It is the definitive game. Not aggressively terrible, but aggressively mediocre. It takes everything that was charmingly flawed about the original and sandblasts away the charm, leaving only the flaws.

In the pantheon of zombie games, Dead Island (2011) holds a strange, cherished place. It was a beautifully broken promise: a tropical paradise turned gore-soaked playground, set to a heartbreakingly melancholic piano chord (the game’s iconic trailer remains a masterpiece of emotional manipulation). The game itself was a clunky, glitchy, but strangely compelling first-person loot-slasher.

Riptide commits the greatest sin a sequel can commit: it is exhausting. The first Dead Island had a sense of discovery—waking up in a penthouse, stepping onto the beach for the first time, watching the sun set over a resort slowly decaying into chaos.

Riptide offers none of that. It is a flooded, brown, muddy slog through a military base where every NPC hates you, every weapon breaks after 20 swings, and the game’s engine is actively trying to crash.

Dead Island- Riptide Now

It is the definitive game. Not aggressively terrible, but aggressively mediocre. It takes everything that was charmingly flawed about the original and sandblasts away the charm, leaving only the flaws.

In the pantheon of zombie games, Dead Island (2011) holds a strange, cherished place. It was a beautifully broken promise: a tropical paradise turned gore-soaked playground, set to a heartbreakingly melancholic piano chord (the game’s iconic trailer remains a masterpiece of emotional manipulation). The game itself was a clunky, glitchy, but strangely compelling first-person loot-slasher. Dead Island- Riptide

Riptide commits the greatest sin a sequel can commit: it is exhausting. The first Dead Island had a sense of discovery—waking up in a penthouse, stepping onto the beach for the first time, watching the sun set over a resort slowly decaying into chaos. It is the definitive game

Riptide offers none of that. It is a flooded, brown, muddy slog through a military base where every NPC hates you, every weapon breaks after 20 swings, and the game’s engine is actively trying to crash. In the pantheon of zombie games, Dead Island