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The Walking Dead is one of the greatest Image comics series ever, with fans loving the book still to this day. It’s so popular that it’s being completely reprinted in color, with fans still buying the book. The adventures of Rick Grimes made zombie stories great again, but it can also be blamed for the fall of zombie stories as well. In fact, I would say that the comic sounded the death knell for zombie stories much earlier than most people realize, and it happened in the Woodbury arc of the book.
Woodbury Made the Zombies Less Important in The Walking Dead

The survivors found Woodbury in The Walking Dead #27. At this point in the story, Rick had found his family, the drama with Shane was over, and the group had found a prison to live in. Throughout the prior 26 issues, the zombies felt like a massive threat. The group had lost many people, the majority of them to the zombies, and there was a visceral fear among readers that the zombies were this unstoppable force, a tide that would come in and sweep away fan-favorite characters. The zombies were the main villain of the book at this point.
Now, sure, there were problems among the group and with other survivors, but the zombies were the threat that everyone had to learn to deal with. Woodbury changed all of that. This was a group of survivors who survived because they were ruthless. The Governor was a monster, but a human one, and suddenly, it was the human monsters that became the focus. The prison arc leading up to Woodbury started in this direction (I still remember the page turn with the beheaded twins being the first thing you saw at the top of the page), but the zombies were still the main threat.









