By complicated, we mean they love it when it gives them exactly what they want, and accuse it of demonic crimes when it does not.
Normal ARPG behavior.
But a new Diablo 4 forum thread has pushed the conversation into sharper territory. The question being asked is simple:
When players say “weighted RNG,” are they really just talking about odds manipulation?
And once you phrase it that way, the whole loot system suddenly sounds less like neutral math and more like a goblin casino with better lighting.
Weighted RNG Sounds Harmless Until It Does Not
“Weighted RNG” is a normal game design term.
It means some outcomes are more likely than others. That is not automatically evil. ARPGs have used weighted drops forever, because pure flat randomness would be absolute chaos.
If every affix, item type, rarity, and reward had the exact same odds in every situation, loot would become a nonsense storm of junk, jackpots, and balance nightmares.
Weighting helps control progression.
That part is real.
But players are not really arguing about whether weighting exists. They are arguing about whether Diablo 4’s weighting feels fair, transparent, and fun.
That is a much more dangerous question.
Players Do Not Trust The Invisible Math
The thread gets spicy because some players believe certain outcomes feel too heavily weighted against them.
One player points to repeated unwanted results from transfiguration. Others talk about how it can feel like the game knows exactly what they want and quietly lowers the chance of giving it to them.
Is that proven?
No.
Is that how players feel after thousands of rerolls, failed drops, bad affixes, and “almost perfect” items turning into emotional wreckage?
Absolutely.
And in loot games, perception matters almost as much as math.
If players believe the system is fighting them, the numbers can be technically correct and still feel terrible.
Fair RNG And Fun RNG Are Not The Same Thing
One of the better counterarguments in the thread is that players are famously bad at understanding probability.
That is also true.
People remember bad streaks harder than good streaks. They ignore perfect drops for builds they are not playing. They call 80% success “rigged” when it fails three times in a row, even though streaks are exactly what probability loves doing to fragile human brains.
So yes, some RNG complaints come from misunderstanding randomness.
But that does not erase the design issue.
Diablo 4 is not a spreadsheet played by robots. It is a loot game played by tired people who want progress to feel possible, even when it is rare.
If the system is mathematically defensible but emotionally exhausting, players will still walk away.
The Real Problem Is Trust
The phrase “odds manipulation” hits hard because it changes the emotional framing.
“Weighted RNG” sounds technical.
“Odds manipulation” sounds suspicious.
Mechanically, the two may describe similar things. Emotionally, they are miles apart.
That is why Blizzard has to be careful with loot systems that feel too hidden, too punishing, or too dependent on expensive reroll chains.
Players do not need every exact drop rate carved into a wall.
But they do need to feel that the game is respecting their time, not quietly stretching the chase to keep engagement metrics fed.
Once players start believing the loot system is designed mainly to delay them, every bad roll becomes evidence.
Diablo 4 Needs Better Loot Confidence
This debate is not really about removing weighted RNG.
That would be silly. Diablo 4 needs structured loot. It needs rare items. It needs chase goals. It needs some rewards to feel special instead of dropping like expired coupons.
The real question is whether the weighting creates satisfying progression or just slow frustration.
Rare loot should make players say, “One more run.”
Bad weighting makes them say, “This system hates me.”
That is the line Diablo 4 has to walk.
If Blizzard wants players to trust the loot chase, the game needs clearer reward paths, less hidden-feeling frustration, and fewer moments where players wonder whether RNG is random, weighted, manipulated, or simply possessed.
Because Diablo players can handle bad luck.
What they hate is feeling played.
For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.





















