Are Diablo fans getting too old for the old-school item grind?
Longtime fans of Diablo II are deeply familiar with the extreme timesink that is the late game grind for the very best loot. But when the creators of Diablo IV tried to recreate that style of grinding for the latest game in the series, they found that their players’ tastes had changed quite a bit in the intervening years.
In a wide-ranging interview with Windows Central, Blizzard’s general manager of Diablo, Rod Fergusson, said that they launched Diablo IV under “the assumption that D4 was meant to be more D2-like.” That meant, in part, increasing the length of time required to discover the game’s most valuable items after post-Auction-House Diablo 3 made rare item drops much more common.
“One of the assumptions was that people were going to be okay with the long grind for the Unique or an Uber Unique in particular, because in Diablo II, it can go years,” Fergusson said. “You can go three years before you find the Uber you’re looking for… and so we were like, okay, this is what people love about the progression of D2, that idea of that very long chase.”