Yesterday, Blizzard dropped the official PTR 3.2 notes for Diablo II: Resurrected. Today, the Warlock community is acting like someone kicked over the altar and stole the candles. This is no longer just a “players react to patch notes” story. It has turned into a full-on backlash cycle, with fresh forum threads accusing Blizzard of betrayal, overcorrection, and gutting the class that just sold an expansion a few weeks ago.
The patch notes lit the fuse
The anger is not hard to understand. PTR 3.2 does not just tap one or two Warlock outliers. Blizzard is hitting multiple parts of the class at once, including Miasma Bolt, Miasma Chains, Ring of Fire, Flame Wave, Echoing Strike, Bind Demon, and the old two-hand-plus-shield setup. Blizzard is also changing Herald and Latent Sunder Charm behavior, while openly admitting Herald spawn rates and charm drops “feel too low.” That last part is probably healthy. The Warlock part is what set the forums on fire.
Players are calling it a rug pull
The tone on the forums has shifted from normal balance grumbling to something much saltier. In one active thread, a player says they feel “betrayed” and asks why Blizzard is nerfing one class instead of uplifting the rest. Another argues the changes “break” Bind Demon and likely the summoner tree by making unique demon binding too expensive in skill points. A separate complaint thread says players already built around these mechanics, spent time and trade wealth on them, and now feel like Blizzard is turning that investment into trash after the fact. That is where the “rug pull” language is coming from.
Not everyone is mad, but the mood is nasty
To be fair, this is not one-sided. There are also active threads defending the nerfs as overdue, arguing Warlock launched absurdly overpowered and was crowding out older class identities. One poster called it a “tough but right decision,” while another said they were actually excited for the patch because Warlock had started replacing too many traditional roles. But even in the pro-nerf camp, the underlying message is basically: yes, Blizzard had to do this, but it probably should not have let things get this messy in the first place.
The real problem is timing
That is why this story has bite. Blizzard is probably right that Warlock needed balancing. But when a class arrives with a paid expansion, dominates the meta, and then eats a giant PTR correction almost immediately, players do not read that as clean stewardship. They read it as Blizzard selling the fantasy first and fixing the consequences later. In Diablo, people can handle nerfs. What they hate is feeling like they bought the honeymoon build and got handed the divorce papers two months later.


























