Marigold


 * For the similar plant in Plants vs. Zombies: Garden Warfare, see Heal Flower.

Marigold is a plant in Plants vs. Zombies, Plants vs. Zombies 2, Plants vs. Zombies: Journey to the West, and Plants vs. Zombies: Great Wall Edition. It is also present in Plants vs. Zombies: All Stars. It is similar to the Sunflower, except it makes money for the player to use, instead of sun.

Plants vs. Zombies
It is the first plant the player receives for their Zen Garden (they start out with two Marigolds). In the Zen Garden, it can be many different colors and it is also the least expensive plant in the Zen Garden.

Plants vs. Zombies 2
It returns in this game, but only appears in the Zen Garden. Unlike in Plants vs. Zombies, it does not have many different colored variants. The player starts out with the first Marigold as a tutorial.

Plants vs. Zombies
Marigold

Marigolds give you silver  and  gold  coins.

Special: gives coins

Marigold spends a lot of time deciding whether to spit out a silver coin or a gold one. She thinks about it, weighs the angles. She does solid research and keeps up with current publications. That's how winners stay ahead.

Cost: 50

Recharge: slow

Plants vs. Zombies 2
Sun cost: 0

Marigolds give you rewards in Zen Garden.

Marigold has dedicated herself to the Zen lifestyle. She's a team player, and gives it her best there in the garden. But if she never has to confront another zombie on the lawn again it will be too soon.

Usage
Planting Marigold costs 50 sun. Every 24 seconds or so it produces either a silver coin ($10) or a gold coin ($50), with gold coins being rarer than silver coins. Marigolds are best used in conjunction with Gold Magnets, as the player will probably be too busy tending to their other plants to collect the money themselves.

Strategies
The only purpose of the Marigold is to give the player money. Outside of this, Marigolds are nearly pointless, due to the slow recharge and no attacking powers. However, Marigolds are great space fillers in early levels (when playing Adventure Mode again), due to the lack of stronger zombies and potential for hoarding excess sun. In later levels, Marigolds take up too many valuable slots to be worthwhile (especially on the Roof).

Another strategy is to plant an entire row of Marigolds with a Gold Magnet and one or two Garlic or Imitater Garlic plants in the front to divert the zombies away, although Gargantuars, Catapult Zombies, and Zombonis are immune to Garlic because they do not eat plants.

Marigolds are commonly used in the mini-game Last Stand for gold farming.

Giant Marigold
Giant Marigolds are bigger versions of Marigolds. They can be planted in the canceled mini-game Big Time, in place of regular Marigolds. It gives out one more coin coin than the normal Marigold.

Zen Garden
The Marigold is a plant obtainable for the Zen Garden. Upon finishing Level 5-4, the player can obtain the Watering Can from the final wave of zombies, which will subsequently grant access to the Zen Garden. Crazy Dave will then appear to introduce his or her Zen Garden. Unlike the Marigold in the main game, the Marigold in the Zen Garden comes with a wide variety of petal colors: As with all Zen Garden plants, Marigolds can drop gold and silver coins periodically for the player if they are happy. More Marigolds may be bought at Crazy Dave's Twiddydinkies for $2500, which restocks with three Marigolds every day; there is no limit to purchases in the Nintendo DS version, and for some versions changing the system time will restock the shop. To prevent easy gold farming, Marigolds sell for $3000, which is $5000 less than regular plants' selling price, and give fewer coins and diamonds on reaching each stage of growth. Unlike other plants in the Zen Garden, Marigolds start out as a small flower, while all other plants begin as identical sprouts. A fully grown Marigold can be sold to Crazy Dave for a net profit of $1500.
 * Royal Blue
 * Royal Red
 * Purple
 * Lavender (or Hawaiian Flower)Mari.jpg
 * Cyan
 * Blaze Orange
 * Magenta (or Fuchsia)
 * Canary Yellow
 * Pink
 * Light Green
 * White (this is the standard color for Marigolds in the main game and the only color in the iOS and Android Zen Gardens)
 * It remains to give you coins by watering it.

General

 * The Marigold's face appears in the loading screen of Plants vs. Zombies 2 and Plants vs. Zombies: Garden Warfare.
 * The fact that it produces coins is a pun on its name, which has the word gold in it (Marigold).

Specific to Plants vs. Zombies

 * Marigolds are the only plants that can be bought for the Zen Garden, with the exception being the plants that the player can buy from Crazy Dave in the iOS and Android versions for various prices.
 * Though Marigolds planted in the game modes all have white petals, Zen Garden Marigolds come with many different petal colors (gray, red, pink, orange, yellow, green, blue, cyan, purple, and magenta). When a Zen Garden Marigold is highlighted by the Watering Can in the Nintendo DS version of Plants vs. Zombies, it may change color instead of lighting up. The color it changes to depends on the color of the Marigold, and the petals may not change entirely, leaving small patches of the original color.
 * Rather than starting as a sprout, Marigolds in the Zen Garden start as little flowers with three petals.
 * The player will get a Marigold in their Zen Garden before they get it in Adventure Mode.
 * In Versus Mode, the use of Marigolds is prohibited to prevent Versus Mode from being used as a tool for gold farming.
 * Marigold sprouts can be seen growing in the loading bar on the title page before a Zombie head shoots out of the lawn.
 * The Marigold actually resembles a common daisy more than a marigold.
 * The Marigold is one of seven plants that is not available in Versus Mode. The others are Lily Pad, Tangle Kelp, Sea-shroom, Blover, Flower Pot, and Plantern.
 * This plant is the only Roof obtained plant that does not have a fast recharge.
 * If the bend in the stem faces left, the Marigold will face left (as shown with the white Marigold).Right-Facing Marigold.jpg
 * If the bend faces right, the Marigold will face to the right (as shown with the red Marigold).
 * There is a bug in the Nintendo DS version of Plants vs. Zombies where Marigolds' stems and petal colors get messed up when the player is about to water them or is about to give them chocolate. This bug is only present in the Zen Garden.
 * Marigold and Grave Buster (after removing the grave) are the only plants that can product coins certainly.
 * It is the only plant that produces money.

Specific to Plants vs. Zombies 2

 * Marigold has its own Almanac, despite it only being seen in the Zen Garden and not in the actual gameplay. Oddly enough, it still says it has a sun cost of 0 in the Almanac.
 * It is the only plant that cannot be imitated by Imitater.
 * It is one of the only plants that does not have a costume (although it has unused costumes), the other being the Imitater.
 * There is a glitch in the loading screen where the petals will not animate correctly and results in its head looking like a snowflake.
 * There is a glitch in Zen Garden that when the player waters a Marigold, closes the Zen Garden, and then returns, the Marigold disappears.
 * Marigold comes in one color, which is white.
 * However, Marigold's unused costumes made its petals come in different colors.
 * According to the Almanac, the reason Marigold is Zen Garden exclusive is because it dislikes fighting the zombies.
 * Before the 2.4.1 update, its Almanac description said that it can sometimes give gems. However, it was not able to do so in any update.
 * In a Gargantuar Party Week trailer Plants vs. Zombies Facebook page, a Marigold is seen in normal gameplay.
 * However, this Piñata Party was never shown.
 * It is the only plant that cannot be planted on the lawn without hacks.
 * Marigold is the only plant that cannot be used in any Endless Zone.

Specific to Plants vs. Zombies: All Stars

 * Special events can be played where Marigolds can be killed for money.