Compare Z Dawn prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by GoldenGod Games. Published by GoldenGod Games. Released on 12/6/2019. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Indie, RPG, Simulation, Strategy.

Permadeath, hex-grid tactics, and a sprawling survivor roster make Z Dawn a genuine test of resource discipline - but grind tolerance will determine whether you stick around for the endgame.

I went into Z Dawn expecting a thin mobile port dressed up for PC, and it surprised me - at least for the first several hours. What you actually get is a turn-based survival management game built around a hex-grid world map, a rotating cast of survivors with individual professions and skill trees, and a constant pressure cooker of scarce food, ammunition, and medicine. The structure sits somewhere between a roguelite and a light grand-strategy game: each run starts you with a randomised group, and you are immediately making allocation decisions - who scavenges, who guards the watchtower, who gets the last painkiller. Those early-game decisions carry real weight, and that tension is the best thing Z Dawn has going for it. The survivor management layer has more texture than the price point implies. Each character brings a profession (mechanic, builder, farmer, and others) that determines which camp structures they operate efficiently, and their individual stats affect combat performance on the hex-grid battle screens. Speaking of combat: it is turn-based and positional, not a twitch game, which suits the overall tone. Zombie variants like Spitters, Screamers, and Brutes show up with different threat profiles, and raider factions can swing between trade partners and lethal ambushers depending on how you approach them - a dynamic lifted straight from the Walking Dead playbook, for better or worse. Camp construction adds another planning layer: walls, watchtowers, workshops, and farms all compete for the same limited manpower, so expansion always costs something. Here is where the honest accounting starts. The mechanics that hook you in the first few hours gradually reveal their ceiling. Perk progression is shallow - profession-specific skill trees are thin, and levelling a survivor rarely produces a meaningful build choice. The item pool for looting and crafting is narrow enough that gear excitement fades well before the midgame. The bigger structural problem is pacing: significant turns can pass with nothing to do except skip ahead while your survivors complete jobs, and once your camp is fully built out, the final rescue objective becomes a repetitive scavenge loop with no new levers to pull. One reviewer put it plainly - what starts as compelling slowly reveals itself to be grinding. That is an accurate diagnosis. The UI is dense with data but functional, the 2D hex visuals are lo-fi but readable, and the audio is minimal. None of that is a dealbreaker at the budget tier this game occupies, but the lack of depth in the late game is. For whom does Z Dawn actually work? Newcomers to the survival-management genre will find the systems approachable without a 40-page wiki, and the roguelite restart loop keeps early losses from feeling permanent. If you have played XCOM and wanted a lower-stakes zombie variant to fill a lunch break, the format fits. The VIP mode - which designates a single character whose death triggers a game-over - adds a focused permadeath challenge that sharpens the early tension considerably, and the configurable Zombie Brute invasion frequency lets you tune the difficulty honestly. Steam sits at roughly 72 percent positive across around 247 reviews, which is a fair reflection of a game that delivers a functional loop without ever executing it brilliantly. There is no mod support to speak of, and post-launch updates, while present, have not fundamentally deepened the mechanics. Approach it as a budget afternoon game, not a 200-hour campaign, and the value proposition is solid. Expect a grand-strategy depth curve and you will be disappointed. Diego, Scout Team

Z Dawn
IndieRPGSimulationStrategy

Z Dawn

Dec 6, 2019GoldenGod Games
GamerScout Says

Permadeath, hex-grid tactics, and a sprawling survivor roster make Z Dawn a genuine test of resource discipline - but grind tolerance will determine whether you stick around for the endgame.

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About Z Dawn

I went into Z Dawn expecting a thin mobile port dressed up for PC, and it surprised me - at least for the first several hours. What you actually get is a turn-based survival management game built around a hex-grid world map, a rotating cast of survivors with individual professions and skill trees, and a constant pressure cooker of scarce food, ammunition, and medicine. The structure sits somewhere between a roguelite and a light grand-strategy game: each run starts you with a randomised group, and you are immediately making allocation decisions - who scavenges, who guards the watchtower, who gets the last painkiller. Those early-game decisions carry real weight, and that tension is the best thing Z Dawn has going for it. The survivor management layer has more texture than the price point implies. Each character brings a profession (mechanic, builder, farmer, and others) that determines which camp structures they operate efficiently, and their individual stats affect combat performance on the hex-grid battle screens. Speaking of combat: it is turn-based and positional, not a twitch game, which suits the overall tone. Zombie variants like Spitters, Screamers, and Brutes show up with different threat profiles, and raider factions can swing between trade partners and lethal ambushers depending on how you approach them - a dynamic lifted straight from the Walking Dead playbook, for better or worse. Camp construction adds another planning layer: walls, watchtowers, workshops, and farms all compete for the same limited manpower, so expansion always costs something. Here is where the honest accounting starts. The mechanics that hook you in the first few hours gradually reveal their ceiling. Perk progression is shallow - profession-specific skill trees are thin, and levelling a survivor rarely produces a meaningful build choice. The item pool for looting and crafting is narrow enough that gear excitement fades well before the midgame. The bigger structural problem is pacing: significant turns can pass with nothing to do except skip ahead while your survivors complete jobs, and once your camp is fully built out, the final rescue objective becomes a repetitive scavenge loop with no new levers to pull. One reviewer put it plainly - what starts as compelling slowly reveals itself to be grinding. That is an accurate diagnosis. The UI is dense with data but functional, the 2D hex visuals are lo-fi but readable, and the audio is minimal. None of that is a dealbreaker at the budget tier this game occupies, but the lack of depth in the late game is. For whom does Z Dawn actually work? Newcomers to the survival-management genre will find the systems approachable without a 40-page wiki, and the roguelite restart loop keeps early losses from feeling permanent. If you have played XCOM and wanted a lower-stakes zombie variant to fill a lunch break, the format fits. The VIP mode - which designates a single character whose death triggers a game-over - adds a focused permadeath challenge that sharpens the early tension considerably, and the configurable Zombie Brute invasion frequency lets you tune the difficulty honestly. Steam sits at roughly 72 percent positive across around 247 reviews, which is a fair reflection of a game that delivers a functional loop without ever executing it brilliantly. There is no mod support to speak of, and post-launch updates, while present, have not fundamentally deepened the mechanics. Approach it as a budget afternoon game, not a 200-hour campaign, and the value proposition is solid. Expect a grand-strategy depth curve and you will be disappointed. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5PermadeathSurvivor ManagementHex-Grid CombatRoguelite RunsCamp BuildingRandom EventsFaction DiplomacyLow-Spec FriendlyVIP Mode

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Vista / 7 / 8 / 10
Memory
512 MB RAM
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
Minimum Resolution - 1336x768, Graphics Card with at least 128MB Dedicated Memory
Processor
2 GHz (32/64bits)
Additional Notes
Works on 32 and 64 bits systems

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Game Info

Developer
GoldenGod Games
Publisher
GoldenGod Games
Release Date
Dec 6, 2019

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Z Dawn is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Z Dawn released?

Z Dawn was released on 6 December 2019.

Who developed Z Dawn?

Z Dawn was developed by GoldenGod Games.