Diablo II: Lord of Destruction (2001)

4.46 from 179 votes
Diablo II: Lord of Destruction features a new act and 2 new character classes, the Assassin and the Druid, as well as new items.
First released
Jun 29, 2001
Aliases
D2:LoD, LoD, Diablo 2: Lord of Destruction
Franchises
Diablo
Developed by
Blizzard North
Published by
Blizzard Entertainment
Platforms
Mac, PC
Genres
Action, Role-Playing
Themes
Horror, Fantasy
Rating
ESRB: M
Releases
  • PC - Diablo II: Lord of Destruction United States

Community reviews

 
Was this review helpful?
Yes No
*Warning: spoilers* Amazing expansion for a great game
The expansion pack, Diablo II: Lord of Destruction was amazing and added new playable characters like the druid and the Assassin. It also featured an extra chapter of game play with a new end boss.

Right after you kick Diablo’s ass back into the pits of hell, you are informed by Tyrael that the last remaining Prime Evil, Diablo and Mephisto’s brother, Baal is located near the highlands of Mount Arreat, an area inhabited by Barbarians who defend the World Stone with their life. Baal has collected his Soulstone to keep it safe and is raising an army to attack the mountain and the nearby Stronghold Harrogath.

You battle Baal’s forces and defend the land of the Barbarian tribes. You defeat Overseers and commanders and travel through different areas like icy caves and rocky mountain paths. You eventually learn that one of the elders, called Nihlathak, made a deal with Baal to hand him over the World Stone if he spares the Stronghold from destruction. You hunt down Nihlathak and kill his ass.

Then you need to venture to the World Stone Keep, which can only be entered when defeating the three legendary Barbarian guardians. This was hard as balls but eventually I made it.

Then you find Baal and murder the crap out of him. Because the World Stone is now corrupted by Baal, Tyrael has no choice but to destroy it. The consequences of this action will be known after twenty years, in Diablo III.

I really liked the Druid character and the almost infinite minions from nature that you could summon. You can also turn into a freaking bear or werewolf, so epic.

The only problem I had with this expansion, the same as Diablo III: Reaper of Souls, is that Diablo himself felt like a side boss, because there is another boss or greater evil than him. He is supposed to be the most dangerous creature that ever lived, but now, you just whoop his ass and focus on the bigger problem that is just to come.

Overall, the expansion was a well-received add on for the original game and I loved every second of it.
Was this review helpful?
Yes No