Broken Mythic sources. Lair Boss reward issues. War Plans loot failures. Forgotten Souls forgetting to exist. The usual delightful endgame plumbing disaster.
And then there is this gem:
Rogue Shadow Clone could trigger additional Shrine effects, including extra Soul Eaters in the Deathtoll Chamber.
That is not the biggest fix in the patch.
It may, however, be one of the most Diablo patch notes ever written.
The Shadow Clone Started Inviting Extra Problems
Rogue is already a class built around movement, tricks, burst windows, and the sacred art of making enemies regret having collision boxes.
Shadow Clone fits that identity perfectly.
You summon a copy. It fights with you. Everything gets more dramatic. Very stylish. Very rogue-ish.
But according to Blizzard’s Diablo IV Patch 3.1.1 notes, the Shadow Clone could accidentally trigger extra Shrine effects.
In Deathtoll Chamber, that could mean extra Soul Eaters.
Because apparently one cursed seasonal room was not busy enough.
This Is Funny Until It Happens Mid-Run
On paper, this sounds hilarious.
A Rogue presses a button, the game sees the clone, panics slightly, and suddenly the room starts producing bonus problems like Hell opened a side business in inconvenience.
In practice, bugs like this can be nasty.
Extra Shrine effects can change the pace of an encounter. Extra Soul Eaters can add unexpected pressure. A run that should have been about managing the room suddenly turns into “why are there more of these things?”
That is not build complexity.
That is your own clone filing paperwork against you.
Seasonal Rooms Need Predictable Chaos
Diablo 4 is supposed to be chaotic.
Monsters explode. Floors become hazards. Bosses get rude. Builds detonate entire rooms before your brain has finished reading the damage numbers.
That is fine.
But ARPG chaos still needs rules.
Players can adapt to dangerous mechanics when those mechanics are predictable. They can learn spawn patterns, Shrine behavior, elite pressure, and when to save cooldowns. They can plan around nasty rooms if the game is at least honest about what is supposed to happen.
What players cannot plan around is their own Shadow Clone accidentally poking the Shrine machine and making it cough up extra enemies.
That is not danger.
That is haunted automation.
Deathtoll Chamber Already Had Enough Going On
Deathtoll Chamber has been one of Season 14’s more important activity spaces, especially after Patch 3.1.1 made it more rewarding at higher Torment levels by ensuring at least one Superior Lair Key.
That gives players more reason to run it.
Which also means Deathtoll bugs matter more.
If players are going to spend time in a seasonal activity because the rewards finally make sense, the room itself needs to behave. Not politely, obviously. This is Diablo. Polite rooms are illegal.
But consistently.
Extra Soul Eaters caused by a class ability is the sort of thing that makes players question whether the encounter is tuned badly, bugged, or simply possessed by a demon with a QA grudge.
Class Abilities Should Not Break The Room
There is a simple rule here:
Your class fantasy should make you stronger, faster, trickier, or more explosive.
It should not accidentally increase the room’s administrative burden.
Shadow Clone should feel like a Rogue power moment, not like pressing “summon additional nonsense.” If a player uses a cooldown and the game responds by triggering extra Shrine effects, the ability starts to feel suspicious instead of powerful.
That matters because trust is not only about loot.
It is also about combat behavior.
Players need to know their skills do what the tooltip says. They need to know encounter mechanics are reacting properly. They need to know that pressing a class button will not secretly turn the room into a cursed slot machine.
This Is Exactly The Kind Of Bug Patch 3.1.1 Needed To Clean Up
The bigger Patch 3.1.1 story is still loot repair.
Iconic Mythics were adjusted. El’Druin was added to the Mythic Unique Cache. Pandemonium Fragment costs came down. Lair Boss Mythic sources got fixed. War Plans reward bugs were cleaned up.
But the patch also does a lot of smaller trust work.
Currency pinning. Tooltip clarity. Mutator behavior. Activity reward consistency. Class interactions behaving less like drunken machinery.
The Rogue Shadow Clone Shrine bug belongs in that second category.
Not headline-defining, but absolutely worth fixing.
Good Bugs Are Funny After They Are Gone
Some bugs are funny only when you are reading about them later.
This is one of those.
“My Shadow Clone created extra Soul Eaters” sounds like the kind of cursed sentence Diablo players will laugh at once the run is over, the loot has been sorted, and the keyboard has survived.
During the run?
Less funny.
Especially if the extra enemies helped turn a clean clear into a panic circus.
Patch 3.1.1 fixing this is not going to change the entire season by itself. But it removes one more strange edge case from a season that already had too many of them.
Less Shrine Nonsense, Please
Diablo 4 can keep the ridiculous builds.
It can keep the exploding rooms, the elite packs, the poison floors, the boss farming, the Mythic chase, and the long tradition of players convincing themselves that the next run will definitely be the one.
But class abilities need to stop accidentally making seasonal rooms stranger than intended.
The Rogue Shadow Clone bug was funny.
It was also exactly the kind of nonsense that makes players distrust combat systems.
Patch 3.1.1 fixed it.
Good.
Now the Rogue’s clone can go back to murdering demons instead of summoning extra paperwork.
Sources
Sources: Blizzard Diablo IV Patch Notes, More Diablo 4 coverage on Diabloz.net.



















