![]() Zombie Driver Ultimate Edition is a simplistic yet challenging game offering a variety of fun game modes to take hold of. All of the DLC from the Xbox 360 HD version is now included, but as unlockable content in the game’s Blood Race campaign as rewards for winning tournaments. In each of them it is all about simply joyriding and racking up the kill count. Slaughter Mode comes with nine survival based arenas featuring enormous killing sprees and a dynamic upgrade system as you progress. Blood Race, which has thirty six different arcade racing events based on elimination and endurance, and finally – Slaughter Mode. The Zombie Driver Ultimate Edition comes with three main game modes consisting of Story Mode, the obvious campaign with 31 different story missions to trawl through. With this very cash you can then buy different add-ons for your vehicle to enable you to survive longer and kill with much more force. There are some beast end of level bosses and a selection of sub missions and sub objectives to the main story that allow you to earn cash. You start off initially as a mere Taxi just picking up stranded survivors if you choose to play the Story Mode, who you must find and save throughout the early levels and you can then work your way up by using sports cars, Limo’s, Ambulances, Police Cars, School Buses and the best of all – a fucking great fuck off Military Tank, which by then you would have killed thousands of Zombies and truly earned your right to dominate the land within it. It all appears more dramatic, more over the top and you can’t help but mow down Zombie after Zombie wanting each to have a bitter ending as now horde after horde is chasing your tail. The difference in lighting, frame rates and more polished environments give the action packed sequence of events a first class appearance. The game is more fun than it ever was before by adding extra intensity and much better visuals. To even the odds of survival with the Xbox One version having now doubled the Zombie count since last-gen, it is well balanced due to the placement of a lot more weapons around the cities – but, it’s still “bit of a chase” and a challenge you’ll surely rise to. Primarily, despite all the bells and whistles the gameplay is just the same as the Xbox 360 HD version, but the visual impact and challenges have increased by the shit-load. It has been released on PC during 2009 and sold particularly well on Xbox 360 in 2012 as a HD Version, so it’s landing on the Xbox One marketplace as Ultimate Edition is welcomed because it’s a really fun game and I wish it to be a success for the developer’s. Think Dead Rising meet’s Grand Theft Auto 2, and the more Zombies you kill by running them over, the more you get to unlock and upgrade your vehicles. ![]() If you haven’t played or heard of Zombie Driver before, the game is a top down vehicular combat game where you’re bang in the middle of a zombie apocalypse. Now as part of the program for Xbox One and a complimentary Dev Kit from Microsoft – EXOR Studio’s in their own words “decided to go ahead and make a valid Xbox One version of the game.” They also spent a lot of time on the upgrades, and bumped the game up to 60 FPS! If that wasn’t enough they also confirmed that the amount of Zombies featured in the game has doubled compared to last-gen! In a past press release, developer’s EXOR Studios announced the liquidation process of Cyberfront Corporation and began to give away the game for free for many months thereafter by code drops on their Facebook page. This Zombie Driver: Immortal Edition review is based on a PlayStation 4 copy provided by EXOR Studios.Not so long ago we were saying our goodbyes to the loss of Zombie Driver HD on the Xbox 360 marketplace due to the publisher’s going tits-up bust. If you can look past some of the rougher edges, there is a fun pick-up-and-play zombie-bashing game here for those looking for a rated M for Mature action game. What you get is a fun, top-down, arcade driving/zombie-killing experience. The inclusion of all DLC from the start is a welcomed feature, but the core game remains largely the same. Zombie Driver: Immortal Edition doesn’t change a whole lot compared to its 2012 release. This sense of progression is definitely appreciated. By the end of your time with Zombie Driver, you do feel like a real zombie killing machine. Over time, these do feel like they have an impact on the way each vehicle performs. There are also upgrades specific to each vehicle, such as their ramming power, overall armor, and speed. There are upgrades that are shared between vehicles, like the power of your machine gun or flamethrower. Zombie Driver features a rather fleshed out upgrade tree.
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