Visual Assets
8 screenshotsStore Profile
Identity
- Publisher
- Yoozoo (Singapore) Pte. Ltd
Market Signals
- US top free
- 14
- Downloads
- 82K
- Rating
- 4.63
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| platform identifier | com.gtarcade.codeball |
|---|---|
| Store title | Zomline Survival |
| Publisher | Yoozoo (Singapore) Pte. Ltd |
| version | 1.4.5 |
| rating average | 4.63 |
| rating display | 4.63 |
| rating count | 3914 |
| downloads bucket | 50K+ |
| store category | Strategy |
| content rating | Low Maturity |
| paid | Free |
| price | Free |
| updated on | 2026-06-24 |
| whats new | {"notes":["Ver 3407750 (1.4.5)","Added 1 Hero: Shakespeare","Bug fixes and performance improvements"],"version":"1.4.5"} |
| contains ads | false |
| in app purchases | true |
| android us top new free rank | 14 |
| US top free | 14 |
| Download estimate | 82K |
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No exact-game UA creatives found.
Zomline Survival most likely centers on defending a position from zombie waves: the player prepares defenses or heroes, survives escalating attacks, earns resources, and reinvests those resources into stronger defenses for the next wave or stage.
Zomline Survival has a strong zombie-defense fantasy, but the largest hidden risk is that cinematic wall-breach art may be carrying interest while the actual tower-defense decision model remains undefined.
Zomline Survival has strong fantasy breadth but weak accessible depth evidence. The screenshots show zombie-defense spectacle, not the decision model, so the depth case depends on whether tower placement, wall triage, hero abilities, enemy roles, and upgrade tradeoffs produce distinct counterplay instead of becoming a linear stat-check defense loop.
15 of 15 responses include lens metadata.

This sample is a cautious maybe because the theme and polish appeal, but session flexibility and reliability are uncertain.
I might download Zomline Survival, but I would need it to respect interrupted play. The zombie world and strong store rating make it look like a decent escape when I have a little time at night, and tower defense can be satisfying if one session has a clear end point. My worry is that a new free-to-play strategy game could have event pressure, bugs, or too many timed chores. The polished landscape images make it look more like a sit-down game than a quick pause-anytime one, so I would keep it only if progress is easy to resume.
This sample is a cautious maybe because the theme and polish appeal, but session flexibility and reliability are uncertain.I like the idea of a focused tower-defense session that gives clear progress.
I worry about event pressure, timed chores, or rough early-release friction.
The polished wide visuals make it look immersive but not necessarily easy to pause at any second.
I would try Zomline Survival because the mix of tower defense and larger strategy sounds like it could offer meaningful choices without needing twitch reflexes. A strong rating and new-game momentum make it feel worth a download, especially if the loop gives me clear base upgrades, defensive planning, and visible progress. My worry is that 4X games can bury the good decisions under currencies, queues, and offers. The store visuals look action-focused but readable, so I would stay if tapping through upgrades and battles feels straightforward rather than fussy.
This sample is fairly positive because strategic management fits well, with risk around complexity and free-to-play clutter.I like the promise of meaningful base upgrades and defensive planning.
I worry the game could overload me with currencies, queues, and sales prompts.
The visuals look active but still readable enough to suggest I could follow the core battles.
I would probably skip Zomline Survival because it looks more intense than the kind of daily routine game I usually keep. The rating is impressive, and I can see why a zombie defense game would appeal to players who want action and upgrades. For me, though, a 4X survival loop sounds like it may ask for too much attention, too many check-ins, and possibly too much spending pressure. The landscape action images make it look energetic, but I would rather have calmer levels, clearer puzzle goals, and a game I can finish in a few quiet minutes.
This sample is negative because the game's action strategy format clashes with calm routine play, despite credible store performance.I like that the game appears popular and polished enough to trust as a real release.
I do not like the likely time commitment and pressure of a survival 4X loop.
The wide action imagery feels more energetic than relaxing for my usual daily play.
I would download Zomline Survival if it has fair alliances or rankings, because zombie strategy could be fun to compare with friends. The recent chart position and strong rating suggest there may be enough players for competition to matter. I like the idea of building smarter defenses and outplaying people, but I would not want a game where the person who buys the biggest pack simply wins. The landscape battle presentation makes it look suited to more deliberate play, which is good for me if the goals and upgrade choices stay readable.
This sample is positive when competition is fair, with concern focused on paid advantage and clarity of strategic choices.I like the possibility of competing through smarter defense and alliance play.
I would dislike it if rankings mostly reward heavy spending.
The landscape battle format makes it look like something I would play more deliberately rather than casually tapping through.
I would consider downloading Zomline Survival, but only as a free test before spending anything. The 4.6 rating and visible download base make it look more trustworthy than a random new zombie game, and I like strategy games when they give me steady progress without wasting time. My concern is that a free-to-play 4X game often turns into competing with people who pay more, which is not relaxing. The store images look clean and polished enough, so I would mainly be checking whether purchases feel optional and the menus are not constantly selling to me.
This sample is cautiously positive because polish and ratings support a trial, while spending fairness is the deciding issue.I like that the listing looks polished and has enough rating strength to feel credible.
I worry that spending could become necessary to keep up in a free strategy game.
The images look clean enough that I would not expect immediate confusion from the interface.

This sample is a curious but uncertain install because novelty and world depth matter, while the evidence could also point to a familiar menu-heavy free game.
I would download Zomline Survival out of curiosity, but I am not convinced it has a fresh enough hook yet. A zombie tower-defense 4X could be fun if the world has weird events or clever base choices, and the current store performance makes it feel like it is catching attention. My worry is that it could just be another survival builder with lots of menus, timers, and ad-based saves. The visual assets look polished and action-heavy, but I would need the first session to show personality beyond the standard zombie setup.
This sample is a curious but uncertain install because novelty and world depth matter, while the evidence could also point to a familiar menu-heavy free game.I like that the strategy hybrid could have clever base and defense choices.
I worry it may become a generic menu-heavy survival game with timer pressure.
The polished action images help it stand out a little, but they do not prove the game has a unique personality.
I would probably skip Zomline Survival unless someone told me it has surprisingly fun teams or collections. Zombies and base defense are not my cozy default, and the store page makes it look more about survival pressure than decorating, characters, or relaxing progress. The strong rating does make me curious, but free-to-play strategy games can get stressful when they push timers or revives. The images look clean enough to follow, so clarity is not the problem; it just does not look like the kind of game I would want to unwind with after a long day.
This sample leans negative because the survival strategy theme does not match a comfort and collection motivation, despite acceptable polish and ratings.I like that the listing looks reasonably clear and has a strong rating.
I do not see enough comforting collection, customization, or low-pressure progress for my taste.
The visuals look organized, but the zombie survival tone feels tense rather than cozy.
I might download Zomline Survival if I wanted something to poke at during breaks, but I am not sure it fits short sessions. The store ranking and rating make it feel alive, and a zombie defense loop can be satisfying if each check-in gives me one clear thing to upgrade or defend. My concern is that 4X systems usually want longer attention than I have on a commute. The landscape screenshots make it look better for two-handed play, so I would need quick loading, obvious objectives, and no long forced tutorial before I stay.
This sample is a cautious maybe because the game has clear appeal and social proof, but its deeper strategy format may clash with short-session play.I like the idea of quick zombie defense progress during small breaks.
I worry the 4X systems could require longer sessions and too many menus.
The wide battle presentation looks polished but less ideal for quick one-handed play.
I would download Zomline Survival for a test run because the zombie strategy mix looks easy enough to understand and the store traction makes it feel like people are actually trying it. The 4.6 rating and 50K+ downloads help, since I usually need some proof before installing another free survival game. What would decide whether I keep it is whether the base-building and defense loop has a social reason to come back, not just timers and upgrade buttons. The landscape images make it look more cinematic than tiny portrait-menu chaos, which helps, but I would drop it fast if the first session buries me in pop-ups or ad revive pressure.
This sample is moderately positive because social proof and clear zombie strategy appeal fit quick discovery, while free-to-play pressure remains a real concern.I like that it looks active and easy to explain as a zombie defense game.
I worry it could lean on pop-ups, ad revives, or slow timer progression after the first few minutes.
The wide action images make the game look more cinematic and less cramped than many mobile strategy listings.
I would probably try Zomline Survival, but I am going in skeptical. A zombie 4X tower-defense game could have good mastery if the defense choices and upgrades actually matter, and the high rating makes it seem worth a look. My worry is that free-to-play strategy games often turn competition into spending instead of skill, so I would need to see fair progression early. The store images look like landscape combat rather than simple idle taps, which is promising, but clean menus and readable battle decisions would matter more than flashy zombies.
This sample has guarded interest because strategic depth and action framing fit, while pay-to-win risk limits confidence.I like the chance that tower defense and 4X upgrades could create real mastery.
I do not like the risk that competitive progress could depend more on purchases than smart play.
The landscape combat presentation suggests more direct action than a plain menu-based builder.

This sample is negative because trust and low-pressure monetization are central, and the evidence points to a potentially demanding free strategy loop.
I would not be quick to install Zomline Survival because I do not want a game that turns relaxation into daily obligations. The rating is good, but the free-to-play strategy format makes me cautious about battle passes, login pressure, and offers interrupting play. I would rather pay once for a quiet game than manage a zombie survival routine that keeps asking me to return on its schedule. The landscape action images look polished, but they also make it feel more intense than peaceful.
This sample is negative because trust and low-pressure monetization are central, and the evidence points to a potentially demanding free strategy loop.I like that the strong rating gives the game some credibility.
I worry about daily login pressure, battle-pass style spending, and interruptions.
The polished wide action look feels more intense than calming to me.
I might try Zomline Survival if the strategy is gentle and the planning is easy to follow. Building defenses against zombies could be interesting, and the strong rating makes it seem less risky than many free games. Still, I would worry about alliance pressure, daily events, and too many resources to manage before I know what matters. The wide store images make the world look substantial, but I would need large readable buttons and simple choices to keep playing.
This sample is a cautious maybe because light planning has some appeal, but social obligations and system complexity could push the segment away.I like the possibility of simple defensive planning and visible progress.
I worry about alliance pressure, daily tasks, and too many resources to track.
The wide visuals make the game look substantial, but I would need clearer large controls to feel comfortable.
I would skip Zomline Survival unless I saw a tablet-friendly mode with very clear controls. The game may be popular, and the 4.6 rating is a good sign, but zombie survival does not look especially comfortable or relaxing to sit with. I am concerned that the battles and base screens would require small taps, quick reactions, or too much attention to tiny details. The wide action presentation may look exciting to some people, but for me it raises questions about whether the buttons and text would be large enough.
This sample is negative because comfort, large controls, and relaxed pacing matter more than the game's popularity.I like that other players seem to rate it well, which gives it some credibility.
I worry the game would be too intense and fiddly for comfortable tablet play.
The wide action images make me question whether the controls and text would feel large enough.
I would probably not download Zomline Survival because it does not look like the kind of rule-based game I usually enjoy. I like games where I can quickly understand the board, the objective, and what a good move is, while a zombie 4X tower-defense game sounds like it may have several systems at once. The good rating makes me think it may be polished, but I would still expect more learning and menu management than I want. The bright action images catch the eye, yet they do not reassure me that the goals will be as clear as a card, word, or board-style game.
This sample is negative because familiar rules and clear layouts are more important than action polish or strategic complexity.I like that the rating suggests the game is probably polished.
I dislike that the genre sounds like it may combine too many systems for my taste.
The bright action presentation stands out, but it does not show the simple rule clarity I look for.
I would probably not download Zomline Survival for myself, even though it seems well liked. The high rating and download count make it look legitimate, but zombies and 4X defense sound more complicated than the calm daily puzzles I usually enjoy. I would worry about too many icons, timers, and upgrade choices before I understood the rules. The store images look polished, but they seem more action-oriented than easy, quiet problem solving with big readable steps.
This sample is negative because the game does not match calm puzzle routines, and readability and rule clarity are uncertain.I like that the game has a strong rating and enough downloads to seem trustworthy.
I dislike the possibility of many timers, icons, and rules to learn at once.
The polished action images do not look as calm or readable as a daily puzzle game.
0 of 3 segments score this higher than the current game.