Category: Diablo

Diablo III Drama

Diablo 3 Drama

A little while back, David Brevik, co-founder of Blizzard North who was behind the first two Diablo titles did an interview with IncGamers about Diablo III. After the Blizzard North team was done away with in 2005, Blizzard South was put in charge of Diablo III development.

This is a transcript of the interview:

IncGamers: You are very well known in the world of ARPGs, and I am going to ask you, Diablo 3 is probably the most anticipated PC title in 10 years. What’s your opinion on the final product?

David Brevik: Honestly, I think that they did a lot of the things the best they could, it was a very different game than I would have created, the team and personalities, the people, the talent and all the design philosophies of the people that worked on it in Irvine, we called them Blizzard South, those people have their own style and the their own way they like to design. It was very, very different from the Blizzard North.

So I think that when Blizzard South took over the development of Diablo 3 it was inevitable that they were going to create an experience that was in the Diablo theme but concentrated more towards the things that they liked to experience. Including more story and things like that.

When Blizzard North shut down they lost a ton of experience with why the Action RPG works and what about it works. That’s really difficult to recover from. They didn’t have the experience of people that knew it well. This is why you do things with random levels for example, and so when you lose that experience you are going to create a very different experience in the end than we would have created.

IncGamers: Do you think they bought the wrong people in? As we understand, Jay Wilson, for example, his background was RTS. From our point of view it looked like they misunderstood what kept people playing, The type of loot drops, which has been a big issues. One of the other issues is they have not listened to their community, and they have not anlaysed what makes up that addictive Diablo experience. What are your thoughts on that?

David Brevik: Well, the loot system. They made some decisions with the loot system that were very different than the way that we did it in Diablo 2 and I think that obviously the community has been upset with some of the decisions they made. Having all of your powers work off your main weapon and things like that, to having blues that are more powerful than yellows. Eventually the auction house and how that worked, even something as simple as when you equip an item and it’s bound to your character permanently would have totally changed the dynamic of the game.

It seems odd that they have not really responded in a quick fashion to some of these things. I think they are very well aware of the problems at this point and are trying to fix some of this stuff. It’s a shame that they had to learn some of these painful lessons

IncGamers: As you created Diablo, how do you feel about it? Do you feel a little let down that the legacy has kind of been mashed up?

David Brevik: I have very mixed emotions about it (laughs). On one hand I am sad that people haven’t enjoyed Diablo because it’s a love, a passion, and its obvious people still have a giant love and passion for Diablo and they are speaking out about it because they have such love for it. That makes me feel great.

I am sad because people are outraged and, you know, some of the decision they have made are not the decisions I would make and there have been changes in philosophy and that hasn’t gone over very well. I think in that way I am a little sad.

I am also a little happy, which I hate to say, it shows that the people that were involved in Diablo really did matter, and so I am happy that it has come to light that how talented that group was and how unique and special that group was. I am hoping that, as this happens very often in the industry, you see it with Call of Duty and things like that , when the people leave the game changes and it shows how critical people are in this industry.

IncGamers: One of the questions the Gazillion guys asked me to ask you was, where did the name Diablo come from?

David Brevik: I thought of the game when I was in high school and I lived in the east part of San Francisco in a town called Danville and I loved at the base of Mount Diablo and that’s where the name comes from. Once I found out what the mountain name was, I thought that was awesome, I didn’t speak Spanish, so I thought I wanted to use that as a title for a nemesis in a videogame. It’s simply from where I lived.

IncGamers: Well thanks a lot David, you’ve brought a lot of pleasure to millions of people over the years and hopefully you’ll continue to do so.

Chris Haga who was a Technical Artist on the Diablo III team got wind of the interview and was apparently insulted by it and took to facebook. Shortly after that familiar names comment on the article agreeing with their dislike of David Brevik calling him a “fucking loser”. Some of the other people were Producer Stephen Parker, Game Director Jay Wilson, Gameplay Programmer Roger Hughston and fellow Technical Artist Jill Harrington. I’m quite shocked at the negative attitude towards the man who created the franchise that they’re so proud of. It will be interesting to see what kind of backlash this public reaction from the Diablo III team has. Normally employees who take to facebook and give their company a negative image are fired – I doubt anything like that will happen to the new Diablo team, but it will be interesting to see how Blizzard reacts.

Click to see Chris Haga Facebook image

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Diablo III Starter Edition

Diablo III Starter

The Diablo III Starter Edition lets you play up to level 13. You can read about all the limitations here. You can play all of Act I up to the Skeleton King, level up to level 13, no access to auction houses (real money AH or the gold AH), and you can only be matched up to other Starter Edition players in the matchmaking system.

While this is a great way to test the game to see if it’s really as good or horrible as either side makes it out to be – it’s not an alternative to dropping $50 on the game and getting to play a gimped version (ah-la free-to-play) as much as it’s like WoW and SC2’s starter trials.

To grab the starter edition, Log in to your existing Battle.net account at www.battle.net, and sign up for the Diablo III Starter Edition through the “Your Game Accounts” section.

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Diablo III Players Plummeting

Diablo III Decline

Taking a look at the Xfire statistics of games being played – it’s easy to see Diablo III’s steady decline in active players. While Xfire isn’t indicative of Diablo III’s gamer base, it does show a slice of very active PC gamers and the graph doesn’t look good.

Here are some opinions from this Reddit thread

“I think the reason is this developement:

  1. You bought Diablo3, you played it solo or with friends for a few weeks or so.
  2. Depending on your or your group skills you beat it a few times and you reached hell or inferno.
  3. Now your gear is too bad to continue
  4. You checked the auction house or tried to farm some gear. You may have spend your gold on a few awesome items but you still need much more gear to beat inferno (or even hell depending on your personal skill).
  5. You now can buy a complete set of gear for much real money – more money than the D3 price. Many (including me) will never do that. Or you can try to farm the gear. Turning the game into a total mindless grind especially since 99% of the drops (that’s no exaggeration) are crap. That’s too boring for most people (including me).
  6. You quit playing D3

This is the story 2/3 of my friends and myself had with D3. It was fun until we ran into the you-need-extremly-rare-gear wall.”

And

“The loot is overblown, silly and antiquated. Non-magic loot is basically clutter an hour into the game and onwards, and it seems that every 20 minutes you are returning back to sell because your inventory is full. A completely outmoded concept.

The “hell” that they have conjured up in this game has absolutely zero terror. There is no psychological or creepy enemies, no pentagrams, no upside-down crucifixes, nothing but hordes and hordes of “monsters” and “beasts”. Really, really disappointing from a 2012 mature rated game.

It’s a tame, repetitive farming game.”

What do you think? Do you still play and enjoy it?

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