Diablo 4 Season of Blood Contains “Quite a Lot” of Content, Devs Confirm; Team Needs Multiple Live Streams
Diablo 4 Season of Blood, Diablo 4's upcoming second season, will offer a whole lot of content, according to the development team.
As a matter of fact - Blizzard will need multiple longer deep-dive streams to cover all of the season's features. That's what Blizzard's General Manager of all things Diablo, Rog Fergusson, Community Development Director Adam Fletcher, and Lead Class Designer Adam Jackson said on Twitter recently. Some days ago, Fergusson took to Twitter to tease that Diablo 4's second season will contain "so much stuff" that two live streams are needed to cover all of the content. In his response, Community Development Director Adam Fletcher confirmed that the Season of Blood is true "quite a lot". Fletcher added that he expects that both live streams will be "around" two hours in length.
It is quite a lot
I expect both streams to be around 2hrs
— Adam Fletcher (@PezRadar) September 16, 2023
Following Fergusson's tweet, Diablo 4's Lead Class Designer Adam Jackson chimed in on the matter as well, saying that what Fergusson said isn't an overstatement. "This is no exaggeration", Jackson wrote. "The team's been hard at work to bring a whole lot of exciting updates to the game. I'm really excited for everyone to see what we've been up to."
If true, this would bring the upcoming Deep Dive livestreams up to roughly four hours in length, which is quite long. Especially, considering that Blizzard's previous deep dives clocked in at about an hour and a half for each dive.
Diablo 4 Season of Blood was officially announced during Gamescom 2023 last month. The second season will kick off on October 17 and will focus on the vampiric theme. Aside from offering a new questline, Season 2 will offer new vampiric powers as well as five new endgame bosses.
Diablo 4 is available globally now for PC, PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, Xbox Series X|S, and Xbox One. Blizzard's latest Diablo entry managed to harvest over $666 million in sell-through in its first five days on the market.
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