Thursday, 9 April 2026

Diablo III Players Still Can’t Agree Whether Season 38 Ethereals Are Bugged or Just Brutal RNG

Diablo III’s Season 38 brought Ethereals back, which should have been easy fan service. Big nostalgic weapons. Big power spikes. Big “just one more rift” energy. Instead, part of the current conversation has turned into something much more Diablo-coded: players staring into the loot abyss and asking whether the abyss quietly forgot to spawn the loot.

On the official Diablo III forums, the debate is now pretty clear. Some players say they have pushed deep into the season with little or nothing to show for it, including one report from a Hardcore player at Paragon 541 claiming they had not seen a single Ethereal, while a friend at a similar level had seen more than 15. Another player said they were 111 Greater Rifts in without a drop. That is the kind of bad luck that makes people stop blaming chance and start side-eyeing the code.

The season is working — but the mood is not

Blizzard’s own Season 38 overview says Ethereals are this season’s main theme, that they only drop in Seasonal play, and that their rarity sits somewhere between Ancient and Primal items. In other words, these things were never meant to rain from the sky like candy from a cursed piƱata. They are supposed to be rare.

That said, the player mood is not just random whining. In the active S38 Ethereals Feedback thread, one player said they completed the Seasonal Journey on Barbarian and got zero useful Ethereals outside of early leveling. Another said they had around 24 hours played and still had not seen a single one. So yes, there is real frustration here.

The other side says this is just Diablo being Diablo

The counterargument is also loud, and honestly, not completely unreasonable. In those same threads, other players say they found several Ethereals early, or dozens within the first days of the season, and flat-out call it RNG. Some replies argue that efficiency matters more than raw time played — higher difficulty, faster clears, and better farming routes mean more chances at a drop, which can make unlucky players look bugged when they may simply be farming badly.

That is why this story is interesting. Blizzard has not confirmed an Ethereal drop bug, but the forums are active enough that the issue has clearly become part of the Season 38 conversation rather than one weird post screaming into the graveyard. The current Diablo III forum index still shows both S38 Ethereals Feedback and Not getting any Ethereal weapon drops as active recent topics this week. That does not prove the loot system is broken. It does prove players do not trust it right now. And in a loot game, that is its own kind of problem.

When the loot stops feeling mythical and starts feeling suspicious

Maybe this really is just rotten luck wearing a spooky mask. Maybe some players are farming inefficiently and blaming Blizzard for math. Or maybe Ethereal drop behavior this season is a little rougher than advertised. Either way, when the main fantasy of a season is “go chase the cool weapon,” players tend to get cranky when the weapon starts feeling like a rumor.

Diablo II: Resurrected Console Players Want Blizzard to Finally Say Something About Post-Warlock Performance

Diablo II: Resurrected’s console crowd is getting to that familiar stage of forum anger where people stop asking for miracles and start asking for a sentence. Not a fix. Not a roadmap. Just a human voice from Blizzard confirming someone is actually in the room. Right now, that seems to be the real missing feature on console.

The current flashpoint is a new thread on the official Diablo II: Resurrected console forum asking for a blue post about post-Reign of the Warlock performance, especially on PS5. One reply goes even harder, saying the game has been freezing and pausing at random points since Warlock’s release and accusing Blizzard of doing nothing about it. That is not exactly the kind of post people write when everything feels stable and under control.

The complaints are not living in just one thread

That is the bigger problem here. This does not look like one lonely rage post drifting through the abyss. Blizzard’s console discussion board is currently stacked with recent threads like “Ps5 OFFLINE ‘LAG’/Stutter since update,” “Micro stutters and frame drops still persist,” and “What exactly did the latest patch 1.37 fix?” Over in the console bug section, there are also fresh reports about PS5 teleport lag, console crashes, and stuttering still being present after patch 1.37. When a forum starts sounding like a support group, players tend to notice.

Warlock brought the hype, then the hitching

Blizzard launched Reign of the Warlock on February 11 as a major Diablo II: Resurrected expansion, headlined by the Warlock class, new Terror Zone features, the Colossal Ancients encounter, and quality-of-life changes. In theory, that should have been a nice little necromantic victory lap for D2R. In practice, some console players say the update period since Warlock has turned performance into its own miniboss.

One of the clearest examples is the long-running PS5 offline lag/stutter thread, where players describe severe hitching, brief freezes during combat, stutters after leveling, UI glitches, and even black-screen behavior after later patches. Another recent thread says that even after version 1.037.000, PS5 performance still is not close to where it was before Reign of the Warlock. That does not automatically prove one single root cause, but it does show this is no longer just background noise.

Silence is starting to do more damage than the bug reports

Blizzard’s latest 3.1.2 patch notes do list fixes for crash issues, resolution and UI sizing, and graphics rendering problems. That is useful. But when console players are still asking what patch 1.37 actually fixed, and whether anyone at Blizzard is seriously looking at PS5 performance, patch notes alone stop feeling like reassurance and start feeling like vague weather forecasts from hell.

Wednesday, 8 April 2026

Diablo Immortal’s New Refined Battle Pass Push Looks Smart, and The Hells Quake Is Blizzard’s Little “Don’t Drift Away” Bonus

 


This update is basically Blizzard saying: please stay on the treadmill, but here’s a shinier treadmill

Diablo Immortal has spent the past week generating headlines for bugs, broken menus, missing items, and general live-service chaos. So Blizzard finally throwing out a cleaner, more forward-looking update feels almost suspiciously civilized. In the official Become Sanctuary’s Undoubted Savior post, Blizzard confirms that the first Refined Battle Pass cosmetic set arrives in Battle Pass Season 51 on the upgraded track, while The Hells Quake event runs from April 9 at 3:00 a.m. to April 18 at 3:00 a.m. local server time. That is not exactly a giant expansion reveal, but it is a very obvious “here’s why you should keep logging in” kind of update.

The Refined Battle Pass idea is actually more interesting than it sounds

This is the part that matters. Blizzard says Battle Pass cosmetics now follow a multi-season progression that started with Season 50: you earn a cosmetic in one season, refine it in a second, and then unlock it for three additional classes in a third. In plain English, Blizzard is trying to make Battle Pass cosmetics feel less disposable and a bit more like something you build over time. Honestly, that is a smarter pitch than just tossing another outfit into the pass and hoping players clap politely.

It also fits where Diablo Immortal has been heading lately. We already covered how April’s big Diablo Immortal PvP change is not subtle, and this new cosmetic structure feels like part of the same broader push: keep players tied to the season loop, but make the rewards feel a little more layered than the usual “claim and forget” routine. That is probably the right move for a game that lives and dies on habit.

The Hells Quake is the smaller hook, but it still does its job

Then there is The Hells Quake, which Blizzard says is a limited-time login event running from April 9 to April 18. The company is keeping the pitch pretty mysterious, saying it offers rewards and “a glimpse of what is to come,” which is corporate fantasy-speak for “please take the bait and stay curious.” It is not a huge standalone system reveal, but as a short event dropped next to the Refined Battle Pass announcement, it works. Blizzard gets a cleaner news beat, players get one more reason to check in, and the whole thing lands a lot better than another week of bug drama.

For once, this is a Diablo Immortal story that is not on fire

That might be the real selling point. After pieces like our shop loading bug report, the vanishing Battle.net purchases story, and the Party Finder bug that hides activities,  it is almost refreshing to write about Blizzard trying to sell a system instead of apologize for one. The Refined Battle Pass pitch is a sensible long-tail retention idea. The Hells Quake is a neat little nudge. No, it is not earth-shattering. But by current Diablo Immortal standards, “mostly normal and reasonably well thought out” is already doing pretty well.

Diablo 4 Players Say the Wardrobe Is Still Bugging Out, and Somehow Even Dressing Up Has Become a Season 12 Problem

 


You can slay demons just fine. Picking a mount trophy? Apparently that is where the real challenge starts.

Diablo 4 has a fresh wardrobe complaint on the board, and it is exactly the kind of bug that sounds small until it starts wasting your time. In a new Blizzard forum report posted on April 8, one player says the wardrobe will let them interact with armor, but not with pets, mounts, mount armor, weapons, backpieces, or headstones. They also say armor only selects as a whole set, pigments behave the same way, and even a full reinstall did not fix it. The report is live in Blizzard’s Not able to select in the Wardrobe thread and also shows up among the newest items on the current PC Bug Report board.

This does not look like one completely isolated wardrobe tantrum

That is what makes it more than a one-post curiosity. A separate Blizzard thread from March 20, Wardrobe Bugged, describes a very similar problem: players saying clicked wardrobe pieces will not equip properly, that the interface can force the entire set instead of a single item, and that weird workarounds like pressing number keys or spacebar while clicking can sometimes make it respond. Blizzard’s latest topics pages also show related wardrobe complaints still surfacing this week, including “Wardrobe bug unable to select cosmetics” and “Issue with Wardrobe – Cannot interact (no response) – Diablo 4.” That does not prove every report is the exact same bug under the hood, but it does suggest the wardrobe has not exactly been living a stable life lately.

Why this bug is more annoying than it sounds

Because wardrobe bugs are not supposed to be hard problems. This is the cosmetic menu. This is where players go to make their character look slightly cooler, slightly uglier, or much more expensive than they need to. If the interface starts refusing normal selections and forcing whole sets instead, the system stops feeling polished and starts feeling like one of those menus you have to “fight” into working. And for Diablo 4, that lands badly in a season already carrying too many technical complaints at once. We have already covered how the black screen teleport bug still wasn’t dead, how rubberbanding was getting worse in Season 12, how PC crashes were still killing sessions, and how Season Journey Paragon Points were reportedly going missing Another bug hitting a basic system does not help the mood.

The funny part is that players are now troubleshooting a dress-up menu like it is a raid boss

That is the vibe here. Reinstalling the game to fix a cosmetic selector is already silly. Having older threads suggest keyboard tricks just to convince the wardrobe to equip the right piece is even sillier. Diablo 4 is very good at theatrical darkness, but it probably did not mean for the transmog screen to become part of the survival experience. Right now, this is still a fresh bug report rather than a full-scale community fire, but it is exactly the sort of issue that spreads fast once enough players realize the workaround is “start clicking weird and hope.”

Diablo 4 Players Say Season Journey Paragon Points Are Going Missing, and That Is a Nasty Bug to Find This Late in the Grind

 


Claim the reward. Watch nothing happen. Very cool.

Diablo 4 has a fresh progression complaint on the board, and this one hits a little harder than your average annoying UI wobble. In a new Blizzard forum post, a player says they completed the “Lesser Than Evil” objective under Season Journey Rank V, claimed the reward, saw it marked as claimed in the interface, and still never received the 4 Paragon Points tied to it. They say the objective was completed on April 6, but by April 8 the points still had not shown up. That is not a tiny visual bug. That is the game telling you “congratulations” and then quietly keeping the prize. Blizzard’s bug thread and the current PC Bug Report board both show the report as a fresh April 8 issue.

Why this one matters more than a random bug-board grumble

Paragon Points are not fluff. They are progression. If a seasonal reward says it gave you four and your account total does not move, players are not going to shrug and call it one of life’s mysteries. The original post also says the player suspects other rewards may not have credited correctly earlier, though that part is still one player’s suspicion rather than something Blizzard has publicly confirmed. That distinction matters. The evidence right now supports a real fresh player report, not yet a proven wider outbreak. Still, when the missing thing is permanent progression, people understandably get twitchy fast.

The ugly part is that this does not feel completely out of nowhere

This new complaint lands in a season that already has a bit of a rewards-trust problem. We recently covered how Season 12 rewards still weren’t paying out correctly, and older public chatter also suggests Season Journey reward weirdness has been floating around for a while. An Icy Veins report previously flagged claim issues around Season Journey rewards, and a Reddit thread from weeks earlier described a player getting fewer Paragon Points than expected from seasonal progression. None of that proves this new Rank V report is the exact same bug. It does suggest the broader reward flow has not exactly earned blind trust lately.

Right now, the real problem is confidence

That is the story more than anything else. Diablo 4 can survive balance drama, wardrobe bugs, and even the occasional cursed Occultist moment. But when players start wondering whether claimed progression rewards are actually real, the season starts feeling flimsy in a much less funny way. For now, this is still a fresh report and not a full community firestorm. But it is exactly the kind of bug that can go from “one bad post” to “everybody is checking their Paragon total” in a hurry. And honestly, once players start auditing the game’s math by hand, the mood has already gone bad.

Diablo Immortal Players Say the Haunted Carriage Sometimes Just Never Shows Up, Which Is a Bold Choice for an Event With “Carriage” in the Name

 


The game announces it. Players run to Ashwold. Then everybody stands there looking silly.

Diablo Immortal has another Haunted Carriage complaint on the board, and this one is almost impressive in how basic it is. In a fresh Blizzard bug report, a player says the game throws up the usual warning that the Haunted Carriage is coming in three minutes, tells everyone to head to Ashwold, and then… no event. No carriage. No boss. No spooky procession. Just a crowd of players showing up on time for a world event that apparently decided not to attend its own appointment.

What players are actually reporting

The report is short, but the hook is clean: this is not being described as a one-off fluke. The player says it does not happen every time, but “like half” of the Haunted Carriage attempts simply do not spawn. That is what makes it a usable story. If the event notification fires and players respond the way the game expects, only for the event itself to ghost them, then the whole loop starts to feel less like scheduled content and more like Sanctuary’s least reliable bus service.

It also fits a broader Haunted Carriage pattern

This is not even the first Haunted Carriage-related headache Diablo Immortal players have been dealing with lately. Blizzard’s own Bug Report board showed multiple Haunted Carriage threads active around April 6–7, including the new non-spawn report and other recent complaints tied to Haunted Carriage progress. There was also a separate March report about the Horrid Haunted Carriage event notification not taking players to the event, which Blizzard marked resolved, plus older threads where players said Haunted Carriage kills or completion were not registering properly. So even if this specific non-spawn issue is new, the broader Haunted Carriage track record is not exactly clean.

Why this matters more than it sounds

A world event bug like this is not as dramatic as a login failure or vanishing paid bundle, but it is exactly the kind of thing that makes a live-service game feel sloppy. Diablo Immortal is built on timers, routines, and quick little loops where players jump in, knock something out, and move on. If the game pings the server with “event’s up” energy and then serves empty cemetery air, people notice fast. And right now, Diablo Immortal is not exactly short on trust issues. We already covered the shop loading bug that keeps blocking rewards, the Battle.net purchase bug where claimed bundles can vanish,  and the Party Finder bug that hides activities. Another event acting weird is not catastrophic on its own, but it absolutely adds to the “what is broken today?” mood.

The weird little problem with event-based games

The funniest part is that this is the sort of bug that makes players feel foolish more than angry at first. They got the prompt. They went where the game told them to go. They did the responsible little live-service thing. And then Diablo Immortal basically left them standing in Ashwold waiting for a ghost cart that never arrived. If more players start reporting the same thing, this could turn from a stray annoyance into a very real event-reliability problem. For now, it is one of those wonderfully dumb bugs that sounds fake right until it wastes your evening.

Diablo Immortal’s Winds of Fortune Is Back on April 9, and Yes, This Is the Week to Farm Like a Maniac

 


For one week, Diablo Immortal is basically telling you to stop being polite and start vacuuming up loot

After a stretch of Diablo Immortal headlines that mostly involved things breaking, disappearing, or refusing to load, Blizzard has finally handed players something a lot more straightforward: more stuff. In Blizzard’s latest Become Sanctuary’s Undoubted Savior update, Winds of Fortune returns from April 9 at 3:00 a.m. to April 16 at 3:00 a.m. local server time, with boosted rewards across a pretty wide chunk of the game.

What Winds of Fortune actually does

This is the useful part. Blizzard says players can activate a 24-hour buff during the event to earn increased rewards, and if you forget to activate it before the event ends, the game will do it automatically. During that window, the 4-player party Normal Gems bonus drop is doubled and unaffected by the daily cap, while only the first 12 Common Gems of the day are tradable. Blizzard also says duplicate quantities can drop for gold, experience, Battle Pass Points, Normal Gems, and Legendary Items.

The reward bump also reaches into a bunch of familiar activities, including Horadric Bestiary, Challenge Rifts, Bounties, Fishing, Dungeons, Purge the Depths, Accursed Towers, Hidden Lairs, farming in the wilderness, and Codex Activities. That is Blizzard’s polite way of saying: if you were already planning to grind, this is the week to be an absolute goblin about it.

The fine print matters a little more than usual

There are a couple of catches. Blizzard says Battle Pass rewards themselves are not doubled, and the weekly limit on Battle Pass Points and Normal Gems does not change. Bonus experience also still respects your current modifier, and duplicate drops only last until you hit the event’s limits, which players will need to check in-game. So no, this is not a full seven-day permission slip to break Diablo Immortal’s economy in half. Close, maybe. Not quite.

Why this event lands a bit differently right now

The funny part is that Winds of Fortune arrives right as Diablo Immortal has been dealing with a lot of reward-trust weirdness. We just covered the shop loading bug that blocks rewards and Prodigy’s Path, the Battle.net purchase bug where claimed bundles can vanish,  and the Gem Find Tracker confusion after the update. That last one is especially relevant here, since the original forum thread specifically quoted Winds of Fortune’s gem rules before later posts said the display issue appeared fixed by April 7. In other words, the event looks good, but players will probably be watching the numbers with a little extra side-eye this time.

The real takeaway

This is still one of the cleaner Diablo Immortal stories of the week. More drops, more gems, more reasons to group up, and a very obvious “play now, sleep later” vibe. If you were waiting for a good farming window, Blizzard has very clearly opened one. Just maybe keep one eye on your counters while you are at it. Diablo Immortal has not exactly earned blind trust lately.

Diablo Immortal Players Say Party Finder Is Hiding Activities, Which Is Kind of the One Job Party Finder Has

 


“All Difficulties” apparently means “some of them, probably”

Diablo Immortal has a new bug report making the rounds, and this one is not flashy enough to melt a server or eat a paid bundle. It is just the sort of quietly stupid interface problem that can make a live-service game feel sloppier than it should. In a fresh Blizzard forum post titled The Raid / Party Finder does not properly list all available activities, a player says the Party Finder shows seven activities under All Difficulties, but when filtering by specific difficulty, only three of those activities actually appear. That is less “finder” and more “vague suggestion engine.”

What the report says is going wrong

The breakdown in the report is pretty clean. The player says the full list included activities across Normal, Hell 1–3, and Inferno 1–12. But once they used the difficulty selector, Normal showed only one of the three listed activities, Hell showed none of the one it should have shown, and Inferno showed only one of three. If that is working as described, the filter is not really filtering. It is dropping entries on the floor and hoping nobody notices. Unfortunately for Blizzard, somebody did.

Blizzard has already acknowledged it

This is where the story gets a bit stronger. In the same thread, Blizzard community manager jadaiyuki-1776 replied, called it an “interesting find,” and said they would pass it to the team. That is not a fix, obviously, but it does mean this is already beyond the “one person yelling into the bug-report void” stage. The report is also visible on Blizzard’s current Diablo Immortal bug-report board, where it was listed among the active April 7 topics.

Why this matters more than it sounds

A broken Party Finder is not as dramatic as a login failure or missing paid items, but it is the kind of thing that quietly wastes people’s time. If players are trying to jump into raids or activities and the game is not actually showing the full list it claims to show, then the whole tool becomes less trustworthy. And right now, that is not exactly great timing for Diablo Immortal, considering we have already covered the shop loading bug that keeps blocking rewards and the Battle.net purchase bug where claimed bundles never arrive. A party tool that cannot count properly is not the biggest problem on the board, but it is very much part of the same “why is this so messy?” energy.

A small bug can still make the game feel amateurish

That is really the hook here. Diablo Immortal lives on routines: queue up, group up, get in, get rewards, repeat. So when the interface starts hiding parts of the queue list depending on how you filter it, it makes the whole system feel a little dodgy. Not catastrophic. Just shabby. And in a game this obsessed with frictionless daily loops, shabby is its own kind of problem.

Diablo 4 Players Say PC Crashes Are Still Killing Sessions Minutes After Login

 


If Season 12 wanted to add survival horror, crashing to desktop was a weird way to do it

Diablo 4 has another technical headache refusing to leave the room. In Blizzard’s PC Constant Crashing after a few minutes of play thread, players say the game is crashing just minutes into a session, sometimes hard enough to take the whole system down. The thread started on March 15, 2026, and it was still active on April 8, which is usually a bad sign in a game forum. Problems that disappear fast do not keep bubbling back to the top three weeks later.

What players are actually reporting

The core complaint is ugly, but very simple: launch the game, play for a few minutes, and then watch it fall over. The opening report lists a high-end PC with an RTX 5080 and says the whole system crashes after a short time in-game, while later replies describe continued crashing even after the usual cleanup routine of driver updates, reinstalls, and general PC troubleshooting. That is what gives the story some weight. This is not one person trying to run Diablo 4 on a haunted toaster from 2012.

Blizzard is at least asking for fresh crash logs

There is one useful development here. In an April 1 follow-up visible in the same discussion, Blizzard asked players to generate and send new FenrisDebug.txt files after the team enabled “a few things on our end.” That does not mean a fix is here. It does mean Blizzard appears to still be actively chasing the issue instead of pretending the thread is decorative. In practical terms, the game is still crashing, but support is clearly still collecting evidence.

Why this one matters

Crash bugs always matter a little more because they flatten everything else. It does not matter whether loot is good, builds are fun, or bosses are finally behaving if the client decides your run has lasted long enough. And for Diablo 4, this is landing in a season that already feels a bit too friendly with technical problems. We have already covered how Season 12 lag complaints were getting worse and how the black screen teleport bug still refused to die. Add repeat crashes on top of that, and the season starts to feel less cursed by demons than by QA debt.

Right now, the best headline is still “not fixed”

That is really the story. The crash thread is still surfacing in Diablo IV’s current technical support listings on April 8, which makes it fresh enough to matter and unresolved enough to be worth watching. Diablo 4 can survive balance arguments. It gets harder when simply staying logged in starts feeling like the real boss mechanic.

Diablo 4 Players Say Sigil Powder Is Vanishing at the Occultist, Which Is a Pretty Rude Trick for an Endgame Currency

 


Salvage the sigils. See the number pop. Get absolutely nothing. Cool.

Diablo 4 has a fresh little crafting headache on the board, and this one is the sort of bug that makes a basic endgame habit feel suspicious. In a new Blizzard forum report, a player says they salvaged around a dozen sigils at the Occultist in Kyovashad, saw “15” flash on screen, and then noticed their Sigil Powder stash had not gone up at all. They added that the test included both Nightmare and Boss sigils. If that report is accurate, the game is basically handing out fake receipts for salvage.

What the report actually says

The nice thing about this one, if “nice” is the word, is that the complaint is very easy to understand. This is not a thousand-word theorycraft post about edge-case math. It is one player saying they broke down sigils, the game visually suggested powder was awarded, and the stash total did not move. That kind of bug lands hard because it attacks a very ordinary loop. You clear content, junk what you do not need, and expect the leftover value to go somewhere useful. Instead, this sounds like Diablo 4 nodding politely and pocketing the change.

Why this one is worth watching already

On its own, one short bug thread would not normally be much of a story. The reason this works today is freshness. Blizzard’s PC Bug Report board and the game’s latest-topics page both surfaced “Sigil Powder not accumulating in stash” among the newest active April 8 topics, which is enough to make it current live chatter rather than some moldy forum fossil from three patches ago.

Another small bug in a season already collecting them

That is also why the timing matters. Season 12 already has the mood of a patch where players keep finding new ways for basic systems to wobble. We have already covered how lag complaints were getting hard to ignore and how some rewards still were not paying out correctly. This new Sigil Powder complaint is smaller than those, sure, but that almost makes it more annoying. Big bugs feel dramatic. Small economy bugs feel petty. And petty bugs have a special talent for sticking in people’s heads.

The real problem is trust in the loop

That is the whole issue in one sentence. If players cannot trust a routine salvage action to actually credit the material it says it credited, then one of the game’s dullest but most necessary endgame loops starts feeling dodgy. Nobody wants to wonder whether the Occultist is quietly skimming powder off the top like Sanctuary’s saddest little taxman. For now this is still an early report, not a full community meltdown. But it is exactly the kind of bug that can grow legs fast if more players start checking their stash totals a little more closely.

Tuesday, 7 April 2026

Diablo Immortal Players Say Battle.net Purchases Are Vanishing After Claim, Which Is About the Worst Bug a Shop Can Have

 


Click claim. Watch it disappear. Receive absolutely nothing. Great system.

Diablo Immortal has a fresh monetization mess on its hands, and this one is about as subtle as a brick through a cathedral window. Across several new Blizzard forum reports, players say they are buying bundles through Battle.net, getting the in-game prompt to claim them, clicking the button, and then watching the purchase vanish without the items ever reaching inventory. That is not a pricing complaint or another argument about value. That is the digital version of paying for a bag of loot and having the cashier eat it in front of you.

The reports are lining up a little too neatly

What makes this story stronger than one angry spender post is how consistent the complaints look. In one bug report about Battle.net purchases not redeeming, a player says they bought bundles, hit claim, and got none of the items. In another thread, a Rift Delver’s Hoard purchase reportedly disappeared the same way. A third report says a Wayfarer’s Crate purchased three days earlier never showed up in inventory or even in the in-game log after being claimed. Different bundles, same magic trick: now you see it, now Blizzard support has a ticket.

This is not stuck on one device type either

That is the ugly part. Blizzard’s current Diablo Immortal bug-report board shows multiple active purchase-delivery threads across both iOS and Android, including “Purchases from battle.net is not delivered in a game!”, “Bundle purchase was not delivered!”, and “Battle store items weren’t added to my inventory.” So this does not look like one cursed phone having a bad week. It looks like a wider claim-and-delivery problem that players are running into across more than one platform.

Players say support knows, but the items still are not there

Several of the follow-up replies are saying basically the same thing: support is aware, but affected players are being told to wait for a developer-side fix and watch the forums or patch notes. That is not a great answer when the missing goods are tied to real-money purchases, with one player claiming they are out around $500 in bundles and another saying their $199.99 purchase simply evaporated after the claim click.

If Diablo Immortal’s shop loading bug already made the store feel shaky, and the recent server-list login issue made access feel unreliable, this one hits even harder: players are now questioning whether paid items will actually arrive at all. That is the kind of live-service headline no game wants.

Diablo 4 Players Say the Rubberbanding Is Getting So Bad the Game Feels Like It’s Fighting Back

 


First it was lag. Now it feels like the game is actively arguing with your inputs.

A few days ago, we wrote about how Diablo 4 Season 12 lag complaints were getting hard to ignore. That story was mostly about ugly ping spikes and general instability. This newer wave feels worse. In Blizzard’s fresh Severe Lagging and Rubberbanding thread, players are not just talking about “bad connection” in the abstract. They are calling the game unplayable, describing constant freezing, and saying the usual fixes like reinstalling, lowering settings, and checking their internet are doing basically nothing.

What players are seeing now

The current complaints read less like a normal server wobble and more like the game briefly forgetting how time works. In the new PC bug thread, the original poster says they made yet another thread because Blizzard had not acknowledged the others, while a reply says the game freezes “every other second” and makes even the opening quests feel miserable. That lines up with Blizzard’s PC Bug Report board, where the thread was still active on April 7.

And it is not staying neatly on one platform either. In a recent console discussion thread about rubberbanding and lag, one PS5 player said a Pit boss took 30 seconds to spawn, inputs froze for 10 to 15 seconds, and Infernal Hordes became a total mess with deaths landing after the screen effectively stopped making sense. Another player said the issue started after the last patch and persists even after router resets and other troubleshooting. That is not “a little stutter.” That is Diablo 4 turning combat into interpretive dance.

Why this matters more than one more angry forum thread

Because this is how a bad season mood turns into a bad season reputation. Diablo 4 can survive people arguing about tuning. It can survive one annoying quest bug. It gets harder to shrug off when the basic act of moving, fighting, and loading into content starts feeling unreliable. And that is on top of other Season 12 headaches we have already covered, like reward issues still not paying out correctly. At some point, the season stops feeling rough around the edges and starts feeling cursed in a much less fun way.

Right now, players mostly want Blizzard to get in the room

That may be the real story here. The technical and bug-report boards still show multiple active latency, freezing, and rubberbanding threads, including High latency, EU, 260 - 500ms, after last patch? and the newer severe-rubberbanding report. Players are clearly past the “maybe it’s just me” stage. They want Blizzard to either explain what is happening or fix it before Season 12 becomes the patch people remember for fighting the servers more than the demons.

Monday, 6 April 2026

Diablo Immortal’s Shop Loading Bug Has Been Hanging Around So Long It’s Starting to Look Intentional

 


The store is loading. It is always loading. It may be loading forever.

Diablo Immortal has plenty of familiar live-service annoyances by now, but one of the stranger ones is also one of the most stubborn: the in-game shop that just sits there and spins like it forgot why it was opened. The bug is not new, and that is exactly why it is suddenly worth writing about. A fresh April 3 bug report says the shop keeps loading long enough to block daily rewards and Prodigy’s Path, while older reports show the same problem has been floating around since at least December and really picked up steam in January.

This is not just a “can’t buy things” problem anymore

That is what makes it a better story than the usual “cash shop broken lol” headline. In the newer reports, players are not just complaining about purchases. They are saying the broken shop is stopping them from collecting things the game itself keeps nudging them toward, including free daily bundles and Prodigy’s Path rewards. In the long-running January shop loading thread, one player flat-out says “all DI users must enter the shop at least once a day” because of the free daily reward flow. That turns the shop from optional monetization window into a weird little mandatory hallway the game keeps forcing people through.

Players say the bug has gone from intermittent to downright petty

The pattern across the reports is not especially flattering. A March technical support post describes the shop loading only around 10 percent of the time on one device, while other players say reinstalling, clearing cache, and restarting the game do little or nothing. In the larger master thread about the shop getting stuck on “Loading…”, one player says the issue used to be random but is now basically permanent, while another says they missed daily rewards completely after the shop stayed broken for 20 hours. That is not a cute glitch. That is the kind of bug that quietly turns routine login habits into a chore.

The really annoying part is how inconsistent it sounds

Some reports are on Android. Others are on PC. One player says the shop fails on PC but works on mobile over the same Wi-Fi, which makes the whole thing sound less like one clean device-side issue and more like a messy backend or client handshake problem that nobody has pinned down publicly. That is an inference, not a confirmed diagnosis, but it fits the reports better than the classic “have you tried rebooting?” shrug. And when a bug hangs around for months in a game this obsessed with daily loops, people are going to notice. Loudly.

A bug like this lands badly in a game built on routine

Diablo Immortal trains players to check in, collect, claim, and move on. So when the shop becomes the jammed front door for that whole ritual, the frustration makes sense. This is not the flashiest Diablo story of the week. It is just one of those classic live-service embarrassments where the thing designed to be opened constantly is the thing that will not open.

Diablo 4 Players Say the Black Screen Teleport Bug Still Refuses to Die

 


Sanctuary has plenty of horrors already. The loading screen does not need to become one of them.

Diablo 4 has a black screen bug making the rounds again, and this one sounds especially miserable because it tends to hit right after teleporting. According to Blizzard’s own main black screen thread, players are getting dumped into a blank screen while the HUD, cursor, chat, or even music can still keep going in the background. In other words, the game is not fully dead. It is just dead enough to ruin your session.

What players say is actually happening

The reports are pretty consistent. Players say the bug often shows up after teleporting to town or other overworld locations, and the usual fix is the least glamorous one possible: close the game and start over. Several posts in the thread describe the bug hitting multiple times in a single day, with one player saying it now happens every time they play and another saying the game has become “basically unplayable.”

That is what makes this a real story and not just one grumpy forum post. Blizzard’s current PC Bug Report board still lists the black screen teleport thread among the most active Diablo 4 bug topics on April 6, with hundreds of replies and well over 18,000 views. That is a lot of people staring into the void, and not in the philosophical Diablo sense.

Why this one matters more than a random visual bug

A weird animation glitch is funny once. A teleport bug is different, because teleporting is basic Diablo housekeeping. You sell junk, stash gear, hit the occultist, jump back out, and keep the run going. When that loop starts randomly bricking the game, it wrecks the rhythm of play more than a lot of flashier bugs do. Players in the thread say the issue kills momentum, ends runs, and in some cases makes them want to stop the season entirely.

There is also a hardware angle people keep circling. A number of affected players list AMD GPUs, though not every report does, and no official Blizzard post in the thread has pinned the problem on one vendor. So right now, that part stays in the “possible pattern, not confirmed cause” bucket.

Blizzard has at least acknowledged it, but not fixed it

That is the current state of play. In the same forum thread, Blizzard support rep Joynueer asked players to send in FenrisDebug.txt logs by email so the team could narrow the issue down. That is better than silence, but it is not a fix, and players in the thread are clearly past the point where “please send logs” feels comforting. They want the game to stop eating teleports. Fair enough.

Diablo II: Resurrected Players Say Repeated Disconnects Are Starting to Feel Like the Real Endgame Boss

Diablo II: Resurrected just had its patch-cycle mess with the Steam launch issue and the follow-up hotfix, so you would hope things were settling down a bit. Instead, a newer complaint is now bubbling up in Blizzard’s Technical Support forum, and this one hits a lot harder if you actually play the game the way D2R tends to demand: long sessions, careful farming, and enough patience to make a monk look impulsive.

A fresh wave of disconnect complaints is popping up

A new Technical Support thread posted on April 5 says repeated disconnects are knocking players out of online sessions mid-run, with one player describing an Uber Tristram attempt that died right as Uber Diablo was about to go down. After reconnecting, the portal was gone and the whole run was effectively wasted. That is not a minor inconvenience. That is Diablo II turning your prep work into smoke.

Why this one stings more than a normal crash

In a modern live-service game, a disconnect is annoying. In Diablo II: Resurrected, it can be expensive. The forum post spells that out pretty clearly: keys, organs, Terror Zone farming time, and the kind of slow solo setup that takes actual effort can all disappear because the session falls apart at the wrong moment. If you are farming online and the game drops you at the worst possible second, there is no graceful recovery here. Sanctuary is not exactly famous for refunds.

It does not look like a one-player setup problem

That is the part that makes this worth watching. By April 6, other players had piled into the same thread saying they were seeing disconnects despite stable fiber connections, and one said the day had been the worst so far with more than 15 disconnects. Another said switching internet source did not help, while one more reported the issue showing up every five to fifteen minutes after otherwise stable play. Blizzard’s Technical Support index also shows the thread as active on April 6, so this does not look like one random complaint that vanished into the void.

Right now, the problem is uncertainty

That may be the ugliest part of all. Players can work around a known bug. They can avoid a broken skill, skip a bugged quest, or put off a farm until a fix lands. What they cannot really plan around is the feeling that any productive run might get yanked out from under them with no warning. Diablo II has always been ruthless. It just usually tries to kill you with demons first. 

Diablo Immortal Players Say a Login Bug Is Hiding Server Lists, and Blizzard Is Still Investigating

Diablo Immortal has a new kind of problem on its hands, and it is not the fun sort where a boss drops too much loot by accident. Over the past week, multiple players have reported that the game successfully logs them into Battle.net, shows the usual “tap to play” prompt, and then simply refuses to display a server name, which means they cannot get to character select at all. The reports showed up first in late March and were still active on April 5.

What players are actually seeing

The most common version of the issue is brutally simple: the login works, but the server list does not. Players in Blizzard’s Diablo Immortal forums describe restarting the game, repairing the client, uninstalling and reinstalling, and still getting stuck on a blank server section. One player said the issue had dragged on for more than 10 hours at one point, while others said they had lost several days of playtime.

It started looking like an iOS problem

The early reports were heavily tied to iPhone and iPad users. Blizzard’s Technical Support and Bug Report sections both show active iOS-tagged threads for the same issue, and affected players listed devices including iPad Pro, iPhone 15, and iPhone 14 Pro Max. The game versions reported in those threads center on the 4.3.0 branch that followed Diablo Immortal’s recent The Taking update.

The weird workaround makes this even stranger

The most interesting detail is that several players say they can sometimes get in over cellular or by using a hotspot, but not over home Wi-Fi. One player said they could log in on LTE and then switch back to Wi-Fi after getting into the game. Another thread participant suggested the issue might involve how the client reaches game servers after authentication, although that part remains community speculation rather than an official explanation.

Blizzard has at least acknowledged the problem

This is the part that matters. In the forum thread, Blizzard community manager Kalviery asked affected players to provide device, OS version, game version, location, and internet provider details so the Immortal team could investigate. Players in the same discussion also shared a support response saying the issue is known and under investigation, though Blizzard has not posted a public fix yet.

Right now, this is a login problem with real collateral damage

That is what makes it worth watching. A bad balance patch annoys people. A login bug keeps them out of events, battle pass progress, clan activity, and the rest of the daily treadmill Diablo Immortal is built around. When a live-service game cannot reliably get players from login to character select, that is not background noise. That is the game failing at the front door.

Diablo 4’s First Lord of Hatred Cutscene Finally Makes the Expansion Feel Real

For a while, Lord of Hatred has mostly existed as a release date, a feature list, and a growing pile of pre-purchase bonuses. Now Blizzard’s marketing push finally has something meatier to show. The first cutscene from the expansion, revealed through IGN First coverage, gives Diablo 4 something it badly needed: an actual mood. Not a bullet-point mood. A real one.

The rollout has moved past store-page energy

That matters more than it sounds. Blizzard’s official expansion page says Lord of Hatred launches on April 28, 2026, brings a new campaign, new endgame activity through War Plans and Echoing Hatred, and major updates for all Diablo IV players including deeper hero progression changes and a loot filter. Those are solid features, but features alone do not sell an expansion this close to launch. Atmosphere does.

“The Queen and the Saint” is doing more than teasing lore

The first revealed cutscene, “The Queen and the Saint,” leans into ritual, public devotion, and the sort of smiling manipulation Diablo does well when it is not busy drowning the screen in blood and item text. As recapped by Icy Veins, the scene centers on a ritual atmosphere, Queen Adreona, Lorath, and the suggestion that something deeply wrong is hiding beneath all the reverence. That is a much better opening note than another generic “evil is coming” trailer.

Why this matters now

Diablo 4 has spent a lot of recent weeks trapped in bug reports, reward complaints, and Season 12 weirdness. So Blizzard pivoting the conversation toward faith, control, and Mephisto’s influence is probably not an accident. It is a reminder that Lord of Hatred is supposed to feel like a proper next chapter, not just a content drop with extra cosmetics taped to it. Season 12 was also framed by Blizzard earlier this year as part of the broader road toward the expansion’s launch, which makes this story-focused push feel very deliberate.

Blizzard is clearly building a month-long drumbeat

Blizzard has already been feeding out supporting material around the expansion, including a Warlock lore story in March and a full class spotlight that confirmed the Warlock arrives with Lord of Hatred on April 28. Pair that with the IGN First reveal cycle, and the strategy is obvious enough: stop explaining the expansion like a product page and start selling it like a dark fantasy campaign again. Honestly, about time.

Sunday, 5 April 2026

Diablo 4 PTR Players Say Boss Loot Chests Can Literally Trap You

 


The loot room is not supposed to become the boss fight

Diablo 4’s PTR has produced a fresh little nightmare, and it is the kind only a loot game could invent. A new April 5 PTR bug report says a player got physically stuck between boss loot chests, with teleporting to town and coming back doing nothing to fix it. According to the post, the only way out was using the Leave Dungeon option.

That is a very Diablo sort of problem. You kill the boss, walk over to claim your prize, and the real reward is discovering the chest geometry has decided to hold you hostage. It is not the biggest bug in the world, but it is exactly the kind of awkward PTR issue that instantly makes a feature feel clumsy.

What the report actually says

The report itself is short and painfully clear. The player says they became stuck in between the Boss Loot Chests, and that normal quick fixes did not work. Porting back to town and returning failed. Only manually leaving the dungeon got them unstuck. That suggests the issue is not just a visual overlap or some harmless collision weirdness. It is a movement-blocking problem tied directly to the post-boss reward area.

This is also not buried somewhere obscure. Blizzard’s PTR Bug Report forum shows “Boss Loot Chests - Stuck on them” as an active topic on April 5, and the main Diablo IV latest-topics page surfaced it there too. That gives it enough freshness to count as real current PTR chatter rather than some old leftover report no one saw.

Why this one matters

Normally, a player getting wedged into map geometry would be a minor curiosity. The reason this one matters is context. Blizzard’s newer boss-loot structure already leans heavily on chest interaction after the kill, with Hoard-style loot chests acting as the real payout point rather than the boss simply vomiting all the good stuff onto the floor. So if the chest cluster itself can trap the player, that is not just a funny collision bug. It is the reward system tripping over its own furniture.

There is also a practical PTR angle here. PTR bugs are narrower than live-server bugs, sure, but this is exactly what the PTR is for: finding systems that technically function while still feeling terrible in practice. A loot chest should create a moment of payoff, not a tiny panic where the player wonders whether they now have to abandon the run just to move again.

A small bug that makes the whole reward flow look sloppy

That is the real issue. Nobody is going to quit Diablo 4 forever because a PTR chest pinned them in place one time. But bugs like this make the game feel awkward at the exact moment it is supposed to feel satisfying. You beat the boss. You move toward the loot. You get stuck between the containers like Sanctuary’s dumbest sandwich filling. That is funny once. It is less funny if it ships.