Diablo 4 is heading into anniversary season with March of the Goblins, bonus rewards, free cosmetics, and the usual promise that tiny loot gremlins will make players lose all common sense.
Perfect timing, then, for players to start asking whether some of the goblin-related loot systems are actually working properly.
On the official Diablo 4 forums, one player says they killed 92 Treasure Goblins using a War Plan setup designed around goblin spawns, Treasure Breach sigils, and potential Goblin Hideout portals. The result? Zero Treasure Breach sigils from goblins, zero Goblin Hideout portals, and a rapidly growing suspicion that something is either bugged, disabled, or cursed by a very petty loot accountant.
Goblins Are Supposed to Feel Like Possibility
Treasure Goblins work because they interrupt your brain. You see one sprinting away, and suddenly your carefully planned route stops mattering. The dungeon objective can wait. The boss can wait. Your build can wait. There is a small creature with a bag, and it must be judged.
That chase only works if players believe the goblin can lead to something exciting.
If goblins become just another minor loot piƱata with unclear odds, broken perks, or missing portals, the magic starts to drain out quickly. Players will still kill them, obviously. We are not animals. But the thrill becomes suspicion.
The War Plan Problem
The complaint is not just “I had bad RNG.” The player specifically says they set up War Plan nodes around goblin spawns, including one where goblins can drop Treasure Breach sigils and another where goblins can open portals to a hideout.
That is the key issue. If players invest into a specific goblin-focused setup, they expect the system to at least feel noticeable. Not guaranteed. Not generous. Just present.
Several replies in the thread make the mood even messier. Some players say they have seen a Treasure Breach sigil. Others say they have never seen the portal. One player claims extensive testing after Patch 3.0.2 with hundreds of goblins and crafted sigils still produced nothing from goblins directly.
That is exactly how Diablo loot conspiracy theories are born.
Anniversary Goblins Need to Land Cleanly
This matters more because Blizzard is about to push goblins back into the spotlight with the anniversary event. March of the Goblins should be easy fun: more goblins, more loot, more chaos, more reasons to log in and act irresponsibly around shiny things.
But if players are already wondering whether goblin portals and Treasure Breach drops are bugged, then the event arrives with a question mark attached.
Diablo 4 does not need goblins to be predictable. That would ruin the point. But it does need the reward rules to feel trustworthy.
Rare Is Fine. Broken Is Not.
Maybe Goblin Hideout portals are simply extremely rare. Maybe Treasure Breach sigils are working as intended, just stingy enough to make players question reality. Maybe some War Plan interactions are not behaving properly.
The problem is that players cannot easily tell the difference.
And in a loot game, that distinction matters. Bad luck is annoying. Unclear systems are worse. A suspected bug hiding behind RNG is the worst of all, because every empty result starts feeling like evidence.
Diablo 4’s goblins should make players greedy, not paranoid.
Especially during an anniversary event built around chasing them.



























