

The PvE regions are strictly singleplayer-only as opposed to being able to co-op with friends, and the Turf Takeover is 8v8 as opposed to 12v12 (making it identical to Turf Takeover Tactical). Due to the weaker hardware compared to PC/PlayStation/Xbox, the graphics are rather crunchy and a bit pixelated. Rainbow Stars are removed, with items instead being purchased with Coins. The differences from other versions include an option to play the game without an internet connection running at a lower framerate, being 30 FPS compared to 60 FPS. Now the Plants and Zombies battle once more. The plants once again had control of Suburbia, and humans did not have to worry about their brains being eaten until the zombies escaped. The plants presumably won the battle for Zomburbia and trapped all of the zombies in a "Smell Jar". Zombies: Battle for Neighborville takes place after the events of Garden Warfare 2. Zombies: Battle for Neighborville came to the Nintendo Switch on March 19, 2021. Despite this, a 'Complete edition" of Plants vs. On September 29th, 2020, B attle for Neighborville received its final content update. On September 1st, 2020, however, PopCap announced it would be discontinuing the game in a month due to its commercial failure. On June 5th, 2020, it was made available for purchase on Steam. It was released as a 'Founder's Edition' on September 4, 2019, and was available to purchase until September 30, 2019, with the worldwide release coming out on October 18th.

Zombies: BfN, or simply Battle for Neighborville) is a third-person shooter and platformer video game developed by PopCap Games and published by Electronic Arts.

Zombies: Battle for Neighborville (abbreviated as PvZ: BfN, PvZ: Battle for Neighborville, Plants vs.
