Everything's Deader with Zombies



"Steve: All right. What's with the Zombies? Eric: Oh them. [...] They only come up here when they're bored."

- Radioactive Panda

There's a Romero-style zombie shambling around, but it's not a Zombie Apocalypse. So what's it doing here? Because zombies are cool. Whether it's to set up a Low Fantasy setting with necromantic Horrors, add an element of comedy, or simply to add variety, some works of fiction feature Zombies in a less than central position. It doesn't even have to have a reason. The zombie is there just because.

This is something of a popular advertising gimmick for games, MMORPG's, and Comic Books these days. Just like slapping Wolverine on the cover adds to sales, a "zombie invasion", "Halloween Episode", or other stunt can drive up sales and give a fun Breather Episode from more plot heavy story arcs.

This could also work if there actually is a Zombie Apocalypse, but it's not part of the main story. It's just thrown in there as a parody or homage with little lasting effect on the plot.

General

 * Halloween specials and events used to mean a variety of monsters. Now it just means a zombie episode or zombies spawning in MMORPGs everywhere.
 * This ad from Puerto Rico for the Toyota Highlander. "Just as they adapted to a world of zombies, the Highlander adapts to your life." Possibly the most off-topic ad ever.
 * There's a "turn off your cell phone" advisory that runs in certain movie theaters depicting a Too Dumb to Live woman talking on her phone who nearly gets caught in a Showdown At High Noon, and a battlefield, before finally being overwhelmed and devoured by a horde of zombies.

Advertisements

 * In a Toshiba laptop commercial, an inferior laptop triggers a chain reaction of mishaps involving a power station, a nationwide blackout, and spoiled milk, culminating in a horde of zombies.

Anime & Manga

 * Black Butler manga, chapter 53 and onwards. From the setup, one would have initially expected Frankenstein's Monster.
 * The political drama episode of Excel Saga (which throws in a lot of things just for the hell of it).
 * The Negative Continuity Halloween episode of Samurai Champloo had zombies in it.
 * The "Thriller Bark" Arc of One Piece has an army of zombies and their creators as the major antagonists. Of course, being One Piece, these zombies are considerably more comedy flavored than usual.
 * The enemies of StrikerS Sound Stage X, a special Sound Drama of the Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha series featuring a mini-arc set between the third and fourth season? The Mariage, an army of Kamikaze Super Soldier Cyborg Zombies.
 * Sid Barret from Soul Eater; an awesome, blue zombie—with tattoos! Actually, he's only seen alive in one of the first three episodes where the series is running through its Debut Queue, after that he's killed and well... a zombie. He's not just slight comic relief with his "That's the man I used to be" lines, but he's also an extremely skilled fighter and weapon technician.
 * D.Gray-man has the Order Relocation Arc, which is started off with a faux Zombie Apocalypse when Mad Scientist Komui gives the Science Team members "Komuvitamin D".
 * Komui created the Komuvitamin D, but it was the ghost that gave it to poor Arystar Krory and started the whole mess.
 * Kore wa Zombie Desu ka? has Ayumu, a zombie as the main character WITH A HAREM.
 * Ling-Ling from Rosario + Vampire is a zombie, and she makes a point to remind everyone that she's already dead.
 * Sankarea is a zombie in a romantic comedy.

Card Games

 * Topps has a card range called Hollywood Zombies.

Comics

 * Hellboy had a small eastern European town beset by a horde of zombies. The townsfolk took care of it.
 * Blackest Night shows that the only thing worse than a horde of intelligent zombies is a horde of intelligent zombies with Green Lantern Rings.
 * Solomon Grundy, named after the nursery rhyme.
 * Carl Barks and Don Rosa Scrooge McDuck stories have Bombie the Zombie, a zombie who chases Scrooge around the world. He's a bit slow, so it may take years for him to catch up after a defeat.
 * IDW Comics is planning a Crisis Crossover Cross Through miniseries called "Infestation", crossing Zombies vs. Robots over with Star Trek, The Transformers, G.I. Joe, and Ghostbusters (but not said four licensed properties with each other), with canonical consequences for everyone involved. Trek and Transformers fan reactions has been... about as expected.
 * The second issue of the Funny Animal Stoner comic Horndog was based uround a zombie invasion.

Fan Works

 * Key antagonists in the battle on the Plains of Death in With Strings Attached. Paul loves them because destroying them doesn't compromise his Actual Pacifism.
 * My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic fangame Story of the Blanks has Apple Bloom stumbling into a Town with a Dark Secret,

Film -- Live Action

 * In An American Carol, Malone has a vision of the ACLU as relentless zombies.
 * Rumpelstiltskin summons zombies to help him to claim the soul of the baby Johnny.
 * In Deathstalker II the ... hero? ... let's say protagonist stops to rob a tomb he's travelling past, and has to fight off a zombie horde for his troubles.
 * After being a supernatural Slasher Film most of its run, The Dead Pit throws zombies into the mix.
 * Fido, wherein people keep zombies as pets.

Gamebooks

 * Book 2 of the Lone Wolf series, Fire on the Water, has a whole ghostly fleet maned by undeads as the last obstacle of the story, including zombie crewmates. Since this is just after Lone Wolf gains the Sommerswerd, the ultimate weapon against the living deads, they really aren't much of a threat.

Literature

 * Team Zombie thinks so.
 * Zombie appear in Xanth, but they are simply undead instead of dangerous. They tend to be emotionally upsetting since they are ambulatory beings in a state of continuous rot, but the Power of Love can help them regain their humanity until they are indistinguishable from living persons.
 * Pride and Prejudice And Zombies. Exactly What It Says on the Tin.
 * Seeing the rights for this book were being disputed by Hollywood, a Brazilian movie magazine parodied this trope by suggesting/creating other stories WITH ZOMBIES: Kramer vs. Kramer vs. Zombies, Undead Poets Society, ZOMB-E, and Gone with the Zombies.
 * And Brazil also saw its own version: classic novel The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas became The Undead Memoirs of Bras Cubas.
 * There IS a short story titled "Everything's Better with Zombies".
 * Discworld's zombies, seeing as they're basically the same person's mind and body, just... dead, aren't usually plot-central. One member of the City Watch, Reg Shoe, is a zombie, for example, and a reasonably okay guy. The only "bad" zombie is Mr. Slant, but that has more to do with him being an Amoral Attorney than a zombie.
 * The Discworld novel Reaper Man details an actual zombie apocalypse (or more precisely, an undead apocalypse... with zombies!) caused by Death being fired for taking too much of an interest in his work. Hilarity Ensues.
 * There's zombies in Monstrous Regiment as well, and they're the more classic variety, but still don't eat any brains, they're just restless dead followers of the Duchess. Reg Shoe, who's accompanying Vimes on a diplomatic mission, regards them as an embarrassment (although this is the same guy who gives lectures to graveyards).
 * The Cauldron-Born in the Prydain Chronicles are reanimated corpses that exist only to slay for Big Bad Arawn.
 * Colt Regan: Demon Hunter contains a section where zombies show up, for almost no reason, which the author will tell you was in there because zombies rule.
 * The Inferi from Harry Potter are zombies in everything but name (with the Frankenstein monster's Popcultural Osmosis fear of fire).
 * It should be noted that Romero zombies are also scared of fire, as seen in Night of the Living Dead when they use fire to keep the ghouls from entering the house.
 * There's a Kelly Link short story called "The Hortlak" about a convenience store patronized by the undead; they're not actually carnivorous, but the clerks find them unsettling.

Live Action TV
"Doc: Zombie Attack! "Chase the alien enemy zombies from outer space, hurling flaming marshmallows!" Oh, yes, Sprocket! It sounds like a challenge!"
 * Fraggle Rock. Doc is excited about one of the games for his new computer.


 * "Degrassi of the Dead"
 * The "Green Men" from the Dark Tower series by Stephen King, though they're actually mutants.
 * One episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Dead Man's Party had a mask that was making a bunch of people come back as homicidal zombies, which had no real relevance to the ongoing plot about Buffy returning after having run away from home. ("Look at my mask. Isn't it pretty? It raises the dead. Americans!") Also, in an episode of Angel, Habeaus Corpses an evil law firm was being destroyed by a terrible monster, and for no apparent reason most of the lawyers turned into zombies.
 * It was a supernatural safeguard against unwelcome intruders. After all, Wolfram & Hart is led by very old demons who do not want to share their secrets. And fortunately for Gunn, they left out the "Bite makes a convert".
 * In the episode "The Zeppo", Xander ran into a guy who somehow had the ability to reanimate dead people with a special charm. They still kept their intelligence, but they also kept their wounds.
 * In the Angel episode "Provider", there was also one guy who was a zombie, and all he wanted to do was hook up with his ex-girlfriend. It's unknown what exactly brought him to undeath.
 * The girlfriend poisoned him. He died. He came back as a zombie. She forgave him for cheating. He forgave her for killing him. They kissed and made up.
 * In an earlier episode, The Thin Dead Line, Angel and Kate discovered a police chief had raised all the dead cops in a particular bad area of LA as zombie policemen.
 * Supernatural didn't have a Romero-style zombie until the fifth season, although there was a second-season episode with a "classic necromancy" form of zombie. At one point Sam tricked Dean into going on a personal mission by claiming they had to go zombie-hunting, and Dean really seemed to be looking forward to it. Although the victims of the Croatoan virus are zombie-like.
 * In the Doctor Who story The Web of Fear, the evil Great Intelligence operated chiefly through the body of Staff Sergeant Arnold, KIA early on in the emergency. Similarly a character in The Greatest Show in the Galaxy gets reanimated by the bad guys for no apparent reason except Rule of Cool.
 * The Ninth Doctor, Rose and Charles Dickens teamed up to fight zombies in Victorian Cardiff on Christmas Eve in "The Unquiet Dead".
 * The Charmed Ones in Charmed have to fight against zombies created by a necromancer and Zankou.
 * In the 2010 Halloween episode of Community the students and staff of Greendale Community College had to deal with a mysterious fever that seemed very similar to that of a stereotypical zombie virus. Their memories were conveniently wiped at the end of the episode, and it will likely never be mentioned again.
 * House featured Zombies in a fantasy sequence during the seventh season episode "Bombshells." House killed zombie versions of Foreman, Chase, Taub and Masters with a cane that doubled as a shotgun and axe.
 * The Season 3 Finale of Deadliest Warrior.

Music

 * T-ARA made three versions of the music video for their song "Lovey Dovey" that included a zombie version. It comes complete with a nod to "Thriller" by Michael Jackson.

Professional Wrestling

 * The Undertaker, a wrestling zombie introduced during The Nineties which went on to become one of the most successful gimmicks in the business, remaining one of the most prominent wrestlers in WWE even though his presence contrasts sharply with the more normal gimmicks of today.
 * It what may have been evidence that the WWE version of ECW was indeed a Franchise Zombie, the very first wrestler to compete was... the Zombie.
 * During the month of October, WWE.com has something called WWE Zombies gallery where the superstars themselves were Zombiefied.

Video Games

 * Minecraft. One of the earliest added, and least dangerous hostile mobs in the game; although as per usual with this trope, they can be a bit of a problem in groups.
 * Quarantine Mode in Combat Arms.
 * Warcraft games have plenty. The first campaign in Warcraft 3 was about trying to stop a Zombie Apocalypse, the second had you playing the other side and continuing where the first one left off. Following campaigns also had you fighting against the undead. In the Frozen Throne Expansion the Night Elves campaign had a visit into a zombie-infested lands, Blood Elves campaign begun with trying to stop a massive wave of undead. And of course there was an Undead campaign in which you continued to crush the remaining bastions of humanity before first pausing for a civil war and later leaving for Northrend.
 * In World of Warcraft the free-willed zombies are one of the playable races for the Horde. There also were two zombie invasions. First one heralded the introduction of Naxxramas. The second unleashed the plague of undeath on the lands—you could become infected and, if not cured in time, transform into an evil zombie and spread The Virus further. The second invasion heralded the Wrath Of The Lich King expansion, in which the players task is to venture into the Northrend, infested with undead from top to bottom.
 * Warcraft likes zombies a lot.
 * StarCraft: Wings of Liberty had a mission where you had to fight off colonists who were infested by the Zerg. They were zombies in all but name.
 * As did City of Heroes. In addition to the Zombie invasions in City of Heroes, there are zombies in pretty much every flavour wandering about as antagonists, or, if you're a villain, as minions.
 * Nothing prevents you from stopping crime and protecting the innocent as a zombie hero either.
 * Nox had zombies as standard monsters mid-game (and they get upgraded later), but it was justified by the fact that the hero's primary enemies were necromancers.
 * Grand Theft Auto IV has a "viral" achievement called "Let Sleeping Rockstars Lie" which you get be killing someone who has it already (the developers started with it, so it spread from them). It unlocks the ability to play as a zombie in a speedo. No joke.
 * Threed in EarthBound.
 * Mother 3 also had some zombies in the beginning of Duster's chapter, who were (coincidentally) like.
 * Call of Duty: World at War now has four bonus levels featuring -- what else -- Nazi Zombies. Some of them even goosestep instead of shambling.
 * Fallout has ghouls, unfortunate folks who got a lethal dose of radiation and didn't die. Many of them are quite sane, if a little worse for wear, but are the new victims of bigotry in a world where human slavery is colorblind, and are often forced to eke out an existence separate from the rest of society. Why? Because in the end, every last one of them will degenerate into the feral zombies that gives the civil ones such a bad name. The sad irony is, the isolation and forced habitation in radioactive areas is the very thing that accelerates the process.
 * Half Life 2: "We don't go to Ravenholm..."
 * Apart from that rather infamous level, both Half Life games had zombies as fairly weak, slow opponents that were only really threatening in large numbers or small spaces. Apart from (in the second game) the fast ones. And the poison ones.
 * Notably, the creatures which cause the zombies are, in the sequel, loaded into artillery and used as offensive weapons.
 * The DLC for Red Dead Redemption Undead Nightmare uses the original setting of game, but throws in a zombie plague to create instant awesome.
 * The Dustmen in Planescape: Torment use zombies as laborers and offer people large amounts of money in exchange for use of their body after they die.
 * Diablo. Certain monsters can resurrect the undead. In Act V of the second game, Reanimated Horde-type monsters have a random probability of resurrecting themselves, and can do so up to three times.
 * Some of the Army Men games have zombies thrown in just for the hell of it.
 * Most of the baddies in the Doom games are demons, but there's no shortage of undead. Most of these are soldiers that can fire their guns at you, but 3 introduces the classic, flesh eating, slow shambling variety.
 * Soul Calibur's Cervantes is one, while Astaroth is a "Golem" (read: Frankenstein's Monster).
 * The original Breath of Fire I has a whole town (aptly named Romero) full of the walking dead. Though they don't try to harm you, it still becomes your duty to put them back into the ground.
 * Vampire: The Masquerade: Bloodlines had a cemetery level full of zombies at one point, in direct homage to Romero films. The exact reason for their appearance has never been explained, considering that . There are two other major zombie sequences in the game—one caused by a virus and the other caused by vampire necromancy. Despite the stark difference between the origins of the three zombie groups in the game, they all move, act, and are essentially the exact same things.
 * Plants vs. Zombies, a Tower Defense game where you fight off invading zombies with an army of plants.
 * Borderlands: The first DLC has zombies.
 * Guild Wars has at least 2 different kinds of zombies (without including necromancer minions).
 * There are about 3 major zombie armies, (the Orr zombies, the plague zombies and Joko's zombies) as well as numerous smaller groups. (Unless you count Joko's zombies as mummies.)
 * One of the recurring monsters in Final Fantasy was Zombies. Even in Final Fantasy Tactics A2, a character named used to be a zombie.
 * Neverwinter Nights featured serveral areas infested with zombies.
 * Mass Effect has husks—basically, cybernetic zombies created by devices known as "dragon's teeth" which are enormous spikes that bodies are impaled on. While impaled, cybernetic implants are put into the body to make it obey orders and give it one of several abilities, most commonly a large electrical explosion. In Mass Effect 2, new variants of the husks appear, including a version that consists of several bodies mashed together and equipped with a huge cannon, a massive amalgam of about thirty corpses turned into an enormous living, flying tank, and a form of husk that is on fire.
 * Dragon Age has corpses possessed by demons; what kind of monster they will be depends on the variety of demon. One corpse might want to simply bash your face in, another might want to chew it off, and still others might melt it off with fireballs. Party member Alistair collectively refers to them, however, as "brain-eaters."
 * Uncharted: Drake's Fortune is an Indiana Jones-style action/adventure that ticks along at an even pace, pitting you against your rival's hired thugs, ancient death traps, and a journal full of cryptic instructions. Suddenly, Zombies!
 * Metal Slug 3 has a zombie level, featuring a contagious outbreak at a civilian crash site. Those who get infected die, get hit by lightning and come back to life as a zombie. If this happens to the player, they become less mobile and lose everything but their pistol, but it averts One-Hit-Point Wonder unless they get hit with the substance again. Trying to use a grenade results in them vomiting large amounts of blood across the screen at everything in front of them, and it's VERY powerful, able to take down bosses in one hit. It can be cured with medicine that enemies drop, but why would you do that?
 * The Legend of Zelda has Redeads that leave Link paralyzed with fear in order to come closer and suck the life out of him (by apparently leaping onto and humping him to death), and The Legend of Zelda Links Awakening had actual zombies in the graveyard area.
 * The Simpsons arcade game had a level in a cemetery. While the ghosts were mooks in bedsheets, the zombies were real.
 * Typically the first Mook you'll encounter in Castlevania games.
 * As if being hounded by Jason Voorhees himself in Friday the 13 th wasn't enough, there are also zombies of his past victims shuffling around the campsite.
 * The Zombie in the Disgaea series is one of the few monster classes that's present in every single game.
 * Draugrs from The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim.
 * Every game in the Saints Row series has at least one homie who ends up dying in a cutscene, who you then have the option of bringing back as a zombie. The Third finally makes them part of the actual storyline when
 * Every game in the Saints Row series has at least one homie who ends up dying in a cutscene, who you then have the option of bringing back as a zombie. The Third finally makes them part of the actual storyline when

Web Comics

 * In Holiday Wars, a zombie t-rex shows up in this in this strip
 * Sluggy Freelance. Three words: Zombie Fun Lab.
 * Megatokyo has zombies occasionally pop in to destroy parts of Tokyo. They have to get proper approval just like everyone else, though.
 * Dead Metaphor is a comedy set in a world plagued by zombie outbreaks. It seems people have gotten used to zombies, treating them as annoyances and lower-class citizens.
 * {...} from Hanna Is Not a Boy's Name
 * The main characters of Loserz all like videogames with zombies, and then there's this strip.

Web Original

 * Jonni Rotten in the Metro City Chronicles.
 * Mur Lafferty's audio drama The Takeover. It's like the American venison of The Office but with zombies. And also funny.
 * Oh, and there's a cameo by Johnathan Coulton in the last episode of season 1.
 * SCP-008. The world accessible through SCP-093 suffered what's essentially a Zombie Apocalypse under the application of a truly epic instance of Our Zombies Are Different. They fit the archetype of the endlessly hungry, seemingly-mindless hordes of the restless dead, but... well, when the smallest difference is that they're up to six stories tall, you know you're dealing with something weird here.
 * Gaia Online had its first Zombie Apocalypse on Halloween 2004. The zombie avatar skin was supposed to be temporary and was eventually wiped out altogether due to server problems, but the skin was so popular that in Halloween 2005 another race of zombies, the Grombies, were introduced. After a while, newer users who joined after the event complained that they couldn't get a zombie skin, so a Grombie knock-off skin was introduced via the Death Whisper evolving item, and later another zombie skin was introduced via the 2008 Halloween event. Gaia Online members really like zombies, it would seem. The zombies are not usually part of the plot during the rest of the year but the skins are still fairly common.
 * The original zombie skin has been re-released as an equippable item.
 * Empire did "20 Movies Improved By Zombies".
 * In the official Lost podcast, a Running Gag was that after the show's finale in the sixth season, there would be a Season 7, "Lost: Zombies" with "everybody who we've killed off over the years coming back and trying to eat brains." The producers also released a fake script where Walt becomes a zombie.
 * If you can't beat'em... employ them! The League of STEAM have developed "domestication collars" in order to employ zombies as servants.

Western Animation

 * The "Abracadaver" episode of The Powerpuff Girls.
 * The "Attack of the Zombies" episode of Code Lyoko.
 * The "Legacy of Terror" episode of Star Wars: The Clone Wars.
 * The "Jack and the Zombies" episode of Samurai Jack. Shiver.
 * One episode of The Fairly OddParents has Timmy accidentally reviving a zombie version of his dead pet gerbil.
 * Enzo in ReBoot once became a zombie in a game.
 * "Johnny Zombie Tea Party" had Porkbelly's founding fathers as zombies who don't eat brains but love iPods and TV. Although, they do threaten to lower the property value.
 * Zombies are one of the many bizarre creatures in Ugly Americans, with the protagonist's roommate Randall being the main example. They do like to eat brains, and there was a war against them in the '60s that may have been some kind of failed Zombie Apocalypse, but these days they're mostly just normal people. Randall's finds the ones that still lurch around moaning annoyingly cliché.
 * On Invader Zim, Zim breaks into the mall to return a video tape, leading the security guard to release his zombie army. Played for Laughs in that the zombies just sort of stumble around aimlessly, mostly bumping into each other and ignoring Zim completely.
 * In Odd Job Jack, Leo creates an army of zombies to out-evil Jack, but the city accepts them, finding the swarm preferable to meter maids. Heck, many even find their presence an improvement!
 * In the first Halloween episode of South Park, Kenny becomes a zombie after morticians accidentally embalm him with Worcestershire sauce.

Real Life

 * In Austin, TX, pranksters broke the locks on highway construction signs and altered them to read: THE END IS NEAR! ZOMBIES AHEAD! RUN! RUN TO COLD CLIMATES! NAZI ZOMBIES! Unfortunately, this happened once during a hurricane evacuation. Nobody panicked, thankfully, but it could have been a lot worse with the evacuees who were already under stress from the possibility of having lost most of their Earthly possessions.
 * Of course, Zombie Walks.
 * In Portland Oregon, a group of people dressed as zombies for a costume party got into a car accident. In a literal example of everything being deader with zombies, their costumes were so good that bystanders thought their injuries were much worse than they actually were.
 * There's even a book titled Theories of International Politics and Zombies by political scientist Dan Drezner, which studies real-life international politics through the lens of a Zombie Apocalypse—because why the hell not?

"Waldorf: Why do you suppose fans like zombies so much? Statler: Because they don't have brains either. Both: Do-ho-ho-ho-ho-hoh!"