Hello gentlemen and also ladies!
Blizzard’s credibility was lost. The WarCraft 3 experience was a very sad one. Let us recall at least a model of an elf with human ears.
Diablo 2: Resurrected trailers have problems. The most important thing for me is the radical differences in the appearance of the characters from the original.
And I don’t want to vote with my money for this kind of work. I’ll see how the project develops in the future. Hopefully in the right direction. And then I will make a purchase decision.
I also see no reason to buy an unfinished product.
Thank you all for your attention!
P.S. I can no longer write messages, because I don’t have D2R copy, but I can still edit my post.
P.P.S.
Message in response to BBShockwave, who wrote the post here below.:
Lemon Sky Studios only made models for Blizzard. The assembly work was carried out by the internal Blizzard division Team One. Project management and quality control of the result was handled by Blizzard.
Thus, the entire responsibility for the failure lies with the senior management of Blizzard. And Lemon Sky Studios did their job well! Most of the models turned out to be of very high quality, with a few exceptions that were supposed to be controlled by Blizzard managers.
The lies in the WarCraft 3: Reforged advertising are also a failure of Blizzard, not Lemon Sky. Do not get off your sore head on a healthy one.
As for the remakes of Crash Bandicoot, I went through them. They are made to a good standard. But the developers changed the original timings in some segments and simplified the game. The original Crash is more difficult.
Key decisions for Diablo 2: Resurrected are still made by Blizzard management, not Vicarious Visions. Probably the decision to change characters’ appearances, and for some races, was also made by Blizzard managers for reasons of social and political agendas. Think of LGBT in Overwatch, a game with childish graphics with PEGI 12+.
You know this topic very superficially. And why are you so aggressive?
Just for your information I’m 32.