Vampires vs. Zombies…who would win?


So, we finally have hit the goal of 500th post for the site’s first year.

I had thought to commemorate this achievement by writing up a film review or maybe one of the other writers post something appropriate, but I thought what better way to do this than post something about zombies.

Zombies have been big again of late. The recent premiere season of the TV adaptation of The Walking Dead and the continuation of the original comic book series it’s based on. The TV series’ success has brought the topic of zombies back to the forefront with fans and non-fans sharing a common appreciation for this horror sub-genre which has remained the dirty, stepchild cousin to the more glamorous and fantasy-fulfilling monsters calling themselves vampires.

Vampires have been in the general public’s consciousness due to the popularity of the Twilight book and film series not to mention the TV shows True Blood and The Vampire Diaries. These three franchises have made the vampires sexy and popular once again. While they’re not the silk and lace types popularized by author Anne Rice during the 80’s they still portray the vampires as dangerous, but also conflicted and over-emotional creatures who curse their lot as much as embrace it.

Zombies on the other hand have began their inevitable decline after the market was flooded by legion of sub-par books and films. For every Dawn of the Dead (remake) and Shaun of the Dead we got stuff like Day of the Dead (remake) and direct-to-DVD titles such as Zombie Wars and Last Rites. But thanks to the Robert Kirkman’s critically-acclaimed and very popular zombie comic book series and it’s subsequent TV adaptation by showrunner Frank Darabont the zombies have had a major resurgence that brought the question of which was better: zombies or vampires.

These two monsters have their histories both in entertainment and in folklore. The vampire legend and myth could trace itself back to the beginning of human history as early human civilizations always had in their stories and own legends creatures risen from the grave to drink the lifeblood of those still living. There’s Lilith of the Judeo-Christian faiths who some attribute to being the mother of all vampires. There’s also Cain himself who many thought was the progenitor of the original vampire myth. Every major religion both past and present have had their version of the vampire, but while they’ve remained as stories told to warn children of the dangers of the night they were never truly told as part of entertainment. Only in the past hundred or so years have vampires begun to make their mark on the realm of entertainment.

Zombies on the other hand have always been the younger sibling. It’s history has it’s basis on local religious folklore from African slaves brought over to work the plantations of Imperial colonies in the West. The zombies of these West Indies folklore were not the flesh-eating creatures we now know, but just another form of slavery. The flesh-eating aspect of the zombies would not make it’s appearance until a filmmaker from Pittsburgh decided to make his recently risen dead to become flesh-eaters. Night of the Living Dead gave birth to the zombies that’s turned legions of readers and monster aficionados into fans of the monster. A monster who wasn’t as strong or as sexy as the vampire, but much scarier and quite more apocalyptic in its nature. It’s this apocalyptic aspect of the zombie monster which keeps this younger monster from becoming fully eclipsed by it’s more older sibling the vampire.

Now, a question was brought up by the websites Zombie Ammo and Vampybit.Me about the topic on vampires and zombies. With the current popularity of these two monsters there was bound to be a debate on who would win in a match-up between the two monsters for domination of the world.

In one corner we have vampires who retain their intellect and have increased all their senses and even given supernatural abilities. They also remain living dead who need the blood of the living to survive with their faculties intact. No blood means having to waste away into a sort of limbo where death doesn’t truly come but also living death becomes a paralyzing curse only to be lifted with infusion of this life giving blood.

In the other corner we have zombies who are literally mindless with only the primal instinct to feed the only motivation for their existence. But feed on living flesh they must and their hunger has no limit. Their literally a locust on a global scale which would scour the planet of all living things. It doesn’t matter whether the flesh is human or animal but it has to be the warm, living flesh that feeds them. In the end, zombies would become the extinction-level event for humanity.

So, who would win in such a battle for domination.

Vampires need humans. While their appetites ultimately kills their human victims they do try to keep their feeding in moderation. While there are stories and films that paints a world where vampires rule the planet openly they still maintain slave-colonies and/or human farms where they allow their human cattle to breed and multiply thus  their food source remains constant. Human extinction is not what vampires want, but control of humanity instead. Controlling their food and harvesting them in an efficient manner. Only a select few would be turned into vampires. Humans who are willing to serve their undead lords would protect them during the daytime and become Renfield overseers over those humans who do not feel the same.

Zombies on the other hand do not care whether their appetites have been sated by a recent feeding. They will continue to feed as long as a living human and/or animal is in their reach. They would gorge themselves to the infinite for that’s what their instinct drives them to do. Human won’t be able to reason or subjugate themselves upon these monsters. These monsters do not have the wherewithal to ration their food source. The fact that death itself (any death whether through zombie, accident or natural) would just add to their geometrically increasing numbers.

How can humanity find a way to stave off extinction in the face of such a surge of death?

The answer to that is the answer to who would win between vampires and zombies. An answer that some may not agree with (being a zombie fan I’m actually surprised I came to this conclusion), but is the correct one when the question was logically looked at.

Vampires would win over zombies.

I say this because despite the vampires having lesser numbers they would have the intellect and know-how to defeat the legions of walking dead. They do this not out of the goodness of their unbeating hearts, but out of necessity. A necessity that ties their existence with the continued existence of humanity. A humanity that becomes extinct due to a zombie apocalypse would inexorably lead to the very downfall of the vampires themselves.

Vampires on skill alone would be able to destroy any zombies they come across. The fact that their flesh are cold and they’re not living makes them invisible to the zombies. They don’t want to feed on dead flesh because if they did then they would turn on each other instead. This aspect of the vampire keeps them upright and ready to fight.

With their food source endangered by this upstart monster the vampire would have no choice but to protect this valuable resource. As we’ve seen with the more popular types of vampire stories and film it is that vampires are small in numbers, global and ruled over by a council of elders who governed clans of vampires. They impose rule of vampiric law to make sure that their kind remain secret from the world at-large and/or keep their numbers down to better keep the vampiric plague from becoming a wildfire that would scour the planet of life.

It would be up to these governing bodies of vampires to make sure humanity doesn’t succumb to any form of zombie apocalypse. The level of survival for humanity from such an apocalypse will depend on how quickly vampires marshall their meager, but powerfu forces to stave off the inevitable tide of walking dead. They could respond right away and stop the tide before it becomes a global pandemic or their response would be slow and bring humanity to the brink.

In the end, vampires would do whatever it takes to keep humanity from joining the likes of the dinosaurs and mammoth. Whether it’s using their own supernatural-given abilities to destroy zombies by the score and hundreds. Or they could reveal themselves to humanity as vampiric saviors and giving them a choice: become extinct by way of an unchecked zombie apocalypse or allowed to be ruled by a vampiric elite who would protect them from this tide.

It’s a lousy choice for humanity, but one that I think they would choose for the latter (until they find a way to defeat both and keep themselves whole). The prospect extinction is a powerful motivator for a species and choosing to continue one’s species even under the rule of a parasitic race is a better choice than dying out under the teeth and clawed nails of the walking dead.

As you can tell I’m a huge fan of both (though I lean more towards zombies) and have thought about this topic on more than one occasion. This site has seen many posts about zombies though not enough about vampires which would need to be remedied. There’s the ongoing reviews of The Walking Dead in both it’s comic book and TV series form. There was also the reviews of this past summer’s anime series hit which also dealt with the zombie apocalypse but with a level of T&A involved to spice things up a bit. I speak of Highschool of the Dead.

Feel free to leave comments about what you think the conclusion I arrived at. Who do you think will win out between vampires and zombies? Which of the two do you like to read and watch more of? If there was a zombie apocalypse would you try to survive on your own or submit yourself to a vampiric protector and hope they don’t run out of their own supply of blood?

27 responses to “Vampires vs. Zombies…who would win?

  1. I voted for the vampires. 🙂

    I love zombie movies (especially if they’re Italian-made) but vampires will always have a special hold over me. Its probably because vampires can be mysterious, dangerous, and sensual whereas zombies are just dangerous. Nobody wants to become a zombie but more than a few of us have fantasized about vampires and the penatration of fangs. 🙂

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    • LOL, well I don’t know about the penetration of the fangs aspect.

      All the reasons you pointed out if why I think vampires would win. They’re the lesser of two monsters when one boils it down to. I mean think about it. Would you rather live in the world of True Blood or the world of The Walking Dead?

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      • And vampires are a lot sexier than zombies just on general principle, probably because zombies are all decayed and icky whereas vampires look like Ian Somerhalder and David Boreanaz. Plus, you can exchange witticisms with vampires whereas with zombies, all they ever want to talk about it what they’re eating. If Johnny Depp had to become a supernatural creature in real life, I think he’d be a vampire. Sam Worthington and that guy from the Tron movie, however, they would become a zombies.

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  2. Vampires can be brutal as well. Remember the 30 Days Of Night comic series & movie. I detest zombies because they are a virus clothed in human flesh, devoid of any intelligence or spark of life, they are pointless death! They are the magnification of mindless consumer mind frame that I despise in the living.

    Vampires at least have some reflection of the spark of life, personality, character, vices, virtue etc. I prefer them in their non shimmering in the sunlight version along the lines of Whedon’s Spike, hell even Eric Northman from True Blood. He has accepted his existence and is not whining & bemoaning his lost humanity like Bill C.

    Zombies have coexisted with vampires in fiction. Vampire Hunter D, Hellsing etc but they are more undead minion, than flesh eating plague. It would be cool to see a zombie film where vampires have to make themselves known in order to save their food stock.

    It would be interesting to see a vampire with Rice lore/Southern Vampire/Anita Blake lore power set go against a legion of the undead. Or have a story where a Dracula-like vampire carves out a haven for himself to protect his cattle from the onslaught of mindless consumers.

    Sorry for the rant. Nurse, I need my meds now.

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    • This does bring up an interesting issue — could vampires drink the blood of zombies, assuming of course that zombies still have blood in them. And could they, as a result, end up creating yet a third creature to deal with, a vampire/zombie hybrid?

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      • I think even if zombies still had blood in them that hadn’t already coagulated due to lack of circulation it would still be dead blood. If Interview of a Vampire taught me anything it’s that vampires must not drink dead blood lest it takes them down.

        The other side of this coin is what would happen if for some reason a human bitten by a zombie was suddenly turned into a vampire in order to stave off infection. Since death itself is the trigger that turns someone into a zombie does becoming a vampire supersedes that zombification process.

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        • I think Richard Matheson would argue that both vampirism and zombiefication are the result of the same virus but I’d have to go find my copy of I Am Legend to tell you for sure (or fer sher, as I we say where I’m from).

          Myself, I’ve always been of the opinion that the “death” one goes through before turning into a vampire is more like a paralyzed state (which, actually, is apparently the same sort of “fake death” that people used to go through before showing back up as what came to be known as zombies). So really, vampires aren’t so much dying as their just going into a cocoon and then coming out as somethig much more intriguing. Whereas zombies are just the dead reanimated.

          So I guess it depends on which “virus” finishes up its work first. 🙂

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      • Well, while a vampire would not drink dead blood, I do wonder about what would happen if a vampire were to bit a human who had been bitten by a zombie, but not yet reanimated. I mean, their blood is still flowing and fresh, but the virus is in it, so we could very well wind up with a vampire/zombie hybrid. Unless vampires can smell infected blood prior to feeding on their victims. I guess I’d have to ask if anything has ever been discussed about what were to happen if a vampire fed on someone with other viruses, such as AIDS. Is the virus just unable to survive in a vampire’s unique biological makeup, or again are vampires able to sense major blood illnesses like that and just avoid those specimens altogether?

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        • Every piece of vampire literature I’ve read from folklore to modern tales always spoke of vampires not caring if a person was infected with a disease or not. A person whose blood was weak due to disease never passed on the infection to the vampire. Whatever infection a vampire’s bite has which causes a person to turn seems to supersede any other diseases that victim may have. Now, infection caused by a zombie is a different matter since it also does the same in that it steamrolls over all present affliction on the victim.

          So, it will have to depend on whose infection is more potent: the vampire’s or the zombie’s.

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          • Actually, there was either a short story or a novel — I can’t remember which since I was like 15 or 16 when I read it and even then, it was just something I found in a used book store — where one of the subplots was about vampires having to screen the blood they were drinking in order to avoid getting infected with HIV. In that case, at least, vampires were vulnerable to tainted blood.

            I actually have a lot of vampire encyclopedias and guides, the majority of which I bought while I was going through my vampire phase (not a coincidence that Buffy the Vampire Slayer started pretty much the same time I started Junior High and ended right when I was starting college). A lot of them are in storage now. I may have to go dig them out on December 26th. 🙂

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  3. Vampires would win for the reasons you gave, unless they were the Twilight vampires. Then they’d be far too tortured and angsty over their existence that by the time they finally came to terms with it, either the zombie hordes would have wiped out humanity, or humanity would have staged a comeback with no help from the vampires to begin with. So, at best it would be a no contest.

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  4. Pingback: VampyBit.Me » Blog Archive » ZOMBIEAMMO GIVEAWAY RUNNERS UP AND WINNER IS….. - The Official Linda Le Weblog

  5. Vampires are already dead so cannot be infected by a zombie or infected human, it would have no effect on the, similarly in some fiction vampire blood has healing/curing properties so giving it to an infected but not yet turned into a zombie human might cure them.

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