Friday, 5 June 2026

Diablo Immortal’s Bout of Realms Is Back for PvP Sickos


Diablo Immortal’s fourth anniversary celebration is not just about gifts, boss gauntlets, double loot, and suspiciously generous Legendary Gem trials. Blizzard is also bringing back the Cross Server Bout of Realms Championships, which means it is once again time for organized PvP chaos with actual bragging rights attached.

According to Blizzard’s official Fourfold Revival anniversary update, Bout of Realms returns as part of the wider anniversary push. Blizzard has previously described Bout of Realms as a multistage Tower War PvP competition where teams of eight battle other teams across servers within their home region.

In normal language: gather seven other people you trust, then go find out which friendships survive competitive Diablo Immortal.

Eight Players Enter, Several Egos Leave Damaged

Bout of Realms is built around team PvP, which already makes it very different from most of Diablo Immortal’s anniversary noise. This is not a loot buff. This is not a one-hour borrowed power trial. This is not three bad Set Items being thrown into the reforging blender.

This is competition.

Teams need coordination, timing, role discipline, and probably at least one person in voice chat saying “focus target” with the emotional tone of a doomed battlefield commander.

That is the appeal. Diablo Immortal’s PvP can be messy, dramatic, and occasionally feel like a spreadsheet got into a knife fight. But Bout of Realms gives the chaos a structure. Teams are not just queueing for random violence. They are climbing through a championship format where wins actually mean something.

Anniversary Hell Needed Some Competitive Blood

We have already covered how Diablo Immortal turned its anniversary into a boss gauntlet, how Winds of Fortune doubles loot with fine print, and how Chaos Convoy turns PvP into a slot machine with armor.

Bout of Realms feels like the sharper competitive sibling. Less random modifier madness, more organized violence. Less “what card did I just draw?” and more “why did our entire backline just evaporate?”

That is good variety for the anniversary slate. Not everyone wants another loot event. Some players want a real PvP test, preferably one that lets them prove their server is full of killers and not just people who farm efficiently while pretending to be busy.

Diablo Immortal PvP Is Still Its Own Beast

Of course, Diablo Immortal PvP always comes with baggage. Balance, matchmaking, resonance, class tuning, coordination, and reward structure all matter. Competitive events can be exciting, but they also expose every awkward edge in the system.

That is why Bout of Realms is interesting. It gives Blizzard a format where serious PvP players can engage with something more structured than casual Battleground chaos, while also giving the community a clean competitive storyline during the anniversary window.

Will it be perfectly balanced? Please. This is Sanctuary, not a court hearing.

But it should be watchable, sweaty, and exactly the kind of event that makes PvP players log in with bad intentions.

Diablo Immortal’s anniversary is already stuffed with rewards and event loops. Bout of Realms adds the missing ingredient: competitive violence for the people who see a celebration and ask whether there will be blood.

There will be.

For more Diablo coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo II: Resurrected Heralds Are No Longer Loot Goblins, Apparently



Diablo II: Resurrected Ladder Season 14 is live, Patch 3.2 has arrived, and Blizzard has made one thing very clear: Terror Zone Heralds are not supposed to become loot goblins wearing a serious face.

According to Blizzard’s official Ladder Season 14 notes, the team has adjusted Heralds and Sunder Charm drops after PTR feedback. The goal is to make Heralds feel rewarding without turning them into a weird shortcut that breaks Diablo II’s old-school item chase.

Which is fair. Diablo II players do not mind suffering for loot. At this point, many of them consider it a family tradition.

The PTR Version Was Too Generous

Blizzard says the PTR experimented with giving Heralds an increased chance to drop something valuable if a Sunder Charm did not drop. That idea has now been removed because it proved too lucrative.

Translation: players looked at the Heralds, saw loot potential, and immediately began turning the system into a farming equation with horns.

Instead, Sunder Charms have been integrated into the existing Herald item table. Higher Tier Heralds now matter more because they drop more items, and their increased chance to drop a Latent Sunder Charm scales upward, with Tier 3 and 4 getting twice the increased chance and Tier 5 getting three times the increased chance.

That sounds like Blizzard trying to thread a very narrow needle: make Heralds worth chasing, but not so rewarding that every Terror Zone becomes a loot piƱata with extra lightning.

Sunder Charms Get Cleaner Access

The patch also makes the increased chance to drop a Latent Sunder Charm start at Tier 1 instead of Tier 4. That should make the chase feel less stingy earlier, especially for solo players.

Blizzard also says the chance to drop Worldstone Shards is no longer modified by player count, which is effectively an increase for solo players. The same applies to the increased Sunder Charm drop chance from Heralds.

That is a smart change. Diablo II’s loot chase is brutal enough without solo players feeling like they are farming through a locked church window while groups eat at the main table.

Rewarding, Not Ridiculous

The funniest line in the notes is Blizzard’s explanation that Heralds have had their Unique, Set, and Rare drop chances slightly reduced so they do not feel like loot goblins rolling excessive Rainbow Facets and unique jewelry.

That is the entire tension of Diablo II: Resurrected right now. Players want fresh systems. They want reasons to run Terror Zones. They want Sunder Charms to feel accessible. But they also do not want the game’s classic item economy turned into a slot machine with better lighting.

We already covered how Diablo II: Resurrected’s Warlock summoner drama is not over, but the Herald changes show the other half of Patch 3.2’s balancing act. Blizzard is not just tuning skills. It is trying to make new reward loops feel modern without accidentally turning Diablo II into something less stubbornly Diablo II.

The Classic Chase Still Matters

That is the important part. Diablo II’s loot identity is fragile because it is old, beloved, and deeply unreasonable in ways players somehow cherish.

If Heralds are too rare, they feel irrelevant. If they are too generous, they break the chase. If Sunder Charms are too annoying to target, players complain. If they are too easy, players complain differently.

Welcome to Diablo.

Patch 3.2’s Herald changes look like Blizzard trying to land somewhere between famine and loot goblin carnival. Whether it works will depend on how the new Terror Zone pacing feels across a full ladder season.

But the message is clear: Heralds can be rewarding.

They just are not allowed to become tiny jackpot machines with a dramatic entrance.

For more Diablo coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo 4’s Nemesis Lair Exit Bug Is Peak PTR Comedy

Diablo 4’s Season 14 PTR has serious bugs. Crafting weirdness. Cube issues. Misleading UI messages. Mythic upgrade confusion. Talismans behaving like cursed jewelry from a demon pawn shop.

But sometimes the funniest PTR issue is not the biggest one.

According to Blizzard’s official PTR 3.1.0 Known Issues list, characters currently cannot teleport to the exit portal of the Nemesis Lair mutator through the map icon.

That is not game-ending. It is not build-destroying. It is not the sort of bug that makes your perfect item turn into decorative trash.

But it is very Diablo.

Even the Exit Portal Has Problems Now

The Nemesis Lair issue is simple: the map icon does not properly let players teleport to the exit portal. In normal human language, this means the dungeon is done, the suffering has happened, the demons have presumably been converted into loot, and the game still finds one last tiny way to be annoying.

That is peak PTR energy.

Diablo 4 is currently testing huge Season 14 systems, including Mythic Uniques 3.0, Horadric Cube upgrades, Talismans, War Plans, Solo Self-Found, and all the other machinery Blizzard is trying to bolt onto the endgame without accidentally summoning a spreadsheet demon.

Compared to that, an exit portal map bug is small. But small friction matters in an ARPG because players repeat content endlessly. One broken exit interaction is funny once. After fifty runs, it starts feeling like the dungeon has developed a personality disorder.

PTR Bugs Are Supposed to Be Weird

We have already covered how Diablo 4’s PTR known issues list looks like a crafting crime scene, how the PTR UI is already gaslighting players, and how players are finding weird item bugs everywhere.

This Nemesis Lair problem is less dramatic, but it belongs in the same haunted filing cabinet. The PTR exists so Blizzard can find exactly these annoying little snags before the season launches properly.

Because once Season 14 goes live, players will be much less forgiving when a dungeon flow breaks. Especially if they are already juggling new loot rules, Cube requirements, Mythic upgrades, and whatever fresh item paranoia survives testing.

Fix the Big Stuff, But Don’t Ignore the Tiny Pain

It is easy to focus only on the huge bugs. Broken Greater Affixes. Missing Mythic tooltip requirements. Blank War Plans boards. Those absolutely matter.

But ARPGs live or die on rhythm. Kill, loot, move, upgrade, repeat. Anything that interrupts that rhythm becomes louder the more players run into it.

So yes, the Nemesis Lair exit bug is funny.

It is also exactly the kind of tiny annoyance Blizzard should kill before players start farming Season 14 content for real.

In Diablo, escaping hell should be difficult.

Clicking the exit portal icon should not be the boss fight.

For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo 4’s SSF Glyph Upgrade Bug Is the Wrong Kind of Solo Pain

Diablo 4’s Season 14 PTR is testing Solo Self-Found, which is supposed to be a self-imposed challenge. No trading. No parties. No borrowed power from your friend who plays twelve hours a day and says things like “it’s casual.”

That kind of pain is fine. That is the point.

But a reported PTR issue around Glyph upgrades in SSF mode is a very different kind of pain. Over on the Diablo 4 PTR Bug Report forum, a player says they were unable to upgrade Glyphs after completing the Pit, later adding that it seems to be happening in SSF mode.

That is exactly the kind of bug that sounds small until you remember how important Glyph progression is to endgame power.

Solo Self-Found Should Be Hard, Not Broken

Solo Self-Found is built around restriction. You choose to progress alone. You earn your own gear. You cannot trade your way out of bad luck or party your way through the rough parts.

That is good ARPG suffering. Healthy suffering, by Diablo standards, which means only moderately cursed.

But if players cannot properly upgrade Glyphs after completing Pit runs, that moves from “challenge mode” into “the game ate my homework.” Glyph upgrades are a core part of character growth. They are not optional flavor. They are not cosmetic nonsense. They are one of the main ways players turn a build from “technically alive” into “capable of deleting demons without apologizing.”

The Pit Is Already a Sensitive Progression Point

Diablo 4 players have had strong opinions about Glyph leveling for a long time. The Pit is not just another activity. It is tied directly to Paragon Glyph progression, endgame pushing, and the feeling that your build is actually moving forward.

That makes a reported SSF-specific Glyph upgrade issue especially annoying. Solo players are already choosing a stricter path. They should not also have to wonder whether the upgrade system is quietly refusing to cooperate because they picked the lonely checkbox.

We already covered how Diablo 4’s Solo Self-Found mode is solo, except when it isn’t. That article was about expectations: SSF means no trading and no parties, but not a fully private world.

This is a different kind of expectation problem. If SSF has its own progression state, stash, currency, and leaderboard rules, then its progression systems need to work cleanly too.

This Is Exactly What PTR Reports Are For

To be fair, this is not a live-season disaster. It is a PTR report. The official PTR bug forum exists so players can throw weird problems into the light before Season 14 fully launches.

And Diablo 4’s PTR is already finding plenty of weirdness. We have covered players reporting strange item bugs everywhere, UI messages misleading players, and Cube interactions creating broken Greater Affixes. The Glyph issue fits into the same pattern: test the system hard now, so it does not become everyone’s problem later.

Still, this one matters because it hits progression, not just item weirdness. If Glyph upgrades fail or become inaccessible in SSF, the mode stops feeling like a clean solo challenge and starts feeling like punishment by technicality.

SSF Needs Clean Pain

Diablo 4’s Solo Self-Found mode could be one of Season 14’s best additions. It gives players a cleaner loot journey, separate competition, and a stronger sense that every upgrade was earned the hard way.

But SSF has to be reliable. The pain should come from bad drops, hard fights, stubborn bosses, and your own terrible build decisions.

Not from finishing the Pit and finding out the Glyph upgrade part of the ritual has decided to go on strike.

That is the wrong kind of solo pain.

For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo 4 PTR Players Are Finding Weird Item Bugs Everywhere


Diablo 4’s Season 14 PTR is doing exactly what a PTR is supposed to do: letting players break things before the real season arrives and starts charging rent in everyone’s stash.

And right now, players are finding item weirdness all over the place.

The official Diablo 4 PTR Bug Report forum is filling up with reports around affixes, Mythic Uniques, Charms, Totems, item art, salvage behavior, and other gear-related oddities. Some of these are small. Some sound deeply annoying. Some have that special PTR smell of “this will become a nightmare if it reaches live.”

The Loot Machine Is Making Strange Noises

Recent player-reported issues include Allstats affixes showing up on boots, odd item drops that will not salvage, Mythic Unique transmutation problems, Charms being sent to stash or going missing on armory swap, and Druid Totems reportedly not working with the new Upgrade to Mythic Cube recipe.

That is quite a menu.

To be clear, these are PTR bug reports, not final live-season disasters. The whole point of a public test realm is to catch weird behavior while the build is still covered in testing tape and developer fingerprints.

But the pattern is still worth watching, because Season 14 is built around deeper item systems. More upgrades. More Cube interactions. More Mythic rules. More Charms and Talismans. More ways for loot to become powerful, strange, or legally suspicious.

Season 14 Needs Item Trust

We have already covered how Diablo 4’s PTR known issues list looks like a crafting crime scene, how the Cube can apparently create a broken Greater Affix, and how the PTR UI is already misleading players.

This wider bug-report wave fits the same theme. Diablo 4 is making loot more complex, but complexity only works when players trust what they are seeing.

If a Charm vanishes, a Mythic upgrade behaves strangely, a stat appears where it should not, or an item refuses to salvage like it has legal representation, players stop thinking about builds and start thinking about bugs.

This Is Annoying, But Useful

The good news is that players are doing the work. They are testing strange setups, reporting broken interactions, and dragging weird item behavior into the light before Season 14 fully launches.

The bad news is that Diablo 4’s loot system is currently complicated enough that every bug feels like another warning sign nailed to the Horadric Cube.

That does not mean Season 14 is doomed. It means Blizzard has a lot of cleanup to do.

If the team fixes these item issues before launch, the PTR did its job. If not, players may enter Season 14 wondering whether every strange drop is powerful, bugged, or just another decorative disappointment with item power attached.

Diablo 4 can survive weird PTR bugs.

It just needs to make sure the weirdest ones stay on the PTR.

For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo 4’s War Plans Can Go Blank If Mrak Gets Involved


Diablo 4’s Season 14 PTR has already taught players one important lesson: Mrak is powerful, useful, and absolutely not to be trusted around unfinished progression.

According to Blizzard’s official PTR 3.1.0 Known Issues list, using Mrak boosts can activate a blank War Plans board for players who have not completed the campaign yet. Blizzard notes that players must complete the campaign before using War Plans.

That sounds like a boring prerequisite issue, but this is Diablo 4, so naturally it becomes funny. The magical PTR vendor can hand you power, materials, Uniques, Talismans, Torment unlocks, and a mountain of testing shortcuts, but apparently he can also open a War Plans board with the strategic depth of an empty napkin.

The Real Final Boss Was Prerequisites

Blizzard’s 3.1 PTR overview explains that War Plans are getting updates in Season 14, including party syncing so groups can generate and share the same War Plan board. That is a good idea. Diablo 4 badly needs fewer moments where party play feels like four people trying to organize a dungeon through cursed paperwork.

But War Plans still sit on top of campaign and progression states, and the PTR is clearly exposing some awkward edges there.

We already covered how PTR vendor Mrak has become the real final boss, because he can grant absurd amounts of testing power. Gold, Obols, materials, Uniques, Talismans, max Aspects, War Plans, Torment tiers, Paragon 200, and more are all on the menu.

That is useful. It is also how you discover what happens when the test server lets players skip half the ladder and then asks the systems underneath to pretend everything is normal.

Blank Boards Are Funny Until They Block Testing

A blank War Plans board is not the scariest bug in the Season 14 PTR. It is not as dramatic as the Cube creating a broken Greater Affix or the PTR UI misleading players about item changes.

But it still matters.

War Plans are supposed to guide activity choices, progression, and party coordination. If the board appears blank because a character’s campaign state does not line up with Mrak’s boost magic, that creates exactly the wrong kind of confusion. Players testing Season 14 should be breaking builds, boss loops, and item systems, not staring at an empty planning board wondering whether the feature is bugged or their character skipped one too many steps.

PTR Shortcuts Need Clean Guardrails

This is the hidden danger of test realm convenience. Boost vendors are great because they let players reach late-game systems quickly. Without Mrak, half the PTR feedback would arrive too slowly, too narrowly, or from players too exhausted to test anything except their patience.

But shortcut tools need guardrails. If a feature requires campaign completion, the game should either enforce that clearly or make the boost path complete every required dependency properly.

Otherwise, Mrak becomes less of a helpful vendor and more of a demon clerk handing players official-looking forms with several missing pages.

Season 14 is already complex enough. Mythic upgrades, Cube rerolls, Talismans, Corrupted Reaper farming, UI bugs, and War Plans updates are all fighting for attention. The last thing players need is a blank board caused by a shortcut that was supposed to make testing easier.

Mrak is still useful.

But maybe finish the campaign before letting him rearrange your entire life.

For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo 4’s PTR UI Is Already Gaslighting Players


Diablo 4’s Season 14 PTR is not just testing new loot systems, Cube upgrades, Mythic crafting, Talismans, War Plans, and whatever else crawled out of Blizzard’s design crypt.

It is also testing something much more dangerous: whether the game can actually tell players what just happened.

According to Blizzard’s official PTR 3.1.0 Known Issues list, several UI and messaging issues are already present on the test realm. Some UI messages may not accurately reflect crafting or modification results. Error messages around affix and Cube interactions may be incorrect or misleading. Players may see restriction messages that are not actually valid.

In other words, Diablo 4’s PTR may look you directly in the stash tab and lie.

The UI Has One Job: Tell the Truth

Season 14 is a loot-heavy update. Blizzard is testing Mythic Uniques 3.0, Horadric Cube rerolls, Transfiguration, Talismans, item affix changes, and more. That is already a lot for players to track without the UI acting like a haunted customer service desk.

If a crafting action works, the game should say it worked. If it fails, the game should say why. If an item is restricted, the restriction should be real. Revolutionary stuff, apparently.

This matters because Diablo players make decisions based on these messages. They spend materials, test builds, modify Uniques, and try to figure out whether a new system is powerful, broken, or just pretending.

Loot Paranoia Is Born From Bad Feedback

We have already covered how the Mythic upgrade tooltip is hiding important fine print, and how the Cube can apparently create a broken Greater Affix. Those are item-system problems.

But UI problems are worse in a different way.

When an item is bugged, players can report the item. When the UI is wrong, players start doubting everything. Did the affix apply? Did the Cube fail? Is the item restricted? Did the error message explain the problem, or did it just make eye contact and invent a reason?

That is how loot paranoia starts.

PTR Bugs Are Fine, Bad Communication Is Not

To be fair, this is exactly what a PTR is for. Bugs belong here. Weird interactions belong here. Broken messages belong here, safely contained before Season 14 goes live and players begin feeding actual seasonal progress into the machine.

But Diablo 4’s current direction makes UI clarity especially important. The deeper the loot systems get, the more the game needs to communicate cleanly. Players can handle complexity. They cannot handle complexity wrapped in misleading messages and temporary UI nonsense.

A bad roll is annoying.

A failed craft is frustrating.

A UI that tells you the wrong thing is how people start writing forum posts with the energy of a courtroom witness.

Season 14 Needs Trust More Than Flash

Diablo 4 can have all the deep item systems it wants. Mythic upgrades, Cube rerolls, Talismans, affix modifications, crafted items, and boss-driven currency can all work if players understand the rules.

But the UI needs to become a reliable guide, not another demon whispering half-truths from the corner of the inventory screen.

Season 14 has enough chaos already. The last thing it needs is players asking whether the game is broken, the item is bugged, or the message on screen is simply lying for atmosphere.

Fixing numbers is important.

Fixing trust is bigger.

For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo 4’s Cube Can Apparently Create a Broken Greater Affix

Diablo 4 Season 14 is giving the Horadric Cube more power, which is always a sentence that should make players nervous. The Cube is already becoming a place for Mythic upgrades, Unique rerolls, item modification, and all the usual ARPG gambling disguised as “crafting.”

Now the PTR has added a beautifully cursed twist.

According to Blizzard’s official PTR 3.1.0 Known Issues list, it is currently possible to add a non-functional Greater Affix to an item when using the Transfiguration process.

That is one of the most Diablo 4 bugs imaginable. Congratulations, your item now has a fancy stat that does absolutely nothing. Very powerful. Very decorative. Very hell.

A Greater Affix That Does Nothing Is Peak PTR Energy

Greater Affixes are supposed to be exciting. They are the kind of item detail that makes players stop mid-farm, inspect the drop, and briefly believe their build is about to become less embarrassing.

So a non-functional Greater Affix is not just a small technical issue. It is a trust problem wearing shiny pants.

Blizzard’s 3.1 PTR overview says Season 14 is making Mythic power and item upgrades a much bigger part of Diablo 4’s loot chase. Any Unique can potentially become Mythic, and the Horadric Cube is part of that upgrade path.

That means item modification has to feel reliable. If the Cube can hand players a Greater Affix that looks important but does not actually work, every upgrade becomes suspicious.

The Cube Casino Needs Honest Machines

We already covered how Diablo 4’s Horadric Cube is becoming a Unique item casino, and this is exactly the kind of thing that makes players check the machine for teeth.

Rerolls are already dangerous. Upgrades are already expensive. Transfiguration is already the kind of word that sounds like it belongs on a forbidden contract.

If players are feeding valuable items into the Cube, the result cannot be “technically shiny, functionally useless.” A broken Greater Affix is worse than a bad roll because a bad roll at least tells the truth. A broken roll smiles at you while doing nothing behind the scenes.

This Is Why PTR Bugs Matter

To be fair, this is exactly what the PTR is for. Blizzard has listed the issue, which means the team knows Transfiguration and Greater Affixes need cleanup before Season 14 goes live.

That is good.

But it also highlights the danger of Diablo 4’s current direction. Season 14 is not just adding more loot. It is adding more ways to modify, upgrade, reroll, convert, and re-interpret loot. That can be great if the systems are clear.

It can also become a haunted workshop where players no longer know whether their item is powerful, bugged, lying, or waiting for a hotfix.

We have already seen similar item anxiety with the Mythic upgrade tooltip hiding its Ancestral requirement and Talismans acting cursed on the PTR. The broken Greater Affix issue fits right into that same theme.

Diablo 4’s deeper loot system could still be fantastic.

But first, the Cube needs to stop handing out fake blessings.

For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo 4’s Mythic Upgrade Tooltip Is Already Hiding the Fine Print


Diablo 4 Season 14 is rebuilding the Mythic Unique chase, which sounds exciting until the game starts hiding important rules in places players only discover after something feels wrong.

According to Blizzard’s official PTR 3.1.0 Known Issues list, the “Upgrade to Mythic” tooltip currently fails to state that the prerequisite item must be Ancestral. That may sound like a small tooltip problem, but in a season built around Mythic crafting, Cube upgrades, and expensive item decisions, small missing details can become very expensive confusion.

In other words, Diablo 4 is once again teaching players the ancient lesson: always read the cursed fine print, even when the fine print is not actually there.

Mythic Upgrades Need Clear Rules

Blizzard’s 3.1 PTR overview says Season 14 changes Mythics from a fixed rarity into a modifiable item quality. Any Unique can now potentially become Mythic, either through rare drops or upgrades using the Horadric Cube.

That is a huge shift for Diablo 4’s loot identity. We already covered how Mythic Uniques 3.0 could save loot or make it weirder, and this tooltip issue is exactly why clarity matters.

If players are upgrading items, spending seasonal currency, farming the Corrupted Reaper, and making decisions around Ancestral Uniques, the game cannot afford vague instructions. The system needs to tell players what counts, what does not, and why the shiny button refuses to behave.

This Is How Loot Systems Become Suspicious

Diablo players are already trained to distrust item systems. A stat looks good, then does not work. A tooltip says one thing, then the damage log suggests another. A crafting result appears successful, then the item quietly remains haunted.

The PTR known issues list is already full of item and Cube weirdness, from affixes not updating correctly to Cube actions appearing successful without actually applying changes. We covered that broader mess in our piece on how Diablo 4’s PTR known issues list looks like a crafting crime scene.

But the Mythic tooltip problem deserves its own spotlight because it sits right at the entrance to Season 14’s biggest loot promise.

Players should not have to learn Mythic upgrade requirements through failed attempts, forum posts, or that familiar sinking feeling that they are missing one invisible rule written in demon ink.

The Fix Should Be Simple, But Important

The good news is that this is a PTR issue, and Blizzard has already called it out. Compared to broken affixes or non-functional item effects, a missing tooltip requirement should be one of the easier problems to fix.

But it still matters.

Season 14 is asking players to engage with Mythic upgrades, Horadric Cube rerolls, Talismans, seasonal currencies, boss farming, and more. That kind of complexity can work, but only if the rules are visible.

A deep loot system can be exciting.

A deep loot system with hidden requirements becomes paperwork with horns.

If Blizzard wants Mythic Uniques 3.0 to land, the upgrade path needs to feel powerful, readable, and trustworthy. Step one is simple: tell players the item needs to be Ancestral before they start feeding hope into the Cube.

For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Thursday, 4 June 2026

Diablo Immortal’s Chaos Convoy Is PvP With a Slot Machine Strapped On


Diablo Immortal’s Chaos Convoy is back, which means PvP players once again get to enjoy Battleground violence with randomized power progression thrown directly into the engine like cursed confetti.

According to Blizzard’s official Fourfold Revival anniversary update, Chaos Convoy runs from May 27 to July 13 at 3:00 a.m. local server time. While the event is live, players can enter a special Battleground mode built around randomized Gifts of Corvus.

In normal terms, that means you pick power modifiers during the match.

In Diablo terms, it means PvP found a slot machine and decided to wear it as armor.

No Two Matches Should Feel the Same

Before each Battleground match begins, players choose their first Gift of Corvus. The options are random, but Blizzard says players can reroll each offered card. Then, every 60 seconds during the match, another Gift appears, letting players stack new modifiers and adapt on the fly.

The Gifts can do all kinds of ridiculous things: increase DoT damage, boost movement speed, summon spectral weapons, reduce cooldowns, and more. Blizzard says there are more than 100 Gifts to try, which is either exciting or deeply alarming depending on how much chaos you like in your PvP.

Probably both.

PvP, But Make It Weird

The appeal of Chaos Convoy is obvious. Standard PvP can get stale fast when the same builds, matchups, and power gaps start repeating. Randomized modifiers can shake that up, forcing players to make quick decisions instead of simply executing the same routine until everyone involved loses faith in matchmaking.

That said, this is still Diablo Immortal. Balance is always going to be a conversation, a complaint, a spreadsheet, and occasionally a bonfire.

Blizzard says Paragon Skills and Specializations, Warband Remnants, and Boss Skill affixes on equipment are disabled in Chaos Convoy. That should help keep the mode focused on its own modifier madness rather than letting every outside system crash the party with a chair.

The Rewards Are Getting Better Too

Blizzard also says Chaos Convoy rewards now progress with the Tower War reward track, including daily participation rewards, ranked progression rewards, and seasonal competitive rewards. The event also offers twice the Battleground rewards while active.

That matters, because PvP chaos is more attractive when the reward structure does not feel like someone forgot to fill the chest.

We have already covered how Diablo Immortal’s anniversary turned into a boss gauntlet, how Winds of Fortune doubles loot with fine print, and how Set Gear Reforging turns bad gear into one hopeful gamble. Chaos Convoy fits neatly into that same anniversary circus.

It is loud. It is messy. It is probably unfair in at least three entertaining ways.

But it also sounds like the kind of limited-time PvP nonsense Diablo Immortal is built to do well: fast decisions, weird power spikes, temporary madness, and rewards that make the chaos worth entering.

Chaos Convoy is not subtle.

It is PvP with a slot machine strapped on.

And honestly, that might be the point.

For more Diablo coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo Immortal Turns Three Bad Set Items Into One Hopeful Gamble


Diablo Immortal’s fourth anniversary event has already thrown bosses, free rewards, double loot, and borrowed Legendary Gem power at players. Now it is doing something even more dangerous: giving junk gear a second chance.

According to Blizzard’s official Fourfold Revival anniversary update, the Set Gear Reforging limited-time event runs from June 1 at 3:00 a.m. to June 17 at 3:00 a.m. server time.

The idea is simple, which is always suspicious in a Diablo game. Players can take three Set Items from the same slot and same set type, then reforge them into one amplified version of that item.

In other words: three bad boots enter. One hopeful boot leaves.

Junk Gear Gets One More Chance to Betray You

The reforged item has a chance to roll stronger combinations of Attributes and Affixes. Blizzard lists the possible outcomes as 2+2, 3+2, or 3+3, with the best 3+3 result sitting at a much lower chance than the basic option.

That is classic Diablo math. The system gives you hope, shows you the dream, then quietly reminds you that the dream has odds attached.

Still, this kind of event can be genuinely useful. Set Items pile up fast in Diablo Immortal, and not all of them deserve to live rent-free in your stash. Turning surplus pieces into another shot at better gear is a solid idea, especially during an anniversary window where players are already grinding more than usual.

The Limits Keep the Casino From Catching Fire

There are restrictions, because of course there are. The event has a daily limit of three attempts, with a maximum of ten attempts per week.

That limit is probably necessary. Without it, players would immediately convert half their stash into a spreadsheet bonfire and then complain that the ashes were poorly optimized.

With the cap in place, Set Gear Reforging becomes more of a targeted event bonus than an endless gambling pit. You get a few chances to clean up excess Set Items and maybe walk away with something stronger. Maybe.

Diablo is not a charity. It is more like a haunted pawn shop with combat.

Anniversary Loot With Proper Diablo Energy

We have already covered how Diablo Immortal turned its fourth anniversary into a boss gauntlet, how Winds of Fortune doubles loot with fine print, and how the Legendary Gem Trial lets players borrow a max Rank 5 Gem.

Set Gear Reforging fits neatly into that anniversary chaos. It is useful, slightly dangerous, and built around the beautiful ARPG lie that the next roll will definitely fix everything.

It probably will not.

But if your stash is full of duplicate Set pieces that are too bad to love and too suspicious to delete, this event gives them one last chance to become something useful.

That is not mercy.

That is Diablo with a recycling bin and a gambling problem.

For more Diablo coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo Immortal Lets Players Borrow a Max Rank 5 Legendary Gem



Diablo Immortal’s fourth anniversary celebration has bosses, double loot, reforging, PvP chaos, and now something that sounds suspiciously like a demonic test drive.

According to Blizzard’s official Fourfold Revival anniversary update, the Anniversary Legendary Gem Trial runs from June 1 at 3:00 a.m. to June 17 at 3:00 a.m. server time. During the event, players can try one max Rank 5 Legendary Gem for one hour.

Yes, Diablo Immortal is letting players borrow power like a cursed car dealership. Take it for a spin, feel the damage, enjoy the sparkle, then remember that permanent power in Sanctuary usually comes with grinding, luck, or a small emotional collapse.

A One-Hour Taste of Expensive Power

The best part is that the timer uses active time, not elapsed time. Being offline does not drain the trial. That is surprisingly reasonable, which is always alarming when Diablo Immortal is involved.

Players can also swap Gems during the event period, meaning this is not just a one-and-done curiosity. It gives players a chance to test different Legendary Gem options and see what actually fits their build before committing resources, regret, or both.

For a game where Legendary Gems are a huge part of power progression, that matters. Diablo Immortal has always had a complicated relationship with power, wallets, grind, and player patience. Letting people test a strong Gem before fully chasing it is genuinely useful.

This Is Smart, Even If It Feels Like Bait

Let’s be honest. A Legendary Gem Trial is also very good marketing. Give players a taste of a max Rank 5 Gem, let them feel the difference, then gently return them to normal life like someone taking away a flaming sword at the end of a rental period.

But that does not make the feature bad.

We already covered how Diablo Immortal turned its fourth anniversary into a boss gauntlet, and how Winds of Fortune doubles loot with the usual fine print. The Legendary Gem Trial fits the same anniversary pattern: useful rewards, tempting power, and enough Diablo energy to make everyone suspicious.

Try Before You Grind

The best use of the trial is obvious. Test Gems with real builds. Run meaningful content. Do not waste the hour standing in town admiring the tooltip like a scholar in a haunted jewelry shop.

Use it on bosses. Use it in dungeons. Use it where the extra power actually matters.

Diablo Immortal’s anniversary is clearly designed to pull players back into the machine with gifts, boosts, and events. The Legendary Gem Trial might be one of the more useful pieces of that celebration, because it gives players something rare in Diablo: a chance to try power before marrying the grind.

That is still dangerous, obviously.

Borrowed power always feels good until the demon asks for it back.

For more Diablo coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo 4’s PTR Vendor Mrak Has Become the Real Final Boss


Diablo 4’s Season 14 PTR has Mythic Uniques, Talismans, Cube rerolls, Corrupted Reaper farming, Solo Self-Found, Tower rewards, and enough known issues to make a Horadric scholar fake his own death.

But the most powerful being in the entire test realm may not be a demon, boss, or overcooked build.

It may be Mrak.

According to Blizzard’s official 3.1 PTR overview, the PTR Boost NPC Mrak is available in major cities throughout the test. He is there to help players skip the normal grind and get straight to testing Season 14’s new systems.

In other words, he is basically a debug goblin with a god complex.

Mrak Is Handing Out Sin Like Candy

Mrak can grant gold, Obols, all materials, Lair Keys, Tributes, Infernal Compasses, Nightmare Escalation Sigils, all Runes, max Aspects, random Legendaries, all Uniques, and Talisman items.

That alone would be enough to make him suspicious.

But he goes further. Mrak can also complete the campaign and all Strongholds, unlock Waypoints, reveal the map, grant Skill and Paragon Point rewards, unlock and max War Plans, unlock all Torment tiers, set a character to Level 70, and push Paragon to Level 200.

At that point, he is less of a vendor and more of a small seasonal deity standing next to a waypoint, casually deleting the concept of effort.

This Is Exactly What PTR Needs

As ridiculous as it sounds, Mrak is extremely important. The Season 14 PTR is not meant to be a normal leveling journey. It is meant to test the weird machinery before it launches properly.

Players need fast access to Mythic Uniques 3.0, Horadric Cube rerolls, Corrupted Reaper farming, Talismans, War Plans, and late-game item interactions without spending days rebuilding the entire account from scratch.

That is where Mrak matters. He lets players skip the polite version of Diablo and go directly to the dangerous part: breaking systems.

Use Him Properly, Not Like a Loot Tourist

The temptation is obvious. Players can walk up to Mrak, grab everything, inflate their character into a demonic tax bracket, and then run around pretending the PTR is a free power fantasy.

That is fun for about ten minutes.

But the smarter move is to use him like a test tool. Build weird Talisman setups. Push Cube rerolls. Try Mythic crafting. Check if affixes actually work. Test War Plans at higher Torment tiers. See whether the reward loops feel smooth or like they were assembled during a thunderstorm.

We already covered how Diablo 4’s PTR known issues list looks like a crafting crime scene, and Mrak is basically the fastest way to reach the body.

The Real PTR Boss Is Convenience

PTRs are strange. They need to be convenient enough for players to test properly, but not so chaotic that feedback becomes useless. Mrak exists right in the middle of that problem.

He gives players the keys to the kingdom, several bags of currency, a full wardrobe of Uniques, and permission to make terrible decisions at high speed.

That is useful. It is also exactly why the Season 14 PTR may reveal things Blizzard never intended players to discover this quickly.

Mrak is not the villain.

But if some completely cursed build emerges from the PTR and starts deleting bosses with broken item interactions, do not blame the demons first.

Check the vendor standing by the waypoint, smiling like he just handed everyone the matches.

For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo 4’s Talismans Are Already Acting Cursed on the PTR


Diablo 4 Season 14 is testing a lot of new power toys, and some of them are already behaving exactly how you would expect cursed objects in Sanctuary to behave: badly, mysteriously, and with just enough damage weirdness to make players start muttering at combat logs.

According to Blizzard’s official PTR 3.1.0 Known Issues list, Talismans currently have several problems on the test realm. Some may deal additional damage that does not show in the combat log, some effects apply bonuses inconsistently, and certain Talisman and skill combinations can create unexpectedly high damage output without proper UI feedback.

Very normal. Very comforting. Definitely not the sort of thing that makes every Diablo player immediately ask, “Can I build around the bug?”

Talismans Need to Be Clear, Not Haunted

Talismans are supposed to be part of Diablo 4’s expanding Season 14 item ecosystem. Blizzard’s 3.1 PTR overview shows a season packed with Mythic Uniques 3.0, Horadric Cube updates, Pandemonium Ruptures, The Risen, Corrupted Reaper farming, Tower rewards, Solo Self-Found, War Plans, and more.

That is already a crowded endgame table. If Talismans are going to sit on top of all that, they need to behave clearly. Players should know what a bonus does, when it triggers, how much damage it adds, and whether the number on the screen is real or just a demon doing tax fraud.

Damage that does not appear properly in combat logs is a problem. Inconsistent bonus application is a problem. Unexpectedly high damage from specific combinations is very fun for about twelve minutes, right up until Blizzard notices and sends the nerf carriage.

The Charm Version of Ring of Starless Skies Is Also Broken

The known issues list also mentions that the Charm version of Ring of Starless Skies is not functional. That one stings a little, because when a famous item name shows up in a new form, players are obviously going to poke it first.

Diablo players see “Ring of Starless Skies” and immediately begin imagining obscene builds, suspicious resource loops, and something that will eventually get described in patch notes as “not intended.”

If the Charm version simply does not work, that is exactly the kind of PTR bug Blizzard needs to squash quickly. Season 14 is already asking players to understand Iconic Mythics, Cube rerolls, and a known issues list that already looks like a crafting crime scene.

It does not need broken Charms adding another layer of “wait, is this item bad or just bugged?”

This Is Exactly What PTR Is For

The good news is simple: these are PTR issues. Blizzard has already listed them, which means the team knows the new item systems need cleanup before Season 14 fully launches.

The bad news is also simple: Talismans are exactly the kind of system where small bugs can become huge community drama. If one combination does too much damage, players will find it. If one effect does not show in logs, build testers will argue about it for days. If one Charm silently fails, someone will lose several hours and a small piece of their soul.

Season 14 can still make Talismans exciting. Diablo 4 needs more interesting item hooks, more strange build toys, and more reasons to experiment beyond simply copying the least depressing meta setup.

But those toys need to work.

Because in Diablo, a cursed item is cool.

A cursed item system is how forum threads are born.

For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Diablo Immortal’s Maimed City Makes Lut Gholein Sound Properly Horrible


Diablo Immortal has dropped a new story tease called “The Maimed City”, and it turns out Lut Gholein is having a perfectly normal Diablo day. Meaning everything is awful, someone powerful is pulling strings, and the local government appears to be run by nightmare fuel.

Blizzard describes the tale as taking place in the once-thriving city of Lut Gholein, now under the occupation of a grim figure known as the Caregiver. Those who resist her rule are led toward a fate that may be worse than death, which is always comforting wording from a franchise where death is usually just the tutorial.

The new tale is available as a web comic and a motion comic, with Liz Burnette voicing Andariel in the motion version. That alone gives the whole thing a nice “please do not trust the shadows” energy.

Lut Gholein Deserves Better, So Obviously It Gets Worse

Lut Gholein has always been one of Diablo’s most memorable places: desert heat, old trade routes, buried evils, political rot, and the general feeling that every building has at least one cursed basement.

“The Maimed City” leans into that beautifully. This is not a cheerful anniversary event or another loot boost with fine print. It is Diablo Immortal reminding players that Sanctuary is still a miserable place even when nobody is arguing about drop rates.

The Caregiver sounds especially nasty because the title itself is so unpleasantly polite. In Diablo, anyone called “Caregiver” is either lying, possessed, or about to introduce you to a new form of suffering with excellent posture.

Diablo Immortal Works Best When It Gets Ugly

Diablo Immortal is often discussed through events, currencies, mobile systems, and reward tracks. Fair enough. The game is absolutely a machine of timers, boosts, loot, and buttons that want your attention.

But the darker story pieces are where it can still feel properly Diablo. The fourth anniversary boss gauntlet gave players a loud event full of familiar horrors. Winds of Fortune doubled loot with the usual fine print. “The Maimed City” offers something different: atmosphere.

It gives the world more teeth. It makes Lut Gholein feel occupied, twisted, and politically diseased. It also lets Andariel slither back into the conversation, which is never good news for anyone with skin, hopes, or a functioning survival instinct.

A Grim Little Tease Worth Watching

Blizzard has not made this sound like just a random lore extra. The framing clearly points toward a darker Lut Gholein story beat, with the Caregiver serving as a brutal warden and a larger evil working behind the curtain.

That is exactly the kind of setup Diablo can do well when it stops drowning everything in menus and lets the horror breathe.

Diablo Immortal may be a mobile ARPG full of event timers and reward tracks, but “The Maimed City” is a reminder that the franchise still has room for nasty little stories. The kind where a familiar city becomes something diseased, a ruler’s title sounds almost kind, and the voice of Andariel makes everything feel worse on purpose.

That is good Diablo.

Not pleasant. Not hopeful. Not remotely healthy.

But good.

For more Diablo coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo Immortal Doubles Loot, Then Adds the Fine Print


Diablo Immortal is about to do something every ARPG player understands on a spiritual level: double the loot and then immediately attach rules to it.

According to Blizzard’s official Fourfold Revival anniversary update, the Winds of Fortune event runs from June 10 to June 17 at 3:00 a.m. local server time. During the event, players can activate a 24-hour buff that doubles rewards from a long list of activities.

That sounds simple. Dangerous mistake. This is Diablo Immortal. Of course there is fine print.

Double Loot Sounds Beautifully Suspicious

During Winds of Fortune, several rewards can drop in duplicate quantities, including Gold, Experience, Battle Pass Points, Normal Gems, and Legendary Items. The bonus also applies to activities like Horadric Bestiary, Challenge Rifts, Bounties, Fishing, Dungeons, Purge the Depths, Accursed Towers, Hidden Lairs, wilderness farming, and Codex Activities.

That is a pretty generous spread. If you are already grinding Diablo Immortal’s anniversary events, this is the kind of boost that makes the routine feel less like a punishment and more like a very productive punishment.

There is also a doubled 4-player party Normal Gems bonus drop, and Blizzard says that specific bonus is unaffected by the daily cap.

Lovely. Suspiciously lovely.

Now Comes the Diablo Immortal Paperwork

The Winds of Fortune buff lasts 24 hours in real time once activated. Not playtime. Real time. So if you activate it, wander off, forget dinner exists, fall asleep, or are dragged into a family obligation, the clock does not care.

If players have not activated the buff within 24 hours of the event ending, Blizzard says it will be enabled automatically. Any unclaimed rewards will also be auto-claimed on the next login, which is merciful enough to make any long-term Diablo player suspicious.

There are also limits. Battle Pass rewards will not be doubled, the weekly limit on Battle Pass Points and Normal Gems will not change, and duplicate rewards only apply until each item’s limit is reached. On top of that, only the first twelve Common Gems of the day will be tradable.

So yes, it is double loot.

But it is double loot with a lawyer standing next to the treasure chest.

Still Worth Running, Obviously

Fine print or not, Winds of Fortune is still one of the better parts of Diablo Immortal’s fourth anniversary celebration. We already covered how Diablo Immortal turned its anniversary into a boss gauntlet, and this event gives players another reason to log in during the celebration window.

The key is timing. Since the buff runs for 24 real-time hours, players should activate it when they can actually grind. Do not pop it five minutes before bed unless your plan is to let the demons farm your regret while you sleep.

Diablo Immortal’s anniversary is doing what live-service anniversaries do best: gifts, events, bosses, boosts, currencies, cosmetics, and just enough conditions to make everyone read the event text twice.

Winds of Fortune looks useful. It looks rewarding. It also looks like something players should plan around before clicking the shiny button.

Because in Diablo, even double loot comes with a contract.

For more Diablo coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo II: Resurrected’s Warlock Summoner Drama Is Not Over


Diablo II: Resurrected Ladder Season 14 is live, Patch 3.2 is here, and the Warlock is once again standing in the middle of a very familiar Diablo situation: someone changed the build fantasy, and now the summoner crowd is sharpening pitchforks made of math.

According to Blizzard’s official Ladder Season 14 post, Patch 3.2 brings major Warlock changes alongside Terror Zone updates, stash improvements, loot filter fixes, and other seasonal cleanup. Blizzard also says many of the changes were shaped by PTR feedback.

That is the polite version.

The less polite version is that Warlock summoner players are still arguing about whether Bind Demon has been tuned into a healthier skill, or dragged into the cellar and asked to explain itself.

Bind Demon Is No Longer a Casual Toy

The big shift is that Bind Demon now demands more real investment. Instead of functioning like a cheap one-point wonder that can carry too much power with too little commitment, the skill is being pushed toward actual build specialization.

That may be good for balance. It may also be exactly the kind of change that makes summoner players feel like the fun part of the build has been taxed.

Over on the Diablo II: Resurrected forums, players have been debating whether the 3.2 changes hurt the summoner tree too hard. Some argue Bind Demon needed limits. Others feel the build fantasy is being squeezed until the demon pet feels less like a power fantasy and more like a lease agreement.

Summoner Builds Live or Die on Fantasy

This is why Warlock tuning is delicate. A summoner build is not just numbers. It is the fantasy of controlling something horrible, dangerous, and probably bad for the furniture.

If Bind Demon is too easy, it becomes mandatory and balance gets ugly. If it is too restrictive, the build starts feeling like a worse version of itself, which is how ARPG players begin writing essays with alarming emotional force.

We already covered Diablo II: Resurrected Ladder Season 14 and its Warlock changes, but the summoner debate deserves its own spotlight because this is not just about one skill. It is about whether the class still feels wickedly fun after the nerf hammer has finished redecorating.

Balance Is Good, But Fun Has to Survive

Blizzard is not wrong to adjust overperforming builds. Diablo II has always been a game where powerful interactions can get out of hand faster than a rune economy during ladder reset weekend.

But Warlock is still new enough that every major change feels louder. Players are not just optimizing the class. They are still figuring out what it is supposed to be.

If Patch 3.2 makes Warlock summoners more intentional, more balanced, and still fun, then the pain may be worth it. If it simply makes the build feel slower, stricter, and less demonic, the complaints will not go away.

Diablo players can forgive a lot.

But they do not forgive anyone who takes away their favorite monster and calls it healthy design.

For more Diablo coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo 4’s Season 14 PTR Started by Fighting a License Demon


Diablo 4’s Season 14 PTR was supposed to open the gates and let players test the next great pile of cursed systems. Instead, it briefly ran into the most traditional live-service boss of all: launch problems.

In a PTR 3.1 launch delay PSA on the official Diablo 4 forums, Blizzard said it was investigating an issue and delaying the PTR launch. The post was later marked resolved, but not before players had already begun gathering around the digital gates with pitchforks, snacks, and error messages.

Several players also reported “Unable to find a valid license” problems while trying to access the PTR, which is exactly the kind of phrase that makes a Diablo player stare at Battle.net like it personally betrayed their bloodline.

The PTR Had to Clear Its Own Boss Fight First

To be fair, this was a PTR launch, not the full Season 14 launch. Test servers exist to break. They are supposed to catch problems before the live season turns into a flaming wagon rolling downhill into Reddit.

Still, there is something beautifully Diablo about the test realm needing its own opening encounter before players could even get to the actual demons.

Blizzard’s official 3.1 PTR notes make it clear this is not a small test. Season 14 includes Solo Self-Found, Pandemonium Ruptures, The Risen, Corrupted Reaper farming, Mythic Uniques 3.0, Horadric Cube updates, Tower rewards, War Plans updates, and enough balance changes to make build guides start sweating through the monitor.

So yes, a short delay is annoying. But if the PTR is this loaded, it is better to find the cracked floorboards now.

PTR Chaos Is Annoying, But Useful

We already covered how Diablo 4’s PTR known issues list looks like a crafting crime scene. That is the whole point of this testing window. Blizzard needs players smashing the Cube, abusing the new Mythic systems, testing boss loops, breaking UI feedback, and discovering every weird interaction before the real season begins.

The login/license chaos is less fun, obviously. Nobody downloads a PTR client because they are excited to duel an authentication error. But it also fits the larger pattern: Season 14 is complex, and every piece of the machine needs stress testing.

Even the door.

Better a Broken PTR Than a Broken Season

Diablo 4 players are not exactly famous for patience. This is a community that can detect a 3% damage change from three towns away and begin sharpening forum posts before breakfast.

But in this case, the frustration comes with a boring truth: this is what PTR is for.

If the Season 14 PTR starts with delays, known issues, crafting problems, and login weirdness, that is messy. But it is still better than letting those same problems hit the live season while everyone is trying to farm the Corrupted Reaper, test Mythic Uniques 3.0, or climb leaderboards that already need trust.

The PTR began by fighting a license demon.

Fine. Kill that one too.

For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo 4’s PTR Known Issues List Is a Crafting Crime Scene


Diablo 4’s Season 14 PTR is live, and Blizzard’s official known issues list already reads like someone dropped the Horadric Cube down a flight of stairs and then asked it to do accounting.

According to Blizzard’s PTR 3.1.0 Known Issues list, the current test build has problems across items, affixes, crafting, Horadric Cube interactions, UI messaging, and system behavior. That is not shocking for a PTR. This is exactly what test servers are for.

But it is also very funny in the bleak Diablo way, because Season 14 is asking players to trust some very complicated item machinery.

The Cube Is Already Acting Suspicious

Blizzard’s list includes several Horadric Cube problems. Removing affixes may prevent further modifications on some items. Adding affixes may fail even when requirements appear to be met. Cube actions can appear successful but not actually apply changes. Some operations may incorrectly restrict future upgrades or rerolls.

That is a lot of “may,” which in Diablo language means “some poor player is about to ruin a theoretically perfect item and start typing with murder in their heart.”

This matters because the Cube is not just some side feature in Season 14. It is becoming one of the central tools for loot progression, especially with Unique item rerolls turning the Cube into a dangerous little casino.

Mythic Crafting Needs to Feel Reliable

The known issues list also mentions crafted Mythic items not behaving as expected after creation, crafted items not properly inheriting or displaying intended affixes, and crafted Mythics often rolling below max item level.

That is the kind of thing Blizzard absolutely needs to crush before Season 14 goes live.

We have already covered how Mythic Uniques 3.0 could save loot or make it weirder. The system is ambitious: every Unique can potentially become Mythic, and the Cube is part of that upgrade path.

But ambitious loot systems only work if players believe the result is real. If an item looks upgraded but is not actually applying correctly, or if the UI says one thing while the item does another, the entire chase starts smelling like cursed paperwork.

Affixes Are Also Behaving Like Goblins

The affix section is not much calmer. Blizzard notes that items with multiple affixes may not correctly apply or update their stats after modification. Some affix combinations may behave inconsistently, fail to apply, or leave items in outdated or invalid states.

Again, this is PTR territory. Bugs happen. But Season 14 is leaning heavily into item modification, rerolls, crafting paths, Mythic upgrades, and more ways to touch gear after it drops.

That means affix reliability is not a small technical detail. It is the foundation of the entire loot experiment.

This Is Exactly Why PTRs Matter

The good news is obvious: these issues are being listed now, before Season 14 launches properly. That is much better than discovering them three days into the season after players have already sacrificed half their stash, several currencies, and their remaining trust.

The bad news is also obvious: Diablo 4’s item systems are getting complicated enough that one broken interaction can turn a cool feature into a community bonfire.

Season 14 does not just need big ideas. It needs clean execution. The Corrupted Reaper can drop Mythics. The Cube can reroll Uniques. Affixes can become more flexible. Crafted items can become more exciting.

But only if the machinery works.

Right now, Blizzard’s known issues list is basically a warning sign nailed to the crafting table: test everything, trust nothing, and maybe do not put your emotional support Unique into the Cube until the smoke clears.

For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Tuesday, 2 June 2026

Diablo Immortal Turns Its Fourth Anniversary Into a Boss Gauntlet


Diablo Immortal is celebrating its fourth anniversary in the most Diablo way possible: by handing players some gifts, opening the event gates, and then throwing several horrible bosses at them like a birthday party planned by a demon with poor emotional boundaries.

According to Blizzard’s official anniversary update, the Fourfold Revival celebration runs from June 1 to June 18 at 3:00 a.m. local server time. The update includes anniversary events, giveaways, challenges, a Legendary Gem trial, Set Gear Reforging, Winds of Fortune, and the return of Chaos Convoy.

But the main attraction is clearly Trial of True Evils, which sounds less like an anniversary event and more like someone turned the guest list into a threat.

Diablo, Iphael, Vitaath, and Saarodan Want a Word

Trial of True Evils runs from June 1 to June 17 at 3:00 a.m. local server time. During the event, players face some of Diablo Immortal’s nastiest bosses: Diablo, Iphael, Vitaath, and Saarodan.

The bosses unlock over time, giving players a chance to fight them one by one before the event eventually lets them take on the whole miserable lineup back-to-back. Each fight is scaled to the player, which means this is not just a victory lap for overgeared murder machines.

It is supposed to hurt a little.

And honestly, good. An anniversary boss gauntlet should not feel like opening a party favor. It should feel like Sanctuary invited you to dinner and then locked the doors.

The Rewards Are Actually Worth Looking At

Blizzard says players can log into the Trial of True Evils Anniversary Event to receive a free Anniversary Avatar frame. Participating can also earn rewards including Hellbinder Butchie Familiar Transmogrification, Legendary Crests, random Legendary Gear, random Set Gear, and other miscellaneous rewards.

That gives the event a decent mix of cosmetic bait and practical loot, which is basically Diablo Immortal’s native language.

The anniversary update also includes an Anniversary Legendary Gem Trial, letting players try one max Rank 5 Legendary Gem for one hour during the event period. Active time only counts while the gem is being used, so being offline does not burn the timer. That is surprisingly merciful, which is always suspicious in a Diablo game.

Four Years of Mobile Hell

Diablo Immortal has always lived in a strange place inside the franchise. It is mobile, loud, grindy, heavily event-driven, and occasionally feels like a loot machine built inside a casino cathedral.

But there is something very on-brand about this anniversary. Freebies are nice. Cosmetics are nice. Double rewards and reforging events are nice.

Still, the most Diablo part is obvious: here are your gifts, now go fight four major nightmares and try not to become anniversary confetti.

That is the kind of celebration Sanctuary understands.

Diablo Immortal’s fourth anniversary event is live now, and Trial of True Evils runs until June 17. If nothing else, it proves Blizzard still knows how to throw a birthday party where the cake probably bites back.

For more Diablo coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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Diablo 4 Players Don’t Want Sanctuary to Become Discount Path of Exile

Diablo 4 Season 14 is trying to become deeper, richer, more replayable, and more system-heavy. That is not automatically bad. ARPG players like systems. They collect systems like cursed jewelry and then complain when the jewelry starts whispering.

But the current PTR reaction shows a bigger concern bubbling under the nerf drama: some Diablo 4 players are worried the game is chasing Path of Exile instead of trusting what makes Diablo work.

Over on the official Diablo 4 forums, one active discussion titled “We’re not playing Diablo 4 to play Path of Exile 2” puts the frustration very clearly. The complaint is not simply “systems bad.” It is that Diablo 4 risks losing its own identity while trying to bolt on more crafting, more complexity, more endgame layers, and more seasonal machinery.

Depth Is Good. Identity Crisis Is Not.

There is a big difference between adding depth and adding homework.

Season 14 has a lot going on. Blizzard’s 3.1 PTR notes include Mythic Uniques 3.0, Pandemonium Ruptures, The Risen, Corrupted Reaper farming, Tower rewards, Solo Self-Found, War Plans updates, Horadric Cube changes, and more.

Some of that sounds great. Some of it sounds like Diablo 4 ate an entire ARPG design document and is now trying to digest it through patch notes.

We already compared Path of Exile 2’s endgame rebuild with Diablo 4’s Season 14 systems, and the comparison is useful. Path of Exile is built around density, crafting, complexity, and long-term mechanical obsession. Diablo has traditionally worked best when it makes killing monsters, finding loot, and building power feel immediate, brutal, and readable.

Diablo Needs More Loot Joy, Not Just More Levers

The anxiety around Season 14 is not hard to understand. Mythic Uniques 3.0 could make loot more exciting, but it also adds more rules. Horadric Cube rerolls could save bad drops, but they could also turn every Unique into another gamble. And the lack of a major loot filter fix makes every extra item system feel more dangerous than it should.

Players do not hate complexity. They hate complexity that makes the game feel less like Diablo.

That is the line Blizzard has to walk. Diablo 4 can learn from Path of Exile without becoming a weaker imitation of it. It can add crafting without making drops feel irrelevant. It can add endgame structure without making every session feel like a meeting with a demon accountant.

Season 14 Has to Prove the Pain Has a Purpose

The PTR is doing exactly what a PTR should do: exposing friction before the season fully launches. That means some panic is inevitable. Diablo players see one nerf, one new currency, one confusing Cube rule, and suddenly Sanctuary smells like burnt forum posts.

But beneath the noise is a fair question.

What is Diablo 4 trying to be?

If Season 14 makes the game deeper while keeping the loot chase fast, satisfying, and readable, Blizzard wins. If it simply piles on systems until Sanctuary feels like discount Path of Exile with better lighting, players will notice.

Diablo 4 does not need to be simpler forever.

It just needs to remember that “more complicated” is not the same thing as “more fun.”

For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.

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