Plants Vs. Zombies: Replanted Patch Brings Back The Dynamic Audio...
Plants vs. Zombies: Replanted rolled out in October, and I thought it was pretty good: Really just a higher-resolution (and more expensive) version of the original PvZ phenomenon, sure, but fine overall, and of particular benefit for people who want to play the game on a Steam Deck. Serious fans were unhappy, though, for a number of reasons, foremost among them the music.
Music in the original Plants vs. Zombies is dynamic, you see, changing with the events on the screen, but for some reason EA did away with that in the remaster—instead, it only played the "high intensity" version of the soundtrack. It sounds like a minor thing (even at its most intense, PvZ music is pretty not intense) but holy cow, did people notice—including composer Laura Shigihara—and they did not care for it. Plants vs. Zombies: Replanted landed with a sub-50% "mixed" rating on Steam, quite a contrast to the "overwhelmingly positive" rating the old GOTY Edition holds.
I created the music in Plants vs. Zombies with the specific intention of it being dynamic. Instruments gradually appear to match the intensity of zombies & prevent audio fatigue.Replanted Level 1-1: ALL THE DRUMS RIGHT AWAYYears later + bigger team -> dynamic audio gone? 😑October 18, 2025
The uproar did not go unnoticed by EA, and now it's responded. The newly released 1.3.0 patch brings back "the classic and plantastic Dynamic Audio" that was inexplicably cut, along with a small number of other fixes and adjustments. I've tried it and it works—it still feels like a fairly minor thing to me, but based on the comments posted in response to the patch announcement, players are very happy about the change, although there are still plenty of complaints about problems with achievements, the lack of online co-op play, and a slew of other, more granular issues.
Luckily for all, EA says the next patch, 1.4.0, "is close to being done" and should go live within the next two weeks. That one will give people with controllers the ability to collect sun by squeezing a trigger, and aims to kill "more pesky bugs," among other things. Details on that patch will be posted closer to its release—the full 1.3.0 patch notes are below.
2025 games: This year's upcoming releasesBest PC games: Our all-time favoritesFree PC games: Freebie festBest FPS games: Finest gunplayBest RPGs: Grand adventuresBest co-op games: Better together
Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.
Andy has
Source: PC Gamer