Sat Jul 19, 2008 5:28 pm
A Nimitz class carrier would be great, the problem is actually operating a machine like that. It requires a huge, and relatively well trained crew to run anything powered by a nuclear reactor.
Of course, the most entertaining way to go about this would be trying to completely barricade a port city with a few thousand people, holding it as long as you could, and then retreating to the sea when/if you were overcome to have fun taking potshots at them until they all starved to death. It wouldn't be very safe though, because a single breach of the perimeter in the first stage could easily result in total annihilation.
The 28 Weeks Later zombies are probably smart enough, but they're only human, and they're nowhere near as fast as some of the creatures from Resident Evil.
I think we need to establish how long these zombies can live without fresh victims around. An exact copy of the "28 Weeks Later" scenario wouldn't be challenging enough in my opinion - most of them would starve before they could even reach wherever you chose to hide out.
So, lets say they can survive for 6 months, on average, after the extinction of their food. They can only infect mammals, and a human version has an IQ of 1/3 what it was before infection, can run 20km/h for very extended periods of time, and can only transmit infection through saliva or blood (i.e. biting you or bleeding on you). An infected human takes about 4 hours to convert to the aggressive stage, with symptoms appearing 1 hour after infection. The infection started when Ragnarok delivered a truckload of Pepsi laced with the agent to Heathrow airport, and rapidly spread to most of the Americas, Europe, Asia, Australia, and northern Africa. News of the outbreak took about 30 hours to become coherent, after the widespread destruction of NYC's populace, by which point the virus had already gained a foothold in every major city of the world.
Sound good?
Spudfiles' resident expert on all things that sail through the air at improbable speeds, trailing an incandescent wake of ionized air, dissociated polymers and metal oxides.