Diablo 4 players have discovered the true shape of evil.
Not a pentagram.
Not a portal.
Not even a suspiciously expensive cosmetic bundle staring at your wallet from the shop.
A circle.
A new Diablo 4 forum thread is roasting Blizzard for how often the game leans on circular objectives, circular arenas, circular events, circular danger zones, and the sacred ancient design commandment: stand here until something dies.
Once you see it, you cannot unsee it.
Helltides?
Circle.
Infernal Hordes?
Circle with more screaming.
Kurast Undercity?
Circle tourism.
Dark Citadel?
Move the circle.
New seasonal activity?
Please report to your assigned murder circle.
The Circle Is Not Always Bad
To be fair, circles are useful.
They tell players where to stand. They make objectives readable. They help chaotic combat stay slightly less confusing than a goblin tax return.
In a game where players are blasting through monsters, dodging ground effects, managing cooldowns, and trying to notice whether a boss is about to delete their bloodline, clear visual language matters.
A circle is simple.
Everyone understands it.
Stand inside. Stand outside. Kill things around it. Defend it. Avoid it. Regret it.
The problem is not that Diablo 4 uses circles.
The problem is that players feel like Diablo 4 has started using circles as a substitute for imagination.
When Every Activity Feels Like The Same Shape
The complaint hits because Diablo 4 already has a repetition problem.
ARPGs are built on repetition, obviously. Nobody plays Diablo expecting each dungeon to be a handmade existential journey through interactive literature.
We are here to kill demons until loot falls out.
But repetition still needs flavor.
When too many activities boil down to “go to marked area, stand in marked zone, wait for enemies to spawn,” the endgame starts to feel less like adventure and more like demon-flavored parking enforcement.
The player is not exploring hell.
The player is clocking into a circular workplace.
Diablo 4 Has Better Mechanics Than This
The funny part is that Diablo 4 actually has plenty of good enemy and boss design buried under the circle spam.
There are monsters with interesting attack patterns. There are bosses with readable mechanics. There are elite packs that can force movement, positioning, burst timing, or defensive choices.
That stuff is good.
That stuff feels like action combat.
But when the larger activity wrapper keeps returning to the same “stand in the zone” structure, the better details get overshadowed.
It is like hiring a full orchestra and then asking every instrument to play the same three notes while standing in a chalk circle.
Technically music.
Spiritually cursed.
Players Want Movement, Not Homework Zones
Diablo 4 feels best when players are moving through space with purpose.
Rushing into a ruined hall. Diving into a mob pack. Dodging a boss slam. Chasing a Treasure Goblin like it owes you rent.
That kind of movement gives the game energy.
Circle objectives often do the opposite.
They pin the player to one spot and ask them to wait while enemies arrive in scheduled waves. Sometimes that works. Sometimes it creates tension.
But when it happens too often, it starts feeling like the game is putting a leash on the player.
And Diablo players do not want a leash.
They want a horse, a blood-soaked hallway, and something regrettable at the end of it.
The Timer Problem Makes It Worse
Several Diablo 4 activities also combine circles with timers.
That is where the design can start feeling especially sweaty.
Stand here. Kill fast. Move there. Do it before the clock expires. Repeat until your build either feels amazing or your controller starts filing for divorce.
Timers can add pressure.
They can also make every activity feel like a delivery job in hell.
When paired with static objectives, they can turn a gothic ARPG into a red-and-black productivity app.
That is not exactly the fantasy.
Circles Are Fine, But Diablo 4 Needs More Shapes
This is not really about geometry.
No one is seriously demanding that Blizzard replace every circle with a triangle and call it innovation.
The real request is variety.
More moving objectives. More organic monster encounters. More dungeon events that change the route. More boss mechanics that reward awareness without trapping players in a tiny magic hula hoop. More reasons to explore instead of report to the glowing floor decal.
Diablo 4 does not need to remove circles.
It just needs to stop treating them like the answer to every design meeting.
Sanctuary Should Feel Less Like A Training Diagram
The world of Diablo 4 is gorgeous, miserable, gothic, and absolutely packed with places that look like they should contain terrible secrets.
That is the strength of the game.
Sanctuary has atmosphere.
It has mood.
It has the kind of architecture that says, “Someone definitely made a bad decision here, and you are about to loot the consequences.”
So when the activity design keeps reducing that world to circular zones and spawn waves, something is lost.
Players want to feel like they are descending into danger.
Not attending a demonic group fitness class.
Blizzard has the art, the monsters, the combat, and the foundation to make Diablo 4’s activities feel stranger and more alive.
Now it just needs to stop drawing the same circle around everything.
For more Diablo 4 coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.





















