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Katrena wrote:Depends on the type of zombie we're dealing with.
A "traditional" dead person returning to life as a zombie would probably be slow because rigor mortis would set in. If a zombie with rigor mortis started to run, its extremeties would probably snap off. Even though rigor mortis is temporary, a zombie without limbs is a lot less of a threat.
A virus would be a different sort of threat because if it somehow prevented rigor mortis from setting in or affected different lobes of the brain in different ways, I'd say why wouldn't they be as fast as normal humans, if not super-human in speed?
vyadmirer wrote:Call me the paranoid type, but remember I'm on a post apocalyptic website prepared for zombies.

DTyra wrote:Pray for slow, prepare for fast, it's the only way to be sure.
DriveNASCAR wrote:Some movies have zombies that move in a very slow and awkward manner. Others show them as being able to run, jump, climb, etc. as well or even better than the living. Which is more likely to be accurate?
Nizo wrote:Some one posted something about super human speeds...
Well if a human were the run faster than 28mph than the ligaments in the leg would rip causing the zombies to resort to crawling
Burnt Toast wrote:I would imagine they (zeds) appear normal, functions like normal but have a pale milking tone skin complexion and void of expression. Completely emotionless and having that 1000 yard stare.
ronnycage wrote:i think zombies should be slow... unless they eat a person who just had a 5 hour energy... then they should go nuts!


Pondo_Sinatra wrote:Katrena wrote:Depends on the type of zombie we're dealing with.
A "traditional" dead person returning to life as a zombie would probably be slow because rigor mortis would set in. If a zombie with rigor mortis started to run, its extremeties would probably snap off. Even though rigor mortis is temporary, a zombie without limbs is a lot less of a threat.
A virus would be a different sort of threat because if it somehow prevented rigor mortis from setting in or affected different lobes of the brain in different ways, I'd say why wouldn't they be as fast as normal humans, if not super-human in speed?
You bring up an interesting point. I've thought about this from time to time. There are a few things that I've been mulling over, see if I can make any sense.
The only "close to undead" I've ever had any experience with is animals with rabies (rabid raccoons and foxes are pretty common around here). Although their aggression and lack of fear are intimidating, in the ones that I have seen there's been enough brain damage done where they don't act "normal". I've seen them lunge and snap, but their eye-hand (or eye-muzzle, as the case may be) coordination stinks. Bad.
So I believe that if something similar would hit humans - where the "bug" doesn't really take over but merely destroys parts of the brain - *we* would possibly be nasty, but not really fast or dangerous (unless you get too close).
Now. What about a "smart" virus that settles into the brain and takes charge of a human being and turns them into a flesh craving monster?
Hmmm. A few things to consider there. Could a few billion viruses set up a thinking "network" in a human's brain to replace (or rewire) the normal processes that take place every second of every day? We're a bit more complicated than a remote control car. If you think of all the sensory input we process every second we're awake - all the colors, shapes, textures, smells, stabilization input from the inner ear, pressure, sounds, temperatures, that's a LOT of information to process and make sense of.
There's a whole lot of electrons moving around the brain, and without a reliable map, nothing foreign inside the brain could make heads or tails of that storm.
Now, could there be a virus that only targets certain areas of the brain and leaves the day-to-day activities alone, dealing only with the parts that make us "human"? Possibly, yes.
Could there be something that would make us faster/stronger? Well, I see a remote possibility of improving reaction time and reflexes, and maybe shutting off the pain feedback so we keep doing stuff that hurts in order to achieve the goal of filling our bellies with tasty human flesh, but I think people infected this way would still have the same limitations of their bodies to deal with.
A 350# couch potato wouldn't be able to run a 9 second 100 meter dash, and a 120# spoon-chested chess champ wouldn't be able to throw a car at you.
An infected Olympic athlete, though - now THAT would be some scary stuff right there.
George Orwell wrote:Power is not a means; it is an end. One does not establish a dictatorship in order to safeguard a revolution; one makes the revolution in order to establish the dictatorship. The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power.
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