Kill demons. Watch items explode onto the ground. Get excited. Inspect the drop. Whisper “please don’t be trash” like a broken little loot goblin with trust issues.
That is the Diablo ritual.
But some players now think Diablo 4 is drifting away from that identity and becoming something else entirely: a crafting simulator with demons attached.
A heated Diablo 4 forum thread argues that the game is borrowing too much from Path of Exile-style item manipulation, while forgetting that Diablo’s old magic came from loot actually dropping in exciting ways.
That is a dangerous identity crisis.
Especially for a series that basically invented the “one more run” brain disease.
Loot Drops Should Be The Main Event
The strongest complaint in the thread is simple: Diablo was a looting franchise before it was a crafting franchise.
Crafting can be useful. Crafting can fix bad luck. Crafting can give players a way to chase specific upgrades without praying to a random skeleton in a basement.
But when every item needs to be rerolled, upgraded, tuned, modified, rescued, purified, cursed, blessed, and emotionally negotiated with before it matters, the drop itself starts to feel weaker.
That is the problem.
If the best part of an item happens after twenty minutes in town, the dungeon becomes the prelude to paperwork.
The Cube Is Cool, But It Can’t Replace Loot Magic
Blizzard’s Diablo 4 3.1 PTR tested several major Season 14 systems, including Mythic Uniques 3.0, Horadric Cube updates, Solo Self Found, War Plans, Pandemonium Ruptures, and more.
There is good stuff in there.
The Horadric Cube is iconic. Players love powerful tools. More ways to shape gear can absolutely help build variety, especially when pure RNG decides to act like a drunk treasure goblin.
But the danger is balance.
If crafting becomes the real game, loot drops become raw ingredients. Items stop being exciting discoveries and start becoming project parts.
That might work for some ARPG players.
But for Diablo, it risks sanding down the franchise’s sharpest hook.
Diablo Does Not Need To Be Path Of Exile
The forum debate gets messy, because of course it does.
Some players think Diablo 4 needs deeper systems to compete. Others argue that chasing Path of Exile’s complexity is exactly how Diablo loses its own identity.
And honestly, both sides have a point.
Diablo 4 cannot survive on nostalgia alone. It needs modern systems, meaningful endgame, and item depth that lasts longer than a weekend binge and three questionable snacks.
But it also should not become a game where the loot drop is merely the first step in a twelve-part crafting hostage negotiation.
The Best Version Has Both
The answer is not “remove crafting.” That would be silly.
The answer is making sure crafting supports loot instead of replacing it.
A great drop should still feel great immediately. Crafting should polish it, improve it, or help save a near-miss. It should not be required before the item is allowed to have a personality.
That is the line Diablo 4 has to walk in Season 14.
Give players tools. Give them agency. Give them the Cube, the rerolls, the upgrades, and the weird build experiments.
But do not forget the sacred moment when something drops, the beam hits the ground, and the player’s brain briefly turns into fireworks.
Because Diablo is at its best when loot feels like loot.
Not a crafting receipt with demon stains on it.
For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.








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