Unoriginally, this event is called the Great Panic. Without proper government leadership, lots of people panic. Governments take defensive measures, but their militaries don't understand their new enemy, leading to disastrous engagements such as the Battle of Yonkers, where America's state-of-the-art martial technology does little to even dent the zombie masses of Manhattan. Before anyone knows it, the undead masses have washed over the entire globe, biting, scratching, and killing all they come across. (They would.)īut the lack of information and preventative measures means the zombie tide doesn't stay back for long. Many countries ignore the news of the dead rising up from the grave with a ravenous hunger for human flesh, but others, such as Israel, take the threat seriously and begin zombie-proofing their borders. China has a mild outbreak of zombie that spreads out into the world through various routes: refugees, black market organs, human trafficking, and the undead simply shuffling about. The zombie plague starts as all plagues tend to-slow and steady. (Yeah, we hate those emotions.) The Interviewer decides to take the "human factor" out of his report and rework it as a book. The report consists of interviews from people around the world, but when he turns it, his boss complains the report is too emotional. An unnamed man (we're going to call him the Interviewer) is commissioned to write a report on the Zombie Wars.
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