![]() The Good: The individual skills the girls have are interesting. But if you simply want to kill zombies and not have to worry about anything else, School Girl/Zombie Hunter is a decent time for fans of Earth Defense Force or Onechanbara. If there is anything wrong with the game, it'd be that, like the other two series mentioned, it can get repetitive and the story is pretty dumb. The girls also level up as well, so there's other ways to improve your characters. There's no stat penalty for it either, although changing your shoes can improve your stamina and the like. Amusingly, you can play in your underwear if you want. (Apparently the zombies are all horny men.) Sadly, no lady zombies are present in this game that can get their kink on either. ![]() Power ups like health pickups are also scattered throughout the levels.Ī number of sun areas also exist, and some actually are a bit of tower defense mini-games, where you can actually throw off your costume or panties to distract zombies. There's also a ton of guns and costumes to collect, leaving the game having elements taken from Earth Defense Force. The girls have their own special skills ranging from quick reviving and more stamina, to identifying secret Charon birds and hidden item locations. You can also jump, but it's actually pretty useless. Ammo is unlimited, but you do have reload times that leave you vulnerable.Įach of the students are introduced in the first few levels, and the basics of the game's mechanics are laid out. They also consume a lot of stamina, which is also used for sprinting or dashing, so unfortunately you can't spam those moves. Melee attacks are secondary, and while they provide invulnerability when used, they leave you open afterwards and can't enact combos. School Girl/Zombie Hunter's world has zombie attacks being commonplace enough that the schools educate the students on firearms use, which is why the default weapons you have are the standard-issued assault weapons. It is essentially a side-story to the Onechanbara series, where the game focuses on the ordinary citizens caught in the wars that the lead ladies of the main series fight in. Now they need to find a means to survive or escape from the encroaching zombie invasion. The game's plot is very basic: a group of high school girls are trapped in their school when a huge zombie attack descends upon them. The end result - School Girl/Zombie Hunter - is quite the hoot. Now with several Onechanbara games under its belt, Tamsoft has decided to make another zombie killing game, while focusing on the firearm action seen in Earth Defense Force. Earth Defense Force focused on shooting giant alien monstrosities with firearms, and Onechanbara focused on killing zombies with melee attacks, where you needed to 'reload' your sword by cleaning the blood off, or face having your weapon get stuck, leaving you vulnerable. While made by different development teams, they both were about killing hordes of enemies. One was Earth Defense Force, and the other was Onechanbara. Long ago, there were two series of games born from the the Simple 2000 line of games made in Japan. GAME REVIEW | Ridding The Undead Is Commonplace For "School Girl/Zombie Hunter"
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