Diablo 4 is a title well-known in the gaming community, although the game has not been very popular recently. Apparently, Blizzard decided to encourage us to take an interest in the production, because – on the occasion of Black Friday – it offers interesting promotions. We can even play it for free on Steam, but there is a catch.
Diablo 4 on Steam for free. But you have to hurry
Diablo 4 for computers is now available on Steam, but the promotion is time-limited. We have a whole week to get acquainted with the production, and on November 28, players who took advantage of the offer will lose access to the title. However, this is a great opportunity to thoroughly test Diablo 4 and see if the Blizzard title is for us. This is the first time that the game can be tested for free on Steam. Players who get hooked on Diablo 4 before the end of the promotion will be able to buy Blizzard’s product at a reduced price. The classic version on Steam currently costs PLN 209.40 (excluding promotions PLN 349), the Deluxe Edition is offered for PLN 245.40 (usually PLN 409), and the Ultimate Edition can be obtained for PLN 275.40 (instead of PLN 459). We are therefore talking about discounts of 40%.
All three versions of Diablo 4 are also currently available in other game stores. The title can be found on promotion, among others: in official PlayStation and Xbox stores, and the prices of individual versions are identical – PLN 209.40, PLN 245.40 and PLN 275.40, respectively. In the first store, the promotion is valid until November 28 (but only until 00:59), and in the second store for another 8 days, i.e. until the end of the month.
What to watch out for on Black Friday?
It is worth remembering that the Black Friday shopping holiday that falls next Friday may be a treat for fraudsters impersonating well-known stores. Also gaming platforms. Therefore, it is always worth making sure that exceptionally attractive promotions actually come from proven, legal stores. It often happens that fraudsters impersonate well-known brands (use their logos, make crafted pages similar to original websites, etc.) to gain our trust, and then extort personal data and credit card numbers.
Let’s also pay attention to the content of the text messages we receive. Those from fraudsters often contain linguistic errors or are simply incorrectly translated into Polish. Let’s not click on links contained in messages without thinking. Some of them only look similar to the website addresses of popular stores, but contain minor differences or are located in a foreign domain. You can read more about this in the text below:
Source: Gazeta

Mabel is a talented author and journalist with a passion for all things technology. As an experienced writer for the 247 News Agency, she has established a reputation for her in-depth reporting and expert analysis on the latest developments in the tech industry.