Diablo IV: Lord of Hatred - Deluxe Edition (DLC) - Compare Prices & Find Best Deals

Compare Diablo IV: Lord of Hatred - Deluxe Edition (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Blizzard Entertainment, Inc.. Published by Blizzard Entertainment. Released on 4/27/2026. Available on Xbox Series X, Xbox One. Genres: Action, RPG.

Diablo IV's second major expansion brings the Spiritborn class and a new jungle region, wrapped in a Deluxe Edition stuffed with cosmetic bundles for the committed loot-chaser.

Lord of Hatred is the Deluxe Edition packaging for Diablo IV's second expansion content, built on top of Vessel of Hatred and aimed squarely at players who are already living inside the seasonal loop. If you bounced off Diablo IV at launch, nothing in this package will convert you. But if you're the kind of person who checks patch notes on your lunch break and has opinions about paragon board layouts, there is a lot here pulling in the right direction. The core of what you're buying is the Vessel of Hatred expansion itself, which introduced the Spiritborn class and the Nahantu jungle region. The Spiritborn is genuinely interesting from a build-craft perspective: its mechanics revolve around channeling guardian spirits, and the synergies between those spirits give you actual decision points rather than the usual "pick the number that goes up fastest" optimization. Whether that depth holds past the 60-hour mark depends heavily on which season you're playing through and how aggressively Blizzard has patched things since launch. Historical Diablo IV precedent suggests some builds will be dramatically stronger than others, and the meta will shift. The Deluxe Edition layers on two cosmetic bundles: the Infernal Apostle Warlock set and the High Heavensguard Paladin set. Cosmetics in Diablo IV are a complicated subject because the in-game shop already sells a lot of premium-priced content, so whether these bundles feel like genuine value or like getting back what should have been base content is a question only your personal tolerance for live-service economies can answer. They are, by all accounts, high-production cosmetics with detailed armor designs, and if aesthetics matter to you during your fifteenth Pit run, they are at least well-crafted ones. On the gameplay side, what Diablo IV does well is still here: the moment-to-moment combat is satisfying, the co-op loop (including cross-platform multiplayer) is smooth, and the PvP zones give you something chaotic to do when pure PvE starts feeling mechanical. What it does less well is narrative payoff. The writing rarely rewards re-reading, the side quests range from serviceable to outright filler XP delivery systems, and the overarching story has a habit of gesturing at interesting lore threads without fully committing to them. For someone who wants a game to care about its own fiction the way, say, a classic CRPG does, Diablo IV will always feel like it is one good writer away from being something special. This specific edition is listed for Xbox Series X and Xbox One, which means you are not getting it on Steam. Keep that platform context in mind for your library management. The cross-platform multiplayer support is a genuine upside if your friends are split across Xbox and PC. Bottom line: the Deluxe Edition is for dedicated Diablo IV players who want the full expansion plus cosmetics and do not mind that the narrative is lighter than the loot. Newcomers should probably start with the base game before committing to an expansion bundle. Monika, Scout Team

Diablo IV: Lord of Hatred - Deluxe Edition (DLC)
ActionRPG

Diablo IV: Lord of Hatred - Deluxe Edition (DLC)

Apr 27, 2026Blizzard Entertainment, Inc.Blizzard Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Diablo IV's second major expansion brings the Spiritborn class and a new jungle region, wrapped in a Deluxe Edition stuffed with cosmetic bundles for the committed loot-chaser.

Xbox Series XXbox One
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Historical low: $29.99

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About Diablo IV: Lord of Hatred - Deluxe Edition (DLC)

Lord of Hatred is the Deluxe Edition packaging for Diablo IV's second expansion content, built on top of Vessel of Hatred and aimed squarely at players who are already living inside the seasonal loop. If you bounced off Diablo IV at launch, nothing in this package will convert you. But if you're the kind of person who checks patch notes on your lunch break and has opinions about paragon board layouts, there is a lot here pulling in the right direction. The core of what you're buying is the Vessel of Hatred expansion itself, which introduced the Spiritborn class and the Nahantu jungle region. The Spiritborn is genuinely interesting from a build-craft perspective: its mechanics revolve around channeling guardian spirits, and the synergies between those spirits give you actual decision points rather than the usual "pick the number that goes up fastest" optimization. Whether that depth holds past the 60-hour mark depends heavily on which season you're playing through and how aggressively Blizzard has patched things since launch. Historical Diablo IV precedent suggests some builds will be dramatically stronger than others, and the meta will shift. The Deluxe Edition layers on two cosmetic bundles: the Infernal Apostle Warlock set and the High Heavensguard Paladin set. Cosmetics in Diablo IV are a complicated subject because the in-game shop already sells a lot of premium-priced content, so whether these bundles feel like genuine value or like getting back what should have been base content is a question only your personal tolerance for live-service economies can answer. They are, by all accounts, high-production cosmetics with detailed armor designs, and if aesthetics matter to you during your fifteenth Pit run, they are at least well-crafted ones. On the gameplay side, what Diablo IV does well is still here: the moment-to-moment combat is satisfying, the co-op loop (including cross-platform multiplayer) is smooth, and the PvP zones give you something chaotic to do when pure PvE starts feeling mechanical. What it does less well is narrative payoff. The writing rarely rewards re-reading, the side quests range from serviceable to outright filler XP delivery systems, and the overarching story has a habit of gesturing at interesting lore threads without fully committing to them. For someone who wants a game to care about its own fiction the way, say, a classic CRPG does, Diablo IV will always feel like it is one good writer away from being something special. This specific edition is listed for Xbox Series X and Xbox One, which means you are not getting it on Steam. Keep that platform context in mind for your library management. The cross-platform multiplayer support is a genuine upside if your friends are split across Xbox and PC. Bottom line: the Deluxe Edition is for dedicated Diablo IV players who want the full expansion plus cosmetics and do not mind that the narrative is lighter than the loot. Newcomers should probably start with the base game before committing to an expansion bundle. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

xboxARPGLoot-DrivenSeasonal ContentSpiritborn ClassParagon Build SystemExpansion PassCross-Platform Co-opCosmetic Bundles

System Requirements

Minimum

os
Windows 10
cpu
Intel Core i5-8400
ram
12 GB RAM
gpu
GTX 1060 3GB
storage
60 GB

Recommended

os
Windows 10/11
cpu
Intel Core i7-8700K
ram
16 GB RAM
gpu
GTX 1070 8GB
storage
60 GB SSD

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Blizzard Entertainment, Inc.
Publisher
Blizzard Entertainment
Release Date
Apr 27, 2026

Features

Single-playerMulti-playerPvPOnline PvPCo-opOnline Co-opCross-Platform MultiplayerDownloadable Content+3 more

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Price History

2024-12$59.99
2024-11$41.99
2024-09$35.99
2024-07$29.99(lowest)