
Also Known As: The Infected, Rage Victims
First Appearance: 28 Days Later (2002)
Appearances: 28 Weeks Later, 28 Years Later, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple
Origin: United Kingdom
Kill Count: Widespread / Pandemic-Level
Created by: Danny Boyle & Alex Garland
Tier: Premier Class Tier
The Infected are not a singular masked killer, but one of the most terrifying forces in horror history, humans consumed by the Rage Virus, stripped of reason and driven by pure, uncontrollable violence. First unleashed in 28 Days Later, they redefined the zombie genre entirely, replacing slow-moving corpses with fast, relentless predators that overwhelm through speed, aggression, and sheer unpredictability.
What makes The Infected so effective is their disturbing plausibility. They are not undead. They are living people, infected through blood or bodily fluids in seconds, turning almost instantly into feral, rage-driven attackers. There is no hesitation, no intelligence, and no mercy, only violence. This immediacy makes every encounter deadly, and every drop of blood a potential death sentence.
Film Appearances
28 Days Later (2002)

The Rage Virus is introduced as a laboratory-created contagion, accidentally unleashed and spreading across Britain in a matter of days. The film follows Jim, who awakens 28 days after the outbreak to a deserted London.
The Infected are fast, erratic, and terrifyingly human. They scream, sprint, and attack with animalistic fury, often appearing suddenly in abandoned spaces. Their speed transforms even open environments into traps, while their humanity makes them more unsettling than traditional monsters. The film also explores how quickly society collapses, with The Infected acting as both a physical threat and a reflection of human fragility.
28 Weeks Later (2007)

Six months after the outbreak, the United States military begins repopulating London, believing the virus has been contained. This illusion is shattered when the infection re-emerges through an asymptomatic carrier, leading to a rapid and catastrophic second outbreak.
Here, The Infected are even more dangerous due to population density and confined quarantine zones. They tear through civilians and soldiers alike, overwhelming military containment in moments. The introduction of carriers adds a new dimension to the virus, showing it can remain dormant before exploding into violence. The scale is larger, the destruction more widespread, and the sense of control completely lost.
28 Years Later (2025)

Nearly three decades after the original outbreak, the world has adapted but not recovered. The Rage Virus remains embedded in society, shaping how survivors live, organise, and protect themselves.
The Infected are no longer just remnants of a past catastrophe, they are part of the present reality. Their continued existence reinforces the idea that the virus cannot truly be eradicated. Instead, humanity exists alongside it, in a fragile balance where any mistake can trigger devastation.
28 Years Later: The Bone Temple (2026)

Directed by Nia DaCosta and written by Alex Garland, this instalment expands the mythology of The Infected in significant ways. The story follows survivors navigating a fractured world of cults, violence, and evolving threats, while also introducing new ideas about the virus itself.
A key development is the emergence of an Alpha Infected known as Samson, a figure who displays signs of behavioural change and even limited communication. Through Dr Ian Kelson’s experiments, it is suggested that the Rage Virus may be more complex than previously believed, potentially affecting the brain in ways that could be altered or suppressed. Samson’s interactions hint at the possibility of residual humanity beneath the rage, challenging everything previously understood about The Infected.
At the same time, the film reinforces their continued brutality. Packs of Infected remain a constant threat, attacking indiscriminately and maintaining their role as one of the most dangerous forces in this world. The Bone Temple itself, an ossuary built from the dead, symbolises the lasting impact of the virus, a grim reminder that the Rage Virus has reshaped civilisation permanently. Rather than fading into history, The Infected continue to evolve alongside it.
Character and Legacy
The Infected changed horror forever. Before 28 Days Later, zombies were largely slow and methodical. After it, speed became synonymous with terror. Their influence can be seen across modern horror, inspiring faster, more aggressive threats in both film and gaming, including franchises like Resident Evil and The Last of Us.
More importantly, they brought realism back into horror. The Rage Virus feels disturbingly plausible, a biological threat rather than a supernatural curse. This grounding in reality makes the horror far more immediate and unsettling. Anyone can become one of them in seconds, and once infected, there is no return.
With later entries expanding the concept, particularly the idea of evolving or atypical infected, The Infected remain one of the most dynamic and terrifying creations in the genre. They are not just monsters. They are a warning.
League Placement
The Infected belong firmly in the Premier Class Tier, not just for their brutality, but for their lasting impact on horror as a whole. They didn’t just redefine a subgenre. They rewrote it.
