Base Game
Full campaign, all base classes
Amazons vs Zombies is a free hentai tower defense game on Nutaku where you build a squad of warrior women and fight through zombie-infested cities. Developed by Pixel Paradise, it mixes lane-based strategy combat with an adult storyline — explicit scenes unlock as you progress through the campaign, not through a paywall. Available on browser and Android APK, no subscription required.
Full campaign, all base classes
Gacha drops, some gear exclusive, Premium character pulls, Tactical consumables and more.
Opening Amazons vs Zombies for the first time, it’s immediately clear this isn’t a standard Nutaku clicker. There’s a proper tutorial that gets you into combat within the first few minutes, character designs that look hand-crafted rather than generated, and a UI that — while busy — has an actual structure to it. The post-apocalyptic art direction is consistent throughout: dark environments, animated battle effects, illustrated cutscenes.
Registration runs through your existing Nutaku account. If you already have one, you’re playing within seconds. First-time users go through a quick signup, no payment required. The onboarding tutorial is short enough that it doesn’t overstay its welcome, and it actually explains the combat mechanics rather than just pointing at buttons.
The premise is more coherent than you’d expect from a free adult mobile title. Genekticon, a fictional megacorporation, created Virus G as a biological tool for producing a compliant workforce. The experiment spiraled out of control — instead of obedient workers, it spawned waves of aggressive zombies. Men were largely wiped out. Certain women survived with enhanced physical resilience, now fighting for scraps in a world without infrastructure or safety.
You step in as a commander leading a squad of Amazons — the last organized fighting force — on a mission to find an antidote and uncover what Genekticon actually knew and when. The mystery around the corporation’s labs gives the story enough momentum to carry multiple sessions. It’s not deep narrative by any standard, but it gives each character a reason to exist beyond being eye candy, and that’s more than most titles in this space bother with.
The adult content is unlocked progressively through story missions and character affinity progression. Scenes are fully illustrated — static art rather than animation — with quality that holds up consistently across the cast. Content ranges from suggestive early on to fully explicit as you advance with individual characters. The art style is coherent: the in-game character designs match the scene artwork, which isn’t always the case in free adult games.
The library isn’t enormous. There are multiple playable heroines, each with their own scene progression, but the total volume is limited compared to a dedicated content platform. What’s there is well-made. The pace of unlocking feels tied to gameplay more than to spending, at least through the mid-game — you’re earning content by playing rather than buying it directly.
This is where Amazons vs Zombies earns its place in the Nutaku lineup. Combat is a lane-based tower-defense system: you deploy warrior units strategically and manage waves of incoming zombies with different movement speeds and behaviors. Fast “runner” enemies punish passive setups. Siege-style encounters demand a proper frontline before you can safely position ranged units. There are actual tactical decisions to make each mission.
Four main classes cover distinct roles. Markswomen deal high burst damage from range but fold quickly if enemies break through your frontline. Berserkers are melee damage dealers — your core frontline DPS. Medic-biochemists exploit Virus G weaknesses for bonus damage against specific enemy types and provide support utility. Tanks absorb punishment and hold lane control in late-wave sieges.
Each warrior has a skill tree covering individual techniques and squad-wide tactics. The upgrade system is meaningful — a maxed berserker performs noticeably differently from a base-level one, and the difference shows in practice rather than just on paper. Equipment slots permanently elevate squad capabilities, while consumable boosters offer tactical advantages for specific mission types.
The difficulty curve through the early and mid-game is well-paced. You’re making real decisions about squad composition and upgrade priority without hitting artificial walls every few levels. Later stages require either strong equipment or patience — which is where the monetization starts to apply pressure.
The base game is entirely free. You can download the Android APK or play in the browser on Nutaku without spending anything, and the full main story campaign is accessible without a purchase. The free experience is genuinely playable — this isn’t a demo masquerading as a free game.
The premium layer runs on Nutaku Gold, the platform’s currency. Equipment chests are the main expenditure — gacha-style drops that can contain gear unavailable through standard play. Certain rare heroines are only accessible through Gold pulls. Consumable boosters can be purchased for tougher missions. Seasonal events like Lust Rush are technically free to participate in, but spending accelerates results and ranking significantly.
The honest picture: free players hit a ceiling in the late game, particularly around rare character collection and competitive events. It’s not an immediate hard wall — there’s a solid stretch of content before spending becomes expected — but the ceiling exists.
The Android APK is around 101MB, installs clean, no root needed. On a mid-range phone it runs fine for the most part — the combat animations are smooth, load times between missions are short. The one place it stutters is during heavy wave encounters with a lot of units on screen simultaneously. Nothing that costs you a mission, but it’s noticeable.
The browser version on Nutaku is a reasonable alternative if you’d rather not sideload. First load takes a bit longer than mobile, especially on slower connections, but once you’re in the session the experience is comparable. The bigger annoyance on both platforms is the update system. Updates are forced — there’s no playing on an older version — and they don’t always pick the most convenient moment to ask. Mid-session update prompts are a recurring complaint in the Discord and community threads. The game has pushed from v1.0 to v1.45+ since mid-2025, so the interruptions happen fairly regularly.
The game was built with mobile in mind and it shows. Touch controls are responsive, the UI scales cleanly on standard phone screens, and the combat interface doesn’t require precise taps that misfire on a touchscreen. Tablet users get more comfortable spacing across the board. The one consistent complaint from the player community relates to the forced update system — you can’t skip a pending version, and if the update check fails due to connection issues, you’re locked out until it resolves.
Playing free on the browser, standard banner-style ads are present but non-intrusive during testing. No pop-ups or page redirects were encountered mid-session. On Android, the experience is similar. The ad presence is lighter than many free adult titles, which tend to use interstitials aggressively to push premium upgrades. Spending Nutaku Gold on in-game items does not remove ads — there’s no formal ad-free mode on this title the way some Nutaku games offer it.
HTTPS across the platform. Since the game runs through Nutaku, payment security is handled at the platform level — Nutaku accepts standard card payments and Nutaku Gold purchases, so standard payment processor protections apply. Account registration requires an email address; browsing without an account isn’t possible since the game requires login to save progress. No unusual data collection practices were identified beyond standard analytics.
An active Discord server runs alongside the game, where the development team posts update announcements and event details. Seasonal events like Lust Rush add limited-time challenges with real rewards — the first event distributed prizes via random.org selection, which at least gestures toward transparent randomization. Events add meaningful replay value beyond the main campaign and have kept the player base engaged between content patches. Update frequency — roughly every two to three weeks — is faster than most comparable Nutaku titles.
Most free Nutaku games don’t ask much of you. Cookie of Desire, Passion Industry, a lot of the catalog — you tap a few times, wait for timers, collect rewards. Amazons vs Zombies is a different type of commitment. The combat actually requires attention, squad decisions matter, and losing a mission means something went wrong tactically rather than just cosmetically.
Outside of Nutaku, Eros Fantasy covers similar squad-RPG territory but with a different aesthetic and a more traditional gacha loop. Neither is objectively better — it depends whether the post-apocalyptic setting and tower-defense format appeal to you specifically. What AvZ doesn’t compete on is raw adult content volume. If that’s the priority, a dedicated platform will serve you better. This one earns its time through gameplay first.
Play Amazons vs Zombies Free →
The base game is free on both browser and Android. In-game purchases run through Nutaku Gold, the platform’s currency, which covers equipment chests, rare heroine pulls, and boosters. There is no subscription model — all purchases are one-time currency top-ups.
| Item | Access | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Base Game | Free | Full campaign, all four base classes |
| Equipment Chests | Nutaku Gold | Gacha drops — some gear exclusive to chests |
| Rare Heroines | Nutaku Gold | Certain characters only available via premium pulls |
| Boosters | Nutaku Gold | Tactical consumables for specific missions |
| Nutaku Gold ⭐ | From $4.84 | Starting price via Nutaku platform or gift cards |
There’s no single “premium plan” for this game the way subscription-based platforms work. You spend what you choose, when you choose. The free experience covers the main campaign comfortably. Deeper collection and competitive event play is where regular spending becomes relevant.
Amazons vs Zombies is one of the more mechanically honest entries in Nutaku’s free game library. The tower-defense combat asks for real decisions, the post-apocalyptic story gives the characters context, and the adult content is integrated into progression rather than bolted on as a separate purchase system. These are genuine strengths for the genre.
The limitations are real too. Rare heroine collection is gacha-gated. Competitive seasonal events strongly favor spending. The always-online requirement and forced update interruptions are minor but persistent friction. Late-game content stalls for free players faster than the early experience suggests it will.
If you’re browsing Nutaku looking for something that functions as a game first and an adult platform second, this is a reasonable pick for a few sessions. Don’t expect to collect everything without opening your wallet, but expect real gameplay before that conversation starts.
Rating: 7.2/10 — Stronger gameplay than most free Nutaku titles, adult content earned through progression, active development. Monetization gets heavy in the late game and gacha mechanics limit free-to-play reach.