

Along with a small team and way too many contractors, this game promised over-the-top action and didn’t technically disappoint.

Overall, developer Wideload Games caught the eye of many for its founder, Bungie co-founder and Halo: Combat Evolved veteran Alex Seropian.

Many Xbox players, like myself at the time, wanted to try it for one reason. If you played the game back in 2005 when it released, then it probably seemed like a mistake. In short, Stubbs the Zombie: Rebel Without a Pulse is a product of poor planning. Stubbs the Zombie is one of the weirder game releases of the 2000s and I’m excited to share my review of the game for Nintendo Switch re-release. Sure, we like the hard-hitting stuff, but replaying Stubbs after 16 years makes me yearn for the bizarre. For whatever reason, games are getting more and more serious. Funny enough, a game like this is something I actually miss about the industry nowadays. Underneath the wild premise of the game is a decent experience. The press release marking the game’s official launch even joked that the game was arriving “against all advice.” Is this some sort of meta love for a terrible game? Not at all.
#Stubbs the zombie 2 review full
Aspyr, a multifaceted developer and publisher, knows full well what they’re getting into re-releasing Stubs the Zombie: Rebel Without a Pulse.
