How to Fix a Laceration in Project Zomboid
A laceration is more serious than a scratch but less serious than a deep wound or fracture. It causes moderate health loss, bleeding, and pain. Untreated lacerations bleed out — and if the source was a zombie, lacerations carry a 25% chance of Knox Virus infection, monitored over a 24-hour incubation window.
Step 1: Stop the Bleeding
- Open the Health panel (the heart icon, hotkey
H). - Right-click the bleeding wound entry.
- Select a bandage:
- Sterilized Bandage — preferred, lower infection chance from regular wound contamination.
- Bandage — works fine.
- Ripped Sheets — torn from clothing in an emergency. Counts as a "dirty" bandage; replace ASAP.
Step 2: Sterilize Before Bandaging (Recommended)
Apply a sterilizer to the wound before the bandage to reduce the chance of regular wound infection (this does NOT prevent Knox Virus infection from a zombie source). Verified options:
- Bottle of Disinfectant
- Bourbon
- Cotton Balls (with disinfectant)
- Alcohol Wipes
Step 3: Replace Dirty Bandages
Bandages get dirty over time. A dirty bandage stops bleeding but raises the chance of secondary infection. Open the Health panel periodically and re-bandage with a clean (ideally sterilized) one until the wound closes.
Step 4: Wait Out the 24-Hour Knox Window
If the laceration came from a zombie, you have a 25% chance of zombification at default settings. Symptoms appear progressively over 24 in-game hours: queasy, then nauseous, then full sickness. There is no cure for the Knox Virus once it takes hold.
| Source | Knox Infection Chance |
|---|---|
| Bite | 100% |
| Laceration (zombie) | 25% |
| Scratch (zombie) | 7% |
| Laceration (non-zombie — barbed wire, broken window, tree) | 0% Knox; standard wound infection only |
Bonus: Level Up First Aid While You Heal
Every bandaging and stitching action grants First Aid XP. See our First Aid leveling guide for ways to grind it intentionally.
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