
Game intel
Diablo 4: Lord of Hatred
Sanctuary reaches its breaking point. In Diablo IV: Lord of Hatred, Mephisto’s dark crusade threatens the heart of Sanctuary. Rise as new heroes, uncover the f…
This caught my attention because Diablo hasn’t felt like a constant companion for me lately – more a series of sharp, exciting returns – and a spotlight that promises both a new D4 class and fresh Diablo II: Resurrected content actually looks like the kind of multi-pronged support the franchise needs right now.
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Publisher|Blizzard Entertainment
Release Date|April 28, 2026
Category|Expansion / Action RPG News
Platform|PC, PlayStation, Xbox
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Blizzard confirmed the timing for its Diablo 30th Anniversary Spotlight: Wednesday, February 11. The big hooks are already clear — the reveal of Diablo 4’s second DLC class for the Lord of Hatred expansion and “major updates” for Diablo 2: Resurrected — and the show promises a look at Lord of Hatred’s endgame plus news for Diablo Immortal. If you pre-ordered Lord of Hatred you already have access to the new Paladin class (a familiar D2 transplant); the second class will join it when the DLC launches on April 28, 2026.

Why this matters beyond the reveal itself: Diablo 4’s community has been starved for big, cohesive follow-ups that keep both veterans and returning players invested. Seasonal updates have shaken up systems but haven’t consistently delivered the long-term hooks some players want. Revealing a second DLC class in a major celebration show — rather than an isolated livestream — signals Blizzard wants this expansion to feel like an event with cross-franchise attention.
More intriguing is the specific callout to Diablo 2: Resurrected. D2R received thoughtful post-launch support for a while, but attention waned once Diablo 4 took center stage. The tease from legacy lead producer Matthew Cederquist implies D2R will get more than the occasional ladder reset. That could mean balance patches, new runewords, quality-of-life features, or even new content — anything that would pull D2R players back into longer engagements rather than occasional check-ins.

Context matters: rival developer Grinding Gear Games has run Path of Exile and PoE 2 in parallel, giving both old and new projects sustained lifecycles. If Blizzard is moving to treat its classic and modern Diablo lines with similar, simultaneous attention, that’s good news for the franchise’s long-term health. But a tease and a reveal are only the start — sustained roadmaps and regular follow-through will determine whether this is a meaningful strategy shift or a one-off celebration.
As for the second DLC class itself, speculation will run wild between returning favorites and new archetypes — Blizzard’s history suggests a blend of nostalgia and fresh mechanics. The Paladin’s return sets a tone of honoring D2’s legacy; the second pick could double-down on that approach or introduce something designed specifically around Lord of Hatred’s endgame loop.

There are caveats: a spotlight can be heavy on trailers and light on playable detail, and announcements don’t always translate into timely or deep delivery. I’ll be watching whether follow-up dev posts and patch schedules back up what’s promised on Feb 11.
Blizzard will reveal Diablo 4’s second Lord of Hatred DLC class on Feb 11 during its 30th Anniversary Spotlight and will announce meaningful Diablo 2: Resurrected updates. The showcase could be a welcome sign that Blizzard plans to support both legacy and current Diablo projects in parallel — but the real test will be whether those promises turn into sustained content and clearer post-launch roadmaps.
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