Blizzard courts new controversy with its Diablo 4 Lilith hardcore statue 👀


What you need to know

  • To celebrate the launch of Diablo 4, Blizzard ran a competition to immortalize the first 1000 players to reach level 100 in Hardcore mode on a Lilith Statue.
  • Some players who ranked in the top 1000 have not had their names included on the statue much to their frustration, despite even streaming their achievement on Twitch.
  • This is not the first controversy for the competition, which had to change the initial rules to disregard people who had already played review builds of Diablo 4.

Blizzard has hit a new record with Diablo 4, raking in $666 million in sales in just five days after launch and making it the company’s best-selling title ever. But such huge success also comes with its share of controversies and Diablo 4’s launch has had it’s fair share. The most recent controversy that has fan’s fingertips on fire is the exclusion of some names from its daring Lilith statue challenge, which offered eternal glory for the first 1000 hardcore players who reached the maximum level of 100 in hardcore mode.

Player expresses frustration at being in top 14 players and their name not making it onto the statue (Image credit: Rakin on Twitter)

Hardcore is a brutal mode where death is final and unforgiving. If you fall in battle, your character is lost forever and you must begin anew, so the race to level 100 is a heroic deed. Many of those who have achieved this feat have broadcasted their triumph on Twitch or boasted on social media platforms, but it seems some have been mysteriously snubbed from the list now the statue itself has been erected.

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