

Strongholds will require decent gear to get through on this World Tier, and bosses become a little more involved and interesting as a result. World Tier 2 will add some more challenges, and I preferred playing it this way. Also, if you're a veteran who just wants to get through the game as fast as possible to the more lucrative endgame world tiers, World Tier 1 also doesn't punish you in any way for playing on that difficulty. If you're here just for the story and want an easy ride through the game, World Tier 1 is for you. After finishing the campaign around level 50, you unlock two additional difficulties after completing gear-check capstone dungeons, which come with boosted gear drops. It made it feel a little more like Diablo 2, and added a little more danger to proceedings, while still being relatively easy. I reviewed Diablo 4 entirely on World Tier 2, because I preferred the slower time-to-kill. World Tier 2 boosts your EXP rate and improves the amount of gold you get, while also boosting mob health and their damage output.

You won't have any trouble getting through the game's story at a fairly rapid pace in this mode. World Tier 1 is, of course, the easiest difficulty. This essentially dictates the pace of the game. Although, the first 1000 players to reach the cap in hardcore mode will be commemorated on a special Diablo 4 statue at Blizzard HQ in America.īeyond hardcore and non-hardcore modes, you will be asked to choose a world tier. The added stress and stakes can make Diablo 4 far more exciting, but it's certainly not for everyone, and perhaps not recommended for new players. Hardcore mode is a specific ladder that removes players upon one character death. There's a "hardcore" setting, as is tradition in the franchise. When you initially create a character in Diablo 4, you are access to choose from a variety of difficulty settings.
