Shining a Torchlight on Diablo III's Starter Edition

Trit_warhol
Sunday, May 20, 2012
EDITOR'S NOTEfrom Eduardo Moutinho

Tristan sheds light on Diablo III's barely mentioned Starter Edition. If you're wondering whether the click-and-slash RPG is an experience worth pursuing, track down a trial code and give it a shot before making an investment.

Diablo III 1

I was so close to buying Diablo III. It was in my cart. I only had to click a few more buttons to have Blizzard's latest masterpiece in my hands. 

I held my nerve, though, and appealed to someone, anyone to send me a code for the downloadable trial instead. Thankfully, a generous Twitter user came to my aid, and after about six hours, I was ready to play. 

At first glance, Diablo III isn't much to look at. The character models for each of the classes look a little simplistic, especially when compared to those seen in Max Payne 3 -- which saw release in the same week. I chose the balding, bearded monk, assigned him my standard name (Dutch, in case you were wondering), and started clicking. 

With its subtle narrative hints, charming art style, and visual splendor, I soon found myself hooked on Diablo III. For about three hours, I clicked barrels, jugs, and skeleton warriors. I clicked loot and gold while rearranging my inventory multiple times. I clicked and clicked and clicked some more.

 

Alas, sleep was required as work -- bracketed with a lengthy commute -- awaited me the following day.

I tried to return to New Tristram the following night, but 12 hours away from the house had me exhausted. "Tomorrow" soon became yesterday with no additional play to be had. I finally found the time to get back online, and I proceeded to click some more. It felt more labored this time and far less compelling. It was nothing like those first three hours. 

And then I was struck with an irrepressible sense of déjà vu.

Torchlight!

Nearly three years ago, I bought Runic Games' highly regarded Diablo clone during a Steam seasonal sale and proceeded to invest a fevered three hours in the click-and-loot heavy RPG. After that, I never played it again, save for a failed five-minute attempt to pick it back up last year.

Diablo III 2

Let's go back to Diablo III. After more clicking and kicking -- with Templar in tow -- I defeated the Skeleton King and reached the end of the trial. With some satisfaction, I chose "Cancel" instead of "Upgrade Now" when Blizzard came knocking at the end. It turns out, this kind of action RPG just isn't my thing. Thanks to a near stranger and three hours of play, I was able to ascertain that without dropping 60 dollars on the retail version.

How are you enjoying Diablo III? Has anyone upgraded from the Starter Edition?

 
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Comments (6)
Default_picture
May 19, 2012

First off, I'm a console gamer. My laptop is no where near capable of playing Diablo 3. However, there is this part of me that wants to buy a computer and get the game. That is pure impulse talking. The reason inside me knows that after a few hours I'll get bored of clicking things over and over again. I had a similar experience with Torchlight, but my "Loot whore" bug kept me playing that game for a while. But once I got to the end of the story and had amazing gear, it got boring. I'm sure Diablo 3 is an amazing game in its own right, but I doubt I'll ever play it, unless we get a console version, then I might have to give it a shot.

Default_picture
May 19, 2012

I don't really get in to these games either. I have never been able to.

However, all my friends are currently playing and I feel ever so alone.

Default_picture
May 19, 2012

Your article reminded me of how I almost finished the first Diablo. I lost patience with it in the same fashion. My experience involved more scowling and frustrated agony.

Sigh. Sadly, I might just buy it someday, for old time's sake. I won't truly enjoy it, but I might still appreciate all the mouse clicking. It's a lot softer on my fingers than, say, a first-person shooter.

EDIT: Screw it. I'm not shelling out $60. Lol.

Default_picture
May 20, 2012
No need to upgrade. I preordered it. Play it for hours...may not be your thing but definitely mine.
Default_picture
May 21, 2012

Definitely the game of the year.

Blizzard is very very good, to make  game like this one.

They are artists

Thanks for the tip! I never got into either Diablo or Diablo II even though it was all some of my friends would talk about at the time. Now I'm beeing drawn to Diablo III by the hype and promises of sublime game design by Blizzard. If the need gets to strong, I'll do like you and try to get a trial code.

I suspect I'll end up with the same conclusion as you. Waiting for the first review that dares go in that direction - at least as far as saying that this isn't neccessarily for everyone.

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