
Worryingly, the servers seemed, unstable.

I was having fun, I was enjoying bashing skeletons and demons with my dual axes on my Barbarian, and was just really enjoying replaying a game that I was a little to young to really be any good at, when it first released. For the most part, I found little issue with the game. Most people would be quite happy to know that Diablo 2: Resurrected is essentially the 2000 game with a new coat of paint. I would often swap into legacy mode, just to see how wildly different an area looked, how an enemy model once was, or whether or not the shrine actually existed in the original version, because I didn’t remember it. The legacy graphics compared to the updated visuals are, garish in comparison. This is a remaster, a visually updated version of the D2 that we remember and love. You can switch between modern day and legacy graphics with a hit of a key, and it goes to show something very important with this. Perhaps they are just holding out because of the popularity, I was instantly concerned about what I was going to go in to. I do not know why the Assassin and the Necromancer were unavailable, and it makes me worried that they weren’t. If it wasn’t for the fact that I played with a friend who was playing Druid, who filled the screen with minions, I would have assumed it was fears of the skeletons overloading the servers.

I was very upset that I couldn’t test out the Necromancer at this stage, and that to me personally is a concern.

How does it hold up? We were lucky enough to have a look.ĭiablo II: Resurrected recently had their multiplayer beta, which gave players access to the first two acts, and all but the most exciting of characters in the Necromancer, and the Assassin. By the light, I know this vile demon! Diablo is resurrected and brought to a modern audience with a modern look.
