How did the zombie virus start?

A zombie apocalypse is a fictional event, but in stories, it usually starts from a virus (like the "Wildfire" in The Walking Dead from a lab or space spores) or parasite, often spread by bites, leading to reanimated corpses driven to infect others. While real-world zombies are linked to Haitian folklore and rabies, modern fiction, especially George A. Romero's films, created the flesh-eating, shambling hordes, often with no single "patient zero" origin, just rapid societal collapse from an unknown contagion.
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How did the Zombieland virus start?

In Zombieland, the virus, known as the Mad Zombie Disease, started from a mutated strain of Mad Cow Disease (BSE), which jumped to humans after Patient Zero ate a contaminated burger, causing it to evolve into a fast-acting pathogen that turns people into flesh-eating zombies. The infection spreads through bites, scratches, or fluids, leading to fever, black blood, a swollen brain, and intense hunger for human flesh. 
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How did the first zombie start?

zombie, undead creature frequently featured in works of horror fiction and film. While its roots may possibly be traced back to the zombi of the Haitian Vodou religion, the modern fictional zombie was largely developed by the works of American filmmaker George A. Romero.
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How did the World War Z zombie virus start?

The virus in World War Z, called Solanum, has an unknown exact origin, but theories point to it being unearthed or released around China's Three Gorges Dam construction, infecting a boy who became Patient Zero, leading to a global pandemic spread through bites, organ trade, and infected blood, though the film suggests it was a mysterious, ancient pathogen. 
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When was the first zombie found?

According to The Undead Eighteenth Century by Linda Troost, zombies appeared in literature as far back as 1697 and were described as spirits or ghosts, not cannibalistic fiends. They arrived on the film scene around the same time as their monster peers, Frankenstein and Dracula, with the 1932 release of White Zombie.
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Zombie COVID-19 ESCAPE POV first person

Is Conplan 8888 real or fake?

Yes, CONPLAN 8888 (or CONPLAN 8888-11) is a real, declassified U.S. military document from 2011, but it's a fictional training scenario developed by U.S. Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM) to teach junior officers how to create contingency plans using a completely absurd threat (zombies) to avoid using real-world, sensitive scenarios, making it an effective, humorous, and non-political teaching tool. The plan outlines military operations against a "zombie apocalypse," allowing planners to practice real concepts like logistics, operations, and legal considerations without real-world fallout. 
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Who was patient 0 in World War Z?

In Max Brooks' novel "World War Z," Patient Zero is a 12-year-old Chinese boy, bitten while treasure diving in the flooded ruins of the Three Gorges Reservoir, representing the first documented case of the modern zombie pandemic (Solanum virus), though the virus itself likely predates him, with the boy's discovery triggering a cover-up by the Chinese government that allowed the infection to spread globally through organ trafficking and emigration.
 
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Why does 115 turn people into zombies?

Element 115 was used to create the zombies as one of its side effects was the reanimation of dead cells. The zombies were to be used as super-soldiers by the Germans. After creating them, the Germans realized that they were uncontrollable and would lead to mankind's destruction.
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Is a World War Z virus possible?

No isolated sample of the Solanum virus has ever been recorded in nature. Despite extensive research of soil, water, and air samples from every ecosystem, additionally, no samples have been found in any animal or plant specimen.
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Will 28 years later have zombies?

Yes, they are the "infected," not traditional zombies, in 28 Years Later, but they've evolved significantly from the fast, rage-filled humans of earlier films into more complex variants like intelligent "Alphas" and slow "Slow-Lows," showing the virus adapting to become a persistent, near-sentient threat, blurring lines with zombie lore. 
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What does God say about zombies?

What does the Bible say about Zombies? The Bible does not explicitly mention zombies in the modern sense of reanimated corpses that seek to consume the living.
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Who created zombies?

No single person "created" zombies, as their roots are in Haitian folklore (spirits controlling the living), but American filmmaker George A. Romero is credited with inventing the modern flesh-eating, virus-spreading, shambling zombie in his 1968 film Night of the Living Dead, which drew inspiration from Richard Matheson's novel I Am Legend. Romero's "ghouls" defined the genre, featuring brain-hungry undead that could only be stopped by destroying the head.
 
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Is zombie real or fake?

Are Zombies Real? Yes, according to some scientific studies, but not necessarily in the Hollywood style. A zombie, in Voodoo, is a dead person who is revived after burial and through the influence of powerful drugs, is compelled to do the bidding of the reviver, including criminal acts and heavy manual labor.
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What is the deadliest virus in history?

7 Deadliest Diseases in History: Where are they now?
  1. The Black Death: Bubonic Plague. ...
  2. The Speckled Monster: Smallpox. ...
  3. Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) ...
  4. Avian Influenza: Not Just One For The Birds. ...
  5. Ebola: On The Radar Again. ...
  6. Leprosy: A Feared Disease That Features In The Old Testament.
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Is the zombie virus possible?

A true "zombie virus" like in movies (reanimating the dead, turning people into mindless, flesh-eating monsters) is scientifically impossible, as viruses can't raise the dead or overcome complex biology; however, real "zombie-like" pathogens exist, like fungi that control insect brains or parasites that alter animal behavior, and "zombie viruses" (ancient, dormant viruses in permafrost) could theoretically emerge, posing unknown risks, but not creating Hollywood zombies. 
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Why are zombies so creepy?

From what I can tell, zombies are scary because they remind us of our mortality and mock the concept of death. They're something that isn't supposed to exist, the cannibalism just adds onto it. In addition, zombies are often shown to be rotting so there's a gore aspect to it as well.
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What is zombie at 17 about?

With the exception of losing her older sister in a hit-and-run, 17-year-old Tia Scott has had a pretty normal life. That is until she starts exhibiting strange symptoms and realizes she's caught a virus that's slowly turning her into a zombie.
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Why don't zombies eat each other?

Zombies don't eat each other in most lore because they crave fresh, living flesh and are drawn to the unique scent/heat/electrical impulses of the living, not the rotting meat of other undead; the controlling virus/infection also doesn't see other zombies as food, making them a single-minded "in-group" focused on spreading the infection, not self-cannibalizing. If they did eat each other, the hordes would wipe themselves out, ending the apocalypse narrative. 
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What is the Filipino horror movie about zombies?

Outside (2024 film) Outside is a 2024 Philippine post-apocalyptic drama horror film written and directed by Carlo Ledesma. It stars Sid Lucero, Beauty Gonzalez, Marco Masa, and Aiden Tyler Patdu.
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Is Conplan 8888 a real thing?

Yes, CONPLAN 8888 (or CONPLAN 8888-11) is a real, declassified U.S. military document from 2011, but it's a fictional training scenario developed by U.S. Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM) to teach junior officers how to create contingency plans using a completely absurd threat (zombies) to avoid using real-world, sensitive scenarios, making it an effective, humorous, and non-political teaching tool. The plan outlines military operations against a "zombie apocalypse," allowing planners to practice real concepts like logistics, operations, and legal considerations without real-world fallout. 
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What is the T virus?

The T-Virus (Tyrant Virus) is a fictional, man-made mutagenic virus from the Resident Evil franchise, created by the Umbrella Corporation as a bio-organic weapon (B.O.W.) to generate super-soldiers, but it primarily causes uncontrollable mutation, cellular breakdown, reanimation, and cannibalistic hunger in hosts, turning them into zombies or powerful monsters like the Tyrants. Derived from the Progenitor virus, the T-Virus hijacks cells, leading to intense aggression, enhanced strength, and eventual death, though some rare individuals can gain superior abilities.
 
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Will zombies come true?

No, fictional reanimated corpses are not possible due to biology and physics, as dead bodies can't move or function; however, real-life parasites, fungi (like Cordyceps), prions, or viruses (like rabies) can create zombie-like states by hijacking brains for aggression or altered behavior, though not true "undead" scenarios. So, while zombies in movies aren't real, some mechanisms mimicking zombie traits could theoretically exist. 
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Why don't zombie shows call them zombies?

Zombie shows often avoid the word "zombie" to build realism, show characters encountering a new phenomenon (not genre tropes), create suspense, or to differentiate their creatures from traditional folklore, using terms like "infected," "walkers," or "biters" to reflect the characters' lack of prior knowledge and the evolving threat. This "genre blindness" makes the threat feel more immediate and terrifying because the survivors don't have a pre-existing framework from movies or books to understand or combat them.
 
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Are zombies alive or not?

Zombies in fiction are generally considered "undead" or reanimated corpses, meaning they are biologically dead but animated by some force (virus, magic, etc.), existing in a state between life and death, while real-world "zombies" (like those in Haitian folklore) are living people in a trance-like, enslaved state, but modern pop culture mostly features the undead variety. Biologically, true undead zombies are impossible because dead bodies decompose and can't sustain movement or function without energy, but the concept explores themes of infection and loss of humanity, as seen in shows like The Walking Dead or games like The Last of Us.
 
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