This is not the only nomenclature that seems peculiar as players also recently found some similarities between names used in Diablo 4 and Destiny 2. For instance, a recent Twitter post pointed out Diablo 4 Items players using titles like, "The Drifter" and "Iron Lord," which are a direct reference to Destiny 2. Furthermore, there is also a crossbow in Diablo 4 called Arbalest, which is also the name of an Exotic Fusion rifle in Destiny 2.

Blizzard has kept a pretty tight light on the impending first season that will kick off Diablo 4's live-service journey. Whatever breadth of content, thematic cosmetics, and balance changes set to arrive are coming at a crucial juncture for the franchise, with Diablo 4 being the first mainline entry in the series to go with this gameplay model and Blizzard surely looking to debut its initial additions in a way that keeps players optimistic about the future.

Set to arrive in mid-July, Diablo 4 season one will have the curtain pulled back on what it entails during a developer livestream on July 6. Speculation is rampant with how little has leaked to the public so far, with the only tidbits fans have managed to data mine being a new world tier and quality of gems.

The first season will also come with the game's first battle pass, something many have already purchased, and fans are anxious to know what the value of that will end up being. Diablo 4 launched with a great core gameplay loop and a moderately healthy endgame, but players now having combed through most of what it has to offer and have already composed their wishlist for how Blizzard can iterate upon its foundation.

Diablo 4's First Season May be its Most Important

With the current plan for three-month seasons in Diablo 4, Blizzard's offerings for each will need to be enough to keep players coming back and engaging in the grind without it devolving to monotony. Merely slapping on a battle pass and resetting seasonal progress will fall short of the expectations for today's live-service games.

Presumably, Blizzard has kept a keen eye on what the most successful studios have done to keep games like Destiny 2, Fortnite, and Sea of Thieves from withering on the vine, as well as the strengths and weaknesses of the live-service games the publisher's own development teams have maintained. Fortunately, Diablo 4 has a wealth of avenues it can look to build out, as well as plenty of space for new core features to be tacked on.

Besides adding new world tiers with higher-scaling stats, players will be looking for new items with creative perks that they can craft builds around, as well as new dungeons, events, bosses, class skills, and eventually additional chapters for Diablo 4's story. It is hard to say how much of that Blizzard can reasonably produce for the first season, but the studio has to take big swings at this critical point in a live-service game's journey, where players decide if it is an ecosystem they want to be with for the long haul.

For Blizzard, Maintaining Momentum is Easier Than Getting it Back Later

Blizzard has already come out to clarify that leaderboards will not be implemented in time for Diablo 4's first season. Without the competitive motivator, it will have to dial in the other aspects of the game that make it so rewarding, and most of all, fun. The seasonal theme could be an ace up the studio's sleeve, with an eye-popping aesthetic style, maybe wrapped around a core feature it kept out of release to polish for season one.

Something like the Uber Bosses in previous titles paired with a visual nod to Diablo 2, or introducing an item like the Horadric Cube would go a long way to satiating the fan base until the loop of seasonal ladders with leaderboads is up and functional. Whether it is something entirely new for Diablo 4, or just expanding on the least fleshed-out features, Blizzard can not buy Diablo 4 materials afford to get by on the bare minimum.