According to Blizzard’s official Fourfold Revival anniversary update, Chaos Convoy runs from May 27 to July 13 at 3:00 a.m. local server time. While the event is live, players can enter a special Battleground mode built around randomized Gifts of Corvus.
In normal terms, that means you pick power modifiers during the match.
In Diablo terms, it means PvP found a slot machine and decided to wear it as armor.
No Two Matches Should Feel the Same
Before each Battleground match begins, players choose their first Gift of Corvus. The options are random, but Blizzard says players can reroll each offered card. Then, every 60 seconds during the match, another Gift appears, letting players stack new modifiers and adapt on the fly.
The Gifts can do all kinds of ridiculous things: increase DoT damage, boost movement speed, summon spectral weapons, reduce cooldowns, and more. Blizzard says there are more than 100 Gifts to try, which is either exciting or deeply alarming depending on how much chaos you like in your PvP.
Probably both.
PvP, But Make It Weird
The appeal of Chaos Convoy is obvious. Standard PvP can get stale fast when the same builds, matchups, and power gaps start repeating. Randomized modifiers can shake that up, forcing players to make quick decisions instead of simply executing the same routine until everyone involved loses faith in matchmaking.
That said, this is still Diablo Immortal. Balance is always going to be a conversation, a complaint, a spreadsheet, and occasionally a bonfire.
Blizzard says Paragon Skills and Specializations, Warband Remnants, and Boss Skill affixes on equipment are disabled in Chaos Convoy. That should help keep the mode focused on its own modifier madness rather than letting every outside system crash the party with a chair.
The Rewards Are Getting Better Too
Blizzard also says Chaos Convoy rewards now progress with the Tower War reward track, including daily participation rewards, ranked progression rewards, and seasonal competitive rewards. The event also offers twice the Battleground rewards while active.
That matters, because PvP chaos is more attractive when the reward structure does not feel like someone forgot to fill the chest.
We have already covered how Diablo Immortal’s anniversary turned into a boss gauntlet, how Winds of Fortune doubles loot with fine print, and how Set Gear Reforging turns bad gear into one hopeful gamble. Chaos Convoy fits neatly into that same anniversary circus.
It is loud. It is messy. It is probably unfair in at least three entertaining ways.
But it also sounds like the kind of limited-time PvP nonsense Diablo Immortal is built to do well: fast decisions, weird power spikes, temporary madness, and rewards that make the chaos worth entering.
Chaos Convoy is not subtle.
It is PvP with a slot machine strapped on.
And honestly, that might be the point.
For more Diablo coverage, check our latest posts on Diablo 4 and Lord of Hatred.
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