![]() By and large, the commodity auction house for Diablo II drew a huge number of players who traded in in-game gold and items but also spilled out onto sites such as eBay and Craigslist where people traded in virtual items for real money in a sort of black market (since this trade violated Blizzard’s Terms of Service.) All this occurred in spite of well known hacking and rife item duplication possible in Diablo II accounts.Īs a result, Blizzard has aimed for a controversial always-onine DRM scheme that makes the Diablo franchise which is historically a single player game into a forced-multiplayer game. No doubt, this move comes as more attention is being placed on the real-money transfer (RMT) auction house that Blizzard will be experimenting with as part of the online video game Diablo III. Suspensions and bans of players that have used or start using cheats and hacks will begin in the near future.” We strongly recommend that you avoid using any hacks, cheats, bots, or exploits. Doing otherwise violates our policies for and Diablo III, and it goes against the spirit of fair play that all of our games are based on. ![]() “Playing Diablo III legitimately means playing with an unaltered game client. With the penalty placed on the line, the Blizzard announcement went on to describe what will be viewed as violating the terms of service and would in turn trigger the above punishment. This means that the player will be permanently unable to log in to ® to play Diablo III with his or her account.” “If a Diablo III player is found to be cheating or using hacks, bots, or modifications in any form, then as outlined in the Diablo III end user license agreement, that player can be permanently banned from the game. “Blizzard Entertainment has always taken cheating in any form in Blizzard games very seriously, and that’s no different for Diablo® III,” the video game giant wrote in their harsh warning. Ploygon blog from The Virge brought to our attention that players caught cheating with hacks, bots, or modifications to the game client itself will find themselves locked out of Diablo III, Blizzard announced: ![]() In an attempt to head off potential cheaters in their new Diablo III product, Blizzard is seeking the essential “death penalty” to players caught cheating with a permanent ban from the game. ![]() Cheating is a prevalent problem across a multitude of online video games-and it’s well known in Blizzard’s previous titles in the Diablo series especially Diablo II.
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