Esteves wrote:Well, he is the "Thread Necromancer", and it is on topic, and necrotic and...
Sorry, I made it through about 9 pages, not all 27. Lol
Esteves wrote:Well, he is the "Thread Necromancer", and it is on topic, and necrotic and...
Yes, he takes it so seriously that we have a competition named after him and his Zed fascination/preoccupation:Cyberfly wrote:Yup yup yup.
We take our zombie survival very seriously here.
Just ask blue...
Dude!!! You should SO market that!!Esteves wrote:My 6YO (almost 7) and I invented a variant on Checkers that we call "Zombie Checkers"
Play as regular Checkers, except:
* One player is designated zombies, the other is humans/scientists.
* Instead of removing the opponent's piece when jumped, it gets replaced with one of yours (turned into a zombie or "cured")
Zombies are getting to be too mainstream - they aren't as fun any more I'm switching to reavers. :thumb:When big, news-breaking stuff happens on campus, you want to know, right? But seriously, how can we let you know if we don’t know how to contact you? Bengalerts: the new ISU Emergency Notification System can help. Once you sign up, we’ll use every means possible—email, text, voice message—to get info to you about anything that might affect your health and safety at ISU—and what you should do about it. This includes building or school closures, weather emergencies, and, of course, zombie attacks.
Because, you never know what might happen, right?
[How to subscribe information redacted]
That’s it–except for packing your zombie apocalypse survival kit. Better get on it.
Cyberfly wrote:But...there IS no escaping Reavers!
They have spaceships and will kill you and rape you and eat your face and... eww...I got chills. I skeered myself.
Actually, with the numerous acts of cannibalism that have been on the news, they may be closer than you think.Cyberfly wrote:Well, hey. If you're willing to wait umpteen hunnerd years for them to get made and git here, then more power to ya.
And when he loses, they'll riot. The Mayans may yet be right :laugh:Cyberfly wrote:Me? I'm preparing for the mindless hordes. They should be casting their votes for Obama this November...
SEATTLE (AP) — The infection is as grim as it sounds: "Zombie bees" have a parasite that causes them to fly at night and lurch around erratically until they die.
And experts say the condition has crept into Washington state.
"I joke with my kids that the zombie apocalypse is starting at my house," said Mark Hohn, a novice beekeeper who spotted the infected insects at his suburban Seattle home.
Hohn returned from vacation a few weeks ago to find many of his bees either dead or flying in jerky patterns and then flopping on the floor.
He remembered hearing about zombie bees, so he collected several of the corpses and popped them into a plastic bag. About a week later, the Kent man had evidence his bees were infected: the pupae of parasitic flies.
Don't make me have to hunt you down :pRapier1772 wrote:It's a thread about zombies. And you can't believe it doesn't just die? :skep:
You do know what a zombie is right? :p
If people prepare for "zombies" then they're also prepared for natural disasters (hurricanes, floods, etc.).Santagata wrote:What is this zombie thing? I just dont get! Plus zombie ammo whats that about?
LOLCyberfly wrote:I do know that I'm geared up and READY!
Bring em on!!
Why not use the treadmills as generators?Rapier1772 wrote:
Also claims there are 8 types of zombies:If real countries are detailed in the plan, the public might mistakenly believe the plans are real. Using zombies gets around that problem (for most citizens, at least).
Using zombies was also fun, the report's authors write. By allowing the trainees' imaginations to run wild, the instructors were able to teach them about the basics of writing military plans and orders, they wrote.
"If you suspend reality for a few minutes, this type of training scenario can actually take a very dry, monotonous topic and turn it into something rather enjoyable," they wrote in a disclaimer to the report.
Should the zombie apocalypse ever hit, I seriously doubt anyone will be that concerned with getting their money back (until it's over) or that anyone will be answering phones to process your refund (even after it's over).Please note -- we require medical evidence of the presence of a real zombie should you wish to claim under the 10 year anti zombie guarantee
Being able to tote 1200 rounds in a 30 cal. ammo can doesn't suck, either.kfeltenberger wrote:And why we hoard ammo!Rapier1772 wrote:That's why we reload
What an amazing hippie crusher. Or "hands up" rioter crusher...
Dammit, you're right! I hadn't even considered that. Looking at it zoomed in, you can see that all three of those panels are from the same picture (shadows, reflections, etc.), just manipulated slightly.panzermk2 wrote:Wheel panels are shopped.
More on the virus http://www.zombieworldnews.com/archives ... a_home.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;They have dubbed the condition 'Conscious Deficit Hypoactivity Disorder', or CDHD, which they describe as an acquired syndrome in which those who are infected by necro mortosis lack control over their actions. The undead display symptoms such as lethargic movement, loss of pleasure, language dysfunction, amnesia and the inability to suppress hunger and aggression.
Rapier1772 wrote:New list on States most (& least) likely to survive Z-day.
http://blog.estately.com/2016/07/does-y ... pocalypse/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Alaska will always be #1 on that list but Idaho made it up to #2.
The northeast is pretty much toast.
So true lol. They're every where.
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