Swamp Fever

Swamp Fever is a new campaign spanning four chapters which takes place in a "swampy" location in Left 4 Dead 2 after evacuating from Savannah. The Survivors will reach this swamp and escape from it in a fishing boat familiar to the one in Death Toll. It was playable in Comic Con 2009 through July 23rd to July 26th and will be fully playable to the public views in the Left 4 Dead 2 Demo, which will most likely be released shortly before its release date in November 2009. It seems as though it's a showcase for the AI Director's new, more in-depth level controls—such as the weather, and the new water system which slows the Survivors down and does not allow them to run.

Swamp Fever is also the only campaign that will contain the new Uncommon Infected, mud men, which are hard to spot, and extremely agile compared to the other Common Infected.

Trivia

 * Swamp fever is a term given to a number of diseases that are acquired in wet, swampy environments.
 * Unlike The Parish, Swamp Fever ends its finale the same way all the original Left 4 Dead campaigns do—that is, calling a rescue and waiting until arrival.
 * Some of the walls in a shanty house found in Swamp Fever can be broken off with weapon damage.
 * Swamp Fever was the very first campaign to reveal the Spitter in gameplay videos.
 * In the video of this level you can see a paratrooper hanging from their chute. An OXM article says that they are randomly located on the level by means of the Director, and will signify item drops underneath.
 * It has been seen in the gameplay videos, by GameSpy, that the Survivors can find in the region of Swamp Fever, are the weapons from the original Left 4 Dead. The weapons from the original are the M16A3 assault rifle, the M4 semi-automatic shotgun, the Mini-14 Hunting Rifle, the Uzi Submachine Gun, and the Pump Shotgun.
 * Swamp Fever currently is the only campaign with 4 chapters, as opposed to the usual 5.
 * The Campaign's slogan, "the only cure is dying", is a reference to the fact that there is currently no known cure for the infection.