The Xbox Mini Fridge shouldn’t exist, but we’re thankful it does. It’s rare that a joke results in a genuine product idea in the video games industry, particularly when it’s made at a company’s expense. But that’s exactly what happened with the Xbox Mini Fridge, which is now available to buy.
So how did such a seemingly simple idea come about? When the Xbox Series X was revealed to the world – with its towering, rectangular shape – users on social media quickly likened the console to a fridge . Microsoft, to its credit, embraced the memes poking fun at the Xbox Series X’s appearance and even went as far as to create a giant Xbox Series X fridge.
Soon, fans were clamoring for an Xbox Mini Fridge to be produced, and at E3 2021, Microsoft obliged. The company announced that an Xbox Series X Mini Fridge would release holiday 2021, and the rest is history.
A desirable collector’s item for any Xbox fan, the Xbox Mini Fridge has been in high demand ever since its release. If you’re interested in owning the “world’s most powerful mini fridge”, here’s everything you need to know about the meme-turned-reality product.
Xbox Mini Fridge price and release date
The Xbox Mini Fridge is available now. It was supposed to release during Holiday 2021 (that’s between November and December) but slipped to January 2022. The Xbox Mini Fridge is only available at Target in the US and Game in the UK, the latter of which faced supply issues that subsequently led to a delay.
The Xbox Mini Fridge costs $99.99 / £89.99. It’s worth noting that if you don’t pick it up from a store, you may face a hefty delivery charge due to the size of the unit.
Xbox Mini Fridge design
The Xbox Mini Fridge has been designed to look exactly like an Xbox Series X, and in many ways, it nails this aspect. You’ll find everything you can see on Microsoft’s flagship console here, including a working front USB port that can power a device like your smartphone. The Xbox Mini Fridge’s power button and top vent can also be illuminated independently, giving the unit a more sophisticated look.
On the back of the Xbox Mini Fridge is a switch that lets you turn on the device and choose either eco or max mode. Both modes exhibit a fairly audible amount of fan noise, but the eco mode isn’t too obtrusive.
Inside, there’s room to store up to 12 soda cans thanks to its 10-liter capacity, and a couple of removable shelves to house some snacks inside the door. The Xbox Mini Fridge does a good job of keeping everything cool, but condensation can occur inside, as highlighted by a warning label inside.
Xbox Mini Fridge: where to buy
The Xbox Mini Fridge is only available at Target in the US and Game in the UK. Both retailers have struggled to keep the product in stock, as it’s proven very popular with fans who want a piece of unique memorabilia or simply want a mini fridge as part of their setup.
Diablo Immortal: release date, trailers, PC version, and gameplay
Diablo Immortal will see Blizzard bring the world’s premier action RPG series, Diablo, to mobile devices and PC as a free-to-play game.
Announced back in 2018 as a mobile-exclusive, Diablo Immortal was initially met with some controversy as fans weren't enthused by the idea of a mobile Diablo experience. That's all changed. Not only did alpha and beta tests gain a lot of positive traction among fans, but Blizzard has also since announced the game will be coming to PC . We are certainly more optimistic about Diablo Immortal, having had some brief hands-on time with the game ourselves.
Diablo Immortal will release on June 2, 2022, and you can pre-register for the game right now.
Thanks to tests, teases shared by Blizzard, and our own time with the game, we do know plenty about what to expect from the upcoming Diablo mobile game. Want to know more? Read on for everything we know so far about Diablo Immortal.
Diablo Immortal: cut to the chase
Diablo Immortal is set to release on June 2 for Android and iOS. It will release in open beta on PC at the same time.
Initially Diablo Immortal was due to release sometime in 2021, but Blizzard announced in August that the ARPG was delayed as the team needed more time to tune "core and endgame features".
Although the PC version will launch in open beta, Blizzard says the game is complete. The testing period will allow the development team to tweak the PC version's UI and interface – which were first developed with mobile devices in mind – in response to fan feedback.
It's possible to pre-register for the game on the official site . You'll unlock a few in-game cosmetic goodies for doing so.
Diablo Immortal won't be the mobile-exclusive it was set up to be. Blizzard has also developed the game for PC and is set to release the port at the same time as its mobile versions.
However, the developer has been keen to emphasize that this is very much a mobile-first game. That means the entire experience has been developed with mobile users in mind, rather than traditional PC players. That means faster-paced gameplay and shorter dungeons that can be completed in small bursts of playtime, to suit mobile audiences that tend to not play in long gaming sessions.
The PC and mobile versions will be identical, offering exactly the same content and experience. To make sure they align even more closely, Blizzard has included controller support for both versions of the game and, in a first for the Diablo series, enabled a WASD-based control scheme for PC players. That means you won't need to point and click around the map to move, freeing up your hand for more frenetic combat moves.
The PC version of Diablo Immortal will launch in open beta on June 2. However, Blizzard says this additional testing period will only be instituted to tweak the game's interface and UI off the back of fan feedback, as the game was initially developed for mobile devices. The core PC port is complete and ready to go. All progression you make in the beta will carry over to the game's full release.
Release date & PC announcement trailer
A cinematic and gameplay trailer was released online when Diablo Immortal received its final, official release date. The trailer also confirmed the game will be launching on PC, showing off lots of footage of the port.
Developer update in April 2021 The launch of a closed Alpha test in April 2021 brought with it a video developer update in which we get very brief glimpses at some more parts of the game.
ChinaJoy Gameplay trailer Diablo Immortal made an appearance at a gaming convention in China called ChinaJoy, with a brand new gameplay trailer (via BlizzPlanet ). Across around two and half minutes of footage the trailer gives a glimpse of new models, UI and Diablo 2 villain Baal makes a brief appearance.
BlizzCon 2019 gameplay and development update trailer BlizzCon 2019 brought a gameplay and development update trailer for Diablo Immortal which shows some new character classes, gameplay mechanics and locations. Check it out below:
BlizzCon 2018 trailers Two trailers were revealed for Diablo Immortal during Blizzcon 2018 – one a relatively extensive look at gameplay, the other a cinematic focusing on the story. Feast your eyes on both below:
Diablo immortal hands-on impressions
We had the chance to go hands-on with Diablo Immortal, experiencing 10 hours of the game and we enjoyed our time with it. We found that "a lot of the Diablo experience has been adeptly preserved in the mobile game" and felt that "the game adheres to more of the arcade gameplay of Diablo 3 rather than the more grounded hack-and-slash combat of Diablo 2." You can read more about our early impressions of the game in our hands-on experience .
It may be primarily a mobile game but, for the most part, this is going to be the same Diablo you already know and love, albeit with controls designed to make the most out of a phone touchscreen rather than a mouse or controller.
Developed cooperatively between Blizzard and Chinese devs at NetEase (the company which co-operates Overwatch, Diablo 3 and Warcraft in China), the game will be set five years after the events of Diablo 2 , and will explore what happened after the Worldstone was destroyed in that game, and the path taken to the dismal world of Diablo 3.
The likes of Tyrael, Malthael, and Leah and Deckard Cain will all feature in the story, as will the demon hunters Valla and Josen who appeared in Blizzard’s Heroes of the Storm. In terms of foes, expect appearances from Diablo’s buddy Baal and Skarn, the Herald of Terror. Story beats will be dished out via non-playable characters, with additional storylines landing through updates to the game.
Built from the ground-up, Diablo Immortal will introduce new abilities and techniques not yet seen in a Diablo game. While six familiar classes will be present (Barbarian, Demon Hunter, Monk, Necromancer, Crusader and Wizard – with the Witch Doctor notably absent at this stage), they’ll be able to work together in all-new ways.
Abilities will be able to be combined to make cross-class cooperative play more exciting. A Wizard for instance will be able to freeze a foe with ice crystals before firing a beam called the Ray of Frost into the crystal. When used individually, the Ray of Frost and ice crystals can only take down one baddie, but if the ray is fired at the crystal, it fragments the beam so it can hit multiple enemies.
Players will be able to use Ultimate Abilities (charged through repeated basic attacks) and Legendary items in order to enhance their powers and unleash well-timed devastating attacks that could give them the edge in a difficult battle.
Projectile and melee attacks will also be more clearly directional now—many attacks will include a directional cone within which to fire them off, which will likely be handy when attempting to trigger the combo moves described earlier.
The other big change for the game will be the number of players who can team up together. Previously, this has topped out at four for Diablo 3. But footage of Diablo Immortal shows as many as ten players banding together to battle foes. Early reports indicate that these large-scale battles will be locked to open-world areas, with instanced dungeons (and the boss-specific loot they offer) instead tied to four-player maximum parties, though a recent trailer from ChinaJoy looks like it has six-player parties available.
There also seems to be a greater emphasis on environmental and platforming obstacles in Diablo Immortal. The gameplay clip showed levels in which players had to abseil down a chasm while battling the forces of darkness, and another where they traveled along what appeared to be a river in a raft, taking on baddies along for the ride.
The question is how similar will Diablo Immortal be to previous Diablo games?
During our hands-on time with Diablo Immortal, we found that the game adheres to more of the arcade gameplay of Diablo 3 rather than the more grounded hack-and-slash combat of Diablo 2.
"Regardless of how much the devs say they’ve invoked the grim, dark dungeon-ey look of the latter in Diablo Immortal’s design, it’s the brighter and more vibrant look of Diablo 3 that has the most influence. But look out for some familiar faces from the fan-favorite Diablo 2."
"Diablo Immortal feels like a Greatest Hits album for Diablo, preserving a lot of the enemies and encounters from the series in a more streamlined experience."
So it'll have everything you know and love about Diablo, but will still feel fresh – hopefully. You’ll fight enemies, level up to acquire new skills while dearly wishing that the next felled foe will drop a more powerful weapon, armor piece or accessory to make your coming battles easier. It’s an addictive loop that has made Diablo one of the most revered franchises in all of gaming.
Diablo Immortal’s announcement was met with, at best, a mixed reception. It’s been several years since Blizzard released a mainline Diablo game, and so the trailer seemed a tease for those expecting a full PC or console release. As such, the backlash was immediate, with some accusing Blizzard of cashing in on fans’ goodwill, and that the game was merely a reskin of co-developers NetEase’s previous mobile ARPG titles.
Those concerns have largely been allayed after later Blizzard announced the game would be coming to PC as well as mobile. But the studio tried to previously assure fans that it’s taking as much care with Diablo Immortal as any of its titles and that it’s an all-new game worth their time.
In an interview with GamesBeat , former Blizzard president J. Allen Brack defended the decision to create a mobile game stating that while Blizzard would like its core fanbase to give the mobile release a chance, it's understood that "every game is not going to be for every person".
Brack added that as a mobile title, Immortal will, of course, be "different" and that it's not trying to replicate the PC experience" but promised, "it’s going to be a good, authentic experience for the Blizzard games we bring to that platform."
However, so great has been the animosity that Blizzard has had to show its hand for further titles earlier than expected. Diablo 4 was officially announced at Blizzcon 2019 but, previous to this, Blizzard revealed that Immortal was not the only Diablo game currently in the works.
In another interview with IGN , Brack said that the fan reaction to Immortal's reveal had taught Blizzard "a huge number of lessons". Brack acknowledged concern that Blizzard was moving away from PC releases in favor of mobile but said that this mobile release "doesn’t mean we’re not going to be continuing to make awesome PC games and awesome console games like we have in the past".
In December 2020 it was confirmed that Diablo Immortal is going to be a free-to-play game with optional in-app purchases.
In the announcement, Blizzard said: "We plan on supporting Diablo Immortal with a constant cadence of free content, including new gear, features, classes, stories, and areas to explore. We also want to make sure every purchase feels fair and is guided by a clear set of values that place an emphasis on the player experience for all players."
In-app purchases are going to be "entirely options" so they aren't going to involve things like buying equipment - that can only be had by playing the game. Instead, in-game purchases will allow players to buy gems, crests and reforging items. In the BlizzCon 2021 Q&A , it was said that there are plans for a battle pass system with free and paid tracks.
When Diablo Immortal launches it’ll have six core classes and the team is planning to add more along with extra areas and content. This will also be free to every player and no classes, zones or other content will be paywalled. “In-game purchases should never circumvent gameplay. We want to structure our purchases so it’s a bonus and you feel good about it,” lead designer Wyatt Cheng said.
In an early test of the alpha version of the game, one reviewer wrote for IGN :
"I wasn’t able to spend real money during the alpha, but I felt no compunction to do so, nor did I feel like I was missing out on anything by purely playing Immortal free-to-play."
"This game has an awful lot of compelling gameplay and content for free, and all future content will also remain free, whether it’s new gear, areas, features or even classes. The proof will be in the playing, of course but, at this point, the real-money options seem like they won’t be necessary to enjoy Diablo Immortal, but instead will be a nice bonus for those that are already in deep."
Release date and PC version announced
Diablo Immortal will release on June 2 and, to the surprise of many, launch on PC alongside Android and iOS devices.
Blizzard's latest action RPG, once pitched as a mobile-exclusive Diablo game that will take the series in a bold new direction, will actually be playable on the platform most series fans are familiar with: PC.
It will launch on PC in open beta on June 2. Blizzard says the game is fully complete, but is leaving the testing window open to make UI and interface adjustments off the back of fan feedback.
Pre-registering now open
It is now possible to pre-register for the game.
There are a couple of ways to go about this. You can either head to the official Diablo Immortal website , click the “pre-register now” button, then log in using Battleet account. Or, you can go straight to the Google Play or Apple App store and follow the directions that they give to pre-register.
A pre-order bonus has also been announced . If 30 million people pre-order or pre-register for Diablo Immortal before its release, the Horadrim Cosmetic set will be available for anyone who completes the game’s tutorial within the first 30 days of its release.
Transforming your character
Blizzard has shared some more details about Diablo Immortal in a March blog post . Discussing how you’ll be able to shape your character as you play the game, the post touches specifically on changing class and cosmetics.
Rather than requiring players to create alt-characters each time they want to test out another of the game’s six classes, you’ll be able to change your existing character to a new class. When you do so, you’ll retain all of that character’s level and item progression, and receive new items that suit their play style. None of the items you had equipped or kept in your stash will be removed.
Blizzard says the class change feature has been implemented because it didn’t “want to force our players into the hard choice of giving up progress on their main character to support an alt.
“We also didn’t want anyone to feel obligated to keep a roster of alt characters to gather rewards and resources, or to match the shifting demands of Leaderboards, Cycle of Strife, or other competitive systems.”
However, while you’ll be able to switch to any class you fancy, there’ll be some, as yet undisclosed, limits on the frequency of changes. Blizzard also says players who focus on a single class will have some advantages, such as a broader selection of available character builds. The class change feature won’t be available when Immortal launches but will be added after release in a patch.
As for cosmetics, in Diablo Immortal you can earn and buy new gear to change the appearance of your character. Complete cosmetic sets are available to every class and a new one will be rolled out monthly, themed around that month’s Battle Pass. The visual appearance of your Legendary items will also change as you level up their gems' Resonance stat. That means your armor and weapons will become beefier, more intricate, and emanate brighter light as you progress.
According to the post, “purchasing the Battle Pass for a given month will allow you to unlock a cosmetic outfit for any one class, and purchasing the Premium Battle Pass will also include custom portal skins and portrait frames.”
Others will be available in the in-game shop, though Blizzard says it wants “to make room for cool free cosmetics, and a number are earned through play”.
Delayed to tune "core and endgame features" Blizzard announced in August that Diablo Immortal will no longer release in 2021, with the team now aiming for release in the "first half of 2022".
"Following feedback provided by test participants of the Closed Alpha, our team has been tuning core and endgame features," Blizzard wrote in a blog post announcing the delay. "For example, we’re iterating on PvP content like the Cycle of Strife to make it more accessible, alongside late-game PvE content like the Helliquary to make it more engaging. We’re also working to provide controller support for those who want to play our game in a different way. However, these changes and additional opportunities to improve our gameplay experience will not be realized in the 2021 timeframe we had previously communicated. So, the game is now planned for release in the first half of 2022, which will allow us to add substantial improvements to the whole game."
BlizzCon 2021 canceled There was no update on Diablo Immortal at BlizzCon 2021 as Blizzard canceled the event.
“The ongoing complexities and uncertainties of the pandemic have impacted our ability to properly move forward on many of these fronts, and ultimately we’re now past the point where we’d be able to develop the kind of event we’d want to create for you in November,” Saralyn Smith, Executive Producer of BlizzCon, wrote in an announcement .
An online event with “smaller in-person gatherings” will apparently be held in early 2022, much like BlizzConline 2021. More details on this are expected at a later date.
Cycle of Strife and PvP We had the chance to sit down with some of Diablo Immortals' developers to discuss the game’s faction vs faction PvP mode, Cycle of Strife, currently being tested in closed Alpha. With players taking part as Shadows, Immortals or Adventurers, competing in cycles, Diablo Immortal’s PvP is quite unique and potentially complex, particularly for a mobile game.
“So part of [Cycle of Strife] was that [Diablo Immortal] is an MMO, part of it is we want to have a big social structure, and part of it was some more recent Diablo games didn’t have PvP,” Senior System Designer Kris Zierhut told Techradar. “This is really the first big PvP system that Diablo has ever had.”
At the moment, the team is still adjusting and tweaking Cycle of Strife but even on release, Cycle of Strife will continue to change as more content is added and items are rebalanced. See more detail on Cycle of Strife in our full interview .
A “much richer endgame experience” than Diablo 3 Diablo Immortal’s endgame will apparently be “much richer” than that in Diablo 3, the game’s senior combat designer Julian Love has told Pocket Tactics .
“One of the things that we really want is for players to have lots of different things to do in order to progress their characters,” Love says. “We have things like elder rifts, which are an incremental improvement on greater rifts. Then you’ve got the Helliquary, you’ve got bounties, you’ve got PvP. There’s also the Cycle of Strife that includes an adventurer thread, which is for people who are more PvE focused.
“Typically, when we think about games, we think about leveling up through the storyline, seeing all the zones, then you reach a level cap, and that’s where the game ends. But in the case of Immortal, that’s really kind of where a whole new version – the full-blown version – of the game begins, in that all of these systems are unlocked for you and all of that variety is at your disposal.”
Love touches on the game’s MMO nature and how this “more social environment” plays into the endgame. The Helliquary, he explains, is “a big endgame system where you are setting yourself up against these really large demons that are very intentionally difficult to fight. You’re going to have to prepare for those, you’re going to have to get good at them, you’re going to have to go out and engage in other aspects of the game in order to take them on.
“Of course, players are going to share stories about those kinds of challenges with one another and reach out to others within the game in order to discuss those things. If it was an entirely single-player experience, those stories wouldn’t get shared and referenced as much as when you have a social environment.”
Closed Alpha introduces new content A closed Alpha for Diablo Immortal began in 2021 and introduced plenty of extra content. Accessible only to a limited number of Australian Android players at the time, the Diablo Immortal beta built on December 2020's technical Alpha by adding a new class (the Crusader), new zones, a new dungeon and some endgame content.
The addition of the Crusader means that five of Diablo Immortal’s six launch character classes have been tested, with only the Necromancer left to go. More classes are expected to be added to the game after launch.
The new zones included in the Alpha were Mount Zavin, “the home of the Monks, who are among Sanctuary’s most deadly warriors” and the Frozen Tundra, a region where “war festers… around the great mountain of Arreat, where the Lord of Destruction still threatens the world.” The Frozen Tundra is also the home of the game’s new dungeon, the Cavern of Echoes, in which “adventurers will need to ward off the cold embrace of death as they seek out the Iceburn Tear.”
On top of all of that, there was a new PVP mode being tested. Called the Cycle of Strife, it sees three factions - adventurers, immortals and shadows — “wage war for the Eternal Crown—an ancient source of power central to the Cycle of Strife.”
Before getting to the Cycle of Strife, though, players were able to opt in to prove themselves in the 8v8 Battlegrounds in the city of Westmarch. On top of all of that, the blog post detailing the Alpha said there was also “new Legendary items and Legendary gems, an additional Paragon Tree, two extra skills per class, a test experience teeming with new quests, bounties, and more!”
Finally, there's the Helliquary. This device came to players after they finish the Main Quest in Bilefen and it "allows heroes to locate powerful demons and trap them! Once the demons are defeated, the Helliquary can turn their Demonic Remains into power the Hero can take advantage of."
Minimum device requirements for Technical Alpha In a blog post detailing the Alpha for Diablo Immortal last year, the minimum device requirements to take part were revealed and were as follows:
Android Minimum Requirements
Apple Minimum Requirements
The Horadric Bestiary The Diablo Immortal Twitter account has been tweeting out some entries in the Horadric Bestiary, seemingly revealing some of the creatures that you’re likely to come across in Diablo Immortal with a description and a brief video of artwork.
The Tweets are being posted once a week and thus far we’ve seen descriptions and images of things like the Hellhound, Khazra Warriors and Poisonous Bat Lizards.
BlizzCon 2021 BlizzCon 2021 didn't bring us a firm release date for Diablo Immortal, but there was an interesting Q&A which answered a few questions about the game and revealed more about what's to come. Below we've listed some of the interesting details.
More testing is coming soon We didn’t get a release date for Diablo Immortal during BlizzCon 2021 but it has been confirmed that more tests are coming. In Diablo Immortal’s technical alpha which wrapped up in January, players were able to access five zones and progress through levels as part of testing the mid-game of character progression.
At BlizzCon 2021 it was confirmed new tests are coming for a wider audience and that these should allow players to run into some end-game systems, though it’s not going to mean the end of character growth as there are prestige points and loot grinding to attend to. Future tests are also going to have more questing zones, access to new character classes and may even run for a longer period of time.
Controller support is being investigated During BlizzCon 2021, it was revealed that controller support was one of the most requested things from the technical alpha and that while there is no news on it at the moment, the team is "investigating" bringing controller support in the future.
Mobile MMO is the goal During BlizzCon we got another look at Diablo Immortal and it’s been confirmed that the game is a mobile MMO, or at least an action RPG with MMO elements like voice chat, public events, and dedicated dungeons to take on with your friends.
During the game’s technical alpha, four-person dungeons were in operation and during the BlizzCon Q&A, the development team said they’d be keen to have event with more than four players, though at the moment they’re more of an aspiration and when the game launches it might be without these larger raid-like elements.
Players will operate out of the hub city of Westmarch, and may pass “dozens” of players as they wander around. But more crucial to the MMO experience is “that the world exists outside of you,” as Wyatt Cheng put it, and much like World of Warcraft, the Diablo Immortal world is a persistent place that marches on with or without you.
There are plans for guilds The alpha also featured voice chat within private party and public channels. The development team said that it intends to implement guilds into the game too, so that players can “feel like your membership and participation in a guild matters”.
Suited for short play sessions Diablo Immortal’s gameplay is going to be more suited for short play sessions, which seems fitting for mobile. In the BlizzConline 2021 Q&A, the team leads talked about aesthetic and gameplay changes that have been made to make the Diablo experience work on smartphones.
The Immortal team acknowledged the challenge of adapting the action RPG to mobile phone controls within the display as it means that players’ fingers will cover up some of the action, though it was said that it’s easy to “melt right into the game”.
To make the game more suited to short play sessions, the Immortal team designed activities for one minute, or three minutes, or five minutes, so it would be satisfying for players who picked up and put down the game for brief sessions. But this shouldn't stop it being fun for those who want to play far longer sessions, as they do with the PC and console Diablo games.
The game is also literally brighter and easier to see for those playing on their phones in varying lighting conditions. “It does benefit the game to not be so dark, because you’ve got players playing in a bunch of different ambient light situations and they can really struggle to see anything,” combat designer Julian Love said. “It’s the kind of problem where a gamma knob slider doesn’t really fix the problem. You really need enough ambient contrast in order to make sure that the visceral action remains present and people can distinguish what’s going on. It’s a very fast-paced game.”
Even with these changes, the Immortal team is still trying to make Diablo Immortal feel like its PC and console predecessors – though it will likely take trial-and-error to nail the right approach.
“The biggest thing I care about is ‘Does It Feel Like Diablo,’ and only way to find out is push it into public and see if it’s on the right track,” Love said.
There will be PvP experiences Lead designer Wyatt Cheng said that Diablo Immortal’s PvP plans are “ambitious” and there are different zones with different mechanics. In the game’s technical alpha there was a glimpse of the kind of content they’re making to pit players against one another. These include a treasure chest that would spawn every three hours and only open to the last player standing.
Using the mobile platform Diablo Immortal is all about feeling like a Diablo game but, in working with mobile, the development team has an opportunity to create entirely new experiences that haven’t been done on console or PC.
In the BlizzCon 2021 Q&A combat designer Julian Love said that because every smartphone player is using the same control scheme, there’s an opportunity to explore new monster effects; things like allowing enemies to freeze the ground and make players slip, then combining that with other environmental effects like wind.
“You’ve got this whole new problem for players: the ground is slippery, and there’s a wind blowing against you this way, and if I move with the wind I’m faster but slipping all over the place, but if I fight the wind, I don’t have traction,” Love said. “These are whole new problems for the player to solve.”
We don’t know how often effects like this will crop up in Immortal, but it’s interesting to see how mobile is presenting new opportunities for gameplay.
Rod Fergusson is overseeing the Diablo franchise The Coalition studio head Rod Fergusson has announced he's leaving the Gears of War developer to oversee the Diablo franchise at Blizzard Entertainment.
Fergusson officially made the announcement on Twitter, revealing that he will be joining Blizzard in March where he will, no doubt, join the team in developing the upcoming Diablo 4 and Diablo 4 Immortal.
Check out his tweet below:
Rejoice! WhatsApp users on iOS can celebrate the return of this great feature
The beta builds of WhatsApp are where you tend to find new features and options to play with. From time to time, however, these preview builds also serve as a glimpse of things that are vanishing from the messaging app.
This is precisely what happened with the camera media bar recently, and this led to a wave of complaints from disgruntled users. Previously, you would be able to scroll through your images horizontally while having the camera available to shoot, but a recent update relegated this to just one image.
Thankfully, WhatsApp is very good at listening to feedback, and as such it has taken action to give people what they want. What this means is that – for iOS users, at least – the scrollable camera media bar is back.
The removal this feature caused a lot of upset as it made sending photos and videos a more long-winded process. A few extra taps here and there may not sound like much in theory, but it is something that soon gets extremely annoying in practice.
The bar is back
Although the initial change that saw the removal of the camera media bar did not make the feature unusable, it did complicate the process unnecessarily. If you wanted to send out a message with a previously-taken image as quickly as possible, any extra steps could have been a major irritation.
This is far from being the first time WhatsApp has introduced a change only to backtrack on its design decision , and it almost certainly won't be the last.
This is why the return of the scrollable media bar will be welcomed by most. Anyone who is signed up for the TestFlight beta program can download and install WhatsApp beta version 22.4.0.72 for iOS.
Once installed, this version of the app restores the scrollable media browser bar, making it quick and easy to navigate through the contents of your camera rolls and select videos, photos and other images to send in messages.
Via WABetaInfo