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Town Restoration
April 26, 2026 at 02:24 AM
Expanded town restoration article with beyond-the-graveyard framing, economic loop, quest and NPC structure, undead labor link, defensive function, and unconfirmed-details section
Town restoration is a major pillar of Graveyard Keeper 2 and a structural change from the first game. The sequel expands the playable space beyond the cemetery to include an entire ruined medieval town, and putting that settlement back together is a long-running project that runs in parallel with corpse handling, automation, and combat preparation. See the overview for how the systems fit together.
The cemetery is no longer the whole map. It is one piece of a larger settlement that has been hollowed out by the zombie crisis, and the rest is the player's to repair. Houses, workshops, stores, and other civic buildings sit in some state of ruin, and their visible state changes over time as the player works through the rebuild. The town is a project the player is responsible for, and the cemetery is the economic base that funds it.
Town development doubles as the primary economic loop. The rebuild is pitched as serving the residents and turning their needs into profit. Repairing buildings unlocks the residents who lived or worked in them, and serving those residents converts their needs into revenue that funds the next stage of the rebuild.
Buildings are revenue points
. Each restored structure attaches a resident or service to it as a recurring hook rather than a one-shot reward.
The cemetery feeds the town
. Income from corpse processing, crafting, and graveyard upgrades pays for the rebuild work above ground.
The town feeds the cemetery
. Revenue from town services flows back into the player's wider operation, including better gear and bigger automation chains.
Progression through the rebuild is gated by helping residents solve problems. Quests come from the people who used to live and work in the ruined buildings, and completing those quests is what unlocks the next building, the next service, or the next tier of access on a given site. Specific NPC names, the order in which residents return, and the full catalogue of quests have not been publicly detailed before launch.
The rebuild is not done by hand. Undead workers handle the heavy lifting behind the scenes, which plugs town restoration directly into the game's automation chain. Captured zombies that drive workstations in the cemetery are the same labor pool that keeps the rebuild moving on the surface. Investing in zombie throughput pays off on both sides at once: more reanimated labor means more goods coming out of the workshops and more progress on buildings being repaired in town.
Rebuilding the town is also a defensive system. Restored fortifications close gaps in the perimeter, and a town that has its residents back is a town that can field a garrison. The game pitches a defense made up of trained townsfolk fighting alongside the player's undead troops, and that mixed force only exists if the rebuild is far enough along to support it. Town restoration therefore feeds straight into combat preparation, and the player's ability to hold the line against the zombie apocalypse depends on how many walls have been repaired and how many residents have been armed.
Pre-release material establishes the shape of town restoration but not its full inventory. The following points have not been publicly detailed and should not be assumed:
The town's name and any in-world place names attached to it.
The full roster of residents or named NPCs the player works with.
Named tiers, levels, or upgrades for individual buildings.
The full quest catalogue tied to the rebuild.
Hard limits on how large the town can get or how many buildings can be active at once.
The currency or currencies used in town transactions.
The structure of the town-management UI, including any planning, blueprint, or oversight screens.