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1. The Zombie Apocalypse as a Workplace Escape Fantasy
Meet Akira Tendo: a 24-year-old corporate drone crushed by exploitative office life. His pre-apocalypse routine? Overtime, unpaid work, and a soul-sucking boss.
When zombies take over, Akira doesn’t panic—he laughs. No more deadlines. No more pointless meetings. The real horror wasn’t the zombies; it was the 9-to-5 grind.
2. A Bucket List, Not a Body Count
Instead of killing zombies, Akira creates a 100-item bucket list—ranging from heartfelt dreams to silly wishes.
This twist turns the apocalypse into a chance to truly live, resonating with post-pandemic audiences looking to reclaim joy.
3. Visual Storytelling That Screams “ALIVE”
Before the apocalypse, Akira’s world is dull and gray. Afterward? The screen explodes with neon colors, showing that dying in a vibrant world beats living in a monochrome one.
4. The Zombies Are Us (Literally)
Office workers still clutch coffee mugs. Gym-goers are stuck on treadmills. A pizza delivery zombie still mutters, “30 minutes or less…” The real message? We’re already zombies if we live on autopilot.
5. A New Genre: Hopepunk Horror
Unlike traditional grimdark zombie tales, Zom 100 delivers a message of hope. Akira finds friends, builds a new life, and proves that even in chaos, joy is possible.




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