But every now and then, Sanctuary reminds us that it is not just a loot machine with corpses attached. It is also a massive piece of dark fantasy craft, and the music behind Lord of Hatred may deserve more attention than it gets.
As highlighted by Icy Veins, Blizzard’s new behind-the-scenes video follows lead composer Ted Reedy and the music team as they build the expansion’s score, including orchestral recording sessions at Ocean Way Studios in Nashville, choir work in London, and specialized instruments used to give Skovos its own identity.
Sanctuary Still Sounds Expensive in the Best Way
One of the easiest things to ignore in Diablo 4 is the soundtrack. Not because it is weak, but because players are usually too busy sprinting through Helltides, grinding War Plans, chasing Mythic Charms, or deciding whether an item belongs in the stash or the emotional trash pile.
That is a shame, because Diablo’s atmosphere has always relied heavily on sound. The creak of old wood, the distant chanting, the low strings, the ritual percussion, the feeling that every ruined chapel has been humming something evil since before your character was born.
Lord of Hatred leans into that. The expansion’s music is not just background mood paste. It is doing worldbuilding.
Skovos Needed Its Own Voice
The most interesting detail is how the team approached Skovos. According to the report, the score uses instruments such as the aulos, an ancient Greek double pipe, and the lyre, giving the region a sound that feels older, stranger, and more maritime than the usual dungeon growl.
That matters. New zones in Diablo cannot just look different. They need to feel cursed in a fresh way. Skovos needed a musical identity that did not sound like “generic demon cave number seven,” and those unusual instruments help sell the illusion.
The Art Gets Buried Under the Math
This is the strange tragedy of modern ARPGs. Hundreds of artists, composers, performers, writers, and designers build an entire nightmare world, and within 48 hours players are mostly discussing drop rates, damage buckets, and whether a tooltip is lying again.
That is not wrong. Systems matter. Loot matters. Balance matters. But Diablo works because the numbers sit inside a world that feels sick, ancient, and beautiful in a horrible way.
So yes, keep arguing about itemization. Keep bullying your pants roll. Keep asking Blizzard hard questions about Patch 3.1.
But maybe turn the music up next time you enter Skovos. Sanctuary is still screaming in tune.




























