Sunday, 19 April 2026

Diablo Immortal Players Say Battlegrounds Were Super Laggy

 


Diablo Immortal players are complaining about another rough night in Battlegrounds, and this one sounds less like normal PvP salt and more like the servers briefly forgetting what a fight is. A fresh bug report says Battlegrounds were “super laggy” on April 19, with heavy stuttering, delayed reactions, and moments where attacks appeared to land while everyone’s health bars stayed full for five to ten seconds. That is not just annoying. That is the kind of lag that makes a match feel fake.

The report comes from a fresh thread on the official Diablo Immortal bug report forum, where a PC player says all six Battleground matches they played that night were unusually laggy. In a follow-up post, the same player says there were moments where six or seven players were visibly dashing around and attacking, but nobody’s HP moved for several seconds. According to that report, the desync was bad enough that idol progress kept moving in situations where players probably should have died much earlier.

That is not ordinary Battleground frustration

Anyone who has spent time around Diablo Immortal PvP knows players can blame lag for just about anything, usually five seconds after getting deleted by a whale. But this report has a more specific smell to it. It is not just “I lost and therefore the servers are cursed.” It is “the combat state looked visibly wrong, attacks seemed to connect, and the match logic stopped lining up with what was on screen.” That is a much uglier category of complaint.

And it matters because Battlegrounds already live on a fragile little edge where fairness is debated constantly. The second server behavior starts looking unreliable on top of the usual class balance and matchmaking arguments, the mode goes from frustrating to clownish very quickly. If players cannot trust whether hits are registering in real time, then the whole PvP experience starts feeling like an expensive argument being held underwater.

The timing is bad because Blizzard just tried to refresh Battlegrounds

This also lands awkwardly because we recently covered how Blizzard rolled out a much bigger Battlegrounds refresh to calm some of the long-running PvP complaints. That update was supposed to make the mode feel more stable, more readable, and less miserable. A fresh “Battlegrounds are super laggy tonight” report does not automatically mean the refresh failed. But it absolutely undercuts the mood around it.

It also fits a broader recent pattern where Diablo Immortal keeps stumbling into stories about systems not behaving the way players expect. We have already covered how players said 10 Legendary Crests vanished with no refund mail and how a legendary gem reportedly disappeared after a Rift. Different systems, same broad issue: the game keeps producing moments where trust takes a hit.

Fresh report, small thread, ugly symptom

To be fair, this is still one fresh public report with limited follow-up, not proof that every Battleground in every region turned into slideshow PvP overnight. Nobody should oversell it. But the symptom is bad enough to matter. When players describe a fight where attacks are flying, movement is happening, and health bars simply refuse to update for several seconds, that is not normal latency grumbling. That is the kind of thing that makes a competitive mode look broken in the most visible possible way.

At this point, Diablo Immortal does not just need Battlegrounds to be balanced. It needs them to feel like the server and the screen are participating in the same match.

Diablo 4 Switch Rating Rumor Returns With Lord of Hatred

 

For once, Diablo 4’s latest talking point is not a missing reward, a haunted menu, or a boss chest full of disappointment. This one is a platform rumor, and it has a little more meat on it than the usual wishful thinking. Multiple gaming outlets have reported that Diablo 4: Lord of Hatred has surfaced on Indonesia’s game rating system for Nintendo Switch, which is exactly the kind of thing that gets handheld Diablo fans sitting up fast. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

The important catch is the obvious one: Blizzard has not officially announced Diablo 4 for Switch or Switch 2. Right now, the real story is the rating itself and what it might mean. GamesRadar’s report on the Indonesian rating says the listing is specifically tied to Lord of Hatred, Diablo 4’s upcoming expansion, while Nintendo Life’s coverage notes that the listing has kicked the old Switch 2 rumor back into motion. That does not equal confirmation. But it is a lot more interesting than some random insider whisper on social media. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

Why people are taking this one seriously

There are two reasons this rumor has legs. First, ratings boards do leak real releases often enough that people pay attention when they show up. Second, Diablo already has history on Nintendo hardware. Diablo 3 made the jump to Switch years ago, and Blizzard clearly does not treat Nintendo platforms as off-limits for the franchise. So when a rating appears for Lord of Hatred, people are naturally reading it as a possible sign that Blizzard wants Diablo 4 on handheld hardware too. That is still an inference, but it is a grounded one. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}

The detail making this slightly messier is that some reports say the Indonesian listing points to Switch, while the wider conversation around it is really about Switch 2. Nintendo Life specifically frames it in the context of Switch 2 discussion, and other coverage has done the same. So the rumor currently lives in that awkward zone where the rating is real enough to discuss, but the exact hardware target still looks blurry. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}

If it happens, Blizzard would not be short on reasons

There is also a very practical argument for why this rumor keeps sounding plausible. Blizzard is about to push Lord of Hatred as a big new Diablo 4 beat, and a platform expansion would be one of the cleanest ways to make that expansion feel even bigger. A handheld Diablo 4 pitch is easy to understand, easy to market, and dangerously good at separating ARPG fans from their free time. That is not proof. It is just the kind of business logic that makes the rumor feel annoyingly believable.

And honestly, if Blizzard is looking for a cleaner headline than Ashava caches giving no loot or monsters allegedly becoming unkillable, “Diablo 4 might be heading to Nintendo hardware” is a much nicer story to have in circulation.

Right now, it is a rating, not a reveal

That is the line worth holding. The Indonesian rating report is real enough to make this a legitimate rumor story. But until Blizzard says something publicly, it stays exactly that: a rumor story. No port has been confirmed, no release date has been announced, and nobody should write the Nintendo eShop page in ink just yet. Still, as Diablo rumors go, this one at least has an actual paper trail instead of just someone’s cousin’s favorite leaker.

Diablo 4 Players Say Some Monsters Are Literally Not Killable

 

Diablo 4 has had its share of annoying bugs lately, but this one cuts right past irritation and into full gameplay paralysis. A fresh player report on Blizzard’s PC bug board used the bluntest possible headline: “I cannot commence because Monsters are actually not killable.” That is not a balance complaint. That is not a loot gripe. That is the game allegedly putting enemies on the field and then forgetting to let players finish the job.

The original thread on the official Diablo IV PC bug report forum was posted on April 19, 2026, but it was also quickly marked as deleted by author. That means the public evidence is thin, and nobody should pretend Blizzard has confirmed a broad new unkillable-monster plague. But the topic title is still visible in Blizzard’s latest PC bug listings, which is enough to make it a live story worth watching rather than some made-up ghost report.

Even one report like this gets attention fast

There is a reason a thread title like that hits harder than a lot of other bug posts. Diablo can survive ugly UI. It can survive busted wardrobe menus. It can even survive the occasional loot container deciding to become decorative. Combat is different. The second players start feeling like enemies cannot be killed properly, everything else in the game becomes secondary because the basic contract stops working.

That is also why this story still has value even with the deleted thread caveat. The public details are limited, yes. But “monsters are actually not killable” is not some fuzzy theorycrafting argument over damage math. It is a direct, ugly gameplay failure if true, and those are the kinds of reports players instantly understand.

Diablo 4 has already trained players to expect friction

The timing does not help. We recently covered how players said Ashava’s world boss cache gave no loot, how Season 12 reward complaints were still hitting Bloodied boss loot, and how Flay was reportedly double-casting with WASD input. Different bug families, same overall problem: Diablo 4 keeps producing little moments where players stop trusting whether the game will behave normally from one system to the next.

That broader mood matters because it changes how people read fresh reports. In a cleaner week, a deleted one-post thread might just vanish into the forum swamp. In Diablo 4 right now, even a half-glimpsed combat bug can catch attention because players are already primed to believe the game is capable of something this dumb.

Right now, this one is real but still thin

To be fair, this is not a slam-dunk “major issue confirmed” story. The thread is gone, the author pulled it, and there are no public replies expanding on what zone, quest, or enemy type triggered the complaint. That uncertainty should stay in the article because it matters. But the topic is real, fresh, and visible in Blizzard’s current bug index, which makes it fair game as a watchlist story rather than a fully proven outbreak.

At this point, Diablo 4 does not just need fewer bugs. It needs fewer moments where even the basic act of killing monsters starts sounding negotiable.

Diablo 4 Players Say Ashava’s World Boss Cache Gave No Loot

 

Diablo 4 has another reward complaint on the table, and this one hits one of the game’s most visible public events. A fresh player report says Ashava’s world boss cache gave no loot at all, which is exactly the kind of sentence that can turn a routine boss kill into a giant waste of time. World bosses are supposed to feel like a quick burst of chaos followed by a neat little payout. Getting the chaos without the payout is a much uglier deal.

The current complaint comes from a fresh thread on the official Diablo IV PC bug report forum, where the player says Ashava’s cache did not give them any loot after the kill. The thread showed up in Blizzard’s latest Diablo IV PC bug listings on April 19, which makes it current, visible, and very easy for annoyed players to latch onto.

This is not a glamorous bug, but it lands hard

There is a reason world boss reward issues always feel worse than they probably look on paper. These fights are not just random dungeon trash with a bad mood. Players show up on a timer, burn the boss down with a crowd, and expect the reward loop to be clean. If the cache opens and hands back nothing, the whole experience suddenly feels like it was built to waste your schedule instead of reward it.

And yes, some of that sting is because this is Ashava. World boss kills are big, noisy, public little rituals. They are not supposed to end with a player standing there wondering whether the cache was empty, broken, or swallowed by some invisible loot gremlin.

Ashava cache complaints already have history

What makes this fresh report more interesting is that it is not arriving in a vacuum. Diablo IV’s forums already have older Ashava and world boss cache complaints stretching back to 2023, including reports that Ashava did not drop the cache properly and threads about weekly world boss loot caches failing to appear. That does not prove the new report is the same bug wearing a dusty old mask. But it does mean players have seen this category before, which makes a fresh Ashava complaint feel a lot less isolated and a lot more annoying.

We recently covered how players said Bloodied boss rewards were still going missing in Season 12 and how Band of First Breath was reportedly dropping like a cursed object. This new Ashava report is different, but it fits the same broad pattern: when Diablo 4 touches loot right now, players are not exactly giving it the benefit of the doubt.

Fresh report, small thread, old frustration

To be fair, this is still just one fresh public complaint, not proof that Ashava is broadly eating everyone’s rewards today. Nobody should oversell it. But it is a clean and very understandable story, and those are often the ones that travel fastest. Kill world boss. Open cache. Get nothing. There is no complicated theorycrafting required there.

At this point, Diablo 4 does not just need loot to drop. It needs players to stop feeling like every reward container in the game has a non-zero chance of being mostly decorative.

Diablo Immortal Players Say 10 Legendary Crests Vanished

 

Diablo Immortal has another one of those bugs that instantly makes people suspicious, because it hits the exact place where progression, value, and player trust all overlap. A fresh report says 10 Legendary Crests were lost and never returned through in-game mail, which is normally the fallback players expect when an Elder Rift entry goes sideways. If that safety net fails too, the whole thing stops feeling like a small hiccup and starts feeling expensive. (official Diablo Immortal bug report thread)

The new complaint appeared on Blizzard’s latest Diablo Immortal bug listings on April 19, 2026, with a player on Android saying they lost all 10 crests and never received the expected refund in mail. The thread is still small, and one reply points out that crest returns can sometimes take a while rather than showing up instantly. That matters, because it means this story is not “Blizzard confirmed players are permanently out 10 Legendary Crests.” It is “a fresh live report says the crests vanished and the expected recovery did not happen right away,” which is still a very bad sentence for a live-service game to wear. (thread here)

This bug category already has baggage

What gives this story real weight is that crest-loss complaints are not exactly new folklore in Diablo Immortal. Older Blizzard forum threads show similar reports from previous patches and crashes, including players saying Legendary Crests disappeared during Elder Rift issues and crests were lost from Elder Rift entries without immediate return. In some older cases, players later reported the crests did come back by mail. In others, the tone was a lot less comforting. That does not prove this new report is the same bug. It does show why players react badly the second “missing crests” appears in a thread title.

And honestly, it makes sense. Legendary Crests are not some throwaway resource players forget about ten minutes later. They are a big deal, whether someone earned them slowly, saved them carefully, or paid for them. That means even a delay in the refund flow feels awful, because the player experience is still the same in the moment: crest gone, reward gone, mailbox empty, blood pressure rising.

Diablo Immortal keeps coming back to reward-trust problems

This also lands in a game that has already been collecting too many stories about rewards and progression systems behaving badly. We recently covered how a legendary gem reportedly vanished after a Rift, how a Leviathan Surge upgrade allegedly consumed 9,000 sigils and gave nothing back, and how Survivor’s Bane rewards were reportedly claimable more than once. Different symptoms, same broad problem: Diablo Immortal keeps drifting into stories where players are not sure the reward systems can be trusted to behave normally.

Fresh report, small thread, very sensitive issue

To be fair, nobody should oversell this. Right now, this is still one fresh public report with limited follow-up, and the most grounded reading is that the player says the crests were lost and the mail refund had not arrived by the time they posted. But that is already enough for a real story, because this is one of those bug categories where even a single live complaint has weight. When a game tied this closely to crests, gems, and monetized progression starts eating premium-adjacent items, people notice immediately.

At this point, Diablo Immortal does not just need its Elder Rift systems to work. It needs players to stop feeling like every time they slot valuable crests, they are handing their account over to a haunted vending machine.

Friday, 17 April 2026

Diablo Immortal Players Say Gem Upgrade Numbers Look Wrong

 



Diablo Immortal has another gem-related complaint on the table, and this one lands in exactly the sort of menu where players really do not want ambiguity. A fresh bug report says either the gem description or the progressive upgrade preview is showing the wrong numbers for a legendary gem upgrade. Which means one of two things is happening: either the text is lying, or the upgrade screen is. Neither option is exactly comforting when gems sit so close to power, progression, and wallet pain.

The report appears in Blizzard’s latest Diablo Immortal bug listings under the title “Either gem description or progressive upgrade preview has wrong numbers”, active on April 16, 2026. The public listing is small, but the premise is nasty enough on its own. If the description for a gem says one thing and the progressive upgrade interface says another, players are left guessing which number is actually real before they commit resources. In a game built around incremental upgrading, that is not a small trust issue.

When the UI argues with itself, players stop trusting both sides

This is the kind of bug that can look boring from a distance and feel awful the second it touches your account. Plenty of systems in Diablo Immortal are already fiddly enough without the menus starting an internal argument over what your upgrade is actually going to do. If one screen shows a stat increase and another suggests a different result, the player is stuck in the middle trying to decide whether the problem is bad wording, bad preview math, or a genuinely broken upgrade path.

And yes, players will absolutely care about that more than Blizzard would probably like. Gem upgrades are not just cosmetic noise. They are one of the game’s core progression systems, and they are tangled up with time, grind, and in plenty of cases real spending. The second the UI looks unreliable there, the whole thing starts smelling expensive in the worst possible way.

Diablo Immortal keeps coming back to the same cursed room

This is also not happening in a vacuum. We recently covered how players reported a legendary gem disappearing after a Rift, how a Leviathan Surge upgrade allegedly consumed 9,000 sigils and gave nothing back, and how Survivor’s Bane rewards were reportedly showing up more than once. Different bug shapes, same broad result: systems tied to rewards and progression keep looking shakier than they should.

That matters because once players start seeing a pattern, even a smaller UI-side report gets more attention than it normally would. In another game, mismatched preview numbers might be a footnote. In Diablo Immortal, it lands in a community already primed to side-eye anything involving gems, rewards, or upgrade menus.

Fresh report, small thread, bad category

To be fair, this is not proof of some giant gem-system collapse. The public report is still small, and Blizzard’s forum listing does not by itself show a huge wave of confirmations. Nobody should pretend otherwise. But this is still a very live and very sensitive category of bug. If players cannot trust the number shown on a gem description or the upgrade preview, they are not just dealing with bad UI. They are dealing with uncertainty right at the point where the game asks them to spend scarce resources.

At this point, Diablo Immortal does not just need its gem systems to work. It needs the numbers on screen to stop looking like they are negotiating with each other.

Diablo Immortal Players Say Survivor’s Bane Rewards Can Be Claimed Multiple Times, and That Is Not the Kind of Surprise Blizzard Wants

 



Diablo Immortal may have another reward problem brewing, and this one comes with a slightly different flavor of danger. Instead of rewards disappearing, a fresh player report says some Survivor’s Bane rewards can apparently be claimed multiple times. According to the post, that includes legendaries, dust, and scraps, with some rewards reappearing after others are claimed. That is the sort of bug that goes from “huh, weird” to “this could get messy fast” in about five seconds. 

The report comes from a new thread on the official Diablo Immortal bug report forum, posted on April 17, 2026. The player says they noticed that after claiming certain Survivor’s Bane rewards, others appeared again and could be taken more than once. They also admit they claimed some of them before realizing something was wrong, which is exactly how these things usually go. Nobody loads into a live-service game expecting to become an accidental test case for duplicated loot. 

This is the fun kind of bug right up until it is not

On the surface, sure, this sounds better than rewards vanishing into the void. Players are obviously going to find a duplicate-claim bug a lot more entertaining than a missing-reward bug. But Blizzard tends to treat both categories as radioactive for the same reason: if reward systems start behaving unpredictably, the whole economy around progression, grinding, and fairness starts wobbling.

That is what gives this story some weight even though the public thread is still tiny. Survivor’s Bane is not supposed to be a slot machine that spits out extra prizes because the menu got confused. If rewards are really reappearing after being claimed, then the issue is not just funny. It is the kind of thing that can turn into rollback anxiety, player paranoia, and the usual ugly argument over whether early claimers “exploited” it or just clicked what the game put in front of them. 

Diablo Immortal already has enough reward baggage

The timing also does this bug no favors. We recently covered how players reported a legendary gem disappearing after a Rift, and how a Leviathan Surge upgrade allegedly consumed 9,000 sigils and gave nothing back. Different bug category, same broader problem: Diablo Immortal keeps ending up in stories where rewards and progression systems look shakier than they should.

That is why even a one-post thread like this matters. In a calmer game week, it might just be a strange footnote. In Diablo Immortal, it lands in a live environment where players are already primed to assume that if something touches loot, gems, or claimable rewards, there is a decent chance it is about to get weird. 

Fresh report, small thread, potentially ugly category

To be clear, this is still just one fresh public report, not proof that Survivor’s Bane has turned into a free-legendaries parade for half the player base. Nobody should oversell it. But the category is bad enough on its own. When missing rewards break, players get angry. When duplicate rewards show up, players get excited for a moment and then start worrying about what Blizzard will do next. Neither outcome is especially healthy.

At this point, Diablo Immortal does not just need its rewards to work. It needs them to fail in fewer creative directions.

Diablo Immortal Players Say a Legendary Gem Vanished After a Rift, and That Is Exactly the Kind of Bug That Starts Fights Fast

 

Diablo Immortal has another progression-flavored headache on its hands, and this one hits a nerve immediately. A fresh player report says a legendary gem dropped at the end of an Elder Rift, appeared as earned, and then simply never made it into the player’s inventory. No mail recovery. No obvious fallback. Just the sort of missing reward story that makes people start checking every menu like they are trying to catch a ghost in the act.

The current complaint comes from a new thread on the official Diablo Immortal bug report forum, where one iPad Pro player says they completed a rift, saw a Leviathan gem awarded, then found it missing after leaving the run. According to the report, the item also never arrived through in-game mail, which matters because mail is usually the emergency parachute for loot problems like this. If that backup did not trigger either, the whole thing starts feeling a lot less like visual confusion and a lot more like a real reward failure.

This is the sort of bug players take personally

There are plenty of Diablo bugs people can laugh off. A weird animation. A broken tooltip. A menu acting drunk for ten seconds. Missing progression items are different. They always land harder, because they hit the ugly little intersection where time, luck, and sometimes real money all live in the same room.

That is what gives this story teeth. A legendary gem is not just some random scrap item players forget five minutes later. It is exactly the kind of reward that people remember, track, and absolutely do not want disappearing into thin air after a run that already ate their time.

It also fits an uncomfortable Diablo Immortal pattern

The bigger issue is not just one gem report. It is the pattern Diablo Immortal keeps building whenever progression or monetized-adjacent systems start acting unreliable. We recently covered how players said a Leviathan Surge upgrade consumed 9,000 sigils and gave nothing back, and how some shop bundles reportedly stopped working after the latest patch. Those are different problems, but they all feed the same mood: when Diablo Immortal touches rewards, progression, or paid systems, players are getting less willing to trust the machine.

There is older baggage here too

That distrust does not come out of nowhere. The Blizzard forums have seen older reports in the same family, including previous claims that high-value rewards dropped or were earned but never properly appeared in inventory. That does not prove every new report is part of one giant shared bug. It does mean players have seen this kind of story before, which is why even a single new gem-loss complaint can get people tense very quickly.

Fresh report, small thread, very bad category

To be fair, this is still one fresh public bug report, not proof of a massive ongoing inventory meltdown. Nobody should oversell that. But the category matters. Missing legendary rewards are one of those bugs that always look worse than the thread size, because players instantly understand the pain point. Kill things, finish run, see prize, prize disappears. That is a remarkably efficient way to make people angry.

At this point, Diablo Immortal does not just need more rewards. It needs players to feel confident that when a legendary gem shows up, it will still exist ten seconds later.

Diablo 4 Players Say Season 12 Rewards Are Still Going Missing, and the Latest Complaint Hits Bloodied Boss Loot

 

Another fresh reward complaint has hit the forums, which is not exactly the kind of sentence Diablo 4 wants attached to Season 12 at this point. This time the issue is simple, ugly, and very easy to understand: a player says they killed a Bloodied Greater Lair Boss on Torment IV and did not get the reward they were supposed to get. No confusing tooltip. No weird edge-case interaction. Just kill boss, receive disappointment. ([us.forums.blizzard.com](https://us.forums.blizzard.com/en/d4/t/season-12-reward-bug/245250?utm_source=chatgpt.com))

The fresh report comes from a new thread on the official Diablo IV PC bug report forum, posted on April 17, 2026. The player says they defeated a Bloodied Greater Lair Boss in Season 12 on Torment IV and simply did not receive the rewards. That thread is now sitting alongside another live topic in Blizzard’s latest PC bug listings called “Season Journey Rewards Bugged”, which is not new by itself but does help show that reward friction is still hanging around the seasonal experience like a bad smell. ([us.forums.blizzard.com](https://us.forums.blizzard.com/en/d4/c/bug-report/7?utm_source=chatgpt.com))

This is not the same bug, but it rhymes with all the others

That distinction matters. The older Season Journey Rewards Bugged thread is more about a fake “reward available” prompt that will not go away. The new Season 12 reward bug complaint is more direct: the player did the activity, killed the boss, and says the rewards never showed up. Different bug, same family, same growing suspicion that Season 12 is still a little too comfortable messing with player rewards. ([us.forums.blizzard.com](https://us.forums.blizzard.com/en/d4/t/season-journey-rewards-bugged/241982?utm_source=chatgpt.com))

And that is what makes this story useful even if the thread is still small. Diablo players can live with stingy drops. They can live with long grinds. What they do not love is uncertainty over whether a boss reward is actually going to pay out at all. That turns the whole progression loop from harsh-but-fair into “maybe the machine just eats this one.”

Season 12 has already trained players to be suspicious

The bigger problem is that Diablo 4 has already burned through a lot of reward trust this season. We recently covered how players were still getting fake “Season Rank Rewards Available” notices, and how Band of First Breath was reportedly dropping like a cursed object. Those are not the same issue. But they absolutely help set the mood around a fresh report like this. When rewards disappear in Diablo 4 right now, players are not shocked. They are annoyed in a very practiced way.

Fresh report, familiar anxiety

To be fair, this is still one fresh public report, not proof of a giant widespread meltdown. Nobody should oversell that. But it is live, current, and attached to one of the most sensitive parts of any ARPG: the moment when a boss dies and the game is supposed to hand something back. If players start feeling unsure about that exchange, everything else gets uglier fast.

At this point, Diablo 4 does not just need rewards to exist. It needs players to believe the rewards will still be there after they do the work.

Diablo 4 Players Say Band of First Breath Loot Is Still Broken

 

Diablo 4 has another loot bug on its hands, and this one is weird enough to feel almost personal. Players are once again reporting that Band of First Breath, the Spiritborn unique ring, does not always drop normally. Instead, it may fail to appear on the ground, show up only on the minimap, or get dumped into stash later as missed loot. That is not exactly the dramatic loot explosion players had in mind. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

The latest live report is a still-active thread on the official Diablo IV PC bug report forum, where players say the ring cannot drop properly and may be “falling through the world” before being sent to stash instead. The topic was still visible in Blizzard’s latest PC bug listings on April 16–17, 2026, which makes it current enough to matter and not just some dusty December ghost. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

This bug has been haunting the same item for months

What makes this one especially ugly is that it does not look new in the purest sense. The same item has been tied to similar complaints since at least December 2025, including reports that it would not appear normally on the floor, could not be picked up, or would only show up later in stash. Blizzard’s own Season 12 known bugs thread even includes a player note from March describing Band of First Breath as having “a strange way of generating.” That is a very diplomatic way to say your loot is acting haunted. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}

That longer history actually helps the story rather than hurting it. This is not just one player having a cursed afternoon. It looks more like one very specific unique item keeps misbehaving in a very specific way, across boss drops, obol gambling, and ordinary pickup flow. If a unique keeps refusing to arrive like a normal piece of loot, players are going to notice, especially when it is tied to a class item they may already be farming repeatedly. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}

Loot bugs land harder than they should, because they always do

There is also a reason this kind of bug annoys people more than some random UI nonsense. Loot is the heartbeat of Diablo. Players can tolerate grind. They can tolerate dry streaks. What they do not love is killing a boss, seeing evidence that an item exists somewhere in the universe, and then having to pray it turns up in stash like a late apology.

We have already covered how Nightmare Keys were sometimes failing to point players toward the right dungeon and how Flay was acting strangely with WASD input. Those were annoying. This is more primal. When loot itself starts behaving like an urban legend, Diablo 4 begins to feel less like an ARPG and more like an unreliable witness. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}

Fresh report, old smell

To be fair, this is not proof that every Band of First Breath drop is broken for everyone. But it is a fresh live report attached to an item that has already built a suspicious little trail behind it. That is enough to make it a real story, because the pattern matters almost as much as the bug itself. If the same unique keeps failing to materialize properly month after month, players stop treating it like bad luck and start treating it like one of the game’s weird little cursed objects. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}

At this point, Band of First Breath does not just need to drop. It needs to stop making an entrance like a magician who forgot the second half of the trick. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}

Thursday, 16 April 2026

Diablo Immortal Players Say Some Shop Bundles Broke After Patch

 


Diablo Immortal has wandered back into one of its favorite little disaster zones: the shop. Fresh player reports say that after the latest patch, some in-game bundles simply stopped working at checkout. The offer appears, the button responds, the game says “Processing please wait”, and then absolutely nothing useful happens. No purchase window. No bundle. No resolution. Just a live-service shrug in premium currency form. 

The clearest new complaint comes from a fresh thread on the official Diablo Immortal bug report forum, where one player says that after the patch they could no longer buy bundles like Login Boon and Gemseeker’s Chest. According to the report, other purchases such as Magnate’s Supplies still worked, which makes this look less like a total store outage and more like a selective shop failure tied to specific bundles. The player also says they tried multiple devices with the same result, which is never the kind of sentence you want attached to a monetized system.

Not every shop bug is the same bug, but players stop caring fast

That last part matters. Diablo Immortal players do not experience these problems as neat little categories. They just see another moment where money, rewards, or store items go sideways and the game starts looking like it cannot be trusted around transactions. That is why even a “specific bundles only” problem lands badly. Premium systems do not get much grace when they fail in public. 

And yes, this is also hitting a game that already has shop baggage. We recently covered how Diablo Immortal’s shop loading bug had been hanging around long enough to feel absurd, and how players were raising fresh progression alarms around Leviathan Surge. This new bundle issue is not the same story, and it should not be lazily mashed together with those. But it absolutely feeds the same mood: when the game touches transactions or progression, players are bracing for impact. 

There is also a bigger trust problem floating nearby

This is where the timing gets ugly. Just a day earlier, another Diablo Immortal forum post described a Battle.net bundle purchase that allegedly never delivered the promised Wayfarer bundles. Earlier in April, another player reported that a Rift Delver’s Hoard purchase was claimed in-game but never arrived. Different platforms, different details, same general smell. Players do not need every report to be identical before they start thinking the paid side of the game looks a little cursed. 

Fresh report, small thread, very familiar headache

To be clear, this is still a fresh bug thread, not proof that half the shop has exploded. Blizzard’s latest Diablo Immortal bug listings show the topic live today, and the current public evidence is still limited. But it is current, specific, and painfully easy to understand. A patch goes live, some bundles stop opening the payment flow, and players are left poking at a dead checkout prompt like villagers discovering a cursed relic. That is enough for a story, especially in a game where shop reliability is already on trial.

At this point, Diablo Immortal does not just need new content. It needs one quiet week where players are not wondering whether the game can safely handle a button tied to money.

Diablo 4 Console Players Say Bloodied Magic Gear Is Not Counting

 

Diablo 4 has another one of those seasonal bugs that somehow manages to be both specific and incredibly annoying. This time the complaint is coming from console players, who say the game is failing to recognize a full set of Bloodied Magic gear for a Season Journey objective. In plain English: players are putting on the right blue gear, checking every slot, stripping transmogs, re-equipping everything like maniacs, and the game still acts like they showed up half-dressed. 

The current report comes from a fresh thread on the official Diablo IV Console Bug Report forum, where one Xbox player says Rank 2 will not complete even after equipping all the required Bloodied Magic gear. According to the post, they had already completed later ranks, but could not claim the completion rewards because Rank 2 remained stuck. That is the sort of season-progression nonsense that turns a checklist into a hostage situation. 

Players are already poking at the possible cause

One reply in the same thread suggests the issue may be tied to Spiritborn, because the class does not use an off-hand in the same way other classes do. If that theory is right, then this may not be a random “gear not detected” bug at all. It may be a class-specific requirement check that was never built properly for one of the game’s weapon setups. That would be a very Diablo 4 way for a seasonal objective to break: not spectacularly, just stupidly. 

And that matters because Season Journey bugs hit differently from ordinary combat bugs. A weird skill interaction is annoying. A progression objective failing to count when you did the thing correctly is worse, because it makes players feel like they are arguing with a spreadsheet that hates them personally.

Season 12 keeps tripping over the basics

This also fits a broader Season 12 pattern that is starting to feel less like bad luck and more like a design curse. We recently covered how players were getting fake “Season Rank Rewards Available” notices, and how Nightmare Keys were sometimes activating without clearly pointing to the dungeon. Different systems, same result: players are doing what the game asks, and the game is still finding ways to make basic progression feel weirdly unreliable.

Fresh bug, small thread, very real frustration

To be clear, this is a fresh console-side report, not a massive confirmed meltdown. Blizzard’s latest Console Bug Report listings show the thread active on April 15, and the discussion is still small. That means nobody should oversell it. But the complaint is live, specific, and easy to understand, which is exactly why it has legs. Seasonal objectives are supposed to be clean little dopamine dispensers. When one gets stuck because the game apparently cannot identify a full outfit, it stops being cute very quickly. 

At this point, Diablo 4 does not just need fewer bugs. It needs fewer moments where players do the homework correctly and still get told they failed the class.

Diablo 4 Players Say Nightmare Keys Are Not Pointing to Dungeons

 

Diablo 4 has a new little quality-of-life gremlin on the loose, and this one is less dramatic than a crash but somehow still deeply annoying. Players are reporting that some Nightmare Keys activate normally, then fail to point them toward the dungeon at all. No useful map guidance. No obvious active marker. Just you, your key, and a brief moment of wondering whether the game has decided to become mysterious for no reason.

The complaint comes from a fresh post on the official Diablo IV PC bug report forum, where one player says this is happening with some keys “like every 5th key this season.” According to the report, the Nightmare Key activates, but the game does not point to the dungeon and does not clearly show which dungeon is currently active. That turns a basic loop into dumb guesswork, which is exactly the sort of friction Diablo 4 really does not need more of right now.

It is not a big disaster, but it is exactly the kind of bug people remember

This is the sort of issue that looks small in a patch note and feels bigger when it hits real play. Nightmare Dungeons are not some obscure side activity. They are a normal part of the grind, and that means players expect the whole process to be brain-dead simple: use key, get marker, go kill things. When one of those steps disappears, the game starts wasting time in the most pointless way possible.

And wasted time is the real villain here. Diablo players can tolerate cruel loot, long grinds, and the occasional humiliating death. What they do not love is having the game turn navigation into paperwork. It is the same reason smaller Season 12 issues keep sticking in people’s memory. We recently covered how Diablo 4 players were getting fake reward notifications and how Barbarian players found Flay acting strangely with WASD. Different bugs, same general feeling: the game keeps tripping over things that should just work.

A blinking icon should not feel like a luxury request

What makes this report a little more interesting is that the player is not only flagging the bug. They are also asking for a cleaner fallback, like a blinking icon on the active dungeon. And honestly, that sounds less like a fancy feature request and more like common sense. If the game is going to build so much endgame flow around repeated key usage, it should be crystal clear which dungeon you have actually opened.

That is especially true in a season where players are already watching for systems that feel unreliable. A missing dungeon pointer is not the end of Sanctuary. But it is one more little cut, and Diablo 4 has collected enough of those lately that even the small ones stop feeling small.

Right now, it looks live and unresolved

As of now, the original Nightmare Key bug thread is still live, and the topic is also visible in Blizzard’s latest Diablo IV PC bug listings. That does not automatically mean a huge wave of players is hitting it, and nobody should oversell it. But it is fresh, it is real, and it lands in exactly the kind of routine gameplay loop where even one broken step gets old fast.

Diablo 4 can survive a lot. It probably should not be making players play detective just to figure out which dungeon they opened five seconds ago.

Diablo 4 Players Say Flay Can Double-Cast With WASD

 

Diablo 4 players have found another one of those bugs that sounds small until you imagine it happening inside an actual build. This time the complaint is about Flay, with players saying the skill can sometimes fire twice from a single input when using WASD movement. That is not just a weird animation hiccup. If true, it means a core attack is behaving inconsistently depending on how the player is moving, which is exactly the kind of thing that makes combat feel slippery in all the wrong ways.

The current report sits in a still-visible thread on the official Diablo IV PC bug report forum, where the original poster says Flay will occasionally attack twice off one click while using WASD movement and certain mouse positioning. They also note that Rend can show similar behavior, and that this is happening without the relevant “hit twice” temper being slotted. In other words, players are not describing a build doing what it is supposed to do. They are describing the game freelancing.

One extra swing sounds great right up until it is not

On paper, some people will look at this and say, “Well, free extra attack, what is the problem?” The problem is that bugs like this never stay cute for long. Once a skill starts duplicating inconsistently, you are suddenly in the murky swamp between broken damage, broken resource flow, and completely unreliable feel. A bug that helps one second can sabotage testing, build consistency, and player trust the next.

That is especially true for Barbarian players, because if there is one group in Diablo 4 that tends to notice when basic combat inputs start acting weird, it is the people counting every hit, stack, bleed tick, and timing window like their mortgage depends on it.

WASD is supposed to make combat cleaner, not stranger

Part of what makes this one interesting is the input angle. Diablo 4’s WASD movement is supposed to make the game feel tighter and more responsive for players who prefer direct control. If it is instead creating edge-case behavior where attacks can duplicate under certain input combinations, that is not some harmless little side effect. That is the sort of thing that makes players start wondering which parts of their build are real and which parts are held together by input spaghetti.

We have already covered how Diablo 4 players are dealing with another fake reward notification problem and how Mac players using CrossOver are getting a launch-to-nowhere experience. This Flay issue is a different beast, but it fits the same broader pattern: Season 12 keeps finding new little ways to make the game feel less dependable than it should.

The bigger problem is combat trust

That is what makes bugs like this more serious than they first appear. Diablo 4 can survive a messy tooltip. It can survive a dumb UI prompt. Combat bugs are trickier, because they attack the one thing the game really cannot afford to make slippery: whether your character is actually doing what you told it to do.

As of now, the original bug thread is still up and the topic is also visible in Blizzard’s latest PC bug listings. That does not prove some massive Barbarian crisis. But it does make this a fair live issue to watch, especially if more players start confirming the same behavior. Because once a basic attack starts feeling haunted, people tend to remember it.

Diablo Immortal Wizard Players Say the Class Is Breaking

 

Wizard players in Diablo Immortal are having one of those weeks where every new thread feels like a fresh little insult. First came the backlash over the Wizard mobility change tied to Terminus Facade. Now the mood has shifted from “this feels worse” to “is the class actually breaking in multiple places?” New forum posts are piling up around reduced Disintegrate range, broken essence interactions, and fresh complaints that some boss fights now feel flat-out miserable on Wizard. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

The sharpest new complaint comes from a fresh bug report on Blizzard’s Diablo Immortal forum, where a player says Disintegrate’s range feels massively reduced after recent changes. They specifically mention no longer being able to refract the beam properly on certain dungeon bosses because they have to stand too close, which in practice means getting punished harder and dying more often. That is not just a balance gripe. That is a class-feel problem, and players usually notice those faster than almost anything else. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

It is not just one thing anymore

That would already be enough for a decent frustration story, but Wizard players are not stopping there. Another new bug thread says the Mask of Many essence is not working properly, with one player reporting that the supposed instant full-charge behavior does not correctly apply to Meteor when paired with Binding Forces. Then a separate follow-up post, Wizard bug after essence change, claims the recent changes now stop Wizards from using Ice Crystal and Disintegrate properly against certain bosses, including Pit of Anguish’s last boss and ledge-style encounters. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}

That combination matters. One awkward change can be debated. A cluster of fresh complaints touching range, essence behavior, and encounter usability starts to look less like whining and more like a class going through a rough patch in public.

Wizard players are hearing the same bad song again

The wider context makes the reaction louder too. Blizzard’s own latest Diablo Immortal bug listings show both the Disintegrate and essence reports surfacing together on April 15, while the broader forum feed also shows the still-active discussion around Terminus Facade’s speed boost removal and another complaint that Binding Force Meteor now feels clunky and unusable. That is a lot of smoke around one class in a very short window. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}

It also lands in a game that was already fighting for patience. We have already covered how Diablo Immortal’s Battlegrounds refresh is trying to calm PvP nerves, and how players are raising fresh progression alarms over Leviathan Surge. Against that backdrop, Wizard players are not exactly in a forgiving mood.

Fun is still the first stat people notice

Maybe Blizzard sees some of this as tuning. Maybe some of it really is bug-related collateral damage. But from the player side, that distinction only goes so far. If your class suddenly has less range, worse flow, broken essence interactions, and more annoying boss encounters, the experience is simple: the class feels worse than it did a few days ago.

And that is the danger here. A live-service class does not need to be mathematically dead to start feeling dead. It just needs enough friction piled on fast enough that players stop trusting it. Right now, that looks uncomfortably close to where Wizard is headed. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}

Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Diablo 4 on macOS via CrossOver Still Looks Broken After Season 12, and That Is a Pretty Miserable Place to Be

 


Diablo 4 has plenty of problems this season, but Mac players using CrossOver are dealing with a much meaner one than bad loot luck or another annoying UI gremlin. For some of them, the game simply launches into nothing. Battle.net says it is running, Activity Monitor shows the process chewing on CPU, and the actual game window never appears. That is not a rough session. That is a digital séance.

The core complaint is laid out in a still-active post on the official Diablo IV bug report forum, where a player says the issue started right after the Season 12 update. According to that report, the exact same CrossOver version, macOS version, and bottle setup had worked before patch 2.6.0, then suddenly stopped producing a visible game window after the update.

When “Running” does not mean running

That detail matters, because this does not sound like a vague compatibility complaint from someone trying to make unsupported hardware do circus tricks. The whole point of the bug report is that the setup was working, then Season 12 landed, and Diablo 4 basically turned into a ghost process. You click play, Battle.net insists everything is fine, and your desktop sits there like it has never heard of Sanctuary.

The issue also does not look buried. Blizzard’s latest Diablo IV PC bug listings still show the CrossOver Mac thread active on April 14, which is usually a decent sign that the problem has not simply evaporated. Over on the CodeWeavers support forums, players have been describing the same basic behavior: Diablo 4 says it is starting, then fails to open properly after the new season update.

There is at least one ugly workaround, and it is not exactly elegant

One particularly telling sign that this is not just user error is that some CrossOver users are already experimenting with ugly workaround territory. On the CodeWeavers compatibility forum, one player says they only got Diablo 4 to launch again by moving to a newer macOS beta and using a preview CrossOver build. That is less “fix” and more “ritual sacrifice with extra steps.”

For Mac players, that matters because CrossOver is already the compromise solution. People using it know they are not in the golden path Blizzard supports first. But there is still a big difference between “unsupported edge case” and “the game worked yesterday and now it opens into the void.” Season updates are supposed to break builds in-game, not erase the game window from reality.

The unsupported crowd still notices when things get worse

This is also one of those stories Blizzard can easily ignore because it sits in a niche lane. Diablo 4 on macOS through CrossOver is not the main player base. Nobody is pretending otherwise. But niche problems still matter when they are directly tied to a major patch and show up across both the official bug forum and the CrossOver community.

And honestly, Diablo 4 does not need more stories where players press play and get some fresh new variation of nothing. It already has enough of those.

Diablo Immortal Players Say Leviathan Surge Just Ate 9,000 Sigils and Gave Nothing Back

 

Diablo Immortal has a special talent for making expensive progression feel like a magic trick gone wrong. The latest complaint is a nasty one: a player says Leviathan Surge consumed 9,000 sigils during an upgrade attempt and then failed to upgrade the gem at all. The sigils vanished. The upgrade did not happen. That is not a small annoyance. That is the sort of thing that makes people stare at the screen in silence for a full ten seconds before the swearing starts.

The report comes from a fresh post on the official Diablo Immortal bug report forum, where the player says they tried to upgrade a four-star Leviathan gem to five stars using 9,000 accumulated sigils, only for the game to take the currency and leave the gem unchanged. On its own, one report does not prove a widespread system meltdown. But in Diablo Immortal, when progression currency disappears into the void, people tend to assume the worst for a reason.

This is the kind of bug players do not shrug off

There are plenty of bugs players can laugh off. A weird animation. A menu hiccup. A bit of UI acting possessed. This is not one of those. Currency-linked upgrade systems sit way too close to time, grind, and in some cases real money for players to be casual about them. When something in that chain breaks, the mood turns ugly fast.

And Leviathan Surge was already carrying baggage. Players were recently arguing over its drop behavior in community discussion, with some questioning whether the experience actually matched expectations around the event. That means this new complaint lands in territory that was already a little radioactive before the 9,000-sigil horror story showed up.

Diablo Immortal keeps wandering back into the same swamp

That is the broader problem here. Diablo Immortal does not just get judged on isolated bugs anymore. It gets judged on pattern recognition. Players have seen too many stories where something tied to progression, rewards, or premium-adjacent systems feels off, unclear, or painfully slow to resolve.

We have already covered how the shop loading bug has overstayed its welcome and how Blizzard is trying a much bigger Battlegrounds refresh. Those are different stories. But they feed the same general mood around the game: players are still willing to log in, but they are much less willing to blindly trust systems that touch progression.

No fix yet, and that is where the tension starts

As of now, the original bug report thread is live, and there is no visible public fix attached to it yet. Maybe it is a one-off failure. Maybe it is something Blizzard can restore cleanly. But until that happens, this is exactly the kind of report that spreads because it hits a nerve players already have.

In a game like Diablo Immortal, people can tolerate grind. They can even tolerate greed, up to a point. What they do not tolerate well is the feeling that a hard-earned pile of upgrade currency can simply fall into a crack in the floor while the game shrugs and moves on.

Diablo Immortal Players Are Already Furious About a Wizard Mobility Change, and Honestly It Is Not Hard to See Why

 

For once, Diablo Immortal players are not mainly yelling about crashes, disappearing menus, or the shop falling through the floor. This time the heat is on class feel, and the target is Wizard. More specifically, players are arguing over the apparent removal of the speed boost tied to the Terminus Facade essence, and they are not reacting like this is some harmless little tuning pass.

The spark comes from a fresh thread on the official Diablo Immortal forums, where one player argues that removing the movement boost guts both the fun and the viability of the setup. A matching Reddit discussion is carrying the same mood: less speed, less flow, less reason to keep playing Wizard the same way.

Not every nerf is just numbers on a spreadsheet

That is the real hook here. Players can live with damage nerfs. They can even survive the usual live-service ritual where something fun quietly gets dragged into a back alley and rebalanced. What they do not take lightly is when a class suddenly feels worse to move, worse to route, and worse to enjoy moment to moment.

And that is what makes this more interesting than a simple balance footnote. If the speed boost really is being stripped out of the Terminus Facade setup, players are not just losing power. They are losing rhythm. In an action RPG, that matters a lot more than some developers seem to think. A build can survive lower numbers. It is much harder to survive feeling clunky.

Wizard players are hearing a familiar Blizzard sound

The tone of the backlash is also revealing. A lot of the frustration is not really about one essence in isolation. It is about the old Blizzard problem of taking a setup people actually enjoy and “fixing” it in a way that makes the game feel flatter. That does not always kill a class, but it can absolutely make people stop loving it.

It also lands at a time when Diablo Immortal has already been in one of those classic messy stretches where the conversation keeps drifting back to system friction and player trust. We recently covered how Blizzard is reshaping Battlegrounds with a much bigger PvP refresh, and how the shop loading bug has been hanging around far too long. Against that backdrop, even a class-mobility change starts feeling less like isolated tuning and more like another reason for players to stay annoyed.

Fun is the stat players notice first

Maybe Blizzard sees this as a reasonable correction. Maybe it is one. But players almost never experience these things as clean design philosophy. They experience them in the gut. If a build suddenly feels slower, stiffer, or more annoying to pilot, the spreadsheet explanation does not save it.

That is why this story has legs. It is not just about Wizard balance. It is about whether Diablo Immortal is once again shaving off the part of a class that made people actually want to log in. And in a game built on repetition, fun is not some bonus stat. Fun is the whole engine.

Right now, the argument is only getting louder

As of now, the forum thread is still live, the Reddit discussion is active, and there is no visible Blizzard response attached to the complaint yet. That does not automatically mean the sky is falling. It does mean Wizard players think something that felt good has been made worse, and they are making that point with the usual subtlety of a hammer through stained glass.

Diablo 4 Players Say the “Season Rank Rewards Available” Notice Is Back, and It Leads to Absolutely Nothing

Diablo 4 has found yet another way to irritate people without even doing the courtesy of crashing first. A fresh round of player complaints is centered on the game showing a “Season Rank Rewards Available” notice even when there is apparently nothing left to claim. It is a small bug on paper, but in practice it feels like the UI is trolling you.

The main complaint comes from an active thread on the official Diablo IV bug report forum, where a player says the notification keeps appearing despite the reward screen being empty. That may sound minor, but in a seasonal loot game, false reward prompts are the sort of thing that get under people’s skin fast. When the game tells you loot is waiting and then opens an empty cupboard, players tend to notice.

Same reward anxiety, slightly different costume

What makes this one worth watching is not just the message itself. It is the timing. Diablo 4 has already had a rough stretch with reward-related complaints, missing items, and systems that look shakier than they should. That is why even a UI-facing issue like this lands harder than it normally would.

We just covered how Diablo 4 players say missing loot cases are piling up again, and that broader atmosphere matters here. This new complaint is not the same bug, and it would be lazy to pretend it is. But it feeds the same ugly suspicion: that Diablo 4’s reward systems are still not communicating clearly, and maybe not behaving consistently either.

The problem is trust, not just annoyance

That is the real issue. Seasonal systems are supposed to be clean and satisfying. You level up, you unlock a reward, you claim it, and your monkey brain gets the good chemicals. Instead, some players are getting a phantom notification that leads nowhere. That may be “just UI,” but repeated fake prompts start to erode trust in the whole progression loop.

And that is where Diablo 4 keeps stepping on the same rake. Players can handle grind. They can handle stingy drops. What they do not love is uncertainty over whether the game actually understands its own reward state.

No visible fix yet

As of now, Blizzard does not appear to have posted a visible resolution in the original forum thread. That does not prove a widespread disaster, and nobody should oversell it. But it does make the issue fair game, because the report is live, recent, and sitting in a season where reward confidence already feels a little bruised.

At this point, Diablo 4 does not just need fewer bugs. It needs fewer moments where the game looks players in the eye and confidently announces a prize that does not exist.

Tuesday, 14 April 2026

Diablo Immortal’s In-Game Shop Hasn’t Worked for Some Players in Over a Month, and That Is a Very Blizzard Problem to Have

Diablo Immortal has spent the last stretch trying to keep players interested with events, rewards, and shiny little retention hooks. So there is something almost darkly funny about one of the game’s freshest complaints being this: some players say the in-game shop still doesn’t work at all, and for a few of them, it apparently has not worked for weeks. In a live-service game built to sell convenience, cosmetics, and battle pass upgrades, that is not just a bug. That is the cash register coughing blood.

The strongest thread right now is Blizzard’s official bug report post titled “The in-game Shop hasn’t worked for over a month, cannot purchase anything.” The original poster says the shop on their main account gets stuck on “Loading…” and then throws Error Code: 0 after around 45 seconds, while a second account on the same machine, same network, and same client loads the shop normally. A Blizzard forum MVP reply in that thread says it is a known issue, which is the kind of sentence that sounds reassuring right up until you notice players were still replying weeks later saying it remained broken for them.

And that is where the story gets uglier. A separate technical support thread, “Cannot access in game store,” goes back to February 10 and shows multiple players reporting the same basic failure: the store will not open, daily boons cannot be collected, battle pass purchases are blocked, and in one April 9 reply a player even says they could not retrieve rewards or outfits they had already paid for. That does not automatically prove every report shares the exact same backend cause. It does show this problem is not some one-day shop wobble that quietly fixed itself.

That timing also makes Blizzard look a little silly. Diabloz just covered how Diablo Immortal’s New Refined Battle Pass Push Looks Smart, and The Hells Quake Is Blizzard’s Little “Don’t Drift Away” Bonus, while Diablo Immortal’s Winds of Fortune Is Back on April 9, and Yes, This Is the Week to Farm Like a Maniac framed the current update cycle as Blizzard trying to keep players engaged with cleaner reward incentives. That is all well and good. But if part of the audience cannot reliably open the in-game shop at all, then the game’s monetization layer starts looking less like a polished machine and more like a haunted vending machine in Westmarch.

Blizzard has not posted a visible full fix in the source threads checked here. So the careful version is still this: these are active player reports, not proof the entire shop is down for everyone. But when a “known issue” hangs around long enough for players to start joking that Blizzard apparently does not want their money, that stops being a tiny support annoyance. It becomes one of those bugs that makes the whole game feel a little less under control than it should.

Diablo II: Resurrected’s Warlock Nerf Debate Is Starting to Turn Into a Casual-Player Problem

Yesterday’s D2R story was about backlash. Today’s version is a little more interesting, because the argument is shifting. This is no longer just hardcore players yelling about balance philosophy and busted metas. A growing chunk of the forum debate is now about whether Blizzard’s Warlock changes are about to suck the fun out of the class for the people who were supposed to love it most: regular players with limited time, limited gear, and limited patience.

The center of that discussion is the Blizzard forum thread “Warlock nerf demotivates casual players, which was posted on April 13 and is still active today. The thread itself is not even cleanly anti-nerf, which is what makes it such a good read on the current mood. Some players argue Warlock should not be nerfed because casuals finally had a class that felt powerful without absurd investment. Others argue the exact opposite: that Warlock is so overtuned it actually ruins progression and makes the game boring, even for casuals. In other words, Blizzard has managed to land on the most Diablo problem possible — a class that feels empowering to one group and game-killing to another.

That debate only makes sense in the context of the actual PTR 3.2 notes. Blizzard is not making one tiny adjustment here. It is hitting multiple Warlock tools at once, including Miasma Bolt, Miasma Chains, Ring of Fire, Flame Wave, Echoing Strike, and the class’s one-hand-two-hand weapon interaction, while also reworking Herald and Latent Sunder Charm behavior. If you liked Warlock because it felt like a fast-track power fantasy, PTR 3.2 looks like Blizzard showed up with a bucket of cold water.

The reason this follow-up matters is that the forum front page now shows several parallel threads pushing the same underlying anxiety from different angles, including “The best way is to strengthen other chars, not weaken warlock” “I , Have 2x 99 Warlocks... And I STILL Want the Nerf”, and a broader stream of PTR 3.2 arguments still crowding the active D2R discussion list. That is a sign Blizzard is no longer dealing with one angry thread. It is dealing with a class-identity fight.

Diabloz already covered the first wave in our PTR 3.2 breakdown and the initial Warlock backlash piece. What feels new now is the tone: less “you nerfed my broken build” and more “you sold me a fun class, and now you’re deciding what kind of fun is allowed.” That is a much harder complaint for Blizzard to shrug off, because it hits the paid-expansion fantasy right in the throat.