Blizzard was not kidding when it told Polygon that the new remastered Diablo II would be faithful to the first. You will even be able to Diablo 2 Items pick up where you left off with your 20-year-old savegames. "Yes! Yes, keep those!"

As a lapsed player myself, the very idea is giving me chills -- harmful ones, ones that I imagine are akin to that which Gollum felt at The Lord of the Rings when he decided to pull The 1 Ring off his brother's throttled corpse. I thought I could safely leave this game supporting, but no. It seems I may want to monitor an old friend shortly.

For the remaining original game's fanbase, though, this might be incredible news: players like me spent large sums of time grinding Diablo II's supervisors and levels to dust searching for particular items, and of course selling them on the internet and trading them within a game that wasn't really designed for that type of thing. (One particular rare item, the Stone of Jordan, was really employed as a makeshift form of money.)

Now, all that advancement is technically yours instead of having to start from scratch, and it could even be mobile, too: theoretically, the game's cross-save abilities across PC and games imply you could even load your OG save on a Nintendo Switch.

Diablo 2: Resurrected is a remaster of the classic action RPG and its growth Lord of Destruction, using fresh 3D images and Buy Diablo 2 Resurrected Items completely recreated cinematics.