I ended up brewing 6 consecutive batches, top cropping verdant: mostly English styles, but also a couple of Australian sparkling (pale ale malt, corn, clusters). The first three or 4 were down town fruit salad city, regardless of temp or gravity, although the magnitude of the electric red cherry/pineapple/apricot did decrease a little with lower temps and lower gravity, I think. Maybe.
The later batches were noticeably more mellow, with the trademark verdant flavor very much in the background for the 6th pitch, which was a 1.032 mild. I would describe that one as "obviously but generically English." Flocculation seemed to weaken along with the fruit salad. Perhaps 5 or 6 consecutive batches done under the rustic conditions in my brewery are enough to see some reversion to the London Ale III mean. I don't know.
All the beers were very good. The Australian sparkling with cluster hops is just perfect for this yeast. I did a big sweet porter with an earlier pitch and the fruit salad really worked well with a load of extra dark crystal and muscovado sugar. The worst (even though it was still delicious) was a basic best bitter. Fruit salad really clashed. The mild was the best, but I think it would have not been nearly as good if done with an earlier pitch when the fruit salad was prominent.
For me, Verdant is another "not really" on the long road that is the search for a decent dry option for English styles. Flocculation/clarity is OK. Ability to top crop is excellent. It really likes to hang around 75% attenuation, but I was able to push it up to 82 and down to 63 with malt choices and mash temp/time. Those attenuation numbers are for the malt portion of the grist only--before figuring any contribution of sugar. It behaves very English. It doesn't have the twang I get from S-04. But the fruit salad is a little off in lighter styles. It's best use as an English strain is in something dark and sweet.
If I want a pale bitter and it's July and I have no other choice, I would use it in a bitter, but more likely I would just go ahead and brew a mild or a strong bitter to better suit the yeast. On the other hand, I will buy this yeast again specifically for use in Australian sparkling ale (I call my version "American sparkling mild") and in darker, sweeter English ales.