Skip to main content

Zanki Zero: Last Beginning launches into a cycle of violent rebirth

Send in the clones

Unlike other dungeon crawls, Zanki Zero: Last Beginning makes repeated death part of the regular adventuring experience. Out today, in this post-apocalyptic RPG from Spike Chunsoft and some of the Danganronpa creative crew, your party members are vat-grown, fast-ageing clones, doomed to die. Popped out of vending machines, your heroes start as children and will die of old age after just a few days, if the weird mutant monsters (or goats) don't get them first. Below, a trailer breaking down some of the game's stranger systems, like perks unlocked by finding new ways to die.

Similar in style to games like Dungeon Master and Legend Of Grimrock, Zanki Zero is a first-person, party-based dungeon crawl with real-time combat, but a few clever ideas of its own. Some enemies have locational damage points to disable attacks or earn extra loot. There's some life sim elements in-between dungeon sorties too, including farming, cooking, and deciding who bunks up with who. It's nothing explicitly adult, and seems played for laughs, but the English version has apparently excised a few potentially sketchy scenes involving the characters in their child forms.

Watch on YouTube

While I've not had the chance to play this myself, I've heard that while it shares some darkly comic themes with the Danganronpa series, the story takes a back-seat to the dungeon crawling. There's a dark mystery to be unravelled, explaining why these eight people are stuck on a mutant-infested island, cursed to live and die in an endless cycle. I've heard rumblings that it's not as interesting a narrative as Danganronpa's bizarro anime Sherlock nonsense. Still, some interesting concepts here and I'm still curious to see how it brings them together, if I can find time for just one more RPG.

Zanki Zero: Last Beginning is out now on Steam for the admittedly steep price of £45/€54/$54. You can see a little more of it, its systems characters on its official page here.

Read this next

Dominic Tarason avatar
Dominic Tarason: A freelance games critic, Dominic was a regular contributor to Rock Paper Shotgun from 2015 until 2020. In that time he wrote the site's mods column, Modder Superior, as well as flexing his indie game, first-person shooter and Path Of Exile expertise while covering PC gaming news in the evenings. He has also contributed to PC Gamer.
View comments (12)
Related topics

Rock Paper Shotgun is better when you sign in

Sign in and join us on our journey to discover strange and compelling PC games.