Friday, 8 May 2026

Lord of Hatred Feels Like a Finale, But Diablo 4 Is Clearly Not Done

Light Lord of Hatred story spoilers below.

Diablo 4’s Lord of Hatred feels like an ending. Not a soft little “see you next season” ending, either. More like the game finally slammed the book shut on the entire Age of Hatred arc, blew out the candles, and left Mephisto somewhere deeply inconvenient.

But if anyone thinks that means Diablo 4 is done telling stories, that seems about as likely as a Treasure Goblin voluntarily handing over receipts.

Lord of Hatred may close one major chapter, but it also leaves Blizzard with something more interesting: a cleaner board for whatever comes next.

The Age of Hatred Gets Its Big Finish

PC Gamer recently argued that Diablo 4 finally feels finished, partly because Lord of Hatred gives the game a stronger narrative shape after years of buildup. That is the important distinction. Finished does not have to mean over. It can mean the current story finally has a proper spine.

GameSpot also notes that Lord of Hatred brings a conclusive end to the storyline that began with Diablo 4’s base campaign, wrapping up the Age of Hatred and leaving players wondering what follows now that Mephisto’s immediate arc has been dealt with.

That is a big deal. Diablo 4 has spent a long time orbiting Lilith, Mephisto, Neyrelle, corrupted faith, broken legacy, and the general problem of Sanctuary being a cosmic family dispute with extra corpses.

Lord of Hatred gives that arc weight. It makes the journey feel less like endless teasing and more like a completed saga.

But Diablo Itself Still Has a Lot of Darkness Left

The obvious question is: what comes after Hatred?

GameSpot’s story analysis suggests that Diablo himself may not necessarily be the next immediate stop, which is interesting because many players naturally expect the franchise’s namesake demon to eventually kick the door down. But Diablo lore has never been short on nightmare fuel. Baal, the Void, unresolved Prime Evil threads, divine corruption, ancient Sanctuary history, and whatever awful thing Blizzard decides to drag out of the basement next all remain on the table.

GosuGamers describes Lord of Hatred as a flawed but thrilling conclusion to a years-long story, while also noting that where Diablo 4 heads next is still unknown. That uncertainty is the key.

The expansion feels final because it closes the Hatred saga.

It feels unfinished because Diablo is still Diablo.

A Cleaner Launchpad for the Next Era

The best thing Lord of Hatred may have done is clear space.

Diablo 4 no longer has to keep dragging the same Mephisto-shaped shadow behind every major beat. The game can now push forward with a new villain, a new region, a new cosmic problem, or a stranger kind of threat entirely.

That is healthy. Live-service storytelling can get stale when every expansion feels like the middle chapter of a story that refuses to arrive. Lord of Hatred appears to do the opposite: it ends something loudly enough that the next arc can breathe.

Sanctuary Never Gets to Retire

So yes, Lord of Hatred feels like a finale.

It should.

But Diablo 4 is clearly not packing up Sanctuary, turning off the hellfire, and sending everyone home with a commemorative skull. The expansion gives the game closure, not retirement.

And that might be the best possible position for Diablo 4 right now.

The old arc is closed. The endgame is stronger. The systems finally feel more complete. The future is open, dangerous, and probably full of decisions that will make the forums combust by lunch.

In other words, Diablo 4 may have ended the Age of Hatred.

But Sanctuary still looks like a place with plenty of terrible ideas left.

Last Epoch is doing something dangerously sensible: asking ARPG players what is actually annoying them.

Not in the vague “we hear your feedback” way that usually means a community manager has been sent into the comment mines with a wooden shield. Eleventh Hour Games has launched a new quality poll campaign designed to gather focused feedback on the parts of Last Epoch that most affect the player experience.

In a genre currently full of loud endgame rebuilds, seasonal chaos, loot debates, and patch-note firefighting, that is a smart move.

Also slightly terrifying. Asking ARPG players what feels broken is like asking a Necromancer if they have any thoughts on bone management. You may be there for a while.

The Quality Campaign Starts With Skills and Passives

In the official “Building a Better Last Epoch” forum post, Eleventh Hour Games says community feedback, suggestions, and bug reports play a major role in identifying where the game is working and where it needs improvement.

The first poll focuses on Skills and Passives, asking players what most impacts their experience. The options include skills not behaving as expected, skill or passive nodes not working, nodes interacting incorrectly, and scaling issues such as damage, mana costs, or cooldowns.

That is a very ARPG list. In normal games, “my skill does not work” is a bug. In ARPGs, it can also be a build identity crisis, a spreadsheet emergency, and the reason someone stops playing a class for three months.

Players Are Already Going Deep

The thread quickly turned into exactly what you would expect from a serious ARPG community: specific examples, long explanations, controller complaints, tooltip criticism, scaling concerns, passive tree frustration, and several players politely explaining that the poll itself may be too broad.

That last part is important. Some players like the initiative but argue that bugs, scaling, unclear tooltips, and broken interactions should be separated more clearly. One recurring complaint is that it can be hard to know whether a skill is weak, broken, unclear, or simply interacting with another node in a way the game never explains properly.

That is the kind of problem that matters deeply in Last Epoch, because the game’s skill trees are one of its biggest strengths. The more interesting the build system becomes, the more painful it is when players cannot tell whether their clever idea is underpowered, bugged, or secretly doing nothing while wearing a nice tooltip.

The Polls Will Cover Much More Than Skills

This is not meant to be a one-off complaint bucket. Eleventh Hour says the quality poll campaign will continue across several areas, including Endgame, Combat, Items, UI, Audio, Connectivity and Performance, Environment, Quests, and Crafting.

That is a broad net, and it needs to be. Modern ARPGs are not judged only on loot anymore. Players care about clarity, stability, responsiveness, build diversity, crafting depth, controller feel, and whether endgame progression feels like a rewarding climb or a haunted filing cabinet.

Diablo 4 has been learning that lesson loudly. Path of Exile 2 is rebuilding major parts of its endgame before 1.0. Last Epoch is now asking players where the quality pain is most concentrated.

The genre is getting crowded, and “good enough” is becoming a dangerous phrase.

This Is the Right Kind of Listening

The useful thing about focused polls is that they turn vague frustration into patterns. Forum threads can be noisy, emotional, and occasionally written like someone just lost a beloved helmet to a bug. But structured feedback can help developers see which problems are widespread and which ones are isolated but loud.

That does not mean every poll result should become a patch note. Players are excellent at identifying pain. They are not always excellent at designing the surgery.

Still, this kind of campaign shows the right instinct. Instead of only pushing new content, Eleventh Hour is making quality itself part of the roadmap conversation.

Last Epoch Needs Polish as Much as Content

Last Epoch has always had a strong pitch: deep buildcraft, approachable systems, interesting skill trees, and enough ARPG crunch to keep theorycrafters happily muttering in the corner.

But polish matters. Reliability matters. Clear tooltips matter. When a passive node does not behave the way players expect, the fantasy does not just crack mechanically. It breaks trust.

That is why this campaign is worth watching.

New bosses and big updates get the headlines. Quality fixes are less glamorous. But in ARPGs, polish is what keeps players farming after the launch-week glow fades and the first wave of “best build” videos starts aging like milk in a demon cellar.

Last Epoch is asking players where the pain is.

Now comes the harder part: turning that pain into fixes before the next build idea dies in a tooltip.

Diablo Immortal’s StarCraft Event Sneaks in a Permanent Gear Upgrade



Diablo Immortal’s StarCraft crossover has the obvious headline bait: Zerg in Sanctuary, Protoss boss fights, Infested Rifts, Kerrigan cosmetics, and enough space-bug nonsense to make Hell file a pest-control complaint.

But buried inside all that interstellar chaos is something much more practical: a permanent gear-slot change.

As part of the upcoming Diablo Immortal × StarCraft crossover update, Blizzard says all players will gain access to all eight gear slots. Players who have not yet unlocked the final two slots will have default gear automatically equipped in those slots, with final item details still to be announced.

That may not sound as loud as a Zerg invasion, but it might be the part of the update players still care about after the crossover banners come down.

The Crossover Is Flashy. The Gear Change Is Permanent.

The event itself runs from May 13 to June 10 and includes a full StarCraft-themed content package: Aeon of Stars rewards, Infested Rifts, Dark Ascension boss fights, a new Baneboil Legendary Gem, StarCraft Familiar skins, and a Queen of Blades Phantom Market cosmetic.

That is the fireworks show. The permanent gear-slot update is the foundation work happening under the stage while everyone is staring at the Hydralisk.

Giving all players access to all eight gear slots should make character progression feel more consistent, especially for newer or returning players who had not unlocked those final slots yet. Instead of hitting the event with missing equipment space, players will at least have default gear filling the gaps.

Why This Actually Matters

In a game like Diablo Immortal, gear slots are not cosmetic decoration. They affect power, progression, builds, survivability, and how quickly players feel like they are participating in the real game rather than loitering outside the loot economy with a sad little backpack.

So while the crossover’s main marketing image may be “Zerg crash into Sanctuary,” the gear-slot change is a quieter quality-of-life move that helps smooth out the player experience.

It is also smart timing. A crossover event will almost certainly bring curious players back in, including some who have not touched Diablo Immortal in a while. Giving them access to all eight gear slots makes the return less awkward and the event less dependent on old progression gates.

Conqueror Mode Gets the StarCraft Treatment Too

The permanent gear-slot change arrives alongside a special version of Conqueror Mode, where players pick a faction and activate faction-themed shrines during matches.

Terran shrines grant a Stim Pack-style attack and movement speed boost. Zerg shrines add poison projectiles. Protoss shrines provide protective shields.

That is a neat way to translate StarCraft’s faction identities into Diablo Immortal combat without turning the whole thing into a fake RTS bolted onto an ARPG. It keeps the event fast, readable, and very much built around hitting things until they stop objecting.

The Useful Part Behind the Space Bugs

The StarCraft crossover is obviously the headline. It is weird, loud, and extremely easy to sell with one sentence: Sanctuary has Zerg now.

But the permanent gear-slot change may be the more important long-term update.

Events come and go. Cosmetics rotate. Crossover rewards get collected, missed, regretted, and argued about in comment sections.

A cleaner gear baseline sticks around.

So yes, Diablo Immortal’s StarCraft event is bringing space bugs, psionic warriors, explosive Baneling energy, and Kerrigan fashion to Hell’s mobile cousin.

But it is also sneaking in a practical upgrade that makes Diablo Immortal a little easier to re-enter, a little cleaner to play, and a little less likely to make returning players feel under-equipped before the Swarm even arrives.

Sometimes the real loot is not the crossover skin.

Sometimes it is Blizzard quietly fixing the wardrobe while the Zerg distract everyone.

Path of Exile 2’s Next Update Looks Like a Direct Shot at Diablo 4’s Endgame Moment


Diablo 4 finally gets people saying it feels more complete, and almost immediately Path of Exile 2 walks into the room carrying a giant endgame overhaul like a man who heard someone else was getting attention.

Grinding Gear Games has officially announced Path of Exile 2: Return of the Ancients, the next major update for its early access ARPG. It launches on May 29, 2026, and according to multiple previews, it is not a tiny balance patch wearing dramatic trousers.

This is a major endgame rebuild. And for players watching both Diablo 4 and Path of Exile 2, the timing is deliciously rude.

PoE 2 Is Going Straight for the Endgame Problem

According to PC Gamer’s interview coverage, game director Jonathan Rogers described Return of the Ancients as the update meant to make Path of Exile 2 feel complete enough to leave early access behind.

The big target is the post-campaign grind. Instead of dropping players into a confusing sandbox and hoping they find joy somewhere between death, loot, and mild emotional damage, the new update is designed to make the endgame more guided, more structured, and easier to understand.

That should sound familiar. Diablo 4 has spent much of its life wrestling with the same beast: how to make endgame feel like a satisfying loop rather than a haunted checklist.

Return of the Ancients Is Not Small

Reports from GamesHub and GosuGamers describe a massive update: new endgame storylines, 15 bosses, four Pinnacle encounters, two new Ascendancy classes, a redesigned Atlas Tree, expanded crafting, more than 40 new Unique items, and a fresh league built around ancient runic power.

The Atlas is also getting reshaped into a more explorable endgame world with fixed objectives and clearer destinations. Boss access is being reworked too, with dedicated questlines replacing some of the random first-time key-drop frustration.

That is the kind of change ARPG players notice. Not because it adds more things to click, but because it tries to answer the bigger question: why am I doing any of this besides “number go up, monster go down”?

Diablo 4 Should Be Watching

This does not mean Path of Exile 2 is “beating” Diablo 4. That argument is boring, sweaty, and usually ends with someone writing 900 words about loot philosophy in a comment section.

But it does mean the ARPG arms race is getting interesting again.

Lord of Hatred has pushed Diablo 4 into a stronger position with better structure, War Plans, Cube tricks, more directed farming, new class debates, and a clearer sense of what its endgame wants to be.

Now Path of Exile 2 is answering with its own giant endgame pass, and that is good for everyone who likes their action RPGs complicated, violent, and occasionally hostile to free time.

The Real Winner Is the ARPG Player With No Sleep Schedule

For Diablo fans, the most interesting part is not whether PoE 2 steals players for a weekend. It is that both games now seem to be pushing toward the same goal: making endgame feel less like loose content scattered across a map and more like a coherent long-term machine.

That is exactly where the genre should be heading.

Diablo 4 has momentum right now. Path of Exile 2 is about to make its biggest endgame argument yet. Last Epoch is asking players what needs fixing. Grim Dawn is still roaring in the corner like the old veteran that refuses to sit down.

The ARPG space is alive, loud, competitive, and covered in loot.

Sanctuary may have Hell. Wraeclast may have ancient horrors.

But right now, the real monster is the release calendar.

Diablo Immortal Is Getting a StarCraft Crossover, Because Hell Needed Zerg


Diablo Immortal is getting invaded by StarCraft, because apparently Sanctuary looked at Hell, demons, cursed relics, immortal tyrants, and endless murder-caves and thought: “This could use space bugs.”

Blizzard has officially announced Diablo Immortal × StarCraft, a new crossover event running from May 13 to June 10. The event brings the Swarm, Protoss enemies, Infested Rifts, crossover rewards, a new Legendary Gem, special Conqueror Mode changes, and a Phantom Market cosmetic inspired by Kerrigan, Queen of Blades.

So yes, Diablo Immortal now has Zerg in it.

Somewhere, Deckard Cain is sighing into a space helmet.

The Swarm Descends on Sanctuary

The main event is called Aeon of Stars, and it gives players several StarCraft-themed rewards just for logging in, including a StarCraft-inspired Avatar Frame, the new Baneboil 2-Star Legendary Gem, and a weapon transmog inspired by Kerrigan.

From there, players can earn points by completing daily activities, killing monsters, and tackling limited-time content. Milestone rewards include a StarCraft-inspired portal, stickers, weapon transmogs, legendary gear with selectable affixes, set items with selectable affixes, and additional Immortal Keys.

That is a lot of crossover loot, which is good, because if you are going to let the Zerg crawl into Diablo Immortal, they should at least bring presents.

Infested Rifts Sound Exactly as Gross as They Should

One of the standout additions is Infested Rifts. During the event, Elder Rifts can roll a unique affix that fills the run with Zerg enemies and a special boss: the Feral Hydralisk.

Players will also get access to a special Psionic Storm ability inside the rift, dropping damaging fields onto enemies. In other words, Diablo Immortal is turning an Elder Rift into a miniature StarCraft battlefield, complete with hostile alien meat and suspiciously useful space magic.

There are also exclusive legendary weapons tied to the special Elder Rift, though Blizzard notes that their special affixes cannot be transferred. If the item is destroyed, the essence cannot be obtained, which is a very Diablo Immortal way of saying: please read before you start clicking like a caffeinated goblin.

The Protoss Are Here Too

The crossover is not just Zerg chaos. Players can also face the Tal’Darim in Dark Ascension, a special limited-time boss fight featuring the Tal’Darim Templar and Ascended Archon.

The fight supports up to four adventurers and includes event-specific objectives and rewards. Entry requires challenge tickets, so this is not just a random walk-in appointment with psionic death.

That gives the event a nice split: Zerg infestation for the disgusting swarm fantasy, Protoss enemies for the “glowing alien zealot just ruined my evening” side of things.

Baneboil Lets You Weaponize Banelings

The new Baneboil Legendary Gem may be the funniest part of the whole thing.

Blizzard describes it as a gem containing Zerg ferocity. In practice, dealing damage can conjure Banelings that swarm nearby enemies, explode on contact, cover them in corrosive acid, deal damage over time, and make them take increased damage from you.

That is not subtle. That is not elegant. That is StarCraft’s most famous biological hand grenade being shoved directly into Diablo’s loot system.

Excellent. No notes.

Kerrigan Cosmetics, Familiars, and Conqueror Mode

The crossover also includes a Queen of Blades Phantom Market cosmetic, letting players lean fully into the Kerrigan fantasy. There are also two StarCraft-inspired Familiar skins: Immortal for the Protoss side and Zergling for the Swarm.

Even Conqueror Mode is getting warped by the crossover. Players will be able to choose faction-themed shrines tied to Terran, Zerg, or Protoss effects. Terran gives a Stim Pack-style boost to attack and movement speed, Zerg adds poison projectiles, and Protoss grants a protective shield.

Blizzard is also adding a permanent optimization alongside the update: all players will get access to all eight gear slots, with default gear automatically equipped for anyone who has not unlocked the final two slots yet.

Ridiculous? Yes. Useful? Also Yes.

This is the kind of crossover that sounds absurd for about three seconds, then starts making perfect sense. Diablo Immortal is already the most flexible, event-heavy, cosmetics-friendly corner of the Diablo universe. If any Diablo game was going to open the door and let the Zerg into Sanctuary, it was this one.

And honestly, it looks packed. There is a real event structure here, not just a login banner and a suspiciously expensive outfit. Infested Rifts, boss fights, faction Conqueror changes, a new gem, familiars, cosmetics, reward cycles, and a permanent gear slot change make this feel like a full seasonal event rather than a lazy brand handshake.

Is it weird? Absolutely.

But Diablo is allowed to be weird. Especially when the weirdness involves Kerrigan, Banelings, and the sudden realization that Hell now has a pest problem from outer space.

Thursday, 7 May 2026

Diablo 4 Hotfix 6 Fixed One Crash, While Players Asked About Everything Else



Diablo 4 Hotfix 6 has arrived, and it is not exactly the kind of patch note that needs its own audiobook.

Blizzard’s latest update for Diablo 4 3.0.1c fixes one specific issue: a crash connected to the Paladin Free Trial on Battle.net. That is useful, especially if you were one of the unlucky players trying to test-drive holy violence only to have the game politely collapse in your hands.

But as Lord of Hatred continues its messy early run, the reaction is less “great, everything is fixed” and more “cool, now about the other fires.”

Hotfix 6 Is Tiny, But Necessary

The official Diablo IV patch notes list 3.0.1c Build #71858 as a May 6 update for all platforms, with one bug fix: resolving the crash issue with the Paladin Free Trial on Battle.net.

That is not a bad hotfix. Small fixes still matter, especially during an expansion launch window where players are testing new classes, new systems, new progression routes, and every cursed corner of Sanctuary’s infrastructure.

If a trial class is crashing the game, that should be fixed quickly. Nobody wants their first Paladin experience to be “login, load, vanish.”

The Problem Is the Backlog

The awkward part is timing.

Season 13 is already carrying a long list of community complaints and player-reported issues. Some players are warning that Treasure Breach keys and other sigils may downgrade if left unused. Rogue players have been asking why class-specific concerns were not addressed in recent hotfixes. Others are still talking about stash pressure, War Plans improvements, rare endgame access, and the general feeling that Lord of Hatred’s systems are excellent but slightly held together with ritual string.

So when Hotfix 6 lands with one line, the fix may be valid — but the emotional response is predictable.

Players do not read patch notes in isolation. They read them while holding their own personal list of grievances like a blood-stained shopping receipt.

Hotfix 5 Was the Big Cleanup

Part of the contrast comes from Hotfix 5, which did the heavy lifting. That update cleaned up infinite glyph upgrades, infinite Unique farming through War Plan nodes, and the infinite scaling issue with Aspect of Limitless Rage.

Compared to that, Hotfix 6 feels like a tiny bandage placed next to a haunted battlefield.

But that does not mean it is pointless. It just means Blizzard is currently operating in triage mode: fix the crash, close the exploit, restore the disabled thing, investigate the weird key problem, and hope the forums do not become sentient before breakfast.

This Is the Lord of Hatred Launch Window Now

The bigger story is that Diablo 4 is still settling after a major expansion. That means hotfixes will not all be glamorous. Some will close game-breaking exploits. Some will adjust systems. Some will fix one crash and leave everyone staring at the patch note like it owes them money.

That is live-service reality. It is not always pretty. It is rarely quiet. And in Diablo’s case, it usually involves at least one system doing something it absolutely was not supposed to do.

Hotfix 6 fixed what it set out to fix. That is good.

But the community is clearly waiting for the next bigger pass — the one that addresses the problems players are currently shouting about from every corner of Sanctuary.

Until then, Paladin trial players can crash less.

Everyone else is still checking the patch notes like a demon owes them compensation.

Diablo 4 Players Still Love War Plans, Even If They Keep Breaking Things



Diablo 4’s War Plans system has already done something rare for a new endgame feature: players actually seem to like it.

Yes, this is the same system that recently helped produce an infinite Unique farming problem through the Out of the Cold and Dog of Astaroth nodes. Yes, Blizzard had to step in with Hotfix 5 and shut that little loot-printing ritual down. And yes, that does make War Plans sound like a beautiful machine with a few cursed gears chewing through the basement.

But despite the early chaos, Diablo 4 players are still praising War Plans as one of Lord of Hatred’s best additions.

The Endgame Finally Has a Map

As Icy Veins highlights, players have been calling War Plans one of the expansion’s biggest wins because the system gives Diablo 4’s endgame a clearer sense of direction.

That matters more than it sounds. Diablo 4 has never lacked things to kill. Sanctuary is basically a heavily armed pest-control contract with gothic lighting. The problem has often been knowing which activity is actually worth your time, your build, your materials, and your slowly fading patience.

War Plans help solve that. They give players structured goals, better routing, and a stronger reason to move between activities instead of staring at the map like it personally betrayed them.

Structure Is Powerful in an ARPG

The reason War Plans work is simple: they turn “go do stuff” into a plan.

That may not sound glamorous, but in an ARPG, structure is everything. Players want freedom, yes, but they also want the game to stop shrugging and saying, “I don’t know, maybe go bother a dungeon?”

War Plans make endgame progression feel more intentional. They help players target activities, track goals, and build a loop that feels less like random wandering and more like controlled demon management.

That is a very good thing for Season 13, especially now that Lord of Hatred has added more systems, more farming routes, more crafting layers, and more ways for players to accidentally turn their inventory into a theological problem.

The Account-Wide Problem Is the Big One

Of course, players are not just applauding politely and leaving the room.

One of the loudest requests right now is making War Plans progress account-wide. Game Rant recently covered the growing call for War Plans to become less punishing for alt characters, and the complaint makes sense.

If a player has already pushed deep into War Plans on one character, repeating the same progression from scratch on an alt can feel less like meaningful grind and more like being sentenced to community service by a very boring demon.

Diablo 4 already encourages players to test builds, experiment with classes, and chase different seasonal power spikes. A character-bound War Plans system risks pushing in the opposite direction.

Brilliant Systems Still Need Sanding Down

The funny thing is that the complaints are almost a compliment.

Players are asking for War Plans improvements because they want to keep using the system. They want it to be smoother, more alt-friendly, better in groups, and less prone to breaking into strange reward abuse whenever someone pokes the wrong node combination with a stick.

That is very different from a system players simply ignore.

War Plans have already survived the first real test: people care enough to argue about them.

Diablo 4 May Have Found a Real Endgame Spine

Lord of Hatred has thrown a lot at Diablo 4: new classes, new loot systems, Cube tricks, Cow Level nonsense, hotfix drama, and enough bug reports to make Sanctuary’s clerks unionize.

But War Plans may quietly be one of the most important additions of the entire expansion.

Not because they are perfect. They are not. Hotfix 5 already proved that.

But because they make Diablo 4’s endgame feel more readable, more directed, and more willing to respect the player’s time. That is the kind of foundation the game has needed for a long time.

So yes, War Plans can break things.

They can be messy. They need account-wide progress. They probably need more tuning, more guardrails, and fewer accidental loot fountains hiding in the walls.

But if Diablo 4 has finally found an endgame system players want to see fixed rather than buried, that is a very good sign.

Sanctuary has a plan now.

It just needs Blizzard to keep it from catching fire.

Diablo 4 Players Hijacked the Leaderboards to Sell Their Build Brains


Diablo 4’s Lord of Hatred leaderboards were supposed to show who could murder demons the fastest. Instead, they briefly became something much stranger: premium advertising space for people who are extremely good at turning math into dead monsters.

Over the weekend, several top-ranked players across the NA and EU leaderboards appeared under the same name: INFbuilds. At first glance, that sounds like one wildly over-caffeinated player somehow speedrunning multiple classes across two regions.

But no. It was a group effort.

According to PC Gamer’s report on the leaderboard stunt, the players were using those top spots to promote InfinityBuilds, a Diablo 4 build-guide website connected to streamer and veteran player Mekuna.

That is either shameless self-promotion or brilliant ARPG marketing. Probably both. Sanctuary respects efficiency.

Leaderboards Are Now Buildcraft Billboards

The funny part is that this was not just a random name change. It was a message.

In a game like Diablo 4, leaderboard position is proof. Anyone can publish a build guide. Anyone can say their setup is “insane,” “broken,” “S-tier,” or “actually the build Blizzard fears.” But if your name is sitting near the top of the official rankings, the pitch becomes a little harder to ignore.

InfinityBuilds’ idea seems pretty clear: prove the builds work by putting them where everyone can see them.

That makes the leaderboard less like a trophy case and more like a haunted LinkedIn profile for people with extremely optimized damage rotations.

Build Guides Are Big Business Now

This also says something about where Diablo 4 is right now.

With Lord of Hatred, the game has become more layered. New systems, new classes, deeper endgame pressure, War Plans, Talismans, Charms, the Horadric Cube, Mythic farming routes, and brutal difficulty tiers all mean one thing: casual guessing is getting more expensive.

Players want builds that work. Not vibes. Not “trust me bro.” Not a 37-minute video where the actual build appears after three sponsor reads and a monologue about patch philosophy.

They want clear answers. What class is strong? What setup clears fast? What works for bossing? What survives the endgame? What gets nerfed before breakfast?

That demand creates a strange little economy around expertise. The leaderboard stunt just made it visible.

The New Classes Are Not Owning the Stage Alone

There is another interesting wrinkle here: the strongest leaderboard performances are not necessarily coming from the shiny new toys.

PC Gamer notes that Sorcerers and Barbarians have been looking especially strong, even as players continue experimenting with the newer Paladin and Warlock classes. That tracks with the wider early Season 13 mood: Warlock and Paladin may be exciting, but the old classes did not politely walk into a shallow grave just because someone new showed up with better branding.

That is good for the meta. A new class should be tempting, not mandatory. Diablo is more interesting when several classes are clawing for dominance instead of one build sitting on the throne wearing every patch note like a crown.

Annoying? Smart? Very Diablo?

There is a slightly absurd beauty to all of this.

Some games get leaderboard drama because players cheat. Some get it because someone finds a broken interaction. Diablo 4 gets a group of top players turning high-rank clears into a build-guide business card.

That might sound cynical, but it is also oddly useful. If the builds are real, tested, and capable of performing at the highest level, then players looking for guidance may actually benefit from the stunt.

And if not? Well, the leaderboard has already done what leaderboards always do: start a new argument with numbers attached.

Sanctuary Has Entered Its Marketing Era

Diablo 4’s leaderboards were always going to become more than bragging rights. In a modern ARPG, high-end rankings feed build guides, YouTube videos, Twitch streams, tier lists, coaching, Discord communities, and whatever other digital machinery grows around optimized suffering.

The INFbuilds stunt just made that ecosystem impossible to miss.

It is funny. It is clever. It is a little shameless. And it is probably the most honest possible version of Diablo 4’s competitive endgame: if your build is strong enough, the leaderboard becomes your ad campaign.

Hell has rankings now.

Apparently, it also has marketing strategy.

Diablo 4 Players Warn: Use Your Treasure Breach Keys Before They Downgrade



Diablo 4 players are warning each other about a nasty little inventory bug that may be turning valuable Nightmare Dungeon keys into far less exciting dungeon paperwork.

The short version: if you get a Treasure Breach key, you may want to run it immediately.

Players on the official Diablo IV forums are reporting that some keys and sigils are downgrading while sitting in bags or stash, with Treasure Breach keys apparently changing into ordinary Dungeon Delve keys. That is not a cute transformation. That is a loot goblin getting promoted to accountant and stealing your lunch.

The Treasure Breach PSA Is Getting Loud

A fresh forum PSA titled “Run treasure breach keys immediately - bug is making keys downgrade” warns players not to save Treasure Breach keys for later.

The original post claims that Nightmare Dungeon keys are downgrading in player bags, specifically warning that people are losing Treasure Breach keys and advising players to use them immediately until the issue is fixed.

Other players in the same thread mention similar problems with Amethyst Reserve, Vile Splendors, and Forgotten Wisdom sigils. In other words, this may not be limited to one shiny little key type.

Older Reports Point to the Same Problem

This does not appear to be completely new either.

A separate earlier bug report from May 1 described Treasure Breach dungeon keys losing their affix after some time. Several players in that thread said keys they had saved later turned into normal Dungeon Delve keys.

One player speculated that the issue may be tied to Treasure Breach being connected to War Plans upgrades and not being fully account-wide, though that is still player speculation rather than an official Blizzard explanation.

Until Blizzard confirms the cause, the safest interpretation is simple: if the key matters, do not babysit it. Run it.

Why This Bug Feels So Bad

The reason players are annoyed is obvious. Treasure Breach keys are exciting because they imply extra reward potential. They are not the sort of thing players want to burn casually while half-awake. Many players naturally save them for better timing, higher difficulty, or a proper farming session.

If those keys can quietly downgrade before use, that turns smart planning into punishment.

That is especially awkward in Season 13, where Lord of Hatred has already pushed players toward more structured endgame routing, War Plans, Tributes, Kurast Undercity runs, boss farming, and long-term loot planning.

You cannot ask players to treat endgame resources strategically and then have the resources behave like cursed dairy products in the fridge.

What Should Players Do Right Now?

Until this gets officially addressed, the community advice is pretty direct:

If you get a Treasure Breach key, run it immediately.

The same caution probably applies to other rare or valuable sigils players are reporting issues with. Do not stash them for a perfect future run. Do not save them for later tiers. Do not let them sit around like they are harmless collectibles.

In Diablo 4 right now, your best key might have commitment issues.

Another Weird Season 13 Inventory Problem

This is the kind of bug that may not affect everyone, but still creates paranoia fast. Once players believe a valuable item can downgrade in their bags, every inventory screen becomes a crime scene.

That is not great for a season already juggling hotfixes, class drama, War Plan bugs, Mythic farming discoveries, and enough player reports to make the forums look like a haunted help desk.

Hopefully Blizzard clarifies or fixes the issue quickly. Until then, treat Treasure Breach keys like fresh meat in Hell.

Use them before something worse happens.

Diablo 4 Players Found a Sneaky New Way to Farm Mythic Uniques


Diablo 4 players have discovered that the Horadric Cube is not just a fancy demon blender for gear. It may also be one of the best new ways to chase Mythic Uniques in Lord of Hatred.

The trick revolves around the Cube’s Amalgamation recipe and a very important lesson for Season 13: stop casually burning your Tributes of Armaments like they are disposable dungeon snacks.

Because apparently, those little consumables can be upgraded into something far nastier.

The Horadric Cube Is More Flexible Than Players Thought

The latest discovery highlighted by Icy Veins shows that the Horadric Cube’s Amalgamation recipe can work on more than just gear, charms, talismans, and other obvious crafting targets. It can also be used on Tributes of Armaments.

The basic idea is simple: place five identical Tributes of the same type and rarity into the Horadric Cube, use Amalgamation, and upgrade them into one Tribute of the next rarity tier.

That may sound like normal crafting admin, but the important part is where the ladder ends. Players can work their way up to a Mythic Tribute of Armaments, which can then be used in the Kurast Undercity for a better shot at Mythic Unique rewards.

That is not just useful. That is the kind of thing that makes every “junk” Tribute in your inventory suddenly look like it deserves a little respect.

Five Tributes Go In, One Better Tribute Comes Out

The recipe is refreshingly direct by Diablo standards, which means only three spreadsheets and one mild panic attack are required.

You need five matching Tributes of Armaments at the same rarity. Those can be upgraded into one higher-rarity version. Lower-quality Tributes can be pushed upward step by step, eventually turning Legendary versions into a Mythic one.

The catch is that this applies specifically to Tributes of Armaments when chasing the Mythic version. So no, this is not a magical answer to every Tribute problem in Sanctuary. It is a very specific route for players who want to turn otherwise ordinary drops into a much more valuable Mythic farming opportunity.

Kurast Undercity Just Got More Interesting

Once players have a Mythic Tribute of Armaments, the real fun begins in the Kurast Undercity.

That matters because the Undercity is already built around targeted reward influence. Tributes have long been part of making that activity more deliberate, letting players steer rewards instead of simply praying to the loot goblin void and pretending that is a strategy.

Now, with the Cube involved, the loop becomes more interesting. Instead of only waiting for a rare Mythic Tribute drop, players can stockpile lower-rarity Tributes and slowly upgrade toward the version they actually want.

That turns the Horadric Cube into something Diablo 4 badly needs: a system that makes weaker drops feel like part of a bigger plan rather than instant inventory compost.

Do Not Throw Away Your Armament Tributes

The practical takeaway is simple: keep your Tributes of Armaments.

Do not use every lower-rarity Tribute the moment it lands. Do not vendor them. Do not treat them like cursed pocket lint. If you are chasing Mythic Uniques in Season 13, those Tributes may now be ingredients in one of the more interesting long-term farming routes available.

This is also exactly the kind of discovery that makes the Horadric Cube feel dangerous in a good way. The best ARPG crafting systems are not just menus full of recipes. They are toolboxes players keep poking until something valuable, broken, or suspiciously efficient falls out.

The Cube Is Starting to Look Like the Real Endgame Star

Wowhead’s Horadric Cube guide describes the system as a major new layer for modifying gear, transmuting items, crafting Charms, and giving players more control over endgame progression.

This Tribute discovery strengthens that idea. The Cube is not just another crafting bench. It is becoming a place where players can turn bad luck into delayed ambition.

That is very Diablo. Take five things you almost ignored, shove them into an ancient artifact, perform a questionable ritual, and hope the result gets you closer to god-tier loot.

Season 13 has already been full of bugs, hotfixes, strange builds, exploit cleanup, and community chaos. But this is the good kind of discovery: practical, clever, and just hidden enough to make everyone check their bags with sudden regret.

So if you have been throwing away Tributes of Armaments, congratulations. You may have been feeding Mythic Unique chances directly into the trash.

The Horadric Cube noticed. It is probably judging you.

Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Diablo 4 Might Finally Feel Finished, and That’s the Real Lord of Hatred Story


For almost three years, Diablo 4 has carried one very awkward curse: it often felt less like a finished ARPG and more like a brilliant cathedral still being built while players were already fighting demons inside it.

That may finally be changing.

With Lord of Hatred, the conversation around Diablo 4 has taken a noticeable turn. Not universally, because this is Diablo and universal agreement would clearly violate some ancient law. But several second-week reactions are landing on the same uncomfortable idea: maybe Diablo 4 is finally becoming the game it always looked like it wanted to be.

The “Finally Finished” Argument Is Getting Louder

PC Gamer recently argued that Diablo 4 finally feels finished, pointing to years of updates, reworks, endgame changes, and now Lord of Hatred’s larger systems as the moment where the game’s identity starts to properly lock into place.

That is a harsh compliment, but probably the right one.

Diablo 4 was never empty. It had atmosphere, combat weight, production value, and enough gothic misery to power a small haunted village. But for a long time, its systems felt like they were constantly being rearranged by someone trying to solve a puzzle during an earthquake.

Lord of Hatred does not erase that history. It just makes the current version feel more coherent.

Lord of Hatred Is Winning Over Skeptics

Windows Central’s Jennifer Young also wrote that Lord of Hatred changed her mind about Diablo 4, highlighting how the expansion reshapes pacing, loot, and endgame flow in a way that challenged her earlier doubts.

That matters because Diablo 4 has not had a trust problem only with haters. It has had a trust problem with people who wanted to love it.

The kind of player who enjoyed the combat but bounced off the endgame. The player who liked Sanctuary but got tired of seasonal whiplash. The player who kept asking when the game would stop feeling like it was apologizing through patch notes.

Lord of Hatred seems to be landing with at least some of those players.

Messy, But With Direction

None of this means the expansion is spotless. The launch window has already delivered bugs, hotfixes, exploit cleanup, balance drama, loot debates, Rogue frustration, rare-mode complaints, and enough forum smoke to make Kyovashad look sunny.

But the important difference is direction.

Diablo 4 now has more visible structure. War Plans give players clearer goals, even if they have already needed emergency repairs. Boss farming is more deliberate. Buildcraft has more layers. The endgame has more reasons to exist beyond “go kill things until your eyes glaze over.”

That does not make the game perfect. It makes it feel less unfinished.

The Real Expansion Might Be Confidence

The most important thing Lord of Hatred may add is not one class, one system, one boss, or one weird secret cow incident.

It is confidence.

For the first time in a while, Diablo 4 feels like it is not just reacting to its own problems. It feels like it has a stronger idea of what it wants to be: darker, deeper, more structured, stranger, and still very willing to break itself in public like any respectable ARPG.

That is not a clean redemption arc. It is messier than that.

But Diablo has always been at its best when something powerful crawls out of the wreckage.

Lord of Hatred may not be the moment Diablo 4 becomes flawless. It may be the moment it finally stops feeling like a work-in-progress wearing legendary boots.

Diablo 4’s Rarest Endgame Mode Might Be Too Secret for Its Own Good


Diablo 4 has a new endgame mode where players fight waves of demons until they are eventually overwhelmed, which sounds exactly like the kind of thing ARPG players have been asking for since someone first looked at a dungeon and said, “Good, but what if it hated me forever?”

The problem is that many players may not actually see it.

With Lord of Hatred, Blizzard added Echoing Hatred, a rare challenge built around survival, escalating enemy waves, and the very Diablo concept of finding a special item before the real pain can begin.

It sounds excellent. It also sounds like the kind of feature that could accidentally become a ghost story if its entry ticket refuses to drop.

What Is Echoing Hatred?

Blizzard’s official Lord of Hatred overview describes Echoing Hatred as a rare challenge unlocked by finding a Trace of Echoes item. Once players have one, they can offer it to the Sightless Eye in Temis and enter a realm where Mephisto’s minions keep coming until the player is eventually overwhelmed.

That setup is wonderfully Diablo. Find a rare key. Open a cursed door. Survive as long as possible. Die horribly. Hopefully leave with better loot and a slightly damaged opinion of your own build.

This is exactly the kind of pressure-test mode Diablo 4 can use. It gives players a reason to push beyond normal farming, beyond boss rotations, beyond carefully planned routes, and into a simple question: how long can your build actually survive when Hell stops pretending to be polite?

The Entry Key Is the Real Boss

The sticking point is the Trace of Echoes.

PC Gamer’s Tyler Colp wrote that after more than 45 hours with Diablo 4: Lord of Hatred — including completing the campaign, gearing a Warlock, climbing through Torment difficulty tiers, and playing a broad spread of content — he still had not naturally found the key to Echoing Hatred. He ultimately used a review-server option to generate a Trace of Echoes just to test the mode.

That is funny, but also slightly worrying. If a mode is designed to be rare, fine. If it is so rare that many invested players never interact with it, the line between “mysterious” and “basically invisible” gets very thin.

The Mode Itself Sounds Great

Once inside, Echoing Hatred appears to be exactly what players would expect from a serious survival mode. PC Gamer describes an arena where players activate the challenge, fight waves of monsters, keep pressure under control, deal with increasing difficulty, and ultimately lose the run when death finally arrives.

There are also bonus elements, including Treasure Goblins that can appear during the run and add extra rewards if killed. That is the good stuff. Diablo players love two things: pushing a build until it snaps, and seeing a Treasure Goblin at the worst possible time.

Mobalytics also describes Echoing Hatred as an endless horde-style challenge that scales in difficulty and intensity until the player dies, framing it as an ultimate build test for Lord of Hatred.

Rare Is Exciting. Too Rare Is Dangerous.

The appeal of rare content is obvious. It makes the world feel mysterious. It gives players stories to tell. It keeps the community searching, sharing rumors, and treating every drop like it might be the key to something unholy.

Diablo needs that. The recent Secret Cow Level hunt proved just how powerful community mystery can be when the clues are weird enough and the payoff is ridiculous enough.

But Echoing Hatred is not just a joke portal or a secret gag. It is a full endgame activity. If it is too difficult to access, Blizzard risks hiding one of Lord of Hatred’s more interesting ideas behind lottery-ticket pacing.

Diablo 4 Should Let Players Bleed More Often

Echoing Hatred sounds like one of the smartest additions in Lord of Hatred: clean concept, high pressure, escalating chaos, and clear bragging-right potential.

It should feel rare. It should feel special. It should not feel like content players only read about in someone else’s article while waiting for a drop that never comes.

There is a balance to strike here. Keep the mystery. Keep the thrill. Keep the feeling that the Trace of Echoes matters.

But let players into the meat grinder often enough to actually fear it.

Because Diablo 4 does not need its rarest endgame mode to become a museum exhibit. It needs Echoing Hatred to be what the name promises: a place where strong builds go to find out whether they are actually strong — or just very confident before the screaming starts.

Diablo 4 Rogue Players Wanted Fixes. Hotfix 5 Had Other Plans


Diablo 4 Hotfix 5 arrived with a very clear mission: shut down the weird stuff before Season 13’s endgame turns into a haunted spreadsheet with leaderboards attached.

Infinite glyph upgrades? Fixed. Infinite Unique farming through War Plan nodes? Fixed. Aspect of Limitless Rage scaling into forbidden math? Fixed, with Blizzard noting it will be re-enabled after the hotfix fully rolls out.

All useful. All necessary. All very sensible.

Unless, of course, you are a Diablo 4 Rogue player watching the patch notes and wondering why your class still feels like it is standing outside the cathedral in the rain, holding a bug report and a knife.

Hotfix 5 Was About Exploits, Not Rogue Pain

Blizzard’s official Hotfix 5 notes for Diablo IV 3.0.1 are short and focused. The patch addresses infinite glyph upgrades through Choron’s Soul, infinite Unique farming through the Out of the Cold and Dog of Astaroth War Plan nodes, the infinite scaling issue with Aspect of Limitless Rage, and general stability improvements.

That is the kind of hotfix list you expect during a messy launch window. When players find ways to bend progression, loot, or damage scaling until the numbers start smoking, Blizzard has to move quickly.

But class-specific frustrations do not disappear just because an exploit gets cleaned up. And for some Rogue players, that is exactly the problem.

The Forum Reaction Was Immediate

A new forum thread bluntly titled “0 Mentions of Fixing Rogues on new HOTFIX bluepost” sums up the mood from one corner of the community.

The complaint is not simply “Rogue did not get buffed today.” It is more tangled than that. Players are arguing about reported high-end Rogue Pit clears, possible bugged interactions, leaderboard integrity, and why some issues appear to be handled faster than others.

In another active thread about Rogue Pit 150 runs and the infinite glyph bug, players debate whether certain short clear times are tied to broken damage, Butcher interactions, leaderboard problems, or a wider Season 13 balance mess.

In other words, the Rogue conversation is not neat. It is not one clean issue with one clean fix. It is a ball of knives, damage numbers, class envy, leaderboard suspicion, and forum heat.

Rogue Is Stuck in an Awkward Spotlight

The strangest part is that Rogue players are not all saying the same thing.

Some believe Rogue has bugged interactions that are making certain high-end clears look ridiculous. Others feel the class has been hit by previous changes and still needs real attention. Some are annoyed that Barbarian’s Limitless Rage problem got fast action while Rogue complaints seem to be stuck in the “please investigate” swamp.

That creates a messy public image for the class. Is Rogue too strong because of bugs? Too weak in normal play? Being ignored? Being abused by edge-case interactions?

Depending on which thread you read, the answer is apparently yes.

Hotfixes Can’t Fix Trust Overnight

Hotfix 5 did what it was supposed to do: it cleaned up major exploit problems. That matters for Season 13, especially with leaderboards, War Plans, and endgame progression still settling down after Lord of Hatred.

But it also shows the other half of Diablo 4’s current problem. Players are not just watching what gets fixed. They are watching what does not.

For Rogue players, Hotfix 5 may feel like another patch aimed at the fire everyone can see, while their own class issues keep smoldering in the corner.

That does not mean Blizzard is ignoring Rogue forever. It does not mean the class is doomed. It definitely does not mean every forum post should be treated as sacred scripture carved into a cursed dagger.

But the frustration is real enough to notice.

Diablo 4’s latest hotfix may have closed the exploit buffet, but Rogue players are still waiting to see whether their table is even getting service.

Diablo 4’s War Plans Are Brilliant, Broken, or Both


Diablo 4’s War Plans are starting to look like one of those systems that could either become a great endgame backbone or a cursed machine that occasionally prints Uniques until someone at Blizzard screams into a chalice.

With Lord of Hatred, War Plans were clearly designed to give Diablo 4 players more structure. Instead of wandering through Sanctuary like a loot-starved raccoon, players get chained objectives, rewards, and a clearer sense of what to do next.

That part is good. Very good, even.

The problem is that Diablo players are Diablo players. If a system contains rewards, nodes, modifiers, timing, caches, or even a suspiciously shiny button, someone will find a way to turn it into an exploit engine before the candles have finished melting.

Hotfix 5 Hit War Plans Directly

Blizzard’s official Hotfix 5 notes include one very important War Plans fix: Unique items could be infinitely farmed with the Out of the Cold and Dog of Astaroth War Plan nodes.

That is not a small little “oops.” That is the kind of issue that turns an endgame system into a haunted vending machine.

Targeted rewards are good. Repeatable goals are good. Giving players a reason to engage with War Plans is good. But infinite Unique farming is not a reward structure. It is a loot faucet someone forgot to attach to reality.

The System Itself Still Has Promise

The frustrating part is that War Plans actually make sense on paper. Diablo 4 has long needed better endgame direction, especially for players who log in, stare at the map, and wonder which flavor of demon paperwork they are supposed to file today.

War Plans help solve that by giving players a route. Do this, then this, then this. Earn rewards. Push forward. It is cleaner than pure random wandering and less exhausting than pretending every endgame activity is equally worth your time.

There has already been evidence that Blizzard wants War Plans to work better in practice, too. A recent update improved their value in group play, making them less punishing for players helping party leaders rather than only chasing their own objectives.

Good Ideas Break Loudly in Diablo

The real issue is not that War Plans are bad. It is that complex Diablo systems tend to break in spectacular ways.

Give players a progression tree and they will optimize it. Give them reward nodes and they will route them. Give them a weird interaction between objectives and boss rewards, and suddenly the community has discovered a way to make the loot economy cough up Uniques like a possessed slot machine.

That is not even meant as an insult. It is practically the ARPG life cycle.

Blizzard builds the system. Players stress-test it with the moral restraint of a Treasure Goblin in a bank vault. Hotfixes arrive. The system gets better. Everyone pretends this was not inevitable.

War Plans Need Guardrails, Not a Funeral

Hotfix 5 does not mean War Plans are doomed. If anything, it proves the system is important enough to need fast cleanup.

War Plans could become one of Lord of Hatred’s strongest additions if Blizzard keeps tightening the reward logic, improving party flow, and making sure powerful nodes do not accidentally turn into infinite loot rituals.

The idea is strong: give players a sense of direction, make the endgame feel less scattered, and reward focused play. That is exactly the kind of structure Diablo 4 benefits from.

But right now, War Plans also feel like a newly built cathedral with a few trapdoors under the altar.

Brilliant? Possibly.

Broken? Occasionally.

Very Diablo? Absolutely.

Diablo 4 Hotfix 5 Kills Infinite Glyphs, Infinite Uniques, and Limitless Rage Madness



Diablo 4’s latest hotfix has arrived with a mop, a bucket, and the exhausted energy of someone cleaning up after a very expensive demon party.

Diablo 4 Hotfix 5 for version 3.0.1 is now live, and Blizzard has aimed it directly at three of the messier problems currently rattling around Lord of Hatred: infinite glyph upgrades, infinite Unique farming, and the already-infamous infinite scaling issue with Aspect of Limitless Rage.

In other words, the exploit buffet is closing. Please take your cursed plate and leave quietly.

Infinite Glyph Upgrades Are Out

According to Blizzard’s official Hotfix 5 patch notes, the update fixes an issue where glyphs could be upgraded infinitely using Choron’s Soul.

That is not exactly a tiny problem. Glyph upgrades are supposed to be part of Diablo 4’s long-term character progression, not a magical printing press hidden behind one suspicious interaction. If players can push glyph upgrades far beyond what the system intends, the entire endgame starts looking less like progression and more like someone left the vault door open during a blood ritual.

So yes, that one had to die quickly.

The Unique Farming Machine Got Shut Down Too

Hotfix 5 also fixes an issue where Unique items could be infinitely farmed using the Out of the Cold and Dog of Astaroth War Plan nodes.

That part is especially interesting because War Plans are one of Lord of Hatred’s newer systems, and players are still figuring out exactly how far they can be pushed. Apparently, the answer was “far enough to make Blizzard sprint toward the emergency lever.”

Targeted farming is good. Infinite Unique farming is not targeted farming. That is just a loot piñata with a legal department.

Limitless Rage Was a Little Too Limitless

The third major fix hits Aspect of Limitless Rage, which could infinitely scale. That explains why the Aspect was disabled before this hotfix — it was not merely strong, spicy, or “Barbarian players are having a normal one” strong. It was scaling into the realm of forbidden math.

Blizzard’s developer note says the Aspect will be re-enabled after Hotfix 5 has fully rolled out. That is good news for Barbarians who use it legitimately, and probably less good news for anyone hoping to keep treating damage numbers like a pyramid scheme.

Season 13 Is Still Settling Down

None of this is shocking for a major Diablo launch window. New systems arrive, players immediately attack them like underpaid QA goblins, and within days the community has discovered at least four ways to turn intended progression into a haunted slot machine.

That is part of the chaos of Season 13. Builds are shifting, War Plans are being tested, glyphs are being pushed, loot routes are being optimized, and somewhere in the middle of it all, Blizzard is trying to stop the whole thing from catching fire.

Hotfix 5 is not glamorous. It does not add a shiny new feature or summon a secret cow army. It simply shuts down a set of problems that could have warped progression, farming, and balance if left alone too long.

That may not sound exciting, but in Diablo terms, it matters.

Because when infinite glyphs, infinite Uniques, and infinite Rage are all on the table, Sanctuary does not need another demon lord. It needs a patch note with a broom.

Tuesday, 5 May 2026

Diablo 4’s New Twitch Reward Wants Your Sub Money Now

Diablo 4’s Lord of Hatred Twitch Drops have reached the part of the schedule where watching is no longer enough. Now Sanctuary would like a subscription, please.

After the first launch-window reward, the campaign has moved into its Support a Streamer phase. From May 5 at 12:00 p.m. PT until May 11 at 11:59 a.m. PT, players can unlock the Ensign of the Vanquisher Mount Trophy by supporting a streamer with one subscription.

In other words, the demons are still free to kill. The mount trophy is politely standing behind a pay gesture.

The Free Watch-Time Drop Is Over

The first major Diablo 4 Lord of Hatred Twitch Drop was the Essence of a Lord Emblem, which players could earn by watching two hours of eligible Diablo IV content on Twitch between April 27 and May 5.

That was the simple version of Twitch Drops: link your accounts, find an eligible stream, watch the required time, claim the reward, and pretend you were not also half-reading a build guide in another tab.

Now the campaign has shifted to the more debatable part.

The Ensign of the Vanquisher Needs One Sub

According to Blizzard’s official Lord of Hatred launch Twitch Drops schedule, the Ensign of the Vanquisher Mount Trophy is tied to Support a Streamer and requires one subscription.

That makes it different from the standard watch-time rewards. You cannot simply park yourself in a stream for two hours and walk away with the trophy. This one asks players to actively support a creator during the event window.

Depending on your mood, that is either a nice way to push support toward Diablo creators or another small cosmetic locked behind “just one more purchase.” Both readings are probably going to exist in the same Twitch chat, which is always healthy and never cursed.

There Is Another Free Drop Coming

The good news is that the whole campaign does not stay in paid territory. The next reward, the Skullbladi Axe, returns to the regular watch-time format from May 11 to May 18, requiring two hours of Diablo IV content from eligible Twitch channels.

So if you are not interested in spending money on the mount trophy, you can simply skip this phase and come back for the axe. Your horse may be slightly less decorated, but your wallet will remain unstabbed.

Twitch Drops Are Still Doing Their Job

This is exactly what Twitch Drops are built to do: keep Lord of Hatred visible, push Diablo streams higher, reward players with cosmetics, and occasionally make everyone argue about whether a mount trophy should require a sub.

For regular Twitch viewers, the Support a Streamer reward is probably harmless enough. If you already follow a Diablo creator and planned to subscribe anyway, the Ensign of the Vanquisher is a bonus.

For everyone else, it may feel like the least shocking thing in modern gaming: a small cosmetic reward asking for a small transaction while Hell burns dramatically in the background.

Still, the schedule is worth knowing. Watch-time rewards are easy to miss, Support a Streamer rewards are even easier to misunderstand, and Diablo players are famously calm when cosmetics vanish from limited-time campaigns.

So yes, Diablo 4 has another Twitch reward live. This one just wants more than your attention.

Diablo 4 Season 13’s Best Builds Are Already Changing Fast


The Diablo 4 Season 13 meta has officially entered its most dangerous phase: everyone has a tier list, nobody fully trusts it, and at least one build you ignored yesterday is now apparently capable of turning demons into decorative floor paste.

That is the early Season 13 experience in Diablo 4. The launch window for Lord of Hatred has already produced strong contenders, surprise class performances, hotfix anxiety, and enough build debate to make every stash tab feel like a courtroom exhibit.

In other words: the spreadsheets are alive, and they are hungry.

The Early Meta Is Not Sitting Still

Current Season 13 build rankings from Icy Veins split the strongest options across different activities, including leveling, speed farming, bossing, and endgame pushing. That matters, because “best build” now depends heavily on what you are actually trying to do.

A build that clears trash at the speed of a caffeinated demon may not be the same build you want for bossing. A Pit-pushing setup may feel miserable for quick farming. A leveling monster may collapse the moment the real endgame starts sharpening its knives.

That is good design when it works. It means players are not all being funneled into one cursed meta corridor. It also means choosing a build now feels less like picking a class and more like selecting a legal strategy before entering Hell’s tax court.

Tier Lists Are Already Moving

The speed of change is the real story. Mobalytics’ Diablo 4 tier list has already logged several early Season 13 updates, including movement for Rogue and Warlock builds as players discover stronger setups and refine what actually works in Lord of Hatred’s endgame.

That is exactly why nobody should treat the first week of a Diablo season like sacred scripture. Early rankings are useful, but they are also unstable little goblins. They react to hotfixes, bug discoveries, gear availability, leaderboard pressure, and the terrifying power of one player finding an interaction that makes the math start screaming.

Old Classes Are Still Punching Back

The new Warlock may be flashy, but it has not erased the rest of the roster. Game8’s current Season 13 class ranking places Rogue, Sorcerer, and Barbarian among the strongest early performers, while Warlock remains very much in the conversation.

That is probably the healthiest outcome Diablo 4 could have hoped for. A new class should be tempting. It should not make every veteran Rogue, Barbarian, or Sorcerer player feel like they brought a soup spoon to a cathedral collapse.

Meanwhile, Wowhead’s updated endgame tier list ranks builds by damage, survivability, mobility, and resource management, which is a useful reminder that raw damage is only one piece of the nightmare. A build that hits hard but constantly runs out of resources is not a build. It is a dramatic apology.

Pick a Build, But Keep Your Boots On

The smartest play right now is not to panic-reroll every time a new tier list moves one slot. Season 13 is still young, and Diablo metas have a habit of changing shape the moment players start getting comfortable.

If your build is clearing content, scaling well, and not making you hate your own hands, you are probably fine. If you are chasing the absolute top, then yes, keep watching the rankings, the hotfixes, and the weird little community discoveries that turn “maybe viable” into “please nerf this before it breeds.”

For now, Diablo 4’s Season 13 meta is messy, fast-moving, and weirdly healthy.

The best builds are changing. The old classes are still dangerous. Warlock is still lurking in the shadows. And somewhere, a player is testing a cursed interaction that will ruin next week’s tier list before breakfast.

Diablo 4’s New Warlock Class Isn’t Dominating Season 13 Yet


The Warlock arrived in Diablo 4 with exactly the kind of energy players expected: dark magic, demonic bargains, shadowy nonsense, and enough occult swagger to make every Necromancer quietly check the job listings.

But the early Season 13 meta has not turned into a one-class Warlock parade. At least not yet.

According to Icy Veins’ early Lord of Hatred build-tier breakdown, Rogue, Barbarian, and Sorcerer have been stealing a surprising amount of the spotlight in the first wave of serious pushing. Which is funny, because many players expected the shiny new class to walk into Sanctuary, kick the door down, and immediately become everyone’s problem.

Instead, Warlock is strong. Just not automatically king.

The New Class Smell Is Still Powerful

To be clear, this is not a “Warlock is bad” story. That would be silly, premature, and probably get us cursed by a man in a hood.

The class has several strong-looking builds already, especially around abyss, shadow, summoning, and demonic transformation themes. PC Gamer’s Warlock build guide highlights the class’s Dread Claws and Shadowform synergy, with abyss skills and Soul Shards giving the class a very distinct identity.

That is important. Warlock does not feel like a recycled Sorcerer wearing eyeliner. It brings its own flavor: pact magic, hellish summons, shadow tricks, and the general vibe of someone who read the warning label on forbidden power and said, “adorable.”

Rogue, Barbarian, and Sorcerer Refuse to Die Quietly

The interesting part is that older classes are not politely stepping aside.

Icy Veins’ Season 13 build tier list shows plenty of strong non-Warlock options across speed farming, endgame, and bossing. Rogue, Sorcerer, and Barbarian builds are all showing up in serious conversations, with rapid clears, high-end pushing, and reliable damage keeping them relevant.

Game8’s current Season 13 class tier list also places Rogue, Sorcerer, and Barbarian among the strongest classes in the early Lord of Hatred environment.

That is probably healthy. A new class should be exciting, not legally mandatory. If every leaderboard instantly became Warlock wallpaper, Season 13 would get boring faster than a rare boot with three dead stats.

Early Meta Means Early Chaos

The usual warning applies: this is early. Very early.

Diablo metas do not sit still. They molt. They mutate. They get hotfixed in the middle of the night and wake up missing a leg. Builds that look absurd today can be merely “good” tomorrow, while some overlooked setup suddenly becomes the new monster after one player discovers a cursed interaction hidden behind six layers of math.

That means Warlock could still rise. It has the tools, the player attention, and the shiny-new-class experimentation advantage. Players are still testing gear, Talismans, Charms, Soul Shards, and whatever other suspicious objects Blizzard has allowed us to socket into our collective bad decisions.

Warlock Not Dominating Might Be Good News

The funniest outcome may also be the best one: Warlock is strong, popular, and interesting — but not instantly oppressive.

That gives Diablo 4 room to breathe. It means returning classes still matter. It means players who stuck with Rogue, Barbarian, or Sorcerer do not have to reroll just because the new spooky kid showed up with a demon contract and excellent branding.

For Lord of Hatred, that is a better launch story than “new class deletes everything, please enjoy the mirror match.”

Warlock may still become the face of Season 13. It may still find some disgusting build that makes the Pit look like a tutorial basement. But right now, the early meta is more interesting than that.

The new class is powerful. The old classes are angry. The spreadsheets are awake.

That sounds like Diablo working as intended.

Diablo 4’s Cow King Crown Is a Perfectly Unhinged Loot Joke

 

Diablo 4 players finally found the Secret Cow Level, and yes, the cows brought loot. Of course they did. This is Diablo. Even the livestock understands itemization better than most governments understand paperwork.

But the real treasure may not be the portal, the boss fight, or the sheer joy of watching Sanctuary’s most suspicious cattle finally drop the act. It is The Cow King’s Crown, a Mythic-style joke item that looks like Blizzard took Diablo 4’s most mocked affix design and milked it until it screamed.

And honestly? Good. This is exactly the kind of dumb genius Diablo needs more often.

The Cow King Has Entered the Loot Table

According to Icy Veins’ report on the Secret Cow Level discovery, players can encounter the Cow King inside the newly unlocked bovine realm, where he drops Ancestral Mythic gear, including The Cow King’s Crown.

PC Gamer also notes that players were already theorizing about the crown during the final stretch of the hunt, which is wonderfully appropriate. Diablo players did not just want to find the cows. They wanted the cows to have a loot economy.

They got one. And it is ridiculous.

Damage on Tuesdays, But Make It Moo

The best part of The Cow King’s Crown is that it appears to parody Diablo 4’s infamous early item affix problem: bonuses that felt oddly specific, weirdly conditional, and sometimes closer to cursed legal clauses than exciting loot.

Reports from MeinMMO’s Cow Level breakdown describe the crown’s day-based joke effects, including “Moo-Monday” and a gloriously deranged Tuesday effect involving bad luck, distance, hooves, and the kind of sentence that feels like it was written during a fever dream in Kyovashad.

Windows Central similarly describes the item as an “udderly useless” Mythic Unique with silly buffs depending on the day of the week. Which is not a criticism. That is the entire point.

Blizzard Laughing at Itself Is a Good Sign

The reason this works is simple: Diablo 4 has been through the itemization wars. Players remember the era of overly narrow bonuses, dead stats, and legendary gear that read like tax law for barbarians.

The Cow King’s Crown turns that frustration into a joke. It is not trying to be the next broken meta helmet. It is a wink, a punchline, and a bovine-shaped apology letter wrapped in Mythic packaging.

That matters because Diablo can be grim without being joyless. Diablo 4 spends plenty of time drowning players in rot, blood, betrayal, and angry geometry. A stupid crown from a secret cow boss gives the game permission to be weird again.

The Best Loot Is Sometimes Completely Useless

Not every item needs to define the meta. Some items exist because they make players laugh, screenshot, share, and immediately ask, “Wait, is this real?”

The Cow King’s Crown does exactly that.

After all the serious debate around Lord of Hatred, loot filters, set bonuses, boss farming, and whether Diablo 4’s endgame is brilliant or cursed, this is refreshingly simple.

There is a secret cow boss. He drops a deeply stupid crown. The crown makes fun of Diablo 4’s own past.

Sanctuary may be doomed, but at least the cows have jokes.