Zombie Threats

What infected our progress or threatened our survival?

Unclear requirements kept biting us mid-sprint and we wasted days reworking features.
The flaky CI pipeline was a slow-spreading infection that drained our energy.
Too many meetings ate into our focus time and left us defenceless against deadlines.
Survival Weapons

What kept us alive and helped us fight back?

Pair programming was our trusty shotgun — we squashed bugs faster together.
Clear daily standups kept everyone moving in the same direction.
The new monitoring dashboard gave us early warning before things turned ugly.
Recruit Survivors

What or who do we need to strengthen our team?

We need clearer acceptance criteria before work starts so we aren't caught off guard.
Cross-training would mean we're never down to a single survivor for key systems.
More design support earlier would help us scout the path ahead.
Fortify the Base

What actions will we take to prepare for next time?

Set up automated alerts for the CI pipeline so failures don't sneak up on us.
Document our deployment process and assign a backup owner this sprint.
Block out two no-meeting mornings each week for deep work.

What is the Zombie Outbreak Retrospective

When the dead rise, only the prepared survive — and the same is true for your team. The Zombie Outbreak Retrospective turns reflection into a thrilling survival scenario, where teams imagine their project as a fight for survival against the undead. By framing recent work through a playful apocalypse lens, this themed retrospective helps teams identify the "infections" slowing them down, the "weapons" that kept them alive, and the "safe zones" where things went well. It's an energising way to break routine and spark honest, creative conversations. This format works by mapping familiar retrospective questions onto a zombie survival storyline. Teams identify what threatened their survival (problems and blockers), what helped them fight back (wins and tools), who or what they need to recruit (improvements and support), and how to fortify their base for the next outbreak (action items). The metaphor lowers the stakes of difficult conversations, making it easier for everyone to speak up about challenges without finger-pointing. It's particularly effective for teams that have grown bored of standard sprint retrospectives and need a jolt of fun to re-engage. Beyond the entertainment value, themed retrospectives like this one boost participation, build psychological safety, and improve team morale. Running a Zombie Outbreak Retrospective in TeamRetro gives you the structure of a proven agile ceremony with the engagement of a team-building game — helping you surface real insights, agree on practical improvements, and keep your survivors coming back for more.

Zombie Outbreak retrospective format

Zombie Threats

What infected our progress or threatened our survival?

This topic captures the problems, blockers and risks that dragged the team down during the period. Encourage participants to name the 'zombies' — recurring issues, surprise crises, or sources of stress — without blaming individuals. Frame it as identifying threats to the group's survival so everyone feels safe to speak openly.

Survival Weapons

What kept us alive and helped us fight back?

Use this topic to celebrate the wins, tools, practices and people that helped the team succeed. These are the 'weapons' in your survival kit. Highlighting strengths builds morale and reminds the team what's worth protecting and repeating in future cycles.

Recruit Survivors

What or who do we need to strengthen our team?

This topic focuses on improvements and the support, skills or resources the team needs going forward. Think of it as recruiting allies for the next outbreak. Encourage forward-looking, constructive suggestions rather than rehashing complaints.

Fortify the Base

What actions will we take to prepare for next time?

This is where the team agrees on concrete action items to build resilience. Capture specific, owned and time-bound commitments so the next outbreak finds the team better prepared. Use voting to prioritise the most impactful defences.

When to use this retrospective

  • Around Halloween or whenever your team needs a fun, themed twist on the usual sprint retrospective.
  • When team energy is low or standard retrospectives feel repetitive and you want to boost engagement.
  • When difficult issues need surfacing and a playful metaphor can lower defensiveness and encourage honesty.
  • As a team-building exercise that still produces real, actionable improvements.
  • With newly formed teams looking for a relaxed way to build psychological safety and rapport.

Suggested icebreaker questions

  • If a zombie apocalypse hit the office, which teammate would you want by your side and why?
  • What one item from your desk would be your weapon of choice for survival?

Ideas and tips for your retrospective meeting

  • Set the scene with a short story prompt — describe the outbreak scenario before opening the board to get everyone into the playful mindset.
  • Keep the metaphor light and inclusive; the goal is real insight, so steer conversations back to concrete examples if they drift too far into the theme.
  • Timebox each topic to keep momentum and prevent the most talkative survivors from dominating the discussion.
  • Use anonymous brainstorming so people feel safe naming the scariest 'zombie threats' without fear of blame.
  • Group and vote on items before discussion to focus on the highest-impact threats and defences.
  • Always close by assigning clear owners and due dates to your 'Fortify the Base' actions so the retrospective drives real change.

Frequently asked questions

What is a Zombie Outbreak Retrospective?
It's a themed agile retrospective that reframes your team's recent work as a fight for survival against the undead. Teams identify threats (problems), survival weapons (wins), allies to recruit (improvements) and base fortifications (actions) in a fun, engaging way.
When should I use a Zombie Outbreak Retrospective?
It's ideal around Halloween, when team energy is flagging, or whenever standard retrospectives feel stale and you want to re-engage the group while still capturing meaningful insights.
How long does a Zombie Outbreak Retrospective take?
A typical session runs 45 to 60 minutes, depending on team size. Allow a few extra minutes at the start to introduce the theme and set the scene.
How is it different from a standard sprint retrospective?
It covers the same ground — wins, blockers, improvements and actions — but uses a survival storyline to lower the stakes of tough conversations and boost participation and morale.
Does the fun theme reduce the quality of insights?
No. The metaphor makes people more comfortable raising real issues, and the 'Fortify the Base' topic ensures every session ends with concrete, owned action items that drive improvement.
Is it suitable for remote and distributed teams?
Yes. Running it in TeamRetro lets distributed teams brainstorm anonymously, group and vote on ideas, and capture actions together in real time from anywhere.

New to retrospectives? Read our guide on how to run a retrospective →