Diablo 4 Season 14 has started, which means Sanctuary is once again full of fresh characters, broken sleep schedules, questionable build decisions, and players immediately checking whether someone else is already 40 levels ahead.
Because of course they are.
In a fresh Blizzard forum thread, one player complained that they were stuck in character select while streamers appeared to be racing through the season at full speed. The post quickly turned into the usual season-launch cocktail: frustration, jokes, disbelief, streamer comparisons, and the uncomfortable feeling that some players had already missed the starting pistol before they even loaded into the game.
That is a rough way to begin a season.
Diablo 4 seasons are supposed to feel like a clean reset. Everyone starts with nothing. Everyone makes a new character. Everyone enters the same mess together.
At least, that is the fantasy.
Season Launches Are Supposed to Feel Like a Fresh Start
The appeal of a new season is simple.
The stash is clean. The character is fresh. The build is still a dream instead of a pile of compromises. Nobody has ruined the economy, solved every system, or uploaded sixteen videos explaining why your favorite skill is secretly dead.
For a few beautiful minutes, everything feels open.
Then reality arrives wearing a leaderboard.
When regular players are dealing with queues, character select issues, login hiccups, or slow starts, and streamers appear to be blasting ahead, the clean slate starts to feel a lot less clean. It does not even have to be unfair in a technical sense. It just has to feel bad.
That feeling matters.
Diablo 4 is a loot game, but it is also a momentum game. If your first experience of Season 14 is watching someone else speedrun the fun while you are still clicking menus, that can make the whole launch feel sour.
The Streamer Gap Is Not Just About Streamers
This kind of complaint always turns into a streamer debate, but the real issue is bigger than that.
Streamers are going to play fast. That is the job. They plan routes, stack groups, follow optimized leveling paths, know what to skip, know what to farm, and usually have an audience yelling advice, jokes, or bad takes at them in real time.
That is not how most people play Diablo 4.
Most players are logging in after work, picking a class, checking patch notes they only half-read, making a character name that is already taken, and trying to remember where the seasonal quest starts.
So when those two experiences are compared directly, the normal player experience can look terrible even when nothing strange is happening.
The problem is not only that streamers are fast.
The problem is that modern season launches make everyone painfully aware of how fast the fastest players are.
Fast Leveling Makes the Gap Look Even Stranger
Several replies in the forum discussion also point toward another issue: leveling may simply feel very fast now.
That changes the perception of a season launch.
If highly optimized players can reach high levels or deep Paragon quickly, the early season no longer feels like a shared climb. It feels like some players are sprinting through a side door while everyone else is still trying to find the handle.
Fast leveling is not automatically bad.
Plenty of players do not want the journey to end at level 42 with a headache and three usable items. Getting to the real buildcrafting faster can be good. Diablo 4’s endgame systems, Paragon layers, gear chase, crafting, and seasonal activities all matter more once the character starts coming together.
But if the early curve is too quick for optimized players, the launch window gets weird.
The season starts, and within hours the conversation already shifts from “what are you playing?” to “how are they already there?”
That is not always healthy for the mood.
Character Select Is the Worst Place to Feel Behind
There is also something uniquely annoying about being stuck before the game really starts.
If you are behind because you chose a slower build, fine.
If you are behind because you spent too long comparing classes, fair enough.
If you are behind because you got distracted salvaging boots like a goblin accountant, that is on you.
But being stuck in character select while other players are already farming? That feels different.
It feels like missing the first pull of a raid because the door handle came off.
Season launches live and die on those first hours. Players want to get in, get moving, and feel like the new content is actually under their feet. The moment the game slows them down before the killing even begins, irritation starts building fast.
Fairness Is Sometimes About Feeling, Not Math
There may not be any grand conspiracy here.
Some players got in. Some players had problems. Some streamers played extremely efficiently. Some forum posts were probably exaggerated because season launches turn normal irritation into theater.
That is all true.
But the feeling still matters.
A seasonal reset works because players believe they are stepping into the same new world at roughly the same time. Once that feeling cracks, even a little, people start looking for reasons. Streamer access. Server instability. Leveling speed. Group advantages. Patch timing. Whatever explanation fits the frustration.
That does not mean every complaint is fair.
It means launch perception is fragile.
Diablo 4 Needs Smooth Starts More Than Ever
Season 14 already has enough pressure on it.
Players are judging Pandemonium Ruptures, Deathtoll Chamber rewards, War Plans, Mythic Unique changes, class balance, Tower rewards, Solo Self Found, and the general question of whether this season has enough teeth to keep people interested.
The first few hours matter because they set the mood for everything after.
If the launch feels smooth, players are more forgiving.
If the launch feels messy, every little issue becomes part of the same story.
That is why “streamers are racing ahead while I am stuck in character select” hits harder than a normal complaint. It is not just about one player being annoyed. It captures the exact fear many seasonal players have: that the race started without them, and the game did not even let them reach the starting line.
The Race Was Never Really Fair, But It Still Has to Feel Fun
Diablo 4 seasons are never truly equal.
Some players have more time. Some have groups. Some have better routes. Some follow guides from minute one. Some are streamers. Some are casual players who just want a build that does not collapse like wet cardboard in a Helltide.
That is fine.
The game does not need every player to move at the same speed.
But it does need the beginning of a season to feel welcoming, stable, and worth joining. If players log in and immediately feel behind, blocked, or irrelevant compared to the loudest people on Twitch, that is a bad first taste.
Let the streamers race.
Let the grinders grind.
Let the no-lifers reach numbers that make normal adults concerned for their hydration.
But at the very least, let everyone else get past character select before the season starts making them feel late.
Source: Blizzard forum discussion on streamers racing ahead during the Season 14 launch.


















