![]() ![]() At a cursory glance, it looks like a slightly altered Barbarian, but of course the changes are more than skin-deep. The Reaper of Souls expansion saw the introduction of a new character, the Crusader. You couldn’t get these graphics on a mid-range computer, that’s for sure. It feels like the game could have used higher-resolution textures, but what is here is solid. Aliasing, or jagged-looking graphics, has seemingly been squashed, and there is no lag whatsoever to speak of, unlike in the PS3 port. No matter how many enemies came at me or my group (dozens filling the entire screen at one point), the game hardly broke a sweat. Graphically, D3+ has seen a notable bump in smoothness above everything else. The original game is here in its entirety, plus the expansion Reaper of Souls. You can still play with up to four players, either online or locally. More content, more characters, more special effects, more places! Given how solid the original was, this is most definitely a good thing. ![]() More is better, right? In this case, Diablo III: Reaper of Souls Ultimate Evil Edition (okay, you know what, we’ll just call this D3+) has more of everything. ![]()
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