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Gamebixby > Game Review > Kill Floor 3 Review
Game Review

Kill Floor 3 Review

Published July 29, 2025 11 Min Read
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11 Min Read
Kill Floor 3 Review
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Kill Floor 3 Review

Killing the heavy gun in Floor 3 will keep it up for a while, but a paper on a dull progression system and lack of new ideas.

  • Developer: Tripwire Interactive
  • Publisher: Tripwire Interactive
  • release: July 24, 2025
  • Above: Windows
  • from: Steam, the epic game store
  • price: $40/£35/€40
  • review: Intel Core I9-10900K, 32GB RAM, NVIDIA RTX 3090, Windows10

The Killing Floor 3 has excellent headshots. It’s a kind of gun/buddy interaction that most FPS games will strive and induce Frissons to fail. There’s a deliciously tangible feeling that a metal cylinder fires from your hand several times at a loud speed, crushing the entire presence of the groaning cannibal clone in front of you. A nice bloody headshot, I say.

Hopefully, in a few hours and hours, this game will produce something Other than that It’s just as exciting as a dome blast. Or at least balance it with that instantaneous satisfaction and a more lasting reason to keep your tooling and keep shipping. Instead, it ends up coastting with gunfires and can only point to a boring stat page when asked for something new or fresh.

On the field, this sequel steps on the same bloody ground as the first two games. It’s an increasingly frightening filming of Zeds, with a Gore-oriented cash system that allows for the purchase of heavy weapons during the waves. A lot of frustration has arisen through the switch from Old’s Perk System to KF3’s new experts. (Previously, cosmetic player skins could match any perks or class. But now each Sharpshooter, Medic, etc. are characters with hero shooter style names.)

However, in addition to the fact that developers are planning to cancel this modified release, locking perks to personalities doesn’t actually hinder Zed’s business to a significant extent. It’s good to play Firebug without listening to Firebug Character’s Certainly, certain submarvel removal. But the only real change is the ultimate rechargeable abilities of each expert, such as the Commando’s acid spitting drone buddy and the Ninja’s grapple gun. These are suitable for killing a few people from the potential hundreds of people to clean up.

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If anything, specialists miss the opportunity to make this cooperative shooter more cooperative. I spent over 100 hours on my original killing bed, many of which had medical syringes stuck to my teammates, welded doors that were closed to the size of the Horde, Wales population, and shelled them on the other side. There are very few here. Medics are Medics, and engineers can build ziplines and open armor lockers for their peers to use, but overall it becomes rarer as TeamPlay becomes literally more specialized. So most team comps look like a band with five lead guitarists and one poor medic on one drummer. In fact, everyone, including all medics and engineers, opt for a very deadly ultimate and a damage boost upgrade that reduces the risk of solo play much.

Certainly, few people are enough to get lost during boss battles. Most players have wherewithal to slowly gang rape afterwave specimens. But the ZEDS itself is a very familiar bunch at this point. There are fewer total varieties than killing Floor 2, and it has never appeared before except for the three new bosses. Meanwhile, all three of these climactic monsters fit into a roughly similar template: “Big Things Jump.” Tripwire tried to excite the fight by teaching new tricks from the old Zeds. Most successful in flame-shaking shell: he can now blow fireballs like pure mortar, escape the effective range of shotguns and launchers. Unfortunately, that is the only example where New Zeaed tactics force you to change yourself. Ultimately, Killing Floor 3’s shooting is precise, but simple. All problems are best solved by getting energized with WeakPoints, whether it’s a Husk volatile backpack or perhaps your head.

We will be deploying the ultimate twin-sonic cannon for our engineers against ZEDS on Killing Floor 3.
A meat pound attack in the atrium range of Killing Floor 3.
A fiery impaler lampage on Killing Floor 3.
Run the Scrake on Killing Floor 3.

As I say, there are many opportunities for this simple act of clicking on body parts to burst the dopamine bank. For example, flatten a large number of specimens with consecutive target bangs. Alternatively, rotate the Zed with the teeth closed to reflexively snap the last few inches of your neck. And it’s not just guns either. Both ninja sword options are impressively heavy, allowing you to bisect most ZEDs (almost metal gear rise: Reduced level of vengeance level) in one slash. Some of the terrifying tensions in OG Killing Floor are lost by adding I-Frame Bumsliding, but you are almost acrobatic. Even the sprints keep on creating more appropriate and inevitable prospects and keep fighting.

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Sadly, there are two ways that KF3 can damage its own gun. The boss forgives the phrase and is big. Even at normal difficulties, they are very stiff and absorbent bullet sponges, so the joy of bursting hatred with a well-placed shot evaporates completely, replacing it with rhythmless, hip-filing and full-auto confusion. These fights are challenging, but rarely fun.

The second is the contradiction in which a particular firearm provides satisfaction with its headshot. Tripwire is the best thing in the business to make arm-breaking rifles and bone shaking shotguns, and the KF3 is rich in both. However, if you choose an expert to practice with SMG or beam weapons, you will notice a noticeable lack of the same kind of multisensory punch. In particular, Medic must start with a Dinky Machine Pistol with all the weight of a Happy Meal toy.

Cysts and clots attack within Biolab on killing floor 3.

The KF3 actually has an answer to its own overwhelming gun, the attachment craft system. The idea is that once you gain XP and level up perks, you collect craft material throughout each game and revert back to the base based on your stat boost hardware customizations. While they don’t necessarily spawn with these tailored pieces, they otherwise replace the random upgraded guns you can find in the round shop.

I had no problem with the general concept and happily slapped the better sights and expansion magazines of weapons I normally buy anyway. However, the available add-ons are a strange combination of clear upgrades and gadgets, creating ridiculously subtle statistical shifts and barely gathering the enthusiasm to give examples. What about laser sights that add an entire 4% accuracy? However, the fact that only 2% is an assumption, widow -5% recoil bonus.

This crafting malakie may have the greatest derivative disease that is committed to providing an advantage. For the rest of us, if we can collect some more clogue jars, we don’t feel like juicy power spikes are on the card. And frankly, it’s hard not to feel the same about perk upgrades. Many of these offer more generous bonuses, such as rank-up in some scenarios, such as grenades and healing syringe capacity (such as a potential lifesaver), but they require so much experience and not only provide a ridiculous percentage boost to existing beings, but they cannot be seen as a reason to continue playing on their own.

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Block clot attacks with the ninja sword on killing floor 3.

Also feeding ennui is a medley of technical issues. Performance is whimsical. Use 45-60FPS using high quality on the RTX 3090, which was the God King of the graphics card. Plus, it’s not uncommon to get a sudden, substantial starter when a wave of enemy appears. The Zeds themselves are often victims of glitches. I run through the scenery after they’re fatally bashed, then knocked over the scenery and temporarily snapped when they draped on uneven neven nap. “Poor thing”, I muse and rack the shotgun with -3% spread choke.

I’m grateful to kill Floor 3 because the Staples of the series are firmly established in my mind, if not particularly fresh. Perhaps if this Dosh-earthing massacre of clones is all new to you, its (almost) comfortable weight will keep you longer.

Personally, I look at it and watch games that barely repetitively even slip the gun design and high-tech fidelity. It’s not an attractive approach that often looks like a golden age for more ambitious cooperative shooters. Helldivers 2 cleverly balances massive war and slapstick comedy. Warhammer 40,000: Darktide is a Horde Brawler, with a deep, deep, presented toe. And Deeprock Galactic has been a team play that has made you realize science thanks to its clever weapons of sci-fi tools and weapons. Would you like to kill floor 3? It has a good headshot and a plus 2% front grip.

(TagStoTranslate) Killing Floor 3 (T) Horror (T) PC (T) PS5 (T) Shooting Game (T) Tripwire Interactive (T) WOT (T) Xbox Series X/s

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