by Allison Apr 19,2025
This week, *Diablo 4* unveiled its first content roadmap, offering a glimpse into the action role-playing game's future for 2025 and teasing what's in store for 2026. In an IGN interview, game director Brent Gibson delved into the roadmap, covering topics from the second expansion to potential collaborations with other IPs. However, the community's response to the roadmap has been mixed, with many expressing concerns over the amount of new content planned for 2025 and whether it will be enough to keep players engaged.
"Oh boy! Can't wait for new Helltide color and temporary powers," said redditor Inangelion. "It's gonna be so dope!" This sentiment reflects the feelings of many dedicated Diablo 4 players who were hoping for more substantial updates in the upcoming seasons.
"A new season in other ARPGs is like ‘let's put in a little housing system where you build up a home base with vendors that give you more gear’ or ‘let's put in a whole shipping system where traders from other lands bring materials that let you upgrade your items in ways that change your class mechanic entirely,’" added feldoneq2wire. "A new season in D4 is ‘what color are we making helltides this time?’ And ‘what powers and reputation skins are we whipping up this time?’ "
"I'm not a Diablo 4 hater, I love the game, but there doesn't seem to be a whole lot of meat on the bone here which is a bit disappointing," said Fragrantbutte. "‘And more’ is doing a lot of heavy lifting here," added artyfowl444.
The debate on the *Diablo 4* subreddit became so intense that community manager Lyricana_Nightrayne felt compelled to respond. "We added fewer details to the later parts of the roadmap to accommodate for things the team is still working on," they explained. "This isn't all that's coming in 2025 :)"
Part of the issue stems from Blizzard's approach to seasonal content in *Diablo 4*. While some appreciate the seasonal resets, others find it discourages deep engagement with each season. The debate continues on whether the game should maintain constant seasonal content or if players should wait until 2026 for more substantial updates.
Mike Ybarra, former president of Blizzard Entertainment, weighed in on the discussion via X/Twitter. "Don't ship to check a box," Ybarra stated. "Season's need to get off the cycle of shipping, spending two months to fix issues, then repeating. Pause and give the team time to really address the end-game issues. Playing for a week to then one or three shot a ‘uber’ boss 500 times for a unique, then quitting until next season is fundamentally not fun. Expansions schedule is too long - should be yearly. Reduce ‘story’ investment (costs so much for one time element in a ARPG) and focus on new classes, new mob types, new end-game activities that last more than a few days. If the cycle continues to just ship w/o fixing the fundamental issues, then I'm not sure where Diablo is going. You can add all the end-game activities you want, but you'll be running in place with the same issues. At some point there's just so many random things, it's not worth the effort."
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The conversation around Diablo 4's expansions centers on the delay of the second expansion, originally slated for 2025 but now postponed to 2026. Blizzard had planned annual expansions, with the first, Vessel of Hatred, launching in 2024, but the second will skip 2025.
In our interview with Gibson, he discussed the challenges of developing *Diablo 4* as a live service game, balancing free seasonal content with major paid expansions. "I definitely feel like gamers are more hungry than they've ever been," Gibson noted. "And even if you delivered on their appetite today, that appetite will shift tomorrow. And so you just have to be in a really good spot to adapt to that situation. Because a lot of times too, what's important this month is going to be completely different three months from now. The priority of things can shift very, very quickly based on another game release or the state of your own game. Or maybe we've discovered something really cool and we want to be able to get it in there to change the formula.
"And so it is definitely a new way of developing. It is definitely high interaction with the community. The interesting thing about Diablo is that we have a lot of different community types, right? We have our casual players, we have our hardcore players. They all fall into subdivisions of types of players inside of that. And so what we look to do is season upon season, look at the things that are important to some of those groups and go after them with focus.
"When you take a look at something like what we're doing in Season 8, we know we have a ton of boss lair feedback and so we're adding in the quality of life improvements for those players where that is a big focus of their gameplay type, or we might shift to nightmare dungeons when we're in Season 9. And so it's an opportunity for us to address different groups at different times, leading to an expansion where we're going to be addressing everybody all at once with something big."
*Diablo 4* Season 8 is set to launch later in April, followed by Season 9 in the summer, and Season 10 later in the year.
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