Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Blizzcon 2019: You can play Diablo 4 solo, but expect to meet strangers

Add as a preferred source on Google

Blizzard has spent Blizzcon 2019 touting a dark and twisted world for players to explore in Diablo 4. This time around, though, you’ll be doing so with others, as the seamless world will be populated with other players. Just how interconnected will Sanctuary actually be? And is solo play still viable?

The answers to those questions are complicated.

Recommended Videos

Diablo 4’s Lead UI Designer, Angela Del Priore, took to the stage to explain what a connected Diablo looks like. According to Priore, the number of players in a shared space will be dependent on a multitude of factors.

Story beats and important campaign missions in the overworld, for example, will not be shared. Only a player and up to three party members will be able to partake in these essential plot moments together.

Once a core objective is complete during campaign missions, only then will players see others running across the landscape, and even then it won’t seem too populated. Dungeons will be affected similarly, as these instances will only be available to up to four players in a party.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Many of these choices are designed to preserve the sense of solitude and dread that comes with a Diablo title. Blizzard still wants players to feel like an isolated hero in a strange land, surrounded by unknown horrors.

Cities and towns are much safer than the foul swamps or dry steppes, and so these hub areas will be much more populated. This will let players to group up or challenge each other to friendly PvP bouts. Areas specifically designed for PvP or PvE public events will allow a higher player density.

Priore made it a point to address solo players. No items will be locked behind social events, allowing solo players a path to attain any gear they wish, with friends or not. Adventurers who prefer to play alone can still participate in clan activities, even donating or withdrawing from a guild bank, or not interact with anyone else at all. The level of social engagement, or a complete lack of it, will be left up to players.

While some of this news may be reassuring to some, it creates more questions. With no public event-exclusive gear, will those events just be an avenue to earn some form of currency to buy legendaries? It’s unclear exactly how that will work out.

With no concrete release date, and a confirmation from Blizzard that Diablo 4 is nowhere near ready, we’ll just have to wait and see.

Alan Torres
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Introduced to gaming in the mid-’90s, I was lucky to experience consoles from before my time. The PS1 is the first console…
Intel’s secret handheld chips might just give AMD a run for its money
Two Intel chips built for handheld gaming just leaked online, and things are about to get interesting.
zotac zone front view

Intel has been quietly working on something interesting. A new leak has revealed two unannounced chips, the Arc G3 and Arc G3 Extreme, built specifically for handheld gaming consoles. These chips are expected to show up sometime in Q2 2026, and they could shake up the handheld gaming market in a big way.

Shortly after Intel revealed its full Panther Lake lineup, rumors started swirling about two chips that didn't make the cut. These were originally designed to compete with AMD's Ryzen Z2 series, but their launch was delayed for reasons we don’t know. Now, one of them has resurfaced online.

Read more
OnePlus’ gaming controller for phones has a neat little charging trick that you’ll love
The new add-on does more than add buttons, it could make charging and cooling much less awkward during longer phone gaming sessions
Body Part, Finger, Hand

OnePlus’ new controller for the Ace 6 Ultra looks like another attempt to turn a phone into a handheld, but the smarter idea is the open space in the middle. OnePlus says that section is meant for cooling, and the company’s promo images make clear that this isn’t just a grip with triggers bolted on. It’s a design that tries to leave room for heat management and easier power options at the same time.

OnePlus is still selling it on gaming features, including four physical buttons, hybrid touch-and-button controls, micro-switch inputs, a 1 kHz polling rate, and a claimed 1.8 ms response time. But comfort over time is the more convincing pitch, especially for shooters that punish awkward hand positions and a hot phone.

Read more
Lego Batman feels like the best Dark Knight game in years and I can’t wait for it
And gamers are absolutely here for it.
Lego Batman Legacy of the Dark Knight FEatured Image

It’s been over a decade since Batman: Arkham Knight left players perched on a rainy Gotham rooftop, wondering where Batman games could even go next. Turns out, for years… nowhere particularly exciting.

DC fans have been stuck in a loop of “almost there” and “what was that?” ever since. Gotham Knights tried to pass the torch with a Bat-family RPG that never quite nailed the feeling of being Batman. Then came Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League, which leaned so hard into live-service chaos that it forgot why people liked these characters in the first place. Loot, grind, battle passes, basically stuff that's great for spreadsheets, not so great for Gotham.

Read more