
The world didn’t end all at once. It slipped.
Power went out. Phones stopped working. People stopped answering doors. And somewhere in that silence, the first few survivors learned something quickly—this wasn’t about fighting back. It was about holding together.
ZOMBA Squad isn’t a military unit. It’s not an official team. It’s a group of individuals who survived long enough to become something more than just survivors. Each one brings a different strength. Each one carries something they don’t talk about.
This guide introduces the core members of ZOMBA Squad—the ones holding the line when everything else has already fallen.
Rika Minazuki — The Line Holder
Rika Minazuki doesn’t panic.
Where others react, she observes. Where others freeze, she moves. She isn’t loud, and she doesn’t need to be. Her presence alone stabilizes a room.
Rika represents discipline in a world that no longer rewards it. She treats survival like structure—positions, timing, awareness. Every decision is calculated, not emotional. That’s what keeps people alive around her.
She doesn’t claim leadership, but over time, people begin to look to her anyway. Not because she demands it—but because she never hesitates when it matters.
Rika is the one who holds the line when it starts to break.
Yumi Kisaragi — The Spark
Yumi is movement.
Fast, unpredictable, and impossible to ignore, she cuts through tension with energy that feels almost out of place in a collapsing world. But that energy isn’t chaos—it’s survival in a different form.
Where Rika stabilizes, Yumi disrupts. She creates openings. She forces momentum when hesitation would mean death.
There’s a sharp edge beneath her attitude. She understands the stakes. She just refuses to let the world take everything from her.
Yumi reminds the group that survival isn’t just about staying alive—it’s about not losing yourself in the process.
Shizu Sakamoto — The Quiet Anchor
Shizu doesn’t speak unless she has to.
At first, she seems distant—detached from the urgency around her. But that stillness isn’t weakness. It’s control.
She sees things others miss. Small details. Subtle shifts. The kind of awareness that only comes from someone who is always paying attention.
In moments of chaos, Shizu becomes the calm center. Not by stepping forward—but by never being pulled off balance in the first place.
She doesn’t try to lead. She doesn’t try to stand out. But when everything starts to fall apart, she’s already where she needs to be.
Rei Tsukino — The Competitor
Rei doesn’t survive quietly.
A former tennis champion, she approaches everything like a match—positioning, timing, precision. Even now, in a world where rules no longer exist, she still plays to win.
Her movements are controlled and deliberate. Every action has intent behind it. Nothing is wasted.
Rei brings something the others don’t—drive. Not just to survive, but to push forward. To improve. To stay sharp when others begin to fade.
She doesn’t slow down for the world. The world has to keep up with her.
Mina Crossveil — The Watcher
Mina operates at a distance.
She sees the field differently—not as chaos, but as patterns. Angles. Movement. Opportunity. Her strength isn’t in direct confrontation—it’s in control from afar.
Her background shaped her into something precise. Efficient. Calm under pressure. She doesn’t waste motion, and she doesn’t miss.
Mina isn’t always with the main group. But when she appears, it means something has already been decided.
She doesn’t react to danger. She removes it.
Lina Crossveil — The Counterbalance
Where Mina is controlled, Lina is instinct.
She reads situations in real time, adjusting without hesitation. There’s a natural confidence in the way she moves—trained, but not rigid.
Lina operates closer to the edge than her sister. She engages directly. Adapts quickly. Takes risks when necessary.
Together, the Crossveil sisters represent two sides of the same skillset—distance and proximity, planning and reaction.
Lina is what happens when precision meets pressure.
What Makes ZOMBA Squad Different
They aren’t heroes.
They don’t have a mission to save the world. They don’t talk about rebuilding. They don’t pretend things are going back to normal.
They survive.
But survival, over time, becomes something else. Patterns form. Roles emerge. Trust builds slowly, without words.
ZOMBA Squad isn’t defined by power. It’s defined by how each member responds when things go wrong.
And things always go wrong.
Where to Start
If you’re new to the ZOMBA storyline, the best place to begin is at the start of their world—when survival is still uncertain, and the group hasn’t fully formed.
From there, each chapter introduces not just events, but perspective. How different people respond to the same collapse. How choices shape what comes next.
Every character has a role. Every role has a cost.
Final Note
ZOMBA Squad isn’t about defeating the outbreak.
It’s about enduring it.
And the longer they endure, the more it changes them.

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