Plants vs Zombies: Replanted Is a New ‘Anchor for the Franchise,’ PopCap Says, and a Chance to Reacknowledge the Series’ Roots

As PopCap announces a “definitive” new version of its beloved original Plants vs Zombies, the studio has reflected on the evolution of its garden tower defense franchise — and revealed why now is the right time for it to go back to the series’ PC and console roots, after a pair of sequels focused on smartphones.

Speaking to IGN, PopCap studio general manager Nick Reinhart said the freshly-announced Plants vs Zombies: Replanted was an opportunity to “reestablish” what fans loved about the series, while making it accessible on modern consoles, with polished-up 4K graphics.

Plants vs Zombies: Replanted will arrive on October 23, 2025 priced at $19.99, for PC (via EA app, Epic Games Store and Steam) and on consoles for Nintendo Switch, Switch 2, PlayStation 4, PS5, Xbox One and Xbox Series X/S.

New features include local co-op and PVP options, two additional game modes (a roguelike permadeath offering named Rest in Peace, and Cloudy Day mode, which ups the difficulty by limiting sunlight), plus an art gallery showing previously-unreleased concepts.

Describing the package as “the definitive PvZ remaster,” executive producer Jake Neri said it was PopCap’s way to “preserve the magic of the original while also giving it a freshness that allows it to live for another 20-odd years.”

“We’ve heard for quite a while now that that people would love a remaster of this game,” Neri continued, when asked why Replanted was surfacing now. “Timing is important.”

“PopCap just celebrated [PvZ’s] Sweet 16, which may seem like a little bit of a strange one but, at PopCap, we are strange,” added Reinhart. “It certainly has been swirling around sort of for a little bit, as we’ve been talking about getting things pulled together.”

Replanted’s announcement comes at an interesting time for the Plants vs Zombies franchise, following at least six years of work by PopCap testing various versions of Plants vs Zombies 3 on smartphones. Finally released worldwide in January 2024, PvZ 3 was then taken offline in October 2024 for another “major overhaul” — and, nearly a year later, it is still to resurface.

“My official answer here is that I don’t have anything to say about PvZ 3 at the moment,” Reinhart said when asked for an update on the MIA threequel’s status. For 2025, at least, the franchise’s focus appears to be Replanted — though there are “no plans” for Replanted to also launch on smartphones, something that would leave the runway clear for PvZ to return there at some point.

“Is it a reset?” Reinhart said, when asked if Replanted’s launch was the franchise resetting to its origins, after various spin-offs and sequels. “I think that’s an interesting way to sort of frame the question. What I would say is that I think it’s more of a reacknowledgement of what our roots are, and what sort of games we should be thinking about and what we should be making.”

“Has the brand ever gone away? No,” Reinhart continued. “A reset, to me, almost implies ‘well, it’s been dead on the vine,’ and we’re, like, trying to bring it back or something like that. I don’t think it’s there. I do think that it’s an opportunity for us to reestablish that this is a brand that people love, that there are still a lot of Neighborville stories that we can and should tell, and that we have to author that, to some extent, with our fan base in mind, and that we have to be able to acknowledge what we’ve done there.”

Naturally, PopCap has arrived on its decision to relaunch the original Plants vs Zombies after seeing the reaction to its more recent games in the series. 2013’s smartphone-only Plants vs Zombies 2 was popular and long-lasting, though included touchscreen power-ups and microtransactions that grated with some players. More recent years have seen the franchise’s console focus transform into a 3D shooter, via the Garden Warfare spin-off franchise — though for now, 2019 entry Battle for Neighborville appears to be the last.

Even PopCap itself, previously a prolific creator of bizarre but compulsive game ideas (Feeding Frenzy! Zuma! Bookworm!) has consolidated its focus in recent years. Bejeweled Stars will be a decade old next year, while Peggle 2 is 12 years old already, with no sign of a third entry on the horizon.

“I would say that the passion of the community is an important thing that has to be galvanized and recognized,” Reinhart said, discussing why PopCap has gone back to PvZ’s roots now. “So much of what inspires our design decisions is, how we make sure that we are keeping something that is familiar, that doesn’t entirely break the compact we have made with the player base, but that we can also then begin to iterate and move it forward as well.”

“This game has given us an opportunity to go and dive in and try to figure out exactly what it is that people love about PvZ,” Neri added. “And there’s a lot of learning that we’ve done about the zaniness of the IP and how it appeals to people in that way, and that helps guide us and help us be true to what the the expectation is.”

This desire to keep within fan expectations helped informed PopCap’s choice of new modes for Replanted, Neri continued, as while the developer had plenty of ideas and could have gone in “all different directions,” Replanted’s team instead aimed for what they thought fans would actually want.

“We’re very thoughtful about how much innovation we bring into it,” Reinhart agreed, “and not just trying to alienate the core overall experience for players… As we look to the future, we’re looking at the brand more holistically and saying, what else is there? And what would it mean for us to reinvestigate some of that? There are no formal plans for right now, but it’s something we are spending a lot of time looking at. But for this year, for the current stanza of where PopCap is, it is back at tower defense, and we’re excited about that.”

“We’ve done a ton of exploration around what people loved about all the different versions of PvZ and trying to bring it back into this version,” Neri added. “As we go forward, I definitely hope that Replanted will be an anchor for for us, that people can look to and understand — because the original PvZ still lives in people’s hearts and minds.”

So what of the future? Does a return to the more grounded original Plants vs Zombies in Replanted offer a clue as to where the franchise could go next? Or could it spark the re-release of other PopCap classics?

“We’ve absolutely been having conversations about — if this is fruitful, if this meets the fans expectations… is this a template?” Reinhart said. “I think there’s a lot of enthusiasm about that. Now, whether or not there are actually plans ongoing yet, we can’t say that, but I would say we’re very interested to see how this goes and what it would maybe mean for other properties to sort of maybe follow a similar route.

“PvZ is incredibly enduring,” Reinhart concluded, “and being able to bring that to a new audience, to reawaken people’s nostalgia and their feelings about it as well, especially in a time where I think the world could use a little bit of joy and wackiness, it just feels like the right time for that.”

Tom Phillips is IGN’s News Editor. You can reach Tom at tom_phillips@ign.com or find him on Bluesky @tomphillipseg.bsky.social