The zombie survival genre is a crowded graveyard of good intentions. For every 7 Days to Die , there are a dozen forgettable Early Access titles that fade into the digital fog. Enter Survival Nation: Lost Horizon , the latest open-world zombie survival MMO to shambles onto Steam. After spending a significant amount of time in its current Early Access state, the verdict is a familiar one: a solid skeleton wrapped in a frustratingly thin layer of meat. The Premise: Familiar but Functional You awaken on a sun-drenched, post-apocalyptic coastline. There is no lengthy cinematic explaining a lab leak or a meteor. You simply are. Your goal is equally simple: don’t die. Lost Horizon distinguishes itself from its predecessor ( Survival Nation ) by shifting the setting from a generic urban sprawl to a more varied, island-hopping archipelago. Think Dead Island ’s resort vibes mixed with Rust ’s unforgiving player dynamics.
Promising but barren. Sail at your own risk. Survival Nation Lost Horizon Early Access
Hardcore survival fans who enjoy "playing the patch" and watching a game evolve. If you liked Deadside or Mist Survival in their rough Early Access days, you will find a fun weekend here. The zombie survival genre is a crowded graveyard
Everyone else. Come back in six months. If the developers add the promised NPC factions, fill the empty spaces, and fix the zombie AI, this could be a contender. For now, Lost Horizon is a beautiful boat ride to nowhere. After spending a significant amount of time in