Maps | State Of Decay 2 All
Drucker County is the desert map. It looks cool, but it is universally the most hated map for one reason: . A giant rock plateau splits the map in half, forcing you to take long, looping highway ramps that waste gas.
This article breaks down , ranking their difficulty, highlighting the best bases, and revealing the unique landmarks you cannot afford to miss. 1. Trumbull Valley (Homecoming) Difficulty: Hard (Early Game) / Medium (Late Game) Theme: Nostalgic Farmland & High-Tech Ruins
Fire up the Juggernaut Edition, load your community, and start clearing those Plague Hearts. state of decay 2 all maps
Choosing where to set up your community is arguably the most critical decision you’ll make. Do you need the sprawling fields of Meagher Valley for your cars? The defendable bridges of Cascade Hills? Or the gritty, loot-rich streets of Trumbull Valley?
If you hate driving around obstacles, Meagher Valley is your paradise. This map is almost completely flat. No cliffs, few impassable barriers. You can drive a car across the shallow rivers anywhere, not just at bridges. Drucker County is the desert map
Cascade Hills is the "city-lite" map. It features a massive river separating the map into two halves, requiring you to drive across long bridges that are often blocked by hordes or plague walls.
Since its launch in 2018, State of Decay 2 has evolved from a solid survival game into a deep, replayable zombie apocalypse simulator. Thanks to the Juggernaut Edition and subsequent updates, players now have access to seven unique maps (five base game, plus two from the Heartland DLC and Homecoming update). This article breaks down , ranking their difficulty,
Fairfield is technically part of Trumbull Valley, but in the Heartland DLC and later the Campaign (via the Trumbull update), Fairfield is a burned-out suburban neighborhood. It is small but extremely dense with plague zombies.

