Diablo IV

Diablo IV

Battle.net
In stock
Digital download
A$116
-3%
A$112.28

About

Diablo IV for PC is an online-only action role-playing game, the fourth main game in the Diablo series. This game makes you feel as though you are playing through a medieval city, and for the first time in the series, you can go up and down, as well as along. About the Game The game revives the world of Sanctuary, and takes place some 50 years after the events of the last main game, Diablo III: Reaper of Souls. Lilith, the daughter of Mephisto, is the main antagonist and, in this game, she i...
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Rating:
PEGI 18
Release date:
Recent Steam reviews:
Mostly positive (1197)
All Steam reviews:
Mixed (14870)

Editions

Diablo IV

Standard Edition

  • Diablo IV
  • -5 more
    more in description...
A$116
-3%
A$112.28
Diablo IV Ultimate Edition

Ultimate Edition

  • Diablo IV
  • Inarius Wings & Inarius Murloc Pet in Diablo
  • Amalgam of Rage Mount in World of Warcraft
  • Umber Winged Darkness Cosmetics Set in Diablo Immortal
  • Temptation Mount in Diablo IV
  • Hellborn Carapace Mount Armor in Diablo IV
  • Wings of the Creator Emote in Diablo IV
  • Accelerated Seasonal Battle Pass Unlock in Diablo IV
  • 3 more
    more in description...
A$165
-28%
A$119.06
Diablo IV Digital Deluxe Edition

Digital Deluxe Edition

  • Diablo IV
  • Inarius Wings & Inarius Murloc Pet in Diablo
  • Amalgam of Rage Mount in World of Warcraft
  • Umber Winged Darkness Cosmetics Set in Diablo Immortal
  • Temptation Mount in Diablo IV
  • Hellborn Carapace Mount Armor in Diablo IV
  • Seasonal Battle Pass Unlock in Diablo IV
  • 2 more
    more in description...
A$149
-11%
A$132.29

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Diablo IV - Season of the Construct Accelerated Battle Pass

Diablo IV - Season of the Construct Accelerated Battle Pass

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A$41.35 A$36.20
Diablo IV - Vessel of Hatred

Diablo IV - Vessel of Hatred

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Description

Diablo IV for PC is an online-only action role-playing game, the fourth main game in the Diablo series. This game makes you feel as though you are playing through a medieval city, and for the first time in the series, you can go up and down, as well as along.

About the Game


The game revives the world of Sanctuary, and takes place some 50 years after the events of the last main game, Diablo III: Reaper of Souls. Lilith, the daughter of Mephisto, is the main antagonist and, in this game, she is able to grab a toe-hold in Sanctuary as the forces of both demons and angels have been reduced by the events of the previous games.

Backstory about Sanctuary: Lilith and the angel Inarius created a haven for those needing a time-out from the endless war between heaven and hell. Their alliance led to the arrival of the Nephalem, a combination of Lilith’s demonic side and Inarius’s angelic side – a sort of blend of angel and demon that is neither one nor the other. The Sanctuary inhabitants loathed the existence of the Nephalem and in the ensuing fight, Lilith was banished into the void.

You play as the Wanderer, and the game begins with you being captured and drugged by villagers who are under Lilith’s spell. Your escape brings you into contact with Lorath Nahr (fans of the game will recognise the name from the last game) who explains the premise of the game and gets you set up with your first task. The story will then progress linearly, as you work your way along the storyline, with a lot of excitement and combat along the way.

The Nitty Gritty


There are a number of places on the game map: Dry Steppes, Fractured Peaks, Hawezar, Kehjistan, Scosglen, and Hell itself. There are some procedurally generated dungeons which will change each time you play both inside and out. The world is contained to just your playing party, so there is no danger of coming across other players. Sanctuary is a fixed world, and as such does not change.
As for the other places: Dry Steppes is a cannibalistic desert region; Fractured Peaks is filled with snowy mountains pock-marked with caves; and Hawezar is a witch-populated swamp. Kehjistan seems to be a warning against unchecked capitalism, holding the remains of a past civilisation, while Scosglen is an attractive forested area by the coast: home to druids, werewolves and other enemies such as the drowned undead.

Once you have played through the campaign once (unravelling the fairly loose storyline) you can skip it on subsequent play-throughs (when you have a new character to try out) treating the game more as an open world game where you can explore and battle and quest to your heart’s content. There are no loading screens between regions, and you can wander from one to the other in any order you like. Some areas remain locked until you’ve upgraded enough.

The tried and tested well-loved co-operative play format returns – so round up three like-minded friends, as well as some new player-vs-player formats and challenge events that anyone can try their hand at. If the game seems a bit easy, load up hardcore mode to try a more challenging game.
The graphics in the game are wonderful, with hell showing as suitably gruesome and Sanctuary the tempting refuge it is meant to be!

Who Will You Be?


There are five playable classes in the game and you can play through the game as each one, seeing the differences in weapons, skills and combat styles: as mentioned above, once you’ve completed the first playthrough, you can skip the campaign mode and go straight to the sandbox. Let’s take a look at who you can be:

  • Barbarian: switch between your weapons while in combat, this playing character returns from Diablo II and Diablo III. Or just use your fists and your righteous rage to trample forth!

  • Sorcerer: wield fire, ice, lightning and other elemental magic as a sorcerer as seen in the original game and the first sequel

  • Druid: last seen in Diablo II this character is a shapeshifter who has earth and storm magic, to be deployed while morphing between human, werewolf, and werebear

  • Rogue: from the original game, this speedy battler can handle both distance fighting with a bow and arrow and up-close knife melee attack

  • Necromancer: deal with dark magic and death to summon allies and attack enemies with this returning character who has featured in Diablo II and Diablo III. Use your evil powers to populate your army of the dead, reanimate fallen soldiers and generally terrorise your opponent’s


  • All of these characters are tremendous fun to play, and you can customise your appearance, rather than being tied to a character type, as well as being able to make your own way up skill trees so even your abilities can be customised too. Your character building is loot-based, so be sure to pick up any swag you might come across.

    Diablo IV for PC is available for purchase on Instant Gaming for a fraction of its retail price. You will receive an official key and be able to play the game in seconds. Play smart. Pay less.

    Configurations

    minimum*

    • OS: 64-bit Windows 10 version 1909 or newer
    • Processor: Intel Core i5-2500K or AMD FX-8350
    • Memory: 8 GB RAM
    • Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660 or Intel Arc A380 or AMD Radeon R9 280
    • DirectX: Version 12
    • Network: Broadband Internet connection
    • Storage: 90 GB available space
    • Additional Notes: *1080p native resolution / 720p render resolution, low graphics settings, 30fps, SSD Required

    Diablo franchise

    Diablo Immortal
    Diablo Immortal
    Release date: 2022
    Diablo II
    -68%
    Diablo II
    Release date: 2000
    A$10.60

    Reviews

    7
    Game review score based on 46 reviews

    Recent reviews

    Best Diablo title hands down. Every class is viable and has more than a handful of builds with each of them you can tweek to your heart's content. Actually has an endgame unlike the can do no wrong not even 30FPS forum trading trashfire that D2 has become these days, ignore the unwashed and never pleased masses on this one you won't regret it.
    • Has an endgame
    • Is the best DIablo
    • Most challenging Diablo
    • Music is too quiet
    • Reminds you somewhat of the worst Diablo
    • Too challenging for the smooth brains bombing it.
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    Once again, Blizzard fails to delivers. The game is not bad, but there are several problems that should have been fixed or reviewed before the launch. It's as if they can't just win and always have to compromise. The game is fun while doing the campaign, but gets stale very quickly once it's done. It's a Diablo game for sure, but just not the one everybody was expecting on the long term.

    • Good narrative
    • Excellent main villain
    • Feels like a Diablo game
    • Experience grind is way too slow
    • Some items will likely never drop because of the drop rate being in the decimals
    • Forced online gameplay, even if there's not much people in the world
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    The game was long awaited, and hopes was high, but not unreasonable and with a small dash of caution. The two previous games improved upon each other, showing a promising path if it had been followed.

    Diablo 4 feels like an poorly planned and executed DLC, that falls short on expectations when it comes to long time fans to the franchise.

    The game world is rather small, and is relatively fast to traverse. The map has names for other parts of the world in its corners, giving an illusion that there are other parts of Sanctuary you will eventually go to, which you wont. what you see once you open up the map is all it is. And for all the maps size, it's largely empty. Werry few dungeons, and the enemies are sparsely placed in many of the zones.

    The max level is 90, after that you get paragon levels like in diablo 3. However, you'll beat the games main story long before level 50. And after that, there isent really anything currently to do. Well other than turn up the world difficulty and do the few dungeons there are on repeat.

    The story feels like an afterthought, and sadly have an massive feeling of being rushed.

    Like as if the dews just wanted the player to fight boss after boss. It feels like you fight a main boss every 2 quests. And they often don't even feel challenging.

    The main selling point of Diablo 4 was that it is MMO. That is pretty much lies. The only time you really see other people is in towns, and during a few world events.

    For all this game have and it lacks. And for what Blizzard currently asks for it. It isn't worth even remotely near 70$ nor 70€ I would wait for this game to be 80% off. Because that's what i feel this game is worth currently.

    If they add a large expansion to the story and endgame content for free in the future. Then perhaps the current price tag can be justified.

    But not now. This is a 20$ game, with the price tag of 70$.
    • The Graphics is good
    • The music feels well done, and fitted to events
    • The cinematics are well made
    • Werry short main storry
    • Small world map, and is pretty much empty
    • Pretty much nothing to do after beating the main storry
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    Best reviews

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    Recent reviews

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    *Tags and requirements are for informational purposes