The latest mlb 25 stubspatch for MLB The Show 25 is now live on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S, addressing a single but impactful visual glitch: incorrect team logos in home run celebration sequences. The home run display graphics previously showed wrong logos for teams such as the Angels, Astros, Braves, and Rangers. This latest update corrects those errors, ensuring that team branding aligns with expectations during those signature celebratory moments. The fix has rolled out across supported systems, though Nintendo Switch users will need to wait for a platform‑specific deployment of the same update at a later time.

This is patch 1.006 (Xbox build 1.0.37), and while its scope is narrow, it restores polish to a high frequency gameplay moment. Seeing the correct team logo after sending a baseball deep into the seats reinforces authenticity. Many fans noticed the error right away due to frustration born from several similar visual inconsistencies at launch. This patch finally corrects that oversight.

That said, several lingering issues remain unaddressed. Notably, a performance bug tied to player models featuring dreadlocks—particularly Manny Ramirez and others—continues to cause framerate drops when those players appear in game. Developers have publicly confirmed they will fix this in a future patch but have not yet released a timeline. As such, the current update serves purely cosmetic purposes and does not impact gameplay, controls, or modes.

Players on Reddit have observed that the Switch version of the game launched later than the major consoles, and updates have often staggered as a result. This patch’s developer notes confirm that the same logo fix will reach the Switch in due time. Switch owners are advised to monitor the eShop or system update menus for its arrival.

While this update might seem insignificant on the surface, its importance should not be underestimated. MLB The Show 25 markets itself as a premium baseball simulation, and attention to small details—especially team-specific branding—is essential. Visual inconsistencies can break immersion, and fans who notice them expect prompt resolution. San Diego Studio hears that feedback, even if the fix is not glamorous.

Historically, past updates have made broader fixes—such as resolving title crashes during certain hits to the outfield, freeze issues during mound visits, uniform mismatches in franchise or All-Star games, and screen cropping or menu glitches on consoles. Patch 1.006 continues that lineage by working through the known issues, even if no gameplay functions change.

Switch players should be encouraged by the promise of parity. Despite hardware limitations and the slower certification process on Nintendo’s platform, efforts are still made to release consistent bug fixes. For those preferring handheld play or grinding offline modes, this patch signals that every detail eventually gets attention—even where the fixes are minor.

Looking forward, fans will expect the next update to tackle the performance drop associated with dreadlock haircuts, as well as other lingering gameplay or stability issues. Until then, version 1.006 stands as a small but necessary fix that improves one of the most visible elements of moment-to-moment play for millions of users.