Hubbry Logo
search
logo

Dead Trigger 2

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia
Dead Trigger 2
App Store icon
DeveloperDECA Games
PublisherDECA Games
EngineUnity
PlatformsiOS, Windows Phone, Android, Facebook
ReleaseiOS, Android
  • WW: October 23, 2013
Facebook
  • WW: February 20, 2014
GenresFirst-person shooter, survival horror, action role-playing
ModeSingle-player

Dead Trigger 2 is a first person survival horror video game was developed and published by Madfinger Games, later acquired by DECA Games. It was released for Android and iOS devices on October 23, 2013, and for Facebook on February 20, 2014.[1] As with the original Dead Trigger, Dead Trigger 2 is a single-player zombie-themed shooter. Nvidia showcased Dead Trigger 2 as the first tech demo for their upcoming Tegra 4 mobile system-on-a-chip;[2][3] Slide to Play and Android Police compared the graphical quality to the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3.[4]

Dead Trigger 2 utilizes the Unity game engine. It was released as a free-to-play game; microtransactions are included in the final product, but the developers had tested the game without in-app purchases to make sure the core gameplay works without them.[5]

Gameplay

[edit]

Dead Trigger 2 is a zombie-apocalypse-themed first-person shooter with survival horror and action role-playing elements, currently available on iOS, Android and recently on Windows Phone 8.1 mobile devices. Running on the Unity game engine, the game features a progression system, numerous environments, unlockable and upgradable weapons, and various story-based and quick-play mission types.

Dead Trigger 2 is a free-movement shooter; rather than the on-rails gameplay typical of mobile zombie shooters, the player controls the character's movement like a typical console or PC FPS. The game features two dramatically different control paradigms; with the default controls, the player merely aims at zombies - their weapons will attack automatically when a zombie is underneath the crosshair. The advanced control scheme functions like the first game - the player presses a button to fire the weapon, and an additional button lets the player aim down the weapon's sights for increased accuracy.

Gameplay typically revolves around completing objectives while killing zombies (occasionally killing zombies is the only objective). It also has an infinite wave of zombies in the arena of death. There are also different campaigns and tournaments. The player has a limited amount of health that is refreshed at the start of each mission. The player loses health when hit by zombies or by certain environmental hazards (i.e. radiation). The player can regain health by taking healing pills or getting a health power up from a special zombie.

Enemies come in two flavors, standard zombies and special zombies. Standard zombies often plod along at a slow pace and attack with their arms, but some may sprint or carry melee weapons for increased damage. Special zombies have distinct appearances and unique traits; they are deadlier and tougher to kill, but drop blueprints or large amounts of cash (and sometimes health) when killed.

In addition to carrying two primary weapons, the player also carries a melee weapon and up to three types of consumable items. Consumables include health pills, grenades, exploding chickens and others.

The storyline involves 5 campaigns, each set in a different continent:

  • USA campaign
  • Africa campaign
  • China campaign
  • Europe campaign
  • South America campaign

Reception

[edit]

Dead Trigger 2 received positive reviews from critics. Review aggregator website Metacritic provides a score of 77 out of 100 based on 12 critics.[6]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Dead Trigger 2 is a free-to-play first-person shooter video game developed by Madfinger Games and released on October 23, 2013, for Android and iOS mobile devices.[1][2] Set in a post-apocalyptic world overrun by a zombie plague, the game challenges players to survive by battling hordes of undead across multiple regions, using an arsenal of over 70 firearms, melee weapons, and gadgets like turrets and explosive chickens.[3][4] As a sequel to the 2012 game Dead Trigger, it expands on the zombie survival genre with free-movement controls, customizable touch or virtual joystick interfaces, and a base-building element where players construct a personal hideout and interact with NPCs such as a gunsmith and medic.[5][3] The storyline unfolds through over 600 campaign missions and scenarios across 10 unlockable regions and 33 battlefields, emphasizing strategic planning and intense, real-time combat against evolving zombie threats.[4][3] The game supports single-player campaigns, weekly multiplayer tournaments in arena modes, and social features for competing with friends, with progression tied to resource management, weapon upgrades, and skill improvements.[3][2] It has achieved significant popularity, surpassing 100 million downloads by 2018, and received positive reception for its high-quality graphics, smooth performance on mobile hardware, and addictive gameplay loop, earning an aggregate score of 77/100 on Metacritic based on critic reviews.[6][2] In 2023, Madfinger Games handed over its mobile titles, including Dead Trigger 2, to DECA Games, which continues to update and maintain the title with new content and events.[7]

Development

Announcement and production

Dead Trigger 2 was announced on January 6, 2013, during Nvidia's CES press conference, where it was positioned as the sequel to Madfinger Games' 2012 zombie shooter Dead Trigger.[8][9] The game was developed by Madfinger Games, a Czech studio founded in 2009 and based in Brno, known for its mobile first-person shooters such as the 2011 title Shadowgun.[10] The studio's team, which grew from four to around 40 members by 2012, drew on prior experience with console titles like Mafia and Vietcong to transition into mobile development.[11] Technically, Dead Trigger 2 was built using the Unity engine, which Madfinger had employed since 2009 for its ease of use, rapid development capabilities, and cross-platform support.[11] Nvidia showcased an early version as a tech demo for its Tegra 4 mobile processor at CES 2013, highlighting advanced graphics features like dynamic lighting and particle effects to demonstrate console-like performance on mobile hardware.[12][9] Production adopted a free-to-play model with microtransactions from the outset, influenced by high piracy rates experienced with the original Dead Trigger, which prompted a shift away from premium pricing to broaden accessibility while incorporating in-game purchases for progression items.[13][11] This approach emphasized offline single-player gameplay to distinguish it from multiplayer-focused competitors, allowing players to engage in zombie-shooting missions without an internet connection.[11] In March 2023, Madfinger transferred operations of its mobile titles, including Dead Trigger 2, to DECA Games to focus on PC development, though the core production of the game predated this change.[7]

Release and platforms

Dead Trigger 2 was initially released worldwide on October 23, 2013, for iOS and Android devices.[14] The game launched as a free-to-play title with in-app purchases for virtual currency and items, ensuring no paywalls restricted access to core content. The title expanded to additional platforms shortly after launch. A Windows Phone version arrived in April 2015, bringing the zombie shooter to Microsoft's mobile ecosystem.[15] Meanwhile, a browser-based adaptation for Facebook debuted on February 20, 2014, as another free-to-play option tailored for web play.[16] Originally self-published by developer Madfinger Games, the game's ongoing operations transitioned to DECA Games on March 22, 2023, to sustain live services and updates.[7] Initial marketing efforts emphasized the game's advanced graphics, powered by the Unity engine and optimized for Nvidia hardware. Partnerships with Nvidia highlighted demonstrations on devices like Project Shield at events such as CES 2013, while app store promotions focused on its high-fidelity visuals for mobile.[8]

Gameplay

Core mechanics

Dead Trigger 2 employs a first-person shooter framework with touch-based controls optimized for mobile devices, including an enhanced virtual joystick for movement and precise aiming. Players can navigate environments in full 360-degree freedom, with options to switch between auto-fire mode—where weapons discharge automatically upon targeting enemies—and manual firing using ironsights for greater accuracy, accessible via the in-game options menu. These controls are noted for their responsiveness on touchscreens and compatibility with physical gamepads, though the game lacks dedicated cover or crouching mechanics, emphasizing direct confrontation.[3][17] The combat system revolves around point-and-shoot mechanics, where players wield a diverse arsenal exceeding 70 weapons, including pistols, rifles, shotguns, rocket launchers, and melee options like wrenches, katanas, and chainsaws. Weapon handling incorporates realistic elements such as recoil management during sustained fire, manual reloading sequences, and dismemberment effects on zombie targets, enhancing tactical depth in engagements. Survival is supported by consumables like health-restoring pills, throwable grenades, land mines, and unconventional gadgets such as explosive chickens, which players deploy to manage hordes or counter threats. While weapons can be upgraded for improved performance, these enhancements tie into broader progression systems.[3][17][18] Enemies primarily consist of standard zombies that shamble toward the player with basic melee attacks, requiring 1-3 shots to dispatch depending on weapon choice. Special variants introduce variety and demand adaptive strategies: fast-moving rampagers that charge aggressively, explosive kamikazes that detonate on proximity, health-draining radioactive scientists, vomitrons that hurl slowing blood clots, and heavily armored panzers resistant to standard gunfire. These encounters encourage the use of explosives or targeted weak points to overcome their unique abilities.[17] Environmental interactions focus on solo offline missions within destructible settings, where players can utilize available cover for positioning and destroy certain objects to reveal paths or disrupt enemy advances. The game emphasizes tactical navigation through 33 battlefields across 10 regions, without multiplayer elements in core campaign play.[3][18] Powered by the Unity engine, the game delivers console-like graphical fidelity with advanced lighting, post-processing effects, blood splatters on impacts, and dynamic environmental visuals such as smoke and water reflections, particularly enhanced on high-end devices like those with Tegra 4 chips. Audio feedback includes varied sound effects for gunfire, zombie groans, and explosions, complemented by professional voice acting to heighten immersion during combat.[17][18]

Progression and modes

Players progress in Dead Trigger 2 primarily through earning two currencies: gold, obtained via mission completions, headshots, and zombie drops, and blueprints, collected from mission rewards and challenges, which are used to unlock and upgrade weapons.[4][19] The game features numerous weapons across categories such as primary weapons (e.g., assault rifles and shotguns), secondary handguns, and melee options, all of which can be customized and upgraded up to level 11 for enhanced damage, accuracy, and firing rates using these currencies.[3] A key progression element is the hideout system, a base-building mechanic where players rescue survivors during missions to populate and expand their personal headquarters.[4] These survivors operate facilities such as the workshop for crafting explosives and weapons, the hospital (manned by the medic) for health boosts and painkillers, and the engineer's bench for additional gear production; upgrading these facilities via the scientist increases efficiency, unlocks new content, and provides bonuses like higher mission rewards.[20] The game offers multiple mission modes to drive advancement, including a story-based campaign with 44 core missions focused on survival and zombie extermination, part of over 600 total gameplay scenarios, arena mode for enduring infinite waves of enemies, and daily challenges that reward bonus gold, blueprints, and items for completing time-limited objectives.[4][3] The game continues to receive updates from DECA Games, adding new missions, weapons, and events as of 2025. RPG elements manifest through customizable loadouts allowing players to equip preferred weapons and items without a class system, alongside temporary power-ups and boosters—such as health, damage, and money enhancers—that provide perks like increased speed or damage output during missions.[4][21] Microtransactions integrate via premium gold purchases, enabling faster access to upgrades and blueprints, though the game remains completable without them through consistent play.[4]

Story and setting

Plot overview

Dead Trigger 2 is set in a post-apocalyptic world where a zombie apocalypse has overrun society, with governments collapsed and humanity struggling for survival against relentless undead hordes.[18] The player assumes the role of an unnamed survivor acting as part of the resistance, engaging in missions to combat the outbreak and search for ways to contain or reverse the crisis.[22] The overarching narrative emphasizes themes of survival amid resource scarcity, human resilience against overwhelming odds, and the fight to reclaim a world lost to the undead, incorporating light RPG elements through survivor interactions that support the resistance effort.[23] The story begins with the player euthanizing a bitten companion who succumbs to the infection, then traversing an underground garage filled with zombies to link up with a female survivor who briefs them on immediate threats and objectives.[17] Overall, the tone is fast-paced and action-focused, with sparse dialogue and emphasis on mission progression over in-depth character arcs, delivering a straightforward zombie survival tale.[24] As a direct sequel to Dead Trigger, it expands the global zombie crisis introduced in the original, building a larger-scale narrative of worldwide resistance.[5]

Campaigns and locations

Dead Trigger 2 structures its core story through five regional campaigns that span the globe, guiding players through a series of missions tied to the zombie outbreak narrative while escalating in complexity and environmental variety. These campaigns collectively feature 44 story missions, but the game overall includes over 600 gameplay scenarios across 10 unlockable regions and 33 battlefields.[4][3] Additional regions become available for generic missions after completing the main campaigns, expanding the exploration and combat opportunities.[25] The USA Campaign introduces core gameplay as a tutorial-focused arc with 7 missions set in post-apocalyptic American urban areas. Players rescue survivors and secure resources to establish a hideout amid ruined malls, streets, and industrial sites, learning mechanics like crafting and basic navigation in close-quarters environments. Early objectives include producing painkillers in the hideout and retrieving stolen tools, emphasizing survival basics in familiar cityscapes overrun by initial zombie waves.[26][22] Transitioning to more exotic terrains, the Africa Campaign comprises 10 missions in harsh desert oases and dense jungles. Here, players confront mutated zombie variants while searching for ancient artifacts potentially connected to the virus's origins, navigating open landscapes with helicopter insertions and building defenses against roaming hordes. Missions often involve landing in remote areas, clearing specials like heavy zombies, and managing limited visibility in sandy or vegetated zones for added tactical depth.[27] The China Campaign unfolds across 10 missions in the towering high-rises and bustling streets of Shanghai, presenting high-density urban swarms that demand precise movement. Vertical challenges dominate, with players scaling buildings, using elevators, and defending narrow ledges against overwhelming zombie rushes in confined, multi-level structures. Environmental hazards like collapsing floors heighten the intensity, focusing on crowd control in densely populated Asian city ruins.[28] In the Europe Campaign, 9 missions explore ruined cities, abandoned labs, and fortified facilities, delving into the scientific roots of the virus through investigative objectives. Players uncover clues in sterile laboratories and war-torn boulevards, facing boss-like elite zombies and puzzle-like sequences involving lab equipment or security systems. The settings blend historical European architecture with high-tech interiors, offering diverse cover options and ambush opportunities.[28] The South America Campaign concludes the core story with 8 missions amid lush jungles and ancient ruins, revealing key insights into a potential cure. Environmental traps such as pitfalls, vine entanglements, and collapsing temple structures pose unique hazards alongside standard zombie threats, requiring agile traversal in overgrown, booby-trapped terrains. Final missions tie together global threads, culminating in high-stakes confrontations that emphasize exploration and evasion in humid, relic-filled landscapes.[28] Rescued survivors from these campaigns contribute to hideout upgrades, enhancing player capabilities as the global progression unfolds.[18]

Reception

Critical reviews

Dead Trigger 2 received generally favorable reviews from critics following its October 2013 launch, earning an aggregate score of 77 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 12 reviews.[29] Critics frequently commended its technical achievements, particularly the graphics, which were seen as rivaling Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 levels on mobile hardware.[30] For instance, 148Apps noted that the game "aims at being the mobile equivalent of console games," highlighting its detailed environments and fluid animations.[30] Positive feedback also centered on the intuitive controls and overall polish, making it accessible for touch-based play. Arcade Sushi praised the "tight controls" and "beautiful graphics," emphasizing how they enhanced the zombie-slaying action.[31] Similarly, Digital Spy highlighted "amazing visuals" and "refinements to the controls," crediting them for smooth navigation in free-movement scenarios that set it apart from on-rails mobile shooters. Android Police echoed this by describing the controls as "superb" on touchscreens and the basics as "solid" despite the game's simplicity.[17] However, several reviews pointed to shortcomings in mission design and monetization. AppSpy criticized the "grindy and repetitive fundamentals," though it acknowledged improvements in varied objectives and enemies. Digital Spy similarly called out "tedious grinding and repeated missions" as detracting from the experience. Aggressive microtransactions were a common complaint, with Android Police noting that timers and costly upgrades hindered progression for non-paying players, often requiring real-money purchases to bypass frustrations like super zombie encounters.[17] In the zombie FPS genre on mobile, the game was lauded as a standout for its offline-capable free movement and depth, offering more tactical freedom than typical rail-based titles.[32] The Facebook version, released in February 2014, garnered similar praise for its core gameplay, with GameNGuide describing it as an engaging port that retained the mobile version's zombie-shooting appeal.[33]

Player feedback and legacy

Players have generally praised Dead Trigger 2 for its addictive gameplay and extensive weapon variety, while criticizing its pay-to-win mechanics. On Metacritic, the game holds a user score of 7.9 out of 10 based on 42 reviews, with many highlighting the engaging missions, high-quality graphics, and diverse arsenal as key strengths that encourage repeated play sessions.[34] However, users frequently note frustrations with the energy system and microtransactions that limit progress without spending, describing it as an aggressive monetization approach that pressures players to pay for advantages.[34][17] Commercially, Dead Trigger 2 has achieved significant success through its free-to-play model, surpassing 100 million downloads across iOS and Android by 2018 and reaching over 110 million on Android by 2023.[35][4] No official revenue figures have been disclosed, but the game has maintained strong app store performance, frequently ranking in the top 200 free action games on both Google Play and the App Store.[36] Since its 2013 launch, Dead Trigger 2 has received regular post-launch support, including updates that introduce new weapons, environments, events, balance adjustments, and bug fixes to keep the experience fresh. For instance, updates between 2018 and 2022 added challenging new maps like those in the Siberia region, expanded gadget options up to Tech Level 11, and introduced seasonal events with unique rewards; more recent examples include the December 2024 webshop update and the October 2025 Anniversary Update (version 2.7.0), which added new firepower and celebratory events.[37][38][39][40][3] The game's legacy endures as a prominent entry in the mobile zombie shooter genre, noted for pioneering free-movement controls that deviated from the on-rails style common at the time.[41] In 2023, developer Madfinger Games transferred live operations of Dead Trigger 2 and other titles to DECA Games to ensure ongoing development and player support.[7] An active community shares strategies and mod documentation on dedicated fan sites, while the game has inspired extensive fan content, including numerous YouTube playthroughs and walkthroughs.[25] Culturally, it gained early visibility through NVIDIA's 2013 CES demo showcasing its performance on Tegra 4 hardware and Project Shield.[8]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.