It seems like finding active cow level parties in Diablo 2: Resurrected is a real hit and miss.
Knowing me, I’ll probably participate in Ladders once those start (although I need to figure out how Diablo II is going to do this before I commit to anything). I’m actually surprised that Ladders didn’t immediately start with the launch of the game, because there have to be people who got their characters up to level 99, and they should be rewarded in some way. I also feel like the Lobby could be improved, as you only have access to one chat at a time depending on where you’re at in the game. The older, classic Diablo II had more than one room that you could go to chat in depending on what you were looking for or what struck your fancy.
One day I may also tell the story of the person who I actually met in Diablo II in person… it didn’t, and doesn’t, change how I viewed the game or view the game, but it’s still proof that there are people out there who aren’t exactly good. It’s similar to the story I told of the person I used to know who got, and probably still is, so addicted to World of Warcraft that they permanently threw away the chance at getting a really good job that they could have turned into a really good career. I think it was somewhere in the ballpark of a year ago or so that I told that story. But I need to find some way to tell this story as vaguely as possible…



This is the picture of someone who has been in the local jail for seven years, so, I mean… so much for a fair and speedy trial, right? But in May of 2014, police officers attempted to execute a no-knock warrant on this man’s apartment, and as soon as he realized that someone was breaking into his home — even if they were cops — he began firing back, and in the midst of everyone firing, a cop was shot beyond the confines of his bulletproof garb and would later succumb to that injury at a local hospital. This man, pictured right here, is facing the death penalty because that can be applied to someone in our state if they shoot and kill a member of the police. On a tip from what would later be revealed to be a bad informant, local law enforcement was able to get approval to execute a no-knock warrant in a matter of minutes. The judge who made this decision seriously made it in a matter of minutes. During the raid on his apartment, an officer tripped over a flash grenade which would come to obscure everyone’s vision. It is entirely possible that the cop who was shot was shot as a result of friendly fire, and this has been acknowledged. No attempts have been made to determine whether it was a bullet from Guy’s gun or a bullet from a police officer’s gun that killed this man.