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Extraction
May 16, 2026 at 08:31 AM
Initial version (2026-05-16)
Extraction is the structural core of every night-phase expedition in NAKWON: LAST PARADISE. The player drops into the ruined city, scavenges supplies, fights or evades infected and rival survivors, and must reach a designated exit to keep what they carried. Failing to extract loses the loadout: anything brought on the run is gone when the survivor dies. For wider context, see the overview and the day-night cycle.
Every night-phase session follows the same shape. Survivors queue together in sessions of up to 16 players, drop into the city from Yeouido, complete missions and scavenge gear across the landmarks of central Seoul, and then route back to an exit before time, Last Stand, or other survivors take them out. Returning through an exit is what makes the run count. Everything else is preparation.
Phase | What Happens | Failure State |
|---|---|---|
Drop | Up to 16 survivors enter the expedition map from Yeouido. | Cannot fail; the run starts. |
Scavenge | Loot from landmarks, complete missions, manage noise around infected. | Death; loss of carried loadout. |
Route to exit | Travel back through the city to a designated extraction point. | Death; loss of carried loadout. |
Extract | Use the exit to leave the map; carried loot returns to the shelter. | Missed extraction window; possible loss of run. |
The rule that makes extraction sit at the centre of every decision is the permadeath loot rule. Items carried into an expedition are lost permanently if the player dies and fails to extract. That includes weapons, armor, consumables, mission objects, and any high-value loot picked up during the run. Items stored at the shelter back in Yeouido are safe; items carried on the run are at risk until the survivor returns.
The rule cuts in two directions. It is what gives every expedition real stakes: a careless engagement deep in the city can erase hours of preparation. It is also what makes incremental, cautious extraction viable: even a small bag of common materials, if extracted, is more value than a large bag lost. Players in the closed alpha quickly learned to weigh the value of a fresh objective against the value of the loot already in the bag.
The Last Stand state is the bridge between the moment a survivor goes down and the moment the run is fully lost. When HP reaches 0, the player enters Last Stand and can no longer attack, but they can still move and still attempt to extract. Reaching an exit in Last Stand is a valid extraction; the run counts as long as the survivor crosses the threshold before the infection meter reaches 100%.
This is the design intent behind the layered failure model. A bad engagement does not always mean an instant lost run. A quiet, mobile player who knows the closest exit can recover even a Last Stand into a successful extraction. The same is not true if the player went down deep in the map with no exit in reach.
Because the special infected in the closed alpha are highly sensitive to noise, the route to the exit is rarely a straight line. A firearm shot near an exit broadcasts the survivor's position to nearby infected and to other players. Successful extractions usually involve a quiet route, melee engagements where they cannot be avoided, and a final approach that does not draw a swarm to the exit itself.
Weather adds another layer. The closed alpha confirms heavy rain as a third environmental state alongside day and night, and rain muffles both player and infected sound. A heavy-rain night is a stealthier extraction window; a clear night with normal audio is a higher-stakes one.
Progress made during the closed alpha did not carry over to the eventual full release. Closed-alpha extractions, the loot they produced, the Citizen Grade earned, and the shelter customization built up during the test were all reset at the end of the test window. The mechanics described above are the rules of the system; the run history from any individual test is not persistent across builds.
Specific exit counts per expedition map, named extraction points, exact timing windows, and the rules for forced or contested extractions have not been published in detail. The dossier captures the loop and the failure modes; the exact map geometry of where exits sit is left to future build coverage.