John Mosqueira has recently been hired by Blizzard Entertainment as "Diablo 3"'s new Game Director. Mosqueira took to the game's website to write an introductory letter about himself, detailing his past and his passion for games including "Diablo." He also said some significant things about "Diablo 3" that actually has us excited for the future of the hack-and-slash RPG series.
Who says a dud game can't have a video game comeback?
Cyberpunk and No Man's Sky have to be up there. We're lucky and cursed, equally, to have games that can be updated now. For folks old enough to remember the Sega/SNES into PS1 and even 2 eras, if a game came out that was half baked (*cough*Angel of Darkness*cough*) that was it, no redemption. At the same time, having the option for updates shouldn't be an excuse for half assing games.
Diablo III still works on modern PlayStation and Xbox consoles, and remains hugely playable a decade after initial release.
Are you comparing a continuously improved 10+ years old masterpiece with the... beta of an unreleased game?
Diablo III: Season 28 brings with it the Altar of Rites, an altar full of unlockable bonuses and potions that will require the gathering of tons of resources. One of things needed is the Staff of Herding, which also unlocks the famous Cow Level known as Whimsyshire. Here's how to craft that staff, for those that either have forgotten, or have never completed it.
"Could"
I came back for the last patch and quickly lost interest again. Every major patch I will keep giving it a try. I hope it hooks. I spent a good amount already on the game already. Time.. not money in the RMAH..
It's too late. Sorry Blizz, you had your chance before you poo-pooed on it.
They had their chance, I guess they know that path of exile is free has many more features and difficulty and many many more are playing it over Diablo.
They tried to rob their player base with Rmah they dumbed it down for casuals and disregarded their core player base.
Karma
Just like Xbox one you can only sell out and rape your customers before it back fires.