ubisoft., a snake-deity in Voodoo cults of West Africa and Haiti., a set of horror filmsSee also.

(Redirected from Zombi (video game))
Zombi
Developer(s)Ubi Soft
Publisher(s)Ubi Soft
Designer(s)Patrick Daher
Platform(s)Amstrad CPC, Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, ZX Spectrum
ReleaseAmstrad CPCOther versions
  • EU: 1990
Genre(s)Action adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

Zombi is an icon-driven action adventure video game. It was Ubi Soft's first publication, released in 1986.[1] It was programmed by Yannick Cadin and S.L. Coemelck, with graphics by Patrick Daher and music by Philippe Marchiset.

Gameplay[edit]

A first-person action adventure, it borrows heavily from the George A. Romero film Dawn of the Dead: four protagonists exploring a zombie-filled shopping mall, gunshops, escalators, and the articulated trucks used to block the entrances. If a character's health is depleted, he turns into a zombie, which then roams the room they died in. Zombies can be killed either by numerous body shots, or a single shot to the head. Jewel quest free online. Characters are named after the creators of the game.

Ports[edit]

The game was re-released in 1990, with ports developed for the ZX Spectrum (by Geoff Phillips, Colin Jones and Steve Chance), Commodore 64 (Jean Noel Moyne, Laurent Poujoulat, Jean Francois Auroux),[2]Amiga (Alexander Yarmitsky),[3]Atari ST and MS-DOS (Yannick Cadin).

Reception[edit]

The ZX Spectrum version was awarded 87% by Sinclair User magazine[4] and 77% by Your Sinclair,[5] both reviewers were impressed with the immersive atmosphere.

CU Amiga awarded the Amiga version of the game 85%, whilst German magazine Amiga Joker scored it at 69%.[6]

Zzap!64 awarded the Commodore 64 version of the game 72%. The reviewer said that the gameplay is outdated and is very similar to Catch 23, a 1987 ZX Spectrum game.[7]

See also[edit]

  • ZombiU, a similarly titled 2012 game from Ubisoft

References[edit]

  1. ^'Games, Games and More Games' article from Start magazine volume 3 issue 8, March 1989; retrieved from Atarimagazines.com
  2. ^Zombi at Lemon64.com
  3. ^Zombi at Hall of Light
  4. ^Sinclair User issue 98 at World of Spectrum
  5. ^Your Sinclair issue 52 at World of Spectrum
  6. ^Amiga Joker March 1990 and CU Amiga May 1990 reviews at Amiga Reviews (archive.org copy)
  7. ^'Zombi for Amiga (1990) MobyRank'. MobyGames. Retrieved 24 November 2012.

External links[edit]

  • Zombi at MobyGames
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