Sometimes, salt is justified.
I’ve covered theDestinyseries since the beta period for the original and have witnessed occasions such as its developeressentially telling people to “shut up buy our game,”and an instance where theyoutright lied to their community.
But there’s a dark side of salt: taking leaks at face value. Leaks can also completely color expectations and dig developers (and fans) into a hole of which there is no return. That’s exactly what happened to Blizzard and Nintendo this week.

Right now, theDiablo IIIsubreddit is (appropriately for a game about a denizen of hell),on fire. Fans expected a host ofDiabloannouncements and instead were met with the reveal of a mobile game. Let’s back up a bit.
I’m what you call a hardcoreDiabloplayer. I grinded through hundreds of hours in the original, includingthe expansionmost people probably haven’t even heard of. To say I playedDiablo IIfor over 1000 hours is a conservative estimate. I had max-level characters for every class about a month afterDiablo IIIlaunched and have stuck with it throughReaper of Souls, the Necromancer update and the recent Switch iteration.When Blizzard said to temper our expectations for BlizzConin October and that there probably wouldn’t be a major announcement, do you know what I did? I tempered my expectations and assumed there wouldn’t be any major announcements. But the promise of leaks is too tempting for some.

A few weeks following Blizzard’s calls for calm, a major leak dropped that promised all sorts of old schoolDiablorelated goodies. A remaster ofDiablo IIwas enough to stoke the flames, but a perfectly believable (and still possibly in the works) Druid update forDiablo IIIwas thrown in there. Some people even believed thatDiablo 4was possible even though it wasn’t in the leak. Anything was possible if you believed.
So whenImmortal(a mobile game announcement) hit andthat was it, people blew up. Here’s the thing though: Blizzard has always been a “ready when its ready, Blizzard Time” company. There are alsocompletely separate teamsworking on “multipleDiabloprojects.” We will getDiablo 4one day. There was a twelve-year wait betweenD2andD3. Expect to wait a little longer no matter how many fantastic sounding leaks come out between now and next November’s BlizzCon. If anything onceDiablo 4does come out my kid and many of her peers will becomeDiablofans because of the accessibility of the mobile release (the jury is still out but I’m willing to give it a shot).

That’s not the only leak-related fiasco this week though. Nintendo got an earful when the “Grinch Leak” didn’t pan out. So-called because it also provided previously unseen media for the upcoming Grinch film (and thus adding to its legitimacy),Smashplayers expected the world from the finalSuper Smash Bros. Ultimate Directon November 1. The Grinch Leak was the definition of a decadence, including Shadow the Hedgehog, Isaac (Golden Sun), Ken, Mach Rider, Geno, Chorus Kids (!) and Banjo-Kazooie into the mix.
Semi-believable concepts were thrown in to make it seem real, matching up with themyriad comments from Microsoftabout how they want Banjo-Kazooie to enter the fray. Ken, someone who has been predicted for months on end (and was more obvious as an Echo, or, alternate fighter for the existing Ryu), did make it in, as did Incineroar (who was out of left field). No one else did andSmashboss Sakurai re-iterated that the final roster (pre-DLC) was set. The leak was bogus, but that didn’t stopSmashplayersfrom expressing their disappointment.

Not every announcement or keynote is going to be a banger: if you latch onto leaks this dearly you’re only going to get burned. Sure, we can commiserate over the particularly awful events like Sony’s recent “tent-based” E3 presentation with multiple breaks and slapdash rapid-fire trailers for stuff we’ve already seen. Leaks can be fun to talk about. But the next time someone tells you that Diablo is going to be a DLC character forSuper Smash Bros.based on a joke that Blizzard made during a candid interview, pause, reflect, and consider whether or not you want to hitch your horse to that cart.





