Compare World War Z: Aftermath prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Saber Interactive Inc. Published by Saber Interactive Inc.. Released on 3/27/2023. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action.

Got three friends and forty minutes to spare? World War Z: Aftermath turns coordinated chaos into one of the most viscerally satisfying co-op shooters on PC, even if solo runs feel like bringing a spoon to a buffet.

My first hour with World War Z: Aftermath went something like this: sprint down a narrow Roman street, realise a thousand fast-moving zombies have already flanked my position, panic-switch from rifle to chainsaw, and survive on pure luck while my two teammates held the barricade. That moment captures almost everything the game does well and everything it won't apologise for. This is an unapologetically co-op-first horde shooter, and it is very comfortable being exactly that. Aftermath is the definitive version of the original 2019 game, bundling all previous episode content across New York, Moscow, Marseille, Jerusalem, and Tokyo, then adding two new campaign episodes set in Rome (including Vatican City) and Russia's Kamchatka peninsula. The Rome maps reward situational awareness as zombie swarms pour through tight catacomb corridors from multiple angles. Kamchatka mixes things up with an environmental hazard: stray too far from kerosene heaters and your health drains rapidly from hypothermia, which forces movement discipline you rarely need in other levels. Both episodes are short but tightly designed, and the escalating wave structure means tension rarely drops. The post-launch Against All Odds update further padded things out with additional Horde Mode maps and seven new mutators for Challenge Horde Mode, all free. Horde Mode XL is the real showpiece, throwing over 1,000 enemies at you simultaneously using Saber's Swarm Engine, and it remains genuinely impressive to watch your firepower tear through that mass. The class system gives each of four players a distinct role across eight options: Gunslinger, Hellraiser, Slasher, Medic, Fixer, Exterminator, Dronemaster, and the Aftermath-exclusive Vanguard. Hellraiser brings C4 and a grenade launcher for raw crowd control, Fixer drops supply bags loaded with explosive ammo for the whole team, Medic keeps revives flowing under pressure. The perk trees give you tangible build goals to grind toward, though critics are right that some perk interactions feel underbaked and the points economy punishes players who stay on lower difficulties too long. Weapon progression is separate from class progression, adding another layer of long-term investment. A switchable first-person mode arrived with Aftermath and works reasonably well for close-quarters sections, though the aim-down-sights implementation is a zoom-in rather than true iron sights, which is a small but genuine disappointment for shooter veterans. Here is where honesty matters: solo is a noticeably lesser experience. AI squadmates handle basic cover and can use heavy weapons after recent patches, but they will not carry you through higher difficulties, communicate flanks, or make smart calls on resource placement. The game's design assumes human coordination, and without it the campaign missions feel like you are fighting both the horde and the interface. Cross-play is fully supported across PC and consoles, so finding a session is usually straightforward, but the community is not enormous and queue times at off-peak hours can stretch. The story across all episodes is thin connective tissue between action setpieces, with characters that exist as class skins rather than people you invest in. If you came for narrative, look elsewhere. If you came to watch a tide of fast-moving corpses meet a well-placed turret line and a Hellraiser with a grenade launcher, this game will give you that repeatedly and without apology. World War Z: Aftermath sits comfortably in the same neighbourhood as Left 4 Dead and Aliens: Fireteam Elite. It does one thing, mowing down enormous zombie hordes in co-op, exceptionally well. The depth is narrower than those comparisons in some ways, but the sheer scale of what the Swarm Engine renders on screen still feels like a genuine differentiator years after launch. Bring three humans. Skip the solo run unless you already know what you are signing up for. Alex, Scout Team

World War Z: Aftermath

World War Z: Aftermath

Mar 27, 2023Saber Interactive IncSaber Interactive Inc.
GamerScout Says

Got three friends and forty minutes to spare? World War Z: Aftermath turns coordinated chaos into one of the most viscerally satisfying co-op shooters on PC, even if solo runs feel like bringing a spoon to a buffet.

PCXbox
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €7.27

GamerScout Verdict

A spectacular co-op zombie shooter for squads who want massive horde chaos, undermined significantly if you plan to go it alone.

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Price History

Historical low
€7.275 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€6.69€7.08€7.46€7.855 Jun13 Jun21 Jun28 Jun6 Jul
Tracking prices since 5 Jun 2026
Create alert

Screenshots & Media

About World War Z: Aftermath

My first hour with World War Z: Aftermath went something like this: sprint down a narrow Roman street, realise a thousand fast-moving zombies have already flanked my position, panic-switch from rifle to chainsaw, and survive on pure luck while my two teammates held the barricade. That moment captures almost everything the game does well and everything it won't apologise for. This is an unapologetically co-op-first horde shooter, and it is very comfortable being exactly that. Aftermath is the definitive version of the original 2019 game, bundling all previous episode content across New York, Moscow, Marseille, Jerusalem, and Tokyo, then adding two new campaign episodes set in Rome (including Vatican City) and Russia's Kamchatka peninsula. The Rome maps reward situational awareness as zombie swarms pour through tight catacomb corridors from multiple angles. Kamchatka mixes things up with an environmental hazard: stray too far from kerosene heaters and your health drains rapidly from hypothermia, which forces movement discipline you rarely need in other levels. Both episodes are short but tightly designed, and the escalating wave structure means tension rarely drops. The post-launch Against All Odds update further padded things out with additional Horde Mode maps and seven new mutators for Challenge Horde Mode, all free. Horde Mode XL is the real showpiece, throwing over 1,000 enemies at you simultaneously using Saber's Swarm Engine, and it remains genuinely impressive to watch your firepower tear through that mass. The class system gives each of four players a distinct role across eight options: Gunslinger, Hellraiser, Slasher, Medic, Fixer, Exterminator, Dronemaster, and the Aftermath-exclusive Vanguard. Hellraiser brings C4 and a grenade launcher for raw crowd control, Fixer drops supply bags loaded with explosive ammo for the whole team, Medic keeps revives flowing under pressure. The perk trees give you tangible build goals to grind toward, though critics are right that some perk interactions feel underbaked and the points economy punishes players who stay on lower difficulties too long. Weapon progression is separate from class progression, adding another layer of long-term investment. A switchable first-person mode arrived with Aftermath and works reasonably well for close-quarters sections, though the aim-down-sights implementation is a zoom-in rather than true iron sights, which is a small but genuine disappointment for shooter veterans. Here is where honesty matters: solo is a noticeably lesser experience. AI squadmates handle basic cover and can use heavy weapons after recent patches, but they will not carry you through higher difficulties, communicate flanks, or make smart calls on resource placement. The game's design assumes human coordination, and without it the campaign missions feel like you are fighting both the horde and the interface. Cross-play is fully supported across PC and consoles, so finding a session is usually straightforward, but the community is not enormous and queue times at off-peak hours can stretch. The story across all episodes is thin connective tissue between action setpieces, with characters that exist as class skins rather than people you invest in. If you came for narrative, look elsewhere. If you came to watch a tide of fast-moving corpses meet a well-placed turret line and a Hellraiser with a grenade launcher, this game will give you that repeatedly and without apology. World War Z: Aftermath sits comfortably in the same neighbourhood as Left 4 Dead and Aliens: Fireteam Elite. It does one thing, mowing down enormous zombie hordes in co-op, exceptionally well. The depth is narrower than those comparisons in some ways, but the sheer scale of what the Swarm Engine renders on screen still feels like a genuine differentiator years after launch. Bring three humans. Skip the solo run unless you already know what you are signing up for.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

steamHorde ShooterClass-BasedSkill TreesCross-PlayZombie SwarmsCo-op CampaignThird-Person ShooterWave DefenseHorde Mode XLFirst-Person TogglePvPvZEnvironmental HazardsSwarm EnginePrestige SystemChallenge MutatorsMelee Focused Build

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7
Processor
AMD A10-5700 / Intel Core i3-3220
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
AMD R7-240 / GForce 650Ti / Intel 630
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Interne…

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Processor
AMD Ryzen 5 2400G / Intel core i7-3970
Memory
16 GB RAM
Graphics
AMD Radeon R9 280 / Nvidia GeForce GTX 960
DirectX
Version…

DLC & Add-ons for World War Z: Aftermath1

Expansions, DLC packs and add-on content for this game. Click any item to see store offers.

Keep exploring

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on World War Z: Aftermath.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
82%(200)

Game Info

Developer
Saber Interactive Inc
Publisher
Saber Interactive Inc.
Release Date
Mar 27, 2023

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

No card? Pay another way

Top up your Steam Wallet or buy crypto with any card — instant delivery, no bank account needed.

More from Saber Interactive Inc

Buy smarter: helpful guides

World War Z: Aftermath live on Twitch

Looking for more? See games like World War Z: Aftermath →

Frequently asked questions about World War Z: Aftermath

How much does World War Z: Aftermath cost?

World War Z: Aftermath pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy World War Z: Aftermath cheapest?

Compare World War Z: Aftermath prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is World War Z: Aftermath available on?

World War Z: Aftermath is available on PC, Xbox.

When was World War Z: Aftermath released?

World War Z: Aftermath was released on 27 March 2023.

Who developed World War Z: Aftermath?

World War Z: Aftermath was developed by Saber Interactive Inc and published by Saber Interactive Inc..