Plantsare living organisms that belong to the Plantae kingdom. They obtain most of their energy from sunlight in a process called photosynthesis. However, not all plants absorb energy via photosynthesis. They are the protagonists of Plants vs. Zombies 2 and the player's main defense against the undead assailants.
As of the 11.5.1 update, there is a grand total of 195 playable plants, 126 of which are premium plants and among the premium plants, 22 of them cost real money, 13 of them cost gems. Out of the remaining plants, 78 can be unlocked with seed packets, 13 can be unlocked with mints, and one of them is only available via Zen Garden.
Hello I had plants vs zombies 2 on my phone but had to do a factory reset and have all lost all of my world progress and all of my plants some of which i bought and all my mints. I had the game linked to my google account [edit: email address removed] but after reinstall the game reset everything and I no longer have all my plants. Can anything be done to recover all of my progress?
Go to the loading screen and tap the cloud icon and try the force sync, if that doesn't work then if you signed up to EA's email registration service they can send a code to your email address to restore your account.
These plants have been completely removed from the game, save for their internal listing. These plants will crash the Zen Garden and Endless Zones when obtained as their code no longer exists in the current version.
I feel that maybe I am looking in wrong place because I am not finding them. I have 8 open spaces in my zen garden, and fill all 8 everytime I do Daytime hard, but they seem to be the same set of plants.
There's nothing for collecting them all, but it's something else you can work for while you play. If you're not big on collecting stuff, then you're not going to miss out on anything gameplay or achievement-wise.
Note that "Health" means how long your plant can survive given that 1 Zombie is constantly chewing it. Normal means 6 or 4 bites from zombies, 1 hit from vehicles or Gargantuar, or 16 peas from ZomBotany zombies. All plants can only take 1 hit from vehicles or Gargantuar except Spikerock taking 9 hits.
In the original Plants vs. Zombies, the Suburban Almanac lists a total of 49 playable plants, including Imitater. Each plant is unique, being useful at at least one stage of the game, with each special attribute existing to help counter certain types of zombies or area gimmicks. The plants also populate the Zen Garden, with its own exclusive plants.
All playable plants come from seed packets, which is how plants are selected and then planted in-game. Some of these packets are purchased from Crazy Dave's Twiddydinkies for certain prices and different points of the game, and all the packets are sourced from the same company, Bloom & Doom Seed Co., as evidenced by the text on the top of each seed packet (only found in PC versions).
All of the plants in the Suburban Almanac are unlocked by playing through Adventure Mode, with upgrade plants and Imitater requiring money to purchase from Crazy Dave's Twiddydinkies for their own individual prices. The rest are simmply unlocked at the end of their respective levels, with the exception of Peashooter which is unlocked from the very beginning.
In the Adventure Mode, the final zombie to be defeated in a level where a plant is awarded for completion will drop that plant's seed packet. This packet will play the game's victory jingle when clicked, and transition to a screen announcing the plant's unlock, as well as short flavour text to help introduce the plant to the player. It is implied that Crazy Dave is the one who provides the player with these plants.[1]
To unlock the Morticulturalist achievement, you must collect all 49 plants for the Suburban Almanac, which also includes the upgrade plants and Imitater in Crazy Dave's Twiddydinkies. This therefore requires beating Adventure Mode once, and spending $98,000 for all the shop plants combined.
The purpose of the plants is when collected enough sun, they can be planted to support the players to defend their homes from the brain-eating zombies. They are mutants monstrous that can damage them, simply sit back and act as a support, or can only used once. Players must strategize with them to build a perfect defense to protect themselves from the zombie horde.
In addition to the seven Plant characters, 24 spawnable plants can be purchased and summoned in a variety of games. These plants are all AI (artificial intelligence) controlled, and can be used to hurt or heal.
Plant the stationary plants in pots during Garden Ops, and plant the mobile plants in dirt piles during Multiplayer games. The spawnable plants can be healed and vanquished like any other plant in the game but cannot be revived, so make sure you tend to them.
Plants vs. Zombies is a video game franchise developed by PopCap Games, a subsidiary of Electronic Arts (EA). The series follows the affiliates of David "Crazy Dave" Blazing as they use his plants to defend against a zombie invasion, led by Dr. Edgar George Zomboss. The first game, Plants vs. Zombies (2009), was developed and released by PopCap before its acquisition by EA. After PopCap Games's acquisition, EA expanded the game into a franchise with games on many different platforms.
On April 1, 2009, PopCap released a music video for the song "Zombies on Your Lawn" by Laura Shigihara to promote Plants vs. Zombies.[2] A PopCap spokesperson, Garth Chouteau, revealed in an IGN interview that Plants vs. Zombies would be released soon on PC and Mac.[3] On April 22, 2009, PopCap released an official game trailer of Plants vs. Zombies on YouTube.[4][5] During the promotion of Plants vs. Zombies, PopCap released a demo version of the game that could be played for thirty minutes.[6] Plants vs. Zombies was officially released on May 5, 2009, for PC and Mac,[7] by 2013 switching from a $2.99 gameplay cost to free-to-play on iOS and Android devices. Critics on mobile devices give the game an average of 4.3-4.8 star ratings.[8]
PopCap Games and its assets were bought by EA on July 12, 2011, for 750 million US dollars.[9] Fifty employees were laid off in the Seattle studio of PopCap Games on August 21, 2012, to mark a switch of focus to mobile and social gaming.[10]
On August 20, 2012, PopCap announced that they were working on a sequel to Plants vs. Zombies.[11] Its release date would be set at late spring of 2013.[12] However, the game's status was in doubt shortly after the announcement when the company went through a period of layoffs.[10]
In May 2013, PopCap Games released a trailer revealing a sequel to the first game, titled Plants vs. Zombies 2: It's About Time.[13][14] The game was soft-launched for the iOS in Australia and New Zealand on July 10, 2013,[15] and was officially released on August 14, 2013, as a freemium title.[16] The game featured new locations and plants along with the addition of plant food, a power-up that can be used to enhance a plant for a short period and can either be bought using in-game currency or acquired by defeating zombies that are glowing green.[17] There are four other power-ups in the game, all of which are bought with coins, the in-game currency. Along with these new add ons, the game continues to make updates from time to time. According to EA News, the Arena and Penny's Pursuit updates, which are different game modes within the game, have been some of their latest major updates, aside from all the mini add ons.[18]
In July 2019, EA announced Plants vs. Zombies 3, another free-to-play mobile title in the series. It was launched in a pre-alpha state for Android in July 2019.[19][20] The game soft-launched in February 2020 in the Philippines, Romania, and Ireland.[21] It was then made unavailable in October 2020, becoming unplayable in November 2020. EA has plans to release an improved version of the game in the future.[22] On September 7, 2021, Plants vs. Zombies 3 was soft-launched again with substantial changes, such as two-dimensional graphics and the return of the Sunflower as a plantable plant, having the same purpose in the previous iterations.[23] On January 17, 2024, Plants vs. Zombies 3 was soft launched again, this time as Plants vs. Zombies 3: Welcome to Zomburbia in select regions,[1] adapting storylines and characters from the Plants vs. Zombies comic book series (written by Paul Tobin, illustrated by Ron Chan, and published by Dark Horse Comics), including Tugboat the Zombie and Patrice Blazing.[24]
A spin-off called Plants vs. Zombies Adventures was announced in March 2013[25] and was released on May 20, 2013 on Facebook. The game added new locations and new plants. It also had a gameplay feature in which the player had a limited amount of plants and had to grow more plants at an in-game farm.[26] In July 2014, it was announced that Plants vs. Zombies Adventures would close on October 12, 2014.[27]
Plants vs. Zombies: Garden Warfare was announced at E3 2013 as a multiplayer third-person shooter game made for PC and consoles.[28][29] Plants vs. Zombies: Garden Warfare was released on February 25, 2014, in North America and on February 27, 2014, in Europe.[30] A sequel, Plants vs. Zombies: Garden Warfare 2, was teased in June 2015 and was officially announced at E3 2015.[31][32] The game was released on February 23, 2016.[33] On March 10, 2016, PopCap announced Plants vs. Zombies Heroes, a digital collectible card game in the style of tower defense. It was soft released to certain countries on the same day,[34] and was fully released internationally on October 18, 2016.[35]
In August 2019, a closed beta of a sequel to Plants vs. Zombies: Garden Warfare 2 codenamed "Picnic" was made available to select players through invites.[36] On September 4, 2019, EA announced the sequel's title; Plants vs. Zombies: Battle for Neighborville. It was released in an early access state that same date. The game was fully released on October 18, 2019.[37][38]
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