Diablo III

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Diablo III
Diablo III cover.png
Box art
Developer(s) Blizzard Entertainment
Publisher(s) Blizzard Entertainment
Designer(s) Jay Wilson (lead)
Leonard Boyarsky (world design)
Composer(s) Russell Brower[1]
Derek Duke
Glenn Stafford
Joseph Lawrence
Neal Acree
Laurence Juber
Edo Guidotti
Series Diablo
Engine In-house engine, Havok (physics)
Platform(s) Microsoft Windows, OS X, PlayStation 3,[2] PlayStation 4[2]
Release date(s) Microsoft Windows, OS X
May 15, 2012[3]
PlayStation 3 TBA
PlayStation 4 TBA
Genre(s) Action role-playing, dungeon crawl, hack and slash
Mode(s) Online single-player, multiplayer
Media/distribution DVD DL, digital distribution

Diablo III is an action role-playing video game developed and published by Blizzard Entertainment. It is the third installment in the Diablo franchise and was released in the Americas, Europe, South Korea, and Taiwan on May 15, 2012, and Russia on June 7, 2012[3] for Microsoft Windows and Mac OS. PlayStation 3 and PlayStation 4 versions are planned with an unconfirmed release date.[2]

In the game, players choose one of five character classes; the Witch Doctor, Barbarian, Wizard, Monk or Demon Hunter and are tasked with defeating the titular Diablo.

Diablo III set a new record for fastest-selling PC game by selling over 3.5 million copies in the first 24 hours of its release,[4] and was the highest selling PC game of 2012, selling more than 12 million copies during the year.[5] It received generally positive reviews from critics, although its digital rights management that requires an internet connection at all times was criticized.[6]

As a sequel to Diablo II, new features included an online auction house, which allows players to trade virtual items with in-game gold or real life money, and artisans that can craft materials gathered by the player to create new items.

Contents

Plot [edit]

The game takes place in Sanctuary, the dark fantasy world of the Diablo series, twenty years after the events of Diablo II. Deckard Cain and his niece Leah are in Tristram Cathedral investigating ancient texts regarding an ominous prophecy. A mysterious star falling from the sky strikes the Cathedral, creating a deep crater into which Deckard Cain disappears.

The protagonist arrives in the town of New Tristram to investigate the falling star which struck the cathedral, which is now emanating risen dead; the same cathedral that was the setting of Diablo. The protagonist accompanies Leah to the cathedral in order to rescue Cain from the crater into which he fell. After rescuing Cain, the protagonist learns that the only way to the fallen star is to defeat King Leoric, the former ruler of Tristram known now as the Skeleton King. Cain informs the protagonist that Leoric's crown must be recovered to defeat him, and the protagonist searches for Leoric's crown with the aid of Haedrig Eamon, the blacksmith of New Tristram. After recovering the crown, the protagonist defeats Leoric and finds a stranger where the fallen star landed. The stranger's only memory is of a sword that shattered into three pieces as he fell.

The hero recovers the sword pieces, opposed by the witch Maghda, leader of the local coven. Maghda, however, recovers the third piece before the protagonist and attempts to force Cain to repair the sword. Leah, however, kills the cultists with a surge of magical power, forcing Maghda to kill Cain and flee with the stranger. Cain, before dying, repairs the sword and tasks the protagonist with returning it to the stranger. The protagonist pursues Maghda into the bowels of King Leoric's dilapidated torture chambers underneath his manor, rescuing the stranger and returning to him his sword. The stranger's memories are recovered, and it is revealed that he is the arch-angel Tyrael. Disgusted with his fellow angels' unwillingness to protect humanity from the forces of Hell, Tyrael cast aside his divinity to become a mortal and warn Sanctuary about the arrival of the demon lords Belial (Lord of Lies) and Azmodan (Lord of Sin).

The protagonist, Leah, and Tyrael travel to the city of Caldeum. The protagonist leaves to track down Maghda, while Leah and Tyrael search for evidence of Belial. The protagonist tracks down and kills Maghda, avenging Cain, then returns to Caldeum where Leah has learned that her mother, Adria (the witch of Tristram from the original game) is still alive. The protagonist aids Leah in rescuing Adria from the city's sewers. Adria reveals that the key to stopping the forces of hell is the Black Soulstone, which can trap the souls of the seven Lords of Hell and destroy them forever. The protagonist resurrects the soul of the traitor Horadrim, Zoltun Kulle, in order to recover the Black Soulstone, who reveals that it is hidden in his archives. After recovering Kulle's body and some of his blood, so that he can open his lair, the protagonist is forced to defeat him after he attempts to take the soulstone for himself. Upon returning to Caldeum, the protagonist finds the city under attack by Belial's forces. Adria and Leah fight their way to the palace with the aid of the protagonist, revealing Belial as having taken the form of the Emperor of Caldeum to deceive them, and eventually defeat him. Leah traps his soul within the Black Soulstone, freeing Caldeum, after which she receives a vision of the demon lord Azmodan, who is invading Sanctuary from the crater of Mount Arreat (destroyed by Tyrael in Diablo II) in order to retrieve the black soulstone and empower himself.

The protagonist travels to Bastion's Keep with Tyrael, Leah and Adria to find it under attack by Azmodan's army. After defeating the demon Ghom, the Lord of Gluttony, the protagonist travels to crater of Mount Arreat to confront Azmodan. Tyrael assists the protagonist in reaching the demonic gate protecting the crater, and destroys it with his sword. The protagonist traverses the depths of Arreat's inner core to destroy the Sin Hearts, which empower Azmodan and his armies. Azmodan's consort Cydaea, the Maiden of Lust, attempts to protect the hearts but is defeated. The protagonist confronts and defeats Azmodan, and Leah seals his soul in the black soulstone. With all seven lords of hell trapped within the stone, Tyrael states that the war will be ended if the stone is destroyed. The protagonist returns to Bastion's Keep, but finds that Adria has betrayed them. Adria reveals she has been serving Diablo from the beginning, and that Leah's father is Leoric's son Aidan, the Dark Wanderer (the Warrior player character from the first game and Diablo's reincarnate body in Diablo II), who was possessed by Diablo. Adria sacrifices Leah and uses the Black Soulstone to resurrect Diablo. Now in possession of all the souls of the Lords of Hell, Diablo becomes the Prime Evil, and begins an assault on the High Heavens.

The protagonist arrives in the High Heavens to find it already under attack. Imperius, the Aspect of Valor, blames the protagonist and Tyrael, causing Tyrael to give in to despair. The protagonist meets Itherial, the Aspect of Fate, who instructs them to rescue Auriel, the Aspect of Hope. After rescuing Auriel and returning hope to the forces of Heaven, the protagonist finds Tyrael, who has overcome his despair. Together, they attempt to stop Diablo from reaching the Crystal Arch, the source of power for the forces of Heaven. Diablo is defeated and his physical manifestation destroyed. The Black Soulstone is shown falling from the High Heavens, apparently still intact. After the battle, Tyrael decides to rejoin the High Heavens as the new Aspect of Wisdom, but remains a mortal, dedicated to building a permanent alliance between angels and humans.

Gameplay [edit]

Diablo III's inventory and HUD retain a feel similar to that found in earlier games in the series, including a viewpoint reminiscent of the isometric view of Diablo III's predecessors. The inventory has sixty slots for items. Armor and weaponry each occupy two slots and all other items each occupy one slot.[7] It can also be expanded to include details about the character's attributes.

Gameplay is similar to that of previous titles in the Diablo franchise. The game is classified as a tactical action game that is played primarily using the mouse to direct the character with supplementary commands provided through the keyboard.

Diablo III's skills window depicting the abilities of the wizard class.

The proprietary engine incorporates Blizzard's custom in-house physics, a change from the original usage of Havok's physics engine,[8] and features destructible environments with an in-game damage effect. The developers sought to make the game run on a wide range of systems without requiring DirectX 10.[9] Diablo III uses a custom 3D game engine[10] in order to present an overhead view to the player, in a somewhat similar way to the isometric view used in previous games in the series.[9] Enemies utilize the 3D environment as well, in ways such as crawling up the side of a wall from the depths into the combat area.[11]

As in Diablo II, multiplayer games are possible using Blizzard's Battle.net service,[12] with many of the new features developed for StarCraft II also available in Diablo III.[9] Players will be able to drop in and out of sessions of co-operative play with others.[13] Unlike its predecessor, Diablo III requires players to be connected to the internet constantly due to their DRM policy, even for single-player games.[14]

An enhanced quest system, a random level generator, and a random encounter generator are used in order to ensure the game provides different experiences when replayed.[15]

Unlike previous iterations, gold can be picked up merely by touching it, or coming within range, adjusted by gear, rather than having to manually pick it up.[16] One of the new features intended to speed gameplay is that health orbs drop from enemies, replacing the need to have a potion bar, which itself is replaced by a skill bar that allows a player to assign quick bar buttons to skills and spells; previously, players could only assign two skills (one for each mouse button) and had to swap skills with the keyboard or mousewheel. Players can still assign specific attacks to mouse buttons.[16]

Skill runes, another new feature, are skill modifiers that are unlocked as the player levels up. Unlike the socketable runes in Diablo II, skill runes are not items but instead provide options for enhancing skills, often completely changing the gameplay of each skill.[17] For example, one skill rune for the Wizard's meteor ability reduces its arcane power cost, while another turns the meteor to ice, causing cold damage rather than fire.

Hardcore mode [edit]

As in Diablo II, Diablo III gives players the choice to make hardcore characters.[18] Players are required to first level up a regular character to level 10 before they have the option to create new Hardcore characters.[19] Hardcore characters cannot be resurrected; instead they become permanently unplayable if they are killed. They also do not have access to the real-world money auction house.[20] Hardcore characters are separately ranked; their names are highlighted with a different color (red); and they can only form teams with other hardcore characters. After dying, the ghost of a hardcore character can still chat, the name still shows up in rankings, but the character cannot return to the game.[21]

Gems [edit]

There are four gem types that can be collected throughout Sanctuary. These include topaz, emerald, ruby, and amethyst. They can be found in differing qualities; the highest quality that can be found is the flawless square, which will not be seen until inferno mode. There are 15 different qualities ranging with bonuses of +6, to +62 for base stats including intelligence for topaz, strength for ruby, dexterity for emerald, and vitality for amethyst when put into any item that is not a weapon or helm. When put into a helm the bonuses include a percent life increase for amethyst, a percentage of extra gold from monsters for emerald, a percentage of bonus experience points for ruby, and a percentage of better magic find for topaz. When put into a weapon the results are different still; melee attackers take damage for topaz, adds minimum and maximum damage to a weapon for ruby, critical hit damage is increased for emerald, and each hit adds life for amethyst. An item must have an empty socket in order to have a gem put into it, and many items have multiple empty sockets. Gems can be combined at the Artisans to make higher level gems, to increase the bonus they give to items they are mounted in. The mounting processes is reversible, and gems can be removed for a price with the gem crafter Covetous Shen. A gem can also be removed by salvaging the item it is mounted in, and the gem is left in the character's inventory.[22] [23]

Artisans [edit]

Artisans are NPCs who sell and craft. Two types of artisans can be introduced by completing a quest for each: Haedrig Eamon the Blacksmith and Covetous Shen the Jeweler. The previously announced Mystic Artisan has been pulled, possibly to be released later on.[24] Artisans create items using materials the player can gather by scrapping acquired items and reducing them to their component parts. These materials are used to create items which will have random bonuses. Unlike Diablo II, rare and magic items can be enhanced, not just basic weaponry and armor. Crafting can also be used to train and improve the skills of the artisans rather than create new items. When artisans gain new levels, their shop reflects their higher skill level. The process of salvaging items into materials also makes inventory management easier. Blizzard stated that this crafting system was designed so that it would not slow down the pace of the game.[25]

Followers [edit]

Followers are NPC allies that can accompany the player throughout the game world. There are three followers in Diablo III: Kormac the Templar, Lyndon the Scoundrel and Eirena the Enchantress, who each possess their own skills and background.[26] As followers fight alongside the player, they gain new experience, skills, and equipment as they level up. Only one follower accompanies the player at a time, creating a gameplay strategy decision. Originally, followers were only going to appear in normal, single-player mode. However, Jay Wilson stated at BlizzCon 2011 that followers would continue to be usable in later difficulty levels.[27] Followers will not appear in co-op games.[28]

Auction house [edit]

On August 1, 2011, it was reported that Diablo III would feature two types of auction houses; one where players spend in-game gold and another where players can buy or sell virtual items for real-world money.[29] The real-money auction house is not available in Hardcore mode.[30]

Prior to release Blizzard stated that nearly everything that drops on the ground, including gold, can be traded with other players either directly or through the auction house system. Aside from certain bound on account items, which include items for the secret level[clarification needed (What secret level and what "item for the secret level"?)], Blizzard stated there would be very few items that would be bound to a particular character and therefore un-tradable.[30]

In order to get rated in South Korea, Blizzard had to remove the real-money auction house from the Korean release of the game as the auction house violated Korean anti-gambling laws.[31]

In the gold-based auction house, a flat fee of 15 percent is taken from the final sale price of an auction. The real-money auction house fees are US$1, €1 or £1 (or equivalent) for equipment (weapons and armor) and 15 percent fee for commodity auctions, which include items like crafting materials, blacksmith and jewel crafting plans, and gold exchange. There is an additional 15 percent "cashing-out" fee from proceeds gained selling items in the real-money auction house.[32]

While the gold-based auction house is available to any player regardless of which region they play in, the real-money auction is restricted to players on their home region. If they use the global play function to play in a different region, they will not be able to access the real-money auction house.[33] The real money auction house was opened on June 12, 2012 (June 15 in the Americas).

PvP combat [edit]

Player versus player combat (PvP) was added to Diablo III in a limited form with the 1.0.7 patch, in February 2013. The Brawling system provides a simple free for all area where between two and four characters can fight and defeat each other as long as they like, but without any scores or damage being tracked.[34] Players can participate by choosing from their existing characters, with access to all of the gear and skill they have gathered from playing the game in single-player or cooperative mode.

PvP content for Diablo III had been discussed throughout the game's development, but on March 9, 2012, Blizzard announced that PvP had been delayed and would not be included with the game's release.[35] Lead designer Jay Wilson said in a post on Battle.net that the PvP Arena system would arrive in a post-release patch; it would include multiple Arena maps with themed locations and layouts, PvP-centric achievements, and a quick and easy matchmaking system. "We'll also be adding a personal progression system that will reward you for successfully bashing in the other team's skulls", Wilson added.

On December 27, 2012, Blizzard announced that the previously mentioned Team Deathmatch or Arena mode was cancelled, because it did not have enough depth. Instead a simple PvP system would be added for the time being.[36] That PvP mode was initially named Dueling, and was renamed to Brawling before release.[37] Although the PvP systems initially outlined were not released, Blizzard stated that they will add other full-featured PvP systems in a future free content patch.

Character classes [edit]

The five character classes of Diablo III. From left to right: Wizard, Witch Doctor, Demon Hunter, Barbarian, and Monk
Character creation screen with the Demon Hunter selected

There are five available character classes.[38][39] In the previous two games, each class had a fixed gender, but in Diablo III players may choose the gender they would like to play.[11]

  • The Witch Doctor is a new character reminiscent of the Diablo II necromancer but with skills more traditionally associated with shamanism and voodoo culture. The witch doctor has the ability to summon monsters, cast curses, harvest souls, and hurl poisons and explosives at his enemies. To power spells the Witch Doctor uses Mana, which regenerates slowly.[40]
  • The Barbarian has a variety of revamped skills at its disposal based on incredible physical prowess. The barbarian is able to whirlwind through crowds, cleave through swarms, leap across crags, crush opponents upon landing, and grapple-snap enemies into melee range. The resource used by the barbarian is fury, which is generated through attacking enemies, getting attacked by enemies, and using certain abilities. Fury is used for certain strong abilities and degenerates over time.[41]
  • The Wizard is a version of the sorceress from Diablo II or the sorcerer from Diablo. The Wizard's abilities range from shooting lightning, fire and ice at their enemies to slowing time and teleporting past enemies and through walls. Wizards fuel their spells with arcane power, which is a fast regenerating power source.[42]
  • The Monk is a melee attacker, using martial arts to cripple foes, resist damage, deflect projectiles, attack with blinding speed, and land explosive killing blows. Monk gameplay combines the melee elements of Diablo II's assassin class with the "holy warrior" role of the paladin. Blizzard has stated that the monk is not related in any way to the monk class from the Sierra Entertainment-made Diablo: Hellfire expansion.[43] The monk is fueled by spirit, which has defensive purposes and is slowly generated through attacking, though it does not degenerate.[44]
  • The Demon Hunter combines elements of Diablo II's amazon and assassin classes. Demon hunters use crossbows as their main weapon and can also throw small bombs at enemies. The demon hunter is fueled by both discipline and hatred: Hatred is a fast regenerating resource that is used for attacks, while discipline is a slow regenerating resource used for defensive abilities.[45]

The Archivist class was presented on April 1, 2009, following in Blizzard's April Fool's Day joke tradition.[46]

Development [edit]

Development on Diablo III began in 2001 when Blizzard North was still in operation, and the game was first announced on June 28, 2008, at the Blizzard Worldwide Invitational in Paris, France.[15] The original artistic design differed from that shown at Blizzard Worldwide Invitational 2008 demonstration, and had undergone three revisions before reaching the standards felt necessary by the team behind Diablo III.[citation needed] The game is being planned for a simultaneous release on both Windows and Mac OS X platforms.[15] It was also revealed that the game would require a constant internet connection to play, even for single-player mode.[47]

Diablo III's lead designer is Jay Wilson, a former Relic Entertainment designer credited with work on Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War and Company of Heroes as well as Blood II: The Chosen for Monolith Productions. Its lead world designer is Leonard Boyarsky, one of the six co-creators of Fallout.[48]

Bobby Kotick from Activision announced in February 2012 that Diablo III would not launch in the 1st quarter of 2012, a slide show presentation at Activision's quarterly financial report listed the game's launch sometime in Q2 of 2012, and tne release date of May 15, 2012, was announced on March 15, 2012.[3]

Beta [edit]

On May 9, 2011 Blizzard announced that Diablo III was expected to be released for external beta testing in Q3 of 2011.[49] On September 7, 2011 Blizzard community manager Bashiok confirmed the start of the closed public beta test of the game with limited external testing by employees and their families. Testers were not restricted by a non-disclosure agreement (NDA) i.e. every participant would be free to show, share, or talk about any portion of the beta content.[50] On September 20, 2011 Blizzard announced through their Diablo III site that the closed beta test portion of the game through invites, promotions and giveaways had begun. On October 22, 2011 at BlizzCon, Diablo III game director Jay Wilson announced during an open Q&A that a new wave of beta invitations would be sent after an upcoming patch. Blizzard announced on April 19, 2012 that there would be an open beta weekend for the game, starting on April 20, 2012 and ending the morning of April 23.[51] The closed beta ended on May 1, 2012.

The content available in the beta included the possibility to try all 5 character classes in the first act up to the Skeleton King encounter. The players were also able to try various in-game features such as crafting through the blacksmithing NPC, the auction house, hosting and joining public games as well as earning achievements.[52]

The beta website made references that measures would be in place to prevent future cheating.[53]

Post-launch improvements [edit]

On June 11, 2012 it was announced at Apple's 2012 WWDC keynote that native Retina display support will be coming to Diablo III.[54] The following day, a Blizzard's representative confirmed via the official Battle.net forums Apple's statement, the ongoing work by the developer on the optimization of the game engine for its rendering on the Retina display (and technically on other similar future high-density monitors) and that this optimization will be mainly for aesthetic purposes.[55]

The first PvP addition to the game was in February 2013 as part of patch 1.0.7; a simple free-for-all system called "Brawling" and multiple item crafting options.[34]

Console development [edit]

On January 10, 2012, Blizzard community manager Bashiok tweeted "Yup. Josh Mosqueira is lead designer for the Diablo console project"[56] however a Blizzard spokesperson later clarified that Bashiok's tweet was only "intended as a confirmation that Blizzard is actively exploring the possibility of developing a console version of Diablo III," adding, "This is not a confirmation that Diablo III is coming to any console platform."[57]

At Sony's Press Conference on February 20, 2013, Chris Metzen announced that Diablo III would release on both PlayStation 3 and PlayStation 4.[2]

Music [edit]

Russell Brower composed the music for Diablo III. When composing for the orchestra, he tried to respect the Wagnerian style from the expansion to the second game in the series, Lord of Destruction.[58] The Overture is considered the main theme of the game and it has been performed by the Eminence Symphony Orchestra.[59] A similar composition was used in the cinematic teaser trailer of the game. The Tristram theme from the first Diablo, also used in the second game, is present in Diablo III with some changes.[citation needed]

Marketing and release [edit]

Diablo III was released on May 15, 2012. Players had the options to buy one of two retail boxed versions, a standard edition and collector's edition, or could also pre-order directly from Battle.net and download the installer in advance. On May 14, 2012 players who bought the downloadable version from Battle.net could install the rest of the game including patches.[60] On May 15, 2012 the retail version could be bought from stores doing midnight launches such as GameStop. The Diablo III Battle.net servers went live at this time and people who downloaded the game could begin playing. Initially the launches were hindered by heavy server load with many users getting various errors, including the error 37 which reads; "The servers are busy at this time. Please try again later". These issues made the game unplayable for those affected, while some others experienced in-game bugs.[61][62] Despite assurances from Blizzard that the problems leading to the connection errors during Diablo III's launch had been resolved, Eurogamer reported on May 31, 2012 that these errors were still ongoing, and had reappeared after patch 1.0.2 was released for the game. Many fans complained that the ongoing problems had caused them to lose their hardcore (permanent death) characters.[63]

In South Korea, players waited up to 36 hours to purchase the collector's edition.[64]

The release was also the source of a minor controversy in Australia when retailer Game went into voluntary administration the day before the release, and so was unable to honor pre-orders or offer refunds.[65] In response to this, Blizzard Entertainment offered affected customers credit in purchasing the digital version of the game.[66]

The game has yet to be released in China as it has not been approved by the Ministry of Culture however it continues to be sold under the name "Big Pineapple" which sounds similar to Diablo in Mandarin Chinese in order to dodge the sales ban.[67]

World of Warcraft promotion [edit]

Starting at BlizzCon in October 2011, Blizzard offered an "annual pass" for World of Warcraft, where players who signed up for a 12 month subscription to that game received a free digital copy of Diablo III once released, as well as guaranteed beta access for the upcoming Mists of Pandaria expansion to World of Warcraft and a special Diablo-inspired mount called Tyrael's Charger in World of Warcraft.[68]

Starter Edition [edit]

A demo version of the game, called the Starter Edition, was released simultaneously with the full release. It provides a limited introduction to the game where players can complete Act 1 up to the Skeleton King boss encounter with a level cap of 13.

For the first 30 days after Diablo III's release the Starter Edition was only available through a guest pass code, which was included with the boxed versions of the game. Players had the option to upgrade to the full game through their Battle.net accounts.[69]

The Starter Edition was originally planned to become available to all users after 30 days (on June 14, 2012), however it was delayed until August 15, 2012.[70]

Reception [edit]

Critical reception [edit]

 Reception
Aggregate scores
Aggregator Score
GameRankings 87.64%[71]
Metacritic 88/100[72]
Review scores
Publication Score
Edge 9/10[73]
Eurogamer 9/10[74]
G4 4.5/5[75]
Game Informer 9/10[76]
GameSpot 8.5/10[77]
GameSpy 4/5 stars[78]
GamesRadar 8/10[79]
IGN 9.5/10[80]
PC Gamer (UK) 90/100[81]


Diablo III has received generally positive reviews from critics, attaining scores of 87.64% and 88/100 on aggregate review websites GameRankings and Metacritic respectively.[71][72]

GamesRadar was positive about the game's opening act and its nods to past Diablo games saying "we liked what we saw."[82]

IGN was positive about the new skill system stating "Instead of gameplay like Diablo II, where I often regretted how I allotted my ability points, Diablo III encourages experimentation and finding out exactly what works for your play-style. It's a vastly superior way to handle character abilities", and praised the overall gameplay, stating "the new systems really do make it a lot easier to enjoy Diablo III".[83]

IGN further praised the game's new gameplay design, in particular the rune and loot systems, the randomly generated levels and the game's enjoyable unpredictability. It stated the game's feel is quite intuitive and also praised the game's sound and voicing.[84]

Rock, Paper, Shotgun gave mixed commentary during the game's beta period, praising the actual game itself by stating that it is much more direct than its predecessors and intuitive in its interface. However, it said the playing experience is spoiled due to lag in single-player mode caused by a lack of an offline single-player mode.[85] Following the game's release, it reaffirmed its displeasure at the always-online DRM and offered a mixed opinion that the game was enjoyable but added "nothing new" to its genre.[86]

Users have voiced criticism about the game's strong digital rights management which requires what is known as persistent online authentication, resulting in the lack of an offline single-player mode.[6]

Erik Kain, a Forbes contributing writer, stated that the requirement to remain online is not necessary for single-player mode and that Blizzard is abusing its position as a "juggernaut" and is setting a worrying precedent for the gaming industry.[6] In response to questions about the lack of offline single-player, Diablo III senior producer Alex Mayberry said, "Obviously StarCraft 2 did it, World of Warcraft authenticates also. It's kind of the way things are, these days. The world of gaming is not the same as it was when Diablo II came out."[87]

Gaming Blend supported the game's fanbase (referring to the user ratings on Metacritic and Amazon) and rejected counter-criticisms of the community. It claims that the gaming industry at large is far too defensive of production companies' actions, to the point of accepting backward steps in game availability. William Usher, the article's author said, "Journalists should have been acknowledging consumer distaste rather than fueling it with pro-corporate pandering."[88]

While Gaming Blend disliked the always-online DRM, it did give the game a positive review. It stated the game includes interesting opportunities for experimentation and has great appeal for replaying over and over. The review concluded the game is "smooth and entertaining."[89] A GameArena critic questioned how Blizzard managed to "fail so spectacularly at creating reliable networking for Diablo 3" before going on to point out the lack of competitive multiplayer.[90]

The Black Soulstone footage won the 'Outstanding Visual Effects in an Animated Commercial or Video Game Trailer' award from the Visual Effects Society.[91][92][93]

Sales [edit]

Before its release, Diablo III broke several presale records and became the most pre-ordered PC game to date on Amazon.com.[94] Activision Blizzard reported that Diablo III had broken the one-day PC sales records, accumulating over 3.5 million sales in the first 24 hours after release and over 6.3 million sales in its first week, including the 1.2 million people who obtained Diablo III through the World of Warcraft annual pass.[95] On its first day, the game amassed 4.7 million players worldwide, an estimate which includes those who obtained the game via the World of Warcraft annual pass.[95] In its second quarterly report, Diablo III was reported to have pushed Activision Blizzard's expectations and as of July 2012, more than 10 million people had played the game.[96] Diablo III remains the fastest selling PC game to date, and also one of the best-selling PC video games. As of the end of 2012, it had sold more than 12 million copies,[5] and as of March 2013, Blizzard stated that Diablo III had around 1 million daily players, with 3 million unique players each month.[97]

Controversies [edit]

South Korea [edit]

On May 28, 2012, Blizzard Entertainment's offices in South Korea were raided by the Fair Trade Commission amid allegations that the company had breached consumer rights laws, including suspected violations of Korea's law on electronic commerce and commercial contracts. Players in Korea requested refunds from Blizzard based on their inability to play Diablo III, but Blizzard cited the terms of sale and refused to grant these requests. Hundreds of gamers filed formal complaints with the FTC,[98][99][100] and in June 2012 Blizzard started offering players full refunds.[101]

France [edit]

On June 15, 2012, French consumers group UFC Que Choisir announced that it had received 1,500 complaints in 4 days regarding connectivity issues with Diablo III.[102] As a result of this, the organization asked Blizzard Entertainment to provide a permanent solution within fifteen days of that time (June 30, 2012) and to "communicate completely and transparently about problems encountered in due time". They also requested that gamers be given reimbursement for any troubles they may have encountered. In addition, they asked the French government to take a closer look at games with online-only DRM.[103] On June 28, Blizzard replied to the Que Choisir that the box for Diablo III clearly labelled that a high-speed internet connection was required and that most of the stability issues had been fixed.[104]

Germany [edit]

The German Federation of Consumer Organizations threatened legal action if Blizzard did not respond to complaints about Diablo III's lack of clear information on the German version of the box regarding the online requirement and lack of resale-ability.[105][106]

References [edit]

  1. ^ PC Gamer US (2008-08-01). "Diablo III Preview". GamesRadar. Retrieved 2008-08-02. 
  2. ^ a b c d Dyer, Mitch (February 20, 2013). "Blizzard Announces Diablo 3 for PlayStation 4". Retrieved February 20, 2013. 
  3. ^ a b c "Diablo III Launching May 15 – Digital Pre-Sales NOW OPEN". Blizzard. 2012-03-15. 
  4. ^ "Diablo III sets PC game launch record". Blizzard Entertainment. 
  5. ^ a b Bramblet, Matthew (February 7, 2013). "Activision Blizzard Q4 2012 Earnings Report". diablo.somepage.com. Retrieved March 2, 2013. 
  6. ^ a b c Kain, Erik (May 17, 2012). "Diablo III' Fans Should Stay Angry About Always-Online DRM". Forbes. Retrieved May 17, 2012. 
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External links [edit]