We completely understand how difficult it is to keep up content to a website and hope that they are able to populate the forum with more scenarios.
The reason we mention this we believe that tabletop exercises are an excellent way to hone your thinking and find ways to improve your management of a situation and look at things you may not have considered in your evaluation of plans and ideas.
Command School TTX (the source of the above image) describes Tabletop Exercises and their application brilliantly here.
I don't believe we could do a better job describing the matter so recommend following the link and having a look.
As we enjoy considering scenarios will be creating some scenarios to think about ourselves and when we find other sites doing similar we will link those for your enjoyment. Below is our first scenario for feeding the mind.
A new group of visitors
You have managed to survive the initial outbreak of the zombie apocalypse. You have fortified a small rural town and have fended off zombie hoards and bandits successfully although at a cost. The walls have held but you population has decreased from 200 which your resources could support to 50.
Your ammunition supply is very low and your water supply has become contaminated. As such you have limited ability to defend your fort and many of your community are sick.
Unfortunately only personnel in your community with medical training to deal with the contamination did not survive the previous attack. You also lost the person who knew how to build and operate the bulk water treatment system.
As you are trying to deal with the aftermath of the last attack and work out how to repair the water treatment facility a convoy of survivors comes into sight of your fortifications. You estimate that there are about 20 people in the convoy including a couple of children.
They are heavily armed, much better armed than you are. An envoy of the survivor convoy approaches your fortifications under a white flag. They advise that they have been traveling for two months and would like to stop at your fort for a week to rest and service their vehicles and equipment in exchange for a trade of supplies and services. They also advise that the convoy has two doctors and a nurse, medication and an engineer.
As the leader of the fort you must decide whether you will accept the offer to trade in exchange for a week of respite for the convoy and if you accept, under what conditions if any you would permit such a trade.