Unfortunately, for some players, that cost may include looking like a cursed wax statue under bad tavern lighting.
Blizzard’s Warlock class preview presents Diablo Immortal’s newest class as a demon-summoning, Hellfire-throwing, portal-ripping menace. The Warlock joins the game as its tenth class as part of the Bloodied Jewel / Patch 5.0 update, bringing Soulgorger summons, demonic portals, Warlock legendary items, and enough forbidden magic to make every sensible mage fake a stomachache and leave.
That is the fantasy.
The bug report fantasy is slightly different:
“Why is my face shiny?”
Players Are Reporting Warlock Face And Hair Issues
A new Diablo Immortal bug report claims the Warlock’s face and hair materials appear broken after the class release.
The player describes blurry facial features, overly shiny skin, less defined eyes, nose, and mouth compared with other classes, glossy top hair, and shaved-side hairstyles that appear to be missing proper texture or material detail.
That is not exactly the kind of dark transformation players were expecting.
Summoning demons? Yes.
Accidentally becoming polished furniture? Less ideal.
New Class Launches Live And Die On Presentation
This is not the most catastrophic bug in Diablo history.
No one is saying Warlock is unplayable because the cheekbones look haunted by rendering issues.
But visuals matter, especially when a new class launches.
A new class is not just numbers and skills. It is identity. It is fantasy. It is the first moment players look at the character and think: “Yes, this is my new bad decision.”
If the face looks blurry, the hair looks wrong, or the skin reflects light like a demonically moisturized mannequin, that fantasy takes a hit.
The Warlock Is Supposed To Look Cursed, Not Unfinished
The funny part is that Warlock is the one class where “looks cursed” should actually be a compliment.
The whole pitch is forbidden demonology. Vizjerei shame. Dark pacts. Soulgorger companions. Hellfire. Sacrificial power. A character who has clearly read the wrong book and decided the consequences were probably negotiable.
Warlock should look dangerous.
It should look corrupted.
It should look like someone who knows several demon names and none of them are safe for polite company.
But there is a difference between intentional corruption and texture weirdness.
One is gothic flavor.
The other is “please check the shader.”
Cosmetic Bugs Hit Harder In Diablo Immortal
Visual bugs also sting differently in Diablo Immortal because cosmetics are such a visible part of the game.
Players spend time, money, and identity on how their characters look. New classes need to support that fantasy cleanly, especially when players are creating fresh characters or switching over to test the new class.
If Warlock’s face and hair materials are bugged for some players, it becomes more than a tiny art issue.
It becomes a bad first impression.
And first impressions matter when you are trying to convince players that demonology is cooler than whatever class they have already spent months building.
A Small Bug, But A Very Visible One
The good news is that this sounds like the kind of issue Blizzard can investigate and patch if it is reproducible.
The player even frames it clearly as a possible texture, material, or shader issue, not just a complaint that the Warlock has a different art style.
That kind of bug report is useful.
It points to the problem, compares it with other classes, describes the affected areas, and asks whether it is known.
Very civilized.
Almost suspiciously civilized for a Diablo forum.
Let The Warlock Be Horrifying For The Right Reasons
Diablo Immortal’s Warlock has a strong fantasy.
Demons. Portals. Blood magic. Forbidden knowledge. The whole “what if the bad idea was actually the class fantasy?” package.
That deserves sharp presentation.
If players want their Warlock to look horrifying, it should be because the character has made several morally catastrophic decisions involving Hell.
Not because the hair texture gave up.
Warlock can be shiny in terms of hype.
The forehead does not need to join in.
For more Diablo coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo Immortal and Diablo 4.






















