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    ZomBcon 2010: Seattle Hosts First Ever Zombie Convention

    Buzz's Words

    Brrrrrrrains Seattle, the self-proclaimed zombie capital of the world, was host to ZomBcon,
    the first ever Zombie Culture Convention, over Halloween weekend at the
    Seattle Center Exhibition Hall. The three-day event was an opportunity
    for fans of the walking dead to gather together and celebrate all things
    zombie.

    "Vampires seem to be real popular right now," said convention attendee Mark
    Tanner. "So it's good to get together with others who think zombies
    still rule the undead."

    ZomBcon was the creation of Ryan Reiter and his production company West North
    Entertainment. Reiter, who organized last 4th of July's Red, White &
    Dead Zombie Walk in Seattle, which broke the Guinness Book World Record
    for largest gathering of zombies with over 4,200 participants, was
    excited to continue his vision with ZomBcon.

    "We are very proud to welcome the world to the Northwest to share this
    inaugural year of ZomBcon celebrating the undead over Halloween," said
    Reiter in a press release.

    The convention provided fans the opportunity to meet and interact with some
    of the genere's biggest entertainers. Godfather of zombie cinema George
    Romero was on hand through out the weekend to sign autographs and
    participate in a number of panel discussions. Romero, who directed the
    1968 cult-classic "Night of the Living Dead," is considered by many fans
    as one of the great horror directors of all time.

    "Getting to meet him (Romero) was just awesome! His movies are one of the
    biggest reasons I'm dressed like this," exclaimed an excited Susan
    Sutton, who was costumed as a zombified orderly.

    Also on hand for the event was cult-icon Bruce Campbell. The "Evil Dead"
    star officiated over perhaps the weekend's most unusual event as roughly
    a dozen couples, dressed in their zombie finest, had their wedding vows
    renewed by Campbell.

    The booths lining the Exhibition Hall provided fans the chance to take home
    a variety of zombie memorabilia including books on surviving the Zombie
    Apocalypse, comics, prosthetic make-up, board and role-playing games,
    and even zombie tattoos.

    Fans of Capcom's Dead Rising video game series had the opportunity to play the game's recently released sequel, Dead Rising 2, at the Xbox 360 game station. Players control hero Chuck Greene as he fights through hordes of the undead in a series of challenges set in
    post-apocalyptic Las Vegas.

    Members of game studio Valve's team who created the first-person shooter series Left 4 Dead 1 & 2 for the X-Box 360 were on hand to answer questions about the best selling
    zombie title. While tight lipped about any information on a possible Left 4 Dead 3, the team answered questions about game design, character back-stories, and recently released downloadable content.

    When asked why Valve decided to do a zombie themed game writer Chet Faliszek
    responded, "Zombies are just great fodder for games."The convention
    concluded on Halloween with The Walking Dead Zombie Walk, which featured
    costumed participants taking to the streets of Seattle in a march that
    was held as a symbolic tribute to George Romero.

    Note: This was written by an Associated Content contributor. Sign up here to start publishing your own gaming articles.

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