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1 week after Diablo 2 got its first new class in 25 years, the playerbase is already fractured on whether it's perfectly OP or "completely unacceptable"
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Jordan Gerblick
2026-02-18
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Like Diablo 4's Spiritborn problem from a little while back, Blizzard needs to decide whether to nerf down Warlocks, nerf up the other classes to match, or just leave the whole thing alone and let players figure it out themselves. Naturally, there are impassioned opinions across the spectrum online. One of the most visited threads on the Diablo 2 subreddit over the last week is one titled "Don't nerf Warlock!" with an image of a Warlock holding up a sign with the same demand. The post has more than a thousand upvotes, which is a lot for the Diablo 2 sub, and over 600 comments either agreeing or disagreeing. The top comment with 508 upvotes is in agreement, but with one suggestion: "Sign needs to be floating with a purple aura," a reference to the purple glow that activates with various Warlock skills and abilities. Naturally, it didn't take long for someone to acquiesce. The Warlock is Diablo 2's first new class in 25 years, it's playable right now, and, oh, it's coming to Diablo 4 too Diablo 2 could get more new content, but Blizzard has to "nail that otherwise we kill the game in trying to progress it" The verdict is in: Diablo 4's new Paladin class is delightfully overpowered and "so insanely fun" Comment from r/diablo2 One Reddit user referenced a new video from streamer Coooley titled 'Oops... I broke the Warlock" in which the known Diablo build breaker demonstrates "the most powerful build I have ever seen in Diablo 2." You can get the full build details in the video, but the main prerequisite is that you level Demonic Mastery up to 10, which unlocks the ability to summon two demons. Meanwhile, Coooley combines a number of damage multipliers, including an additional demon he consumes, to boost Echoing Strike's output to "asinine numbers." After which, he quickly solo-clears the entire game with eight players on the server, meaning monsters are as powerful as they can be. "'But it's fun!!' - this Spiritborn-esque level of OP is completely unacceptable for D2," argued one Reddit user, who added, "New classes cannot be intentionally made so powerful that they just crush every challenge the game has to offer. It's just a cheap trick to get us to spend our money which, with time, will completely destroy any balance and sense of progression the game previously had. We are heading into a subscription based (buy the new DLC to be competitive) FOTM ARPG." "No way - it has to get nerfed," said another Redditor. "Bringing up all other characters to his level would make the game feel like Diablo 3, which none of us want. But if we don't do that, the Warlock remains the objectively best class in the game. It has to happen." As someone who spent hundreds of hours in the early 2000s ripping through Diablo 2's campaign and becoming a notorious player killer thanks to my use of the black market "whites" item set (IYKYK), I have no business saying the new Warlock class should be nerfed, but, well, that's how I feel. When players find ways to exploit multipliers in ways Blizzard clearly wasn't intending, we quickly descend into lawlessness where whatever balance system the studio has implemented becomes obsolete. Not to mention, Diablo 2 Resurrected's Reign of the Warlock DLC is $25, which gives this specific scenario a pay-to-win vibe that I can't get on-board with. Diablo 2 could get even more new content, Blizzard says, but "we have to nail that otherwise we kill the game in trying to progress it forward"
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