
Quarantine Zone: The Last Check
Papers, Please traded documents for rashes and bite marks, and the result is a checkpoint sim with a genuinely tense core loop - just don't expect the base management to pull its weight.
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About Quarantine Zone: The Last Check
My instinct whenever a sim labels itself a strategy game is to open a second monitor and start stress-testing the late-game systems. With Quarantine Zone: The Last Check, that second monitor stayed dark for the first few hours because the inspection loop genuinely held my attention on its own. You stand at a first-person examination station, work through a reference handbook of graded symptoms, and route each survivor to one of four destinations: the residential block, quarantine, the laboratory, or liquidation. The tools start simple - a flashlight, a reflex hammer, a temperature scanner - and the campaign drips in new equipment and symptom categories at a pace that keeps the early hours feeling fresh. Distinguishing conjunctivitis from early-stage viral eye damage, or deciding whether that bruise is trauma or necrosis, produces a low-grade paranoia that is the game's single strongest asset. The problems surface once that tool roster fills out. Playing optimally means cataloguing every symptom on every survivor against the manual, because the scoring system rewards complete documentation rather than a quick correct call. What started as tense triage turns into methodical paperwork, and the symptom variety does not scale fast enough to match the growing checklist. The patient models recycle too visibly, the ambient audio offers almost no tension cues, and the visual fidelity of symptoms in-engine is sometimes muddy enough that a sunburnt skin tone and an infection marker look nearly identical - a genuine gameplay problem, not just an aesthetic one. Critics and the Steam community have flagged launch-state bugs ranging from item clip-through soft-locks to the reflex hammer ragdolling survivors in unintended ways; some of these were patched post-launch but the game still carries the fingerprints of a compressed release window. Base management is the structural disappointment. On paper you oversee housing tents, a canteen, a clinic, quarantine cells, and a generator - all upgradeable with money earned from successful inspections. In practice, restocking is a menu click, upgrades are linear, and the whole system resolves in under two minutes per in-game day. A manual supply-cart feature present in the demo was cut before release, and you feel the absence. The drone defense sequences that trigger during nighttime zombie assaults are a brief respite - you switch to an overhead drone view and use weapon systems to hold back horde waves - but each encounter wraps up in a minute or two, leaving you right back at the examination station. Both the base layer and the drone mode read as undercooked side features rather than integrated strategic pillars. For players who clock in for the Papers, Please comparison (and that comparison is unavoidable - multiple reviewers make it directly), the honest answer is that Quarantine Zone has a more tactile inspection system but shallower moral stakes. Character dialogue repeats, emotional beats are thin, and the story offers minimal payoff relative to the weight implied by the setting. The campaign runs roughly 10 to 12 hours to completion, and an endless mode extends replayability for players who want to push their diagnostic accuracy indefinitely. If you are the kind of person who will voluntarily optimize a checkpoint routing spreadsheet, the endless mode is worth factoring into the value equation. If you need the narrative layer to justify the grind, this is not the checkpoint sim that delivers it. Brigada Games is a debut studio, and the bones here are solid enough that a sequel or a substantial content update could produce something genuinely special. Right now the game sits in a frustrating middle position: the core inspection loop works, the tension is real in the early hours, and the Steam rating sits comfortably Very Positive at over 12,000 reviews - but critical consensus landed in mixed territory precisely because the surrounding systems do not match the quality of that central idea. Worth picking up for fans of the document-checking subgenre who can tolerate a rough perimeter, less compelling for anyone expecting the strategy and base-sim depth that the genre tags imply. Diego, Scout Team
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Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 57 ProtonDB community reports.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10 x64 Bit
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 12
- Storage
- 12 GB available space
- Graphics
- GeForce GeForce GTX 980 / Radeon RX 470 / Arc A380
- Processor
- Intel Core i7-5820K / AMD FX-8370
- Additional Notes
- Low Quality setting, in 1080p, producing 30+ FPS
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 11 x64 Bit
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 12
- Storage
- 12 GB available space
- Graphics
- GeForce RTX 2080 / Radeon RX 5700
- Processor
- Intel Core i7-10700 / AMD Ryzen 5 5600X
- Additional Notes
- High Quality setting, in 1080p, producing 60 FPS
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Game Info
- Developer
- Brigada Games
- Publisher
- Devolver Digital
- Release Date
- Jan 12, 2026