The Last Stand Legacy Collection on Steam - User reviews, Price & Information

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Survive the zombie apocalypse and make humanity's last stand in this three-game legacy bundle, revamped for modern hardware. Explore, build, and survive for as long as you can in The Last Stand, The Last Stand 2, and The Last Stand: Union City.

The Last Stand Legacy Collection is a action, post-apocalyptic and zombies game developed by Con Artist Games and published by Armor Games Studios.
Released on July 15th 2021 is available in English on Windows and MacOS.

It has received 2,260 reviews of which 2,023 were positive and 237 were negative resulting in a rating of 8.6 out of 10. 😎

The game is currently priced at 9.75€ on Steam, but you can find it for less on Eneba.


The Steam community has classified The Last Stand Legacy Collection into these genres:

Media & Screenshots

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System requirements

These are the minimum specifications needed to play the game. For the best experience, we recommend that you verify them.

Windows
  • Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
MacOS

    User reviews & Ratings

    Explore reviews from Steam users sharing their experiences and what they love about the game.

    July 2025
    The Last Stand Legacy Collection is exactly what it promises: a faithful port of three iconic Flash-era zombie survival games. It doesn’t try to modernize them beyond full screen support and a few quality-of-life tweaks — and honestly, that’s the charm. These aren’t remakes. They’re preserved snapshots of a time when killing zombies after school on your browser felt like the height of gaming. You’re getting The Last Stand, The Last Stand 2, and Union City just as they were: simple, addictive, a little janky — and completely engaging. Playing them again on Steam feels like flipping open an old game magazine and seeing something you forgot you loved. The first two games are quick survival-defense loops — find weapons, protect your barricade, survive another night. Still tense, still satisfying. Union City adds RPG elements, exploration, looting, and a surprisingly deep world for something that once lived on Newgrounds. There’s no roadmap, no future content updates — and there doesn’t need to be. These games are done. What you’re buying here isn’t a live service or an indie remake. You’re buying time travel. For a few hours, you’re back in a browser window with nothing to do but find a shotgun and survive. If you grew up with these games, this collection is a no-brainer. If you didn’t, they still hold up as a look into the roots of zombie survival gaming. Either way, it’s a tight, nostalgic 4-hour trip that’s absolutely worth the price of admission. —The Ember Archives https://store.steampowered.com/curator/45601239/
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    July 2025
    Once upon a time, decades ago (yes!) when adobe flash player was getting an update every week, I was a little boy who played his first zombie game on a website called Newgrounds (and later Armor Games). Next to other horror classics like Exmortis and Divine Intervention, The Last Stand was a pioneering (at the time), simple to learn, and fun wave-based zombie defense shooter that – unlike others that were highscore based and where you’d die because of endless waves – had a happy ending, if you made it to Day 20. So for a kid, that was motivating rather than depressing, and made me get into it. Also because it wasnt multiplayer but singleplayer focused and each day also had a short diary entry which you might overlook during your first run, but were quick to read up on during subsequent runs to give you an idea of where you were in the “story”. This was back in 2007. A year later in 2008, the sequel came out: The Last Stand 2. More expansive than the first in terms of story, as there were multiple locations rather than just one, and also more strategic than just having to divide your 12 hours of daytime into repair, search for survivors and search for weapons, it now also put you on a timer, to search each location for enough supplies to get you to the next city and you’d be wise to get moving before the 40 day timer to reach Union City would run out. There was more than one “path” to get to Union City, so a subsequent run would take you through other towns, adding to replayability. However, at the end of the day both games were just appetizers, meant to be played during the recess before/after computer class and not for hours, let alone days. Cue: The Last Stand Union City, aka Last Stand 3. Released three years later in 2011, this was a much longer game and an entry in the era of browser games that were popular back then: where you’d create an account, log in, and then play, only to quit after a while, and continue the next time you opened your browser again. This kinda discouraged me at the time, when I realized I couldn’t play the whole game in a single run and would have to quit and continue later, so I never got into it. Many years later and after the death of adobe flash player, these games were finally ported over to steam. Which was the reason I bought The Last Stand Legacy Collection – mainly so I could finally play the much longer third part, which is also the only one that counts as a proper game, than just a brief time killer. But also because all three games have FULLSCREEN support and are nicely upscaled (even back in their browser days, they felt tiny on an already tiny 1080p monitor compared to today's screen sizes). So seeing everything BIG is a real treat and adds to the immersion. And for what it’s worth, the Last Stand: Union City holds up reasonably well all these years later. An RPG simple in visuals so it could be played in a browser by any computer even back in 2011, the game is locked to 30FPS and frequently drops to half that irrespective of how powerful your modern GPU is, but you don’t really notice any lag while playing. The visuals are atmospheric even today, showing a desolate and ailing city divided into several districts, full of locations you can enter and loot. Think of each as a miniature dungeon. No two are alike, each apartment has its own flair, as there are condos, hospitals, police stations, garages, warehouses, subway stations, fast food joints, convenience stores, and even a log cabin out in the woods. Rather than fending off wave after wave of zombies rushing at your barricade like in the first two games, in Last Stand: Union City you work your way through each “level” from left to right like in a traditional platformer, bashing zombies loitering in the streets and inside apartments and stores you break into to scavenge for loot – chiefly ammo for your weapons, bandages, medkits and food and drink to keep you alive. As you search wardrobes and desks, you also come across junk items that are absolutely not worth picking up, clothing items to customize your character, and more weapons you sadly cannot collect to later sell for cash to a vendor (although a couple of vendors do exist from whom you can only BUY weapons and ammo from), so just drop all inferior ones after going through their stats in your inventory. I wish weapons degraded as a result of use in this game, which would then force you to use others than just stick with your favorite combo, but right now the only limiting factor is if you run out of ammo for it, as other weapons use other ammo types like 7.62mm, 5.56mm, 9mm etc., as you'll only tend to switch if you have plenty of ammo left for another weapon. There are certain NPCs you can talk to and quest for, and there are also (sadly only a total of) 2 NPC followers in Union City you can convince to join you as you try to find your spouse by initially heading for your apartment after your car crashed into a telephone pole as you lost control after colliding with a zombie on the road. The game also has a tiredness meter, and there are safehouses in every other level where you can rest to regain your stamina (yes, the game even has a day/night cycle), but you will continue to grow hungry even while sleeping, thus making food (or lack thereof) the biggest threat in this game, rather than zombies (although horde mode when they crash through the ceiling can be scary and often take you off guard as it happens when you least expect it). Ammo is scarce, which is why blunt or blade is recommended to silently dispatch most zombies, but when the horde arrives you'd do well to switch to something automatic and burn through all the ammo you collected to save your life (and that of your follower, who you can revive if s/he goes down by pressing G). You can also swap weapons with a follower, so it's a good idea to equip them with a surplus automatic weapon as they dont need ammo and will significantly boost their damage output, but keep in mind there is an unfixed bug in this game where your follower resets to their default weapon whenever you enter a new area of the city, so dont give them any rare weapons or you will lose them. In this RPG, there are many skills you can invest points in as you level up. Security allows you to open safes, special allows you to deal more damage with your silent crossbow (whose bolts you unfortunately cannot pick up, so I dont know why they created this weapon as it aint any better than a silenced pistol). Speaking of, Pistols, Long guns (incl. shotguns) and Automatics all have their own class so you cant become proficient in all and should settle for a few. Other skills like survival make you go hungry less often, while basic skills like Strength increase your carrying capacity, Endurance your HP and Precision how (in)frequently you MISS when shooting at zombies. This game even has a lockpicking minigame and a quicktime buttonmash event whenever you get grabbed by a zombie. The Last Stand: Union City is the real reason why you should buy this legacy collection, and it offers around 9 hours of gameplay (if you explore all locations incl. the bonus area outside the city called Whistler's Forest, which isnt part of the main questline and was initially a paid DLC for a browser game, imagine...) with the first two games making up an additional hour in total. Worth playing, before moving on to more modern zombie games, incl. older 2D platformer ones that were inspired by these, like Deadlight, 3D open world singleplayer focused 3rd person RPGs like State of Decay, 1st person roguelikes such as Zombi, or the latest in this series - The Last Stand: Aftermath.
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    May 2025
    A long time ago, Armor Games was my first approach to PC gaming... This was part of the S-tier games back then. A bit pricey vs competitors on the same range tho...
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    April 2025
    Before triple-A zombies, there was this. Long before season passes and cinematic trailers, there was The Last Stand. Three Flash games. A keyboard. A mission: survive the night. This collection brings them all back — exactly how they should be. No remakes, no weird reimaginings. Just the raw, addicting gameplay that defined a generation of online zombie shooters. ✅ Classic Flash gameplay, preserved perfectly ✅ Simple, satisfying progression ✅ Union City is still one of the best zombie RPGs out there ✅ Smooth performance with added achievements ❌ Your reflexes might not be what they used to be Whether you played these years ago or you’re discovering them for the first time, this collection proves that good game design doesn’t age. You don’t need 4K graphics or motion capture when the gameplay is this tight. Just a shotgun, some survivors, and the will to hold the line. We didn’t just play these games. We remembered them.
    Expand the review
    April 2025
    Let's be clear about 1 thing here. All of these games are the exact same as if you had played them on ArmorGames or any other flash games website. They look a bit better, but they're the same games. Same jank, same exploits, just a new coat of paint and a new game in your Steam library. If you're buying this, you should be buying this with the knowledge that all you're doing is supporting the devs by buying their almost 2 decade old games. With that in mind, I wholeheartedly recommend this to people who grew up with flash games just like this.
    Expand the review

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    Frequently Asked Questions

    The Last Stand Legacy Collection is currently priced at 9.75€ on Steam.

    The Last Stand Legacy Collection is currently not on sale. You can purchase it for 9.75€ on Steam.

    The Last Stand Legacy Collection received 2,023 positive votes out of a total of 2,260 achieving a rating of 8.56.
    😎

    The Last Stand Legacy Collection was developed by Con Artist Games and published by Armor Games Studios.

    The Last Stand Legacy Collection is playable and fully supported on Windows.

    The Last Stand Legacy Collection is playable and fully supported on MacOS.

    The Last Stand Legacy Collection is not playable on Linux.

    The Last Stand Legacy Collection is a single-player game.

    The Last Stand Legacy Collection does not currently offer any DLC.

    The Last Stand Legacy Collection does not support mods via Steam Workshop.

    The Last Stand Legacy Collection does not support Steam Remote Play.

    The Last Stand Legacy Collection is enabled for Steam Family Sharing. This means you can share the game with authorized users from your Steam Library, allowing them to play it on their own accounts. For more details on how the feature works, you can read the original Steam Family Sharing announcement or visit the Steam Family Sharing user guide and FAQ page.

    You can find solutions or submit a support ticket by visiting the Steam Support page for The Last Stand Legacy Collection.

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    Additionally, we incorporate data from the SteamSpy API, which offers insights into game sales and player statistics. This helps us present a comprehensive view of each game's popularity and performance within the gaming community.

    Last Updates
    Steam data 10 September 2025 19:34
    SteamSpy data 12 September 2025 18:01
    Steam price 14 September 2025 04:32
    Steam reviews 14 September 2025 03:59

    If you'd like to dive deeper into the details about The Last Stand Legacy Collection, we invite you to check out a few dedicated websites that offer extensive information and insights. These platforms provide valuable data, analysis, and user-generated reports to enhance your understanding of the game and its performance.

    • SteamDB - A comprehensive database of everything on Steam about The Last Stand Legacy Collection
    • SteamCharts - Analysis of The Last Stand Legacy Collection concurrent players on Steam
    • ProtonDB - Crowdsourced reports on Linux and Steam Deck The Last Stand Legacy Collection compatibility
    The Last Stand Legacy Collection
    Rating
    8.6
    2,023
    237
    Game modes
    Features
    Online players
    14
    Developer
    Con Artist Games
    Publisher
    Armor Games Studios
    Release 15 Jul 2021
    Platforms
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