Diablo II PC System Requirements

Complete list of the Diablo II system requirements

Blizzard Entertainment published a set of Diablo II system requirements for both the single-player and multiplayer game modes back in 2000 when the game was first released.

At the time of the release, you needed a mid to high range PC gaming rig in order to play the game. These system requirements are quite low end when compared with system specs of current PCs; almost any Windows-based PC purchased since 2010 or so will have more than enough power to run Diablo II.

Diablo II PC System Requirements - Single Player

Spec Requirement
Operating System Windows® 2000*, 95, 98, or NT 4.0 Service Pack 5
CPU/Processor Pentium® 233 or equivalent
Memory 32 MB RAM
Disk Space 650 MB free hard disk space
Graphics Card DirectX™ compatible video card
Sound Card DirectX compatible sound card
Perperiphals Keyboard, Mouse

If you are looking to play Diablo II and are unsure whether your system meets the requirements or not, you can head on over to CanYouRunIt to compare your current system against the published Diablo II system requirements. If you have issues in pulling up and installing the CanYouRunIt plugin, that's a pretty good sign your system cannot run this game.

Diablo II PC System Requirements - Multiplayer

Spec Requirement
Operating System Windows® 2000*, 95, 98, or NT 4.0 Service Pack 5
CPU/Processor Pentium® 233 or equivalent
Memory 64 MB RAM
Disk Space 950 MB free hard disk space
Graphics Card DirectX™ compatible video card
Sound Card DirectX compatible sound card
Network 28.8Kbps or fasterKeyboard, Mouse
Perperiphals Keyboard, Mouse

About Diablo II and the Gameplay

Game cover of Diablo II
Photo from Amazon

Diablo II is an action role-playing game developed and published by Blizzard Entertainment for Microsoft Windows and Mac OS operating systems. It was released in 2000 as the direct sequel to 1996's Diablo and it is one of the most popular and well-received computer games of all time.

The game's overall plot centers around the world of Sanctuary and the continuing struggle between the inhabits of the world with those of the underworld.

Once again the Lord of Terror, as well as his hordes of minions and demons, are trying to return to Sanctuary and it is up to the players and an unnamed hero to once again defeat them. The game's storyline is separated into four distinct acts, each of which follows a fairly linear path.

Players progress through these acts by completing various quests that unlock new areas and allow players to gain experience and become more powerful for the challenges in the quests that follow.

There are a number of side quests that are not required to move the main storyline along but they do allow players to pick up additional experience and treasure and gives some freedom of choice in the story.

The game also contains three different difficulty levels, Normal, Nightmare, and Hell with the harder difficulty offering more rewards in terms of better items and more experience.

This experience and items earned on harder difficulty settings are not lost if the player would return to the easier difficulty levels. On the flip side, monsters are much more difficult to defeat and players are penalized in terms of experience when dying on harder difficulty settings.

In addition to the four-act single-player campaign, Diablo II includes a multiplayer component that was playable via LAN or Battle.net. Players could play with their character created in the single-player mode in the Open realms games which was one of the multiplayer modes. The game also supports co-operative gameplay with support for up to eight players in one game.

One expansion pack has been released for Diablo II. Titled Lord of Destruction, it introduced two new character classes into the game, new items and added to the original storyline. It also overhauled of the game mechanics for both the single and multiplayer portions of the game.

Diablo II was followed up by Diablo III in 2012.

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