hi, are you english native speaker? if not try to change your game language from your native to ENGLISH.
it should make the game work
otherwise try this
-Plants-vs-Zombies-Games/Plants-vs-zombies-broken/m-p/13172895/highli... "in2action" user found another solution
Finally, an answer confirming they atleast know about the issue, thank you. Someone deleted my thread detailing a question about whats going on without bothering to answer and I still dont have a reply from support. Extremely frustrating.
I recently have bought Plants vs zombies 1 Game Of The Year Edition (Not GW) And when I try to open it I get a message box saying "We could not activate plants vs zombies on this computer using the origin account you provided please locate your product key to activate the game using your Origin account, It never gave me a product key and when I click Enter Product Key it opens up another message box that wants me to register a new account.
putting a solution something so random such as "keep trying to access" is so bad.
you are putting this problem under your shoes, saying other people are just bad and didn't try it.
very bad from you and EA assistance,
already having to switch language for a 2017 games is a joke otherwise you can't play it,
assistance was a joke asking me more than 10 times to show them a prove i owned the game.
at least put as solution something valid not a random thing like that.
that worked only for you in your specific case.
the switching language thing helped more people than this, and i'm sure it will help more
A lot of zombies are invading your home, forget weapons because your only defense is an arsenal of 49 zombie-zapping plants. Use peashooters, wall-nuts, cherry bombs and many more plants to annihilate hordes of 26 types of zombies before they reach your house.
Use your garden to plant all kind of plants, each one of them with different features, they explode, fire, double fire, freeze and more. Choose the ones you need, grow sunflowers and use the sun to earn points to grow more plants. Be careful, each zombie has its own special skills, so you have to think the plant that will kill them faster.
From time to time, your crazy neighbor will help you and will tell you some tricks. Each time you pass a level, you'll gain a new kind of plant, and the further you go, the more zombies will attack you.
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Ever since Popcap was acquired by EA their focus has shifted away from simple yet well-crafted puzzle games and towards titles more befitting of their new owner's largely detested business practices. Hence why Plants Vs. Zombies has transformed from a lovable tower defense game into a multiplayer third-person hero shooter. At this point, I'm surprised they haven't figured out a way to turn Peggle into a battle royale.
I still long for the good old days where this was just a game about planting sunflowers to fend off screen door-shielded zombies. However, I can't deny that Plants Vs. Zombies: Battle For Neighborville is a well-made multiplayer title with a decent amount of charm. The only issue is that it doesn't have enough going for it to make it a must-have game let alone one that's worth playing on the Switch.
Battle For Neighborville is all about the large-scale war between the happy-go-lucky living plants and the goofy undead zombies. Much to my surprise, there is a single-player campaign to play through that has some semblance of a plot and quite a bit of comedic dialogue. Well, comedic in the sense that it's supposed to be funny, but aside from a few smirk-inducing lines, it's mostly insufferable. It's all jokes about old 80s fashion and cringe-worthy internet humor like yetis who hoard bling. If I wanted that brand of comedy, I'd peruse a few dozen meme posts over on Reddit.
For the most part, this campaign feels more like an elongated tutorial for the multiplayer mode. It mostly involves walking up to various silly NPCs, accepting a quest, and then fighting waves of zombies ending with a boss battle. It's a good way to get to know all of the various character classes so you're ready for the multiplayer, but it's not much more than that.
This particular franchise actually translates to a hero shooter pretty well since there's a variety of different plant and zombie character designs. On the plant side of things, you have classics like the Pea-Shooter or the zombie-devouring Chomper. Meanwhile, zombies get all kinds of wacky classes like pirates, superheroes, mad scientists, and roller-disco dancers. Each one has its own specific set of skills and attacks. Some are for up-close confrontations, some fire off rounds like machine guns, etc. There are also some classes that are designed for defending objectives and supporting other players.
As for game modes, there's Turf Takeover, which is the big 16 player mode where you're tasked with capturing or defending points and objectives; Garden & Graveyard Ops, which is essentially a Gears Of War-esque horde mode where you and your team fight waves of enemies; and a Weekly Event mode, that for this week was an 8v8 team deathmatch affair. Additionally, there's a big hub world where you can run around with other players, look at your challenges, and spend coins to purchase cosmetics, skills, or new characters. Speaking of those coins, they're all earned in-game. There are no microtransactions in this edition of Battle For Neighborville, which shocked the hell out of me.
The combat is solid, although I wasn't blown away. Technically there's nothing wrong with how this plays, but it doesn't do anything exciting or new. It's just an alright little shooter with extra abilities and not many modes to choose from. It pales in comparison to games like Overwatch or Apex Legends, which coincidentally are both available on the Switch and a lot more fun. It doesn't help that I'm not sure if there's going to be a considerable player base for this. Most of the matches I played didn't have many players actively participating. Instead, the rounds were filled with bots that made up the bulk of both teams. Although to be fair, these were pretty skilled bots. Most of the matches ended with them being the kill leaders or MVPs of their respective teams. So at least the A.I.-controlled players are pulling their weight if you can't find anyone else to play with.
The game looks and plays well with a stable framerate and some enjoyable cartoony levels. While I ragged on Battle For Neighborville's terrible humor, there's a lot of charm in the game's art design. The animations are fluid and imbue these characters with personality. The only downside is that if you're playing this in handheld mode you'll probably see quite a bit of pixelation. This game looks better in docked mode, but it's never going to look as good as it does on PC or any of the current-gen consoles. Of course, that shouldn't be a surprise if you're buying a Switch port of a game like this.
Throughout playing Plants Vs. Zombies: Battle For Neighborville all I could think about was how it's a real bummer that this is what Popcap has become. They now make frivolous multiplayer titles that don't have much of a hook outside of being kooky and based on one of their better past games. There's nothing wrong with Neighborville and I am both thankful and surprised that it wasn't full of loot boxes or other microtransactions. But after I stopped playing I didn't feel an overwhelming need to return to it. It's just an adequate shooter that doesn't stand out from the multitude of other competitive shooters. To make matters worse, EA basically cut the legs out from under Neighborville by releasing Apex Legends on the Switch earlier this month. Not only is that a better game, but it's also still being supported and it's free. Meanwhile, this game isn't receiving any future updates and will cost money. It's kind of a no-brainer which one is more worthy of your time.
Unless you really want to see an ear of walking corn fire machine gun rounds at a zombie dressed as a football player, Plants Vs. Zombies: Battle For Neighborville is far from the best option for a multiplayer shooter on the Switch.
A Nintendo Switch copy of Plants Vs. Zombies: Battle For Neighborville was provided to TheGamer for this review. Plants Vs. Zombies: Battle for Neighborville is available on Nintendo Switch, PS4, Xbox One, and PC.
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]
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