

Zombies: Battle For Neighborville never strays too far from its hero shooter premise. Whichever game mode you choose, Plants vs. Humour is obviously a big part of the experience and it straddles that blurry line between cheesy Saturday morning cartoon jokes and cringe-inducing ‘holds up spork’ gags.Ĭaptured on Nintendo Switch (Handheld/Undocked)
#Plants vs zombies switch release Offline#
A central narrative isn’t really present here in the offline mode, rather you just sort of bounce around between various wacky characters to fulfil basic requests for them. Zombies: Battle For Neighborville is fittingly goofy, as it follows the endless struggle between an endless horde of zombies desperate for human brains, and the legion of garden plants which the humans have employed to fend off the hordes. Zombies: Battle For Neighborville isn’t necessarily anything groundbreaking for the hero shooter genre, but it contains more than enough well-designed and engaging content in both single-player and multiplayer to be well worth looking into. Now, all that extra content has been added into the base game and all the microtransactions have been pulled out, giving us the fittingly titled "Complete Edition". Zombies: Battle For Neighborville, originally saw its debut on other platforms in late 2019 and post-launch support lasted for about a year before the developers chose to move on. The latest release in this series, Plants vs. What began as a simplistic and quirky tower defence title eventually led to the creation of a surprisingly high-quality shooter spin-off series.

It’s been a long and weird road for the Plants vs.
