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And we obviously didn't have much money to market it. We hoped people would take it in the slightly tongue in cheek way it was meant with the title. You had to go via a third party and do a deal with somebody else. "Before the wasn't really the possibility of self-publishing, so you couldn't even begin to think about it. "Now there's the possibility," Rebellion boss Jason Kinglsey told Eurogamer in an exclusive interview. Most importantly though, we've expanded the legions of Nazi undead with some really intimidating new enemies which we'll reveal soon."Ĭurrently the game is confirmed for release on PC, but Oxford-based studio Rebellion hopes to make use of Sony and Microsoft's self-publishing policies to get the game on PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. "The environments, the levels, the soundtrack all give a strong feeling of descent - each encounter, each level becoming progressively more hellish. "We really wanted to heighten the demonic, nightmarish tones of the first game," said head of creative Tim Jones.


The sequel again stars American OSS secret agent Karl Fairburne who, alongside his three allies, fights in Berlin against occult powers in a co-op focused campaign for up to four players. Nazi Zombie Army was a spin-off to Sniper Elite V2 that released in February 2013. Rebellion has announced Sniper Elite: Nazi Zombie Army 2, due out on PC later this year and, potentially, next-generation consoles.
