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This list is composed of non-player characters of varying importance in the computer games Diablo, Diablo II, and Diablo II: Lord of Destruction, and in their histories. An NPC from the video game The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion. ...
âComputer and video gamesâ redirects here. ...
Diablo is a dark fantasy-themed hack and slash action role-playing game developed by Blizzard North and released by Blizzard Entertainment on January 2, 1997. ...
Diablo II, sequel to the popular game Diablo, is a dark fantasy-themed action role-playing game in a hack and slash or Dungeon Roaming style. ...
Diablo Adria the Witch The witch Adria lives near Tristram in Diablo I and sells wares of use to magic users. Her fate by Diablo II is revealed, and it is that she foresaw the demons' coming from the catacombs, and fled Tristram before they slew the town.
Prince Albrecht Albrecht was the young son of King Leoric. He was captured by the traitorous Arch-Bishop Lazarus and taken down into the depths of the catacombs where Diablo's broken soulstone lay. The bodiless demon took control of the boy's mind and fed on his terror, and then reformed him to match his own form. The player character in Diablo I is sent on a quest to find the prince, but only finds another child, sacrificed by Lazarus. At the end after Diablo has been "killed", the hero removes the soulstone from Diablo's forehead, causing its body to transform back into that of Prince Albrecht's, who dies. Soul Stone: In the diablo universe, a soul stone was a jewel or stone used to trap a demons soul inside it. ...
The Butcher A bloated demon, appearing like an Overlord demon with an apron and a giant meat cleaver, the Butcher is one of the earliest (optional) bosses in Diablo I. He resides in a room strewn full of mutilated corpses, the remains of Tristram's townsfolk whom the Arch-Bishop Lazarus intentionally led to their doom. If the quest is generated in a game, a dying townsman outside the church will ask the player character to avenge him and the others by slaying the Butcher . When he is first encountered in his room full of impaled bodies, he utters the line "Ahh, fresh meat!". The demon leaves behind his cleaver, a unique axe with low durability. For players possessing very low character levels, the Butcher is an extremely difficult creature to kill. He will relentlessly pursue a player and attempt to force him/her into close-quarter hand-to-hand combat, savagely hacking away with his cleaver - which usually ends in the player's rapid death. Most Diablo players resort to cunning tactics to bring the Butcher down (such as standing behind wall bars and shooting arrows at him, taking advantage of the creature's inability to open doors), or simply ignore him and come back for him when they have significantly upgraded their character levels. Melée generally means hand-to-hand combat or mano-a-mano. ...
The demo version for Diablo included a single level with the butcher in it, needless to say it was very hard for the players trying this version to manage to best the demon. Demo disc released with a magazine. ...
Deckard Cain Deckard Cain first appears as "Cain the Elder" in Tristram in Diablo, where he is known as a storyteller and can identify items for the player. Towards the end of the game, he reveals that he is in fact Deckard Cain, the last of the Horadrim, and gives vital information about the final trials awaiting the hero. Image File history File links DiabloCain. ...
Image File history File links DiabloCain. ...
Diablo II, sequel to the popular game Diablo, is a dark fantasy-themed action role-playing game in a hack and slash or Dungeon Roaming style. ...
Diablo is a dark fantasy-themed hack and slash action role-playing game developed by Blizzard North and released by Blizzard Entertainment on January 2, 1997. ...
The Horadrim are an ancient confederation of mages in the games Diablo II and Diablo. ...
Cain is also the only character known to have survived when Tristram was destroyed by demons, as they decide to put him in a cage instead of tearing him limb from limb like the other former citizens of Tristram (possibly under orders from the three Brothers to keep him alive). In the first act of Diablo II, the player is eventually required to travel to Tristram and free Cain. After this, he appears in the Rogue encampment and subsequently continues to follow the player character, staying in town in each area, dispensing advice and identifying items for free. Diablo II, sequel to the popular game Diablo, is a dark fantasy-themed action role-playing game in a hack and slash or Dungeon Roaming style. ...
It is also possible to fail to rescue Cain before the end of Act I, though the quest is presented as obligatory by the other NPCs. In this case, he will be rescued by the Rogues and only identify items for a fee. An NPC from the video game The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion. ...
"Stay a while, and listen!" is a typical greeting Cain gives to the player.
Farnham the Drunk Farnham is a character in Diablo I. He is found in Tristram, but doesn't technically provide any kind of service or quest to the player character. He appears at first to be little more than comic relief, but as the game progress his character is revealed to have a darker, more tragic nature: he has become an alcoholic after his experiences in the labyrinth beneath the old monastery nearby. Sometimes his apparently incoherent ramblings may in fact provide players with some insight into what they might encounter in the labyrinth. King Alcohol and his Prime Minister circa 1820 Alcoholism is the consumption of or preoccupation with alcoholic beverages to the extent that this behavior interferes with the alcoholics normal personal, family, social, or work life. ...
Gillian the barmaid Gillian is a young woman who lives in Tristram in Diablo I. She works for Ogden and has stayed in town to take care of her grandmother. She was most likely killed along with most others in the town when it was destroyed prior to the events of Diablo II. She doesn't give any vital information, the only option available being 'Gossip'.
Griswold Griswold is the smith of apparent Scottish origin in Tristram in the original Diablo (although Scotland doesn't exist in the fictional world of Sanctuary). He sells weapons and armour and repairs items. He also gives the player character some quests. He's capable of forging some quite remarkable items as a reward. When Tristram is destroyed, he is risen as a tough and incredibly difficult, though optional, undead zombie the player character faces in Diablo II. This article is about the Scottish as an ethnic group. ...
A group of actors portraying zombies in a film A zombie or zombi is an animated human body devoid of a soul. ...
Inarius Inarius is an angel introduced in the Diablo manual as a means of explaining the origins of the Overlord demon encountered by the player in the Catacombs and Caves levels of the game. The angel left Heaven because of his pride, and built himself a temple. To prove his superiority he launched an ill-fated assault upon one of the temples of Mephisto and slew all his followers. Mephisto was greatly angered by Inarius's actions, and captured the angel and his followers. After tearing off his wings and eyelids, Mephisto chained Inarius for all eternity within a cathedral of mirrors so that he would be forced to look upon his ruined image forever. His followers were turned into the hideous Overlord creatures. Diablo is a dark fantasy-themed hack and slash action role-playing game developed by Blizzard North and released by Blizzard Entertainment on January 2, 1997. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
In the computer game series Diablo, Mephisto is one of the three Prime Evils. ...
In the computer game series Diablo, Mephisto is one of the three Prime Evils. ...
In the computer game series Diablo, Mephisto is one of the three Prime Evils. ...
Expanded role in books In the Sin War trilogy written by Richard A. Knaak, it is revealed that Inarius along with other rogue angels and demons are responsible for the creation of Sanctuary and the Nephalem (Angel and demon hybrids with great power). Inarius wished a Sanctuary away from the constant battles between demons and angels as well as create his own High Heavens which would be greater than the original. However the development of the Nephalem's powers infuriated Inarius making him want to start anew by eradicating all the Nephalem. This brought him into conflict with Mephisto's daughter, his romantic partner Lilith. Due to the conflict between the two Inarius banished Lilith. This is because Lilith desired to be a tyrant with an unbeatable army under her control while Inarius wanted lowly worshipers. But before Lilith's banishment, Lilith had killed all other angels and demons on Sanctuary preventing Inarius from destroying the only sentient being left on Sanctuary, the Nephalem because Inarius did not wish isolation. And so Inarius used the worldstone to prevent the Nephalem from developing their powers, reducing each succeeding generation's powers until they became the mere normal humans of Sanctuary. Inarius also used the world stone to mask the existence of Sanctuary from his own Angelic kind in the High Heavens. He then later created the religion Cathedral of Light to make the beings of Sanctuary worship and serve him. Richard A. Knaak is the bestselling author of Dragonlance novels, Dragonrealm (his own creation), soon-to-be five novels for Blizzard Entertainments Diablo series, and eventually seven works in the Warcraft universe. ...
His role in Sanctuary's history is still further being revealed in Richard A. Knaak's Diablo: Sin War trilogy. The Sin War is a novel series written by written by Richard A. Knaak. ...
Lachdanan Lachdanan was a pious knight and servant of King Leoric's, who survived a disastrous attack against Westmarch only to return to find his king had finally turned all the way into a raving madman. The king, his mind corrupted after possession by Diablo, ordered his remaining warriors to attack Lachdanan and his company, but Lachdanan prevailed, finally slaying the king himself. As he died, Leoric cursed Lachdanan into eternal damnation for his "treachery". In Diablo I, an optional quest in Hell involves saving Lachdanan's soul by finding him the Golden Elixir.
Archbishop Lazarus The Archbishop Lazarus was an ambassador from the Zakarum Church and an advisor to King Leoric. According to the manual to Diablo II - in the form of a letter from the Patriarch of Zakarum - Lazarus was the Custodian of Mephisto's Soulstone in Kurast sometime prior to his arrival in Khanduras. When Leoric set up court in the abandoned Monastery, Lazarus was lured into the monastery's depths by Diablo, where Lazarus proceeded to shatter the soulstone that imprisoned the Prime Evil. After Diablo failed to fully possess Leoric himself, Lazarus brought the King's son, Albrecht, into the labyrinth to serve as the mortal host for the Lord of Terror. After Leoric's death, Lazarus emerged from the Monastery and rallied the villagers into a mob to find Albrecht - but the treacherous Archbishop led them right into the lair of the Butcher. After this disastrous incursion, Lazarus vanished deep into the Monastery, where he remained. He is later defeated by the hero in Diablo.
King Leoric King Leoric, later known as the Black King and ultimately the Skeleton King, was the ruler of Khanduras just prior to the events of Diablo I. He was a devout follower of the Zakarum religion of the Light, and was a great lord from outside the country prior to declaring himself king. Though he was a foreign king, the people of Khanduras eventually grew to respect him for his evident purity of heart and deed. He made his court in the abandoned Horadrim monastery under which Diablo's soulstone secretly lay. (Why the monastery in the game appears as nothing but a decrepit church, and why Tristram remains a little village, is not given an explanation.) The Horadrim are an ancient confederation of mages in the games Diablo II and Diablo. ...
Soul Stone: In the diablo universe, a soul stone was a jewel or stone used to trap a demons soul inside it. ...
However, Diablo's power stirred at the same time, and the Lord of Terror eventually drew the king's archbishop, Lazarus, into the labyrinth under the monastery, where he found the soulstone and was compelled to shatter it. Thus freed, Diablo sought for the most powerful mortal soul he could possess in order to regain his power, and settled for the king's. Leoric found a dark presence trying to intrude into his being, and though he fought it in secrecy, he was not strong enough to banish Diablo, and his mind became twisted and corrupted. As the change began to show in both his appearance and behaviour, his own people started calling him the Black King. The Arch-Bishop Lazarus, also fallen under the power of Diablo, did his best to conceal the nature of the change in the king's person, but eventually suspicions among Leoric's advisors grew to the point that he needed a new plan. Thus, he convinced the now delusional king that the kingdom of Westmarch was plotting to take over and annex Khanduras, manipulating him into declaring war, diverting attention as well as sending many troublesome knights into their deaths when the armies of Westmarch inevitably crushed those of Khanduras. However, Diablo found that a part of the king's soul still fought against him, and that he would still not be able to take full control. Thus he abandoned his attempts to take over Leoric, leaving him broken and crazed as he much more easily took control of his son Albrecht instead. When King Leoric found that his son had gone missing, he went into a rage and had many innocent people executed for kidnapping the prince. He was eventually slain by his own lieutenant, the knight Lachdanan, who returned from the quickly lost war only to find that he, too, was being accused of the kidnapping, and that the king was nothing but a raving madman who set his other warriors upon those returning. King Leoric returns for the final time as the boss of an optional quest in Diablo I, as a Skeleton King who is raising an army of undead. He leaves behind his crown, a unique item with life-stealing properties. In Diablo II the player can find a unique Necromancer wand called "The Arm of King Leoric."
Ogden the tavern owner Ogden is one of the characters found in Tristram in Diablo I. He runs the Tavern of the Rising Sun, but serves no particular role in the game apart from giving information and quests. He possibly appears in Diablo II as assorted pieces of a corpse lying on the ground after demons have ravaged Tristram. Notably, Ogden's introductory dialogue suggests that he knows the player character and that they used to live in Tristram before. This is changed in Diablo II; according to Deckard Cain, no one knows where the mysterious hero who defeated Diablo came from.
Pepin the healer In Diablo, Pepin is a healer in Tristram, healing the player character for free and selling mainly potions. He also gives them one quest. By Diablo II, he has likely been killed along with others in Tristram.
Wirt Wirt is a young boy living in Tristram in Diablo I. He has a peg leg in place of the one he lost in the dungeons when the Arch-Bishop Lazarus led several of the townsfolk to their doom there. Wirt was only saved at all by the actions of Griswold. He is a cynical opportunist primarily interested in making money by selling his magical wares to adventurers. He does reveal that he's actually hoarding up money in order to be able to leave Tristram with Gillian (who's probably not aware of his crush). Pegleg of Gen. ...
Prior to Diablo II, Wirt is killed along with almost everyone else in Tristram and his corpse can be looted for gold when the player reaches the ruins of Tristram. His wooden leg can be obtained as an item, and later used to access the secret cow level. This also starts somewhat of a running gag, where Wirt's "other" leg can be found near the end of the Blood Elf campaign in Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne, and his "third" leg is available as a rare mace-type weapon in World of Warcraft. The appearance of Wirt's second and third legs in both games brings up the question (mainly because its in Wirt's leg description): Are the Demons of Sanctuary (Diablo) and the Demons of the Burning Legion (Warcraft) one and the same? Another popular theory is that all 3 of Blizzard's major franchises are related to one another (StarCraft, Warcraft, and Diablo). Diablo II, sequel to the popular game Diablo, is a dark fantasy-themed action role-playing game in a hack and slash or Dungeon Roaming style. ...
The running gag is a popular hallmark of comic and serious forms of entertainment. ...
An example of a male and female Blood Elf. ...
Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos, released by Blizzard Entertainment in 2002, is a real-time strategy computer game and the second sequel to Warcraft. ...
A development of the club, a mace consists of a strong, heavy wooden, metal-reinforced, or metal shaft, with a head made of stone, copper, bronze, iron or steel. ...
World of Warcraft (commonly abbreviated as WoW) is a massive multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) developed by Blizzard Entertainment and is the fourth game in the Warcraft series, excluding expansion packs and the cancelled Warcraft Adventures: Lord of the Clans. ...
The Burning Legion is the huge demonic army created by the titan Sargeras in the fictional Warcraft universe. ...
i eat poop alot A media franchise is an intellectual property involving the characters, setting, and trademarks of an original work of media (usually a work of fiction), such as a film, a work of literature, a television program, or a video game. ...
âStarcraftâ redirects here. ...
Warcraft: Orcs & Humans is a real-time strategy computer game developed and published by Blizzard Entertainment in 1994. ...
Diablo II Akara Akara is High Priestess of the Sightless Eye and the spiritual leader of the Rogues. In Diablo II, she is found in the Rogue encampment, waiting to gain access to the monastery again. Her role in the game is to heal and rejuvenate the player character, sell scrolls, potions, staves, wands and scepters, and to give major quests in the first chapter.
Alkor Alkor is a cranky old alchemist living in Kurast. He has a number of potions available for sale and will gamble with the player. Apparently, he has a number of odd potions, claiming that Asheara is a good customer as she buys a "potion of manliness" every week from him. He is also very fond of necromancers.
The Ancients Three warriors that protect the entrance to the chamber of the World Stone in Diablo II LOD. They must be defeated to enter the chamber, and will reset every time the game is restarted or a town portal is used. Diablo II: Lord of Destruction (commonly abbreviated LoD) is an expansion pack for the popular hack and slash Action role-playing game Diablo II. Unlike the original Diablos expansion pack, Diablo: Hellfire, it is an official expansion designed by Blizzard North. ...
Andariel Andariel, the Maiden of Anguish, is a demoness, one of the Lesser Evils, and employs poison-based attacks on her enemies. She corrupted many of the Rogues known as the Sisters of the Sightless Eye and took control of the monastery guarding the mountain pass into the east, aiding the Dark Wanderer possessed by Diablo. She is the daughter of Lilith, and according to Deckard Cain she is vulnerable against fire.[1][2] The skull and crossbones symbol (Jolly Roger) traditionally used to label a poisonous substance. ...
Anya This young alchemist is the daughter of Aust, one of the slain members of the Elder Council of Harrogath. She is strong and crafty and has a spirit like no other. The player has to rescue her in the Prison of Ice quest (at which point Nihlathak disappears from Harrogath). Once she is found trapped in an icy block, she is thawed and freed - and becomes the one to see if the player wishes to gamble. She also personalizes an item after Nihlathak is defeated in the following quest.
Asheara Asheara leads the Iron Wolf mercenaries in the Kurast docks in Act III. Besides hiring them out, she sells a selection of items. She is seen wearing little to preserve her modesty, besides a snake draped over her shoulders. After completing the Gidbinn quest, she will inform you that several mercenaries have volunteered to aid you on your journey.
Atma Atma runs a tavern in Lut Gholein in Act II. Her husband and son were killed by the greater mummy known as Radament the Fallen, and she asks the player character to exact revenge by slaying the creature. She can heal and rejuvenate the player characters.
Bartuc Bartuc was the brother of Horazon and like him a significant figure among the Vizjerei mage clans, but eventually turned against them and to the side of Darkness in the Sin War. He allied with the forces of Hell in order to better gain understanding of demonic magics, but turned to bloodlust and madness and in the end fought against his own brother. He was obsessed with bloodshed, and came to be known only as the Warlord of Blood. Though he is said to have died in battle, he can be found as a boss in Diablo, guarding the armories of Hell. The Vizjerei is a clan of mages from the fictional Diablo universe who generally lived within the jungles of Kurast. ...
Diablo is a dark fantasy-themed hack and slash action role-playing game developed by Blizzard North and released by Blizzard Entertainment on January 2, 1997. ...
Near the end of Diablo II: Lord of Destruction, there's also a unique "Council Member" (demonic, once-human spellcaster) called Bartuc the Bloody. He's unleashed upon the player character by Baal in the Throne of Destruction.
Bishibosh Bishibosh is a unique fallen Shaman, with the ability to raise other fallen Shamans. The player eventually will come across Bishibosh (who is a light yellowy orange color) while searching for Deckard Cain, but it is not necessary to fight him. Often, the player can hear lesser fallen calling his name.
Blood Raven Blood Raven is one of the fallen Rogues corrupted by Andariel. She fought against Diablo in Tristram, but subsequently turned to the side of Darkness, and was a key figure in the corruption of the Sisterhood of the Sightless Eye. During the events of Diablo II she starts raising the dead in the Rogue monastery graveyard to create an army of undead. Upon her death, pulses of lighting will be released from her body, instantly slaying all of her minions without the benefit of experience points. Charsi hints that Blood Raven is the Rogue player character from Diablo if one speaks to her and selects the gossip option.
Charsi Charsi is a smith of Barbarian origin who stays in the Rogue encampment and repairs and sells equipment in Act I of Diablo II. She has a fondness for Barbarians, because she herself is a Barbarian. She seems to take comfort in the company of Gheed.
The Countess The Countess is the boss of an optional quest in Act I, which involves seeking the riches hidden underneath the remains of her tower. She is said to have bathed in the blood of a hundred virgins in life and to have been buried in her tower. When encountered, she is essentially a unique Corrupt Rogue. The character is reminiscent of the real Erzsébet Báthory, a Hungarian countess who rumored to have bathed in the blood of virgins and was punished by being buried alive in her castle tower. A portrait of the Bloody Lady of Äachtice. ...
The Dark Wanderer The figure known only as the Dark Wanderer or the Wanderer is a character in Diablo II, though he corresponds to the protagonist of the first game. According to Deckard Cain, he was a warrior, one of the adventurers that came to Tristram to battle the evil in the nearby monastery. As shown in the ending demo of the first game, after slaying Diablo, he removed the soulstone on the demon's forehead, believing that a way to contain the Lord of Terror. He stabbed it into his own forehead, becoming possessed himself. He never seemed quite the same afterwards, and seemed to sink further into depression, until he finally succumbed to Diablo's power enough to set eastward to free the Prime Evil's two brothers, Baal and Mephisto. Soul Stone: In the diablo universe, a soul stone was a jewel or stone used to trap a demons soul inside it. ...
The Wanderer, appearing as a man in dark robes struggling under an invisible, heavy burden, passed through the Rogue monastery leading to the east. Evil followed in his wake, and soon after his passing it, the citadel was overwhelmed by demons. Later he arrived at the hostelry where a survivor from the citadel called Marius was staying. The Wanderer's "inner" demons destroyed the building, and he compelled Marius to follow him. The reasons for this are not known, unless Diablo was somehow able to foresee Marius's small but significant role in the coming events. Marius and the Wanderer travelled to Lut Gholein and the surrounding deserts, finally reaching the desert tomb of Tal Rasha, the Horadric mage who had long ago agreed to have Baal, the Lord of Destruction, bound inside his own soul. The Wanderer, seemingly growing stronger as Diablo gained more control of him, tried to free Tal Rasha, but was attacked by the arch-angel Tyrael. Marius pulled Baal's soulstone from the Tal Rasha's mummified but still living form; now freed but controlled by Baal, the ancient mage attacked Tyrael, and the arch-angel was bound within the tomb. The Wanderer and Tal Rasha travelled on to Kurast and the temple of the Zakarum. There they joined a third demon-possessed mortal, Sankekur, who had become an incarnation of Mephisto, the third brother and the Lord of Hatred. Together the three brothers opened a portal to Hell to enable their return from exile. The Wanderer finally ceased to exist, as Diablo let his body contort and expand into the demon lord's own monstrous form, then marched through the portal to reclaim his rule of Hell. The only time the Wanderer is seen in game is during Act III, outside the Kurast docks. Shortly after he is sighted, he summons several flesh beasts and disappears.
Drognan Drognan is a non-player character who resides in the town of Lut Gholein in Act 2. Besides acting as a researcher searching for Tal Rasha's Tomb (the end level in Act 2), he is also a merchant of town portal scrolls as well as a variety of magical shields, staves, wands, and scepters. In the books, it was speculated that Drognan is really Horazon, one of the most powerful mages in history, and the leader of the Armies of Light, opposite his brother, Bartuc the Bloody, in the mage wars, but this was disproved in the Diablo Novel: Legacy of Blood.
Duriel Duriel, also known as the Maggot Lord or the Prince of Pain, is a large dung beetle-like demon with mantis-like claws, and is one of the lesser evils. He is the final boss of Act II and uses demonic cold magics and has a large amount of health. He is sent by two of the The Prime Evils to prevent the archangel Tyrael from being released. The Prime Evils is the designation given to the three lead villains of the PC game, Diablo II. Hellspawned demonic brothers, the three originally ruled Hell jointly as a triumvirate, until the Lesser Evils conspired against them and overthrew them onto the mortal plane. ...
In early versions of Diablo 2, Duriel was considered a difficult boss, but not because of his own abilities. When attempting to enter Duriel's lair for the first time, the player's hard drive and CPU would begin to load the relevant data. During this time, however, Duriel would be free to attack the defenseless character. At the time, it was not uncommon to attempt to enter Duriel's lair, only to find that the player's character was killed while the loading process occurred. Diablo Diablo II is an action-oriented adventure and role-playing game (RPG) in a hack and slash style designed as a sequel to the popular Diablo. ...
Typical hard drives of the mid-1990s. ...
CPU can stand for: in computing: Central processing unit in journalism: Commonwealth Press Union in law enforcement: Crime prevention unit in software: Critical patch update, a type of software patch distributed by Oracle Corporation in Macleans College is often known as Ash Lim. ...
Elzix Elzix is an ex-bandit who has settled down in Lut Gholein. Now he runs the Desert Rain Inn, gambles with the player, and sells items. He appears to have less than two whole eyes, hands and feet left.
Fara Fara is the smith in Lut Gholein. She has also been trained as a paladin by the Zakarum church, and can heal the player character. Fara seems to disapprove of the mercenaries as she is convinced that they believe in nothing but money.
Geglash Geglash is a resident of Lut Gholein, a warrior who spends a lot of time drinking in Atma's public house and seems to think of nothing but drinking and fighting. He is, however, afraid of water.
Gheed Gheed is a character located in Act I (Rogue Encampment). He will sell you items and allow you to gamble. He's greedy, cynical, and a coward. He also seems to dislike Necromancers. There is also an item in the game named Gheed's Fortune.
Greiz Greiz is the proud captain of the mercenaries hired by Jerhyn to protect Lut Gholein while the city watch was busy fighting demons in the palace. He also has nothing against hiring his men to help the player character.
Hadriel Hadriel is an angel who guards the entrance to Diablo's sanctum. He prevents the player from entering unless they've completed the previous two quests and explains how to summon Diablo using the five seals inside the Chaos Sanctuary. The Archangel Michael by Guido Reni wears a late Roman military outfit in this 17th century depiction An angel is a supernatural being found in many religions. ...
Halbu The smith in Pandemonium Fortress in Act IV.
Hephasto The Armorer Like The Smith in Act I, Hephasto is an Overlord demon that acts as a smith. Hephasto, however, is the master armorer of Hell itself. He was a weaponsmith in service of Izual before that angel's downfall, and continued his vocation as a demon, rising quickly through the infernal ranks. Now he guards the Hellforge, which the player character must use in conjunction with the demon's hammer to break Mephisto's soulstone. The hammer is also seen in a cutscene at the end when they smash Diablo's soulstone.[3]
Hratli The smith in Kurast, Hratli uses magic in his forge and sells almost exclusively magical items. He has placed an enchantment around the Kurast Docktown to ward off evil.
Izual A fallen angel, Izual was once a lieutenant in the armies of Heavens and the bearer of the legendary angelic runeblade, Azurewrath. He was also a good friend of Archangel Tyrael. Izual fell during his assault on the underworld Hellforge as the Shadowfang blade was nearing completion, and his spirit was corrupted by the three prime evils, Diablo, Baal and Mephisto, who eventually were told by him of the way soulstones can be corrupted and turned to suit three brothers' aims in addition to all his knowledge of Heavens, becoming an important, but untrustworthy asset of Hell. It has been suggested that Evil Angels be merged into this article or section. ...
His soul was encased within a hideous, demonic body of immense strength, dwelling in the burned out plains of Hell.[4] This form was eventually killed by the adventurer in Diablo II, revealing the extent to which he was corrupted by evil and why soulstones failed to work. âFiendâ redirects here. ...
Diablo II, sequel to the popular game Diablo, is a dark fantasy-themed action role-playing game in a hack and slash or Dungeon Roaming style. ...
Jamella A seller of magical items of all sorts in the Pandemonium Fortress in Act IV, she gambles and will also heal the player character.
Lord Jerhyn Jerhyn is the young ruler of Lut Gholein, and apparently the son of a sultan. At the beginning of Act II, he's hiding the fact that his palace is being overrun by demons from below. An unnamed Vizjerei mage (only known as the Summoner, later on) had discovered the entrace to Horazon's Arcane Sanctuary underneath the palace, and had secretly opened it and entered, leaving the demons bound within free to enter the palace through the gate. They slaughtered the town's prostitutes, who had been granted shelter within the palace, and were only barely kept in check by the full efforts of the palace guards. It was for this reason that Jerhyn had hired Greiz and his mercenaries to guard the city. He did not tell any outsiders what was going on until the player character had made sufficient impression on him that he let them enter the palace and the Sanctuary. The Summoner bears a noticeable resemblance to the Sorcerer character from the original Diablo, implying that all three heroes were eventually corrupted by the Prime Evils. Sultan (Arabic: Ø³ÙØ·Ø§Ù) is an Islamic title, with several historical meanings. ...
Kashya A leader of the surviving rogues in Diablo II along with Akara, Kashya stays in the Rogue encampment and, after the player character has completed her quest to slay Blood Raven, hires out Rogue henchwomen. The completion of the quest also earns her trust and ends her skepticism about the player.
Larzuk Larzuk is the blacksmith in Act V. He is always coming up with odd ways to help break the siege that are not believed by the others to be workable. He also wishes that he could do his share of the fighting. He sockets one of your items after completing the first quest.
Lilith A demon introduced in the Diablo II patch 1.11, her role in Sanctuary's history is revealed far more in Richard A. Knaack's books the "Diablo: Sin War" trilogy. The daughter of Mephisto and the sister of Lucion, Lilith is a manipulator and seductress. Even very attractive in her demonic form her charms earned her the affection of powerful beings such as Inarius and the Diablo: Sin War trilogy's protagonist Uldyssian, using them as pawns to further her own goals. It is revealed that she along with other rogue demons and angels created Sanctuary. Her offspring with Inarius resulted with many of the Nephalem(angel and demon hybrids) such as Rathma and generations later Uldyssian and Mendeln. Because Lilith desired to use the Nephalem as a powerful army, strong enough to challenge the Burning Hells and the High Heavens, she came into conflict with Inarius who wanted to eradicate the Nephalem. This resulted in Lilith killing off many if not all the rogue demons and angels that were with them. Her actions prevented Inarius from eradicating the Nephalem, but not her subsequent banishment. She later returned still wishing to fulfill her ambitions during the events of Sin War. She weakened the power of the worldstone that prevented the Nephalem from developing their powers. She then helped awaken Uldyssian's dormant power as Nephalem, tempting and manipulating him in her quest to gain a Nephalem army. She failed however, due to Uldyssian, who used the very powers that Lilith had helped awaken and the nephalem army that Lilith desired against the demon. Inarius also played a part in her downfall, though hidden from Uldyssian and his companions and even Rathma. Lilith was then banished once again by Inarius. It is uncertain whether or not she will appear again in the Diablo: Sin War Trilogy, since the final book has yet to be released. Lilith is the mother of Andariel and Queen of the Succubi.[5]
Lysander Lysander is a nearly deaf potion-maker found in Lut Gholein in Act II. He seems to have a liking for Necromancers and does not like to be disturbed by the townspeople.
Malah She is the healer in Act V. She grieves for the loss of her last son, who was slain in battle. She is the person who turns the player's attention to the imprisoned Anya.
Marius Marius is the main character of the Diablo II cutscenes. According to his own narration, Marius used to live in the Rogue monastery, but what his position there was is never revealed. He had fled when Diablo's hellspawn overwhelmed the citadel, finding refuge in a small hostel and fighting nightmares of the attack. But Diablo, in the guise of the Dark Wanderer, stopped at the same hostel, and the place was quickly destroyed by demons his presence called up. When he left, Marius was compelled to follow, and chronicled the journey from the forests of Westmarch to the gates of the Burning Hells. He released Baal from his prison and was given the charge of destroying the soulstone that held the demon's essence. Unfortunately, he couldn't bring himself to enter the portal into hell, and ended up in an asylum. Baal appeared to him under the guise of the Archangel Tyrael and took the soulstone from him, killing Marius in the process. Although Marius has no presence in the game itself (he is only once referred to by Deckard Cain), he is a vital character, fueling the story through his actions.
Meshif Meshif is a character who appears in Act II (Lut Gholein). After getting permission from Jerhyn, the player is able to ride east in his ship, to Act III (Kurast) and vice versa. Meshif was raised in Kurast, and expresses his sadness to the player about the state of his beloved homeland.
Natalya Natalya is staying in the Kurast docks in Act III, awaiting word from her superiors on what to do next. She is clearly an Assassin (like the player character class added in the expansion pack). She has, however, no lines that acknowledge player characters of the same class. Also, Cain identifies her as a member of an Order called "Khral-Harzhek", while the Assassins are later known as the Viz-Jaq'taar. Nevertheless, the descriptions of both Orders are essentially the same. She disappears after the player defeats Mephisto and never returns. There is a Assassin items set named after her. Diablo II: Lord of Destruction (commonly abbreviated LoD) is an expansion pack for the popular hack and slash Action role-playing game Diablo II. Unlike the original Diablos expansion pack, Diablo: Hellfire, it is an official expansion designed by Blizzard North. ...
Nihlathak Nihlathak is the only one of the elders of Harrogath surviving after all the others sacrificed themselves in creating a mystical barrier to protect the town from Baal's minions. Nihlathak had in fact made a deal with Baal, giving the Lord of Destruction an ancient relic that would allow him to reach the Worldstone without being challenged by the spirits of ancient barbarians that otherwise guarded it. Nihlathak is at first found in Harrogath in Act V (in the expansion). He's unfriendly and depressed but sells unidentified items. His evil is revealed when the player character is sent to find Anya, a daughter of one of the dead elders, who turns out to have been trapped in magical ice by Nihlathak. After this, Nihlathak flees and is pursued by the player character, but though he is killed, it's too late as he has already given Baal what the demon wanted.
Ormus Ormus is one of the main vendors and healer in Act III of Diablo II. He talks to the player in an often cryptic manner, speaks of himself in the third person, and claims that he was once a "great Mage" which is true since he came from the Taal mage clan. Grammatical person, in linguistics, is deictic reference to the participant role of a referent, such as the speaker, the addressee, and others. ...
Qual-Kehk Qual-Kehk appears to be the commander of the barbarians in Act V. In the second quest of Act V, you must rescue 15 of his captured soldiers, who are being held as prisoners in the Frigid Highlands. You get to hire Barbarians from Qual-Kehk as a reward for completing the quest.
Radament A unique greater mummy found at the end of the first quest of Act II. He killed Atma's husband and son, leading her to give the hero a quest to slay him and avenge her family. Drognan in Act II explains through research that Radament was once a Horadric mage mummified at his death. In death, Radament longed for youth, and therefore killed and ate many townsfolk of Lut Gholein.
Rakanishu Rakanishu is a lightning enchanted Carver Unique, and is found in the stony field next to the Cairn Stones you have to activate to teleport to Tristam. Rakanishu is a fast moving Carver Unique and when hit, emits lightning bolts occasionally. Other carvers can also be heard calling out his name throughout the game. During the first encounter with Rakanishu, his lightning bolts often pose a great threat to players due to their low lightning resistance.
The Smith A blue colored Overlord demon and boss in Diablo II who has taken residence in the smithy in the Rogue monastery and guards the artifact known as the Horadric Malus.[6] By default, the Smith attacks with powerful melee attack enchanted with fire damage, but he has a vernability to poison.
The Summoner An unnamed Vizjerei mage who had fought Diablo in Tristram (like the Sorcerer in the first game, just as the Dark Wanderer corresponds to a warrior player character who completed the game, and Blood Raven is one of the Rogues who went to Tristram). After that, but before the events of Act II, he came to Lut Gholein and visited Jerhyn's palace, finding within the portal to Horazon's Arcane Sanctuary. He secretly entered the gate and left it open, leaving the palace to be overrun by demons. Inside the Sanctuary, he was corrupted, he also seemed to gain control of the demons bound within.[7]
Tal Rasha Tal Rasha was a powerful ancient Horadric mage in the Diablo mythology. Tal Rasha accepted the fate of having to place Baal's soulstone in his body, having to wrestle with the demon for all eternity. The operation was devised by the archangel Tyrael. Tal Rasha was originally part of the Horadrim who pursued Baal, and, when Baal shattered his soulstone, Tal Rasha offered to contain the demon within his body. Tal Rasha was bound to a pillar in one of seven ancient tombs in the desert, and the shard of the soulstone was jammed into his breast, releasing the Lord of Destruction's spirit into his body. The tomb was then sealed. The Wizard is a magician character class in many role-playing games and computer role-playing games. ...
The Prime Evils is the designation given to the three lead villains of the PC game, Diablo II. Hellspawned demonic brothers, the three originally ruled Hell jointly as a triumvirate, until the Lesser Evils conspired against them and overthrew them onto the mortal plane. ...
Soul Stone: In the diablo universe, a soul stone was a jewel or stone used to trap a demons soul inside it. ...
Archangels are superior or higher-ranking angels. ...
The Archangel Tyrael Tyrael, an archangel, is one of the main characters seen in the popular game Diablo II. He is depicted as a hooded angel, whose face is hidden by the darkness of his hood and never revealed throughout the game. ...
When Baal was freed from his imprisonment by Marius, he continued to use Tal Rasha's body to house his spirit; it is Tal Rasha's body that is destroyed at the end of Act V, just as it is Sankekur's body that is destroyed when Mephisto is defeated and that of the hero from the first game when Diablo is slain. The Prime Evils is the designation given to the three lead villains of the PC game, Diablo II. Hellspawned demonic brothers, the three originally ruled Hell jointly as a triumvirate, until the Lesser Evils conspired against them and overthrew them onto the mortal plane. ...
The Prime Evils is the designation given to the three lead villains of the PC game, Diablo II. Hellspawned demonic brothers, the three originally ruled Hell jointly as a triumvirate, until the Lesser Evils conspired against them and overthrew them onto the mortal plane. ...
There's also a set in the game named in honor of Tal Rasha.
Warriv Warriv is a character who first appears in Act I (Rogue Encampment). He invites you to join his caravan and travel to Lut Gholein upon killing Andariel. In addition, he will take you back from Lut Gholein to the Rogue Encampment whenever you desire - in Lut Gholein, Warriv sports a different outfit.
References - ^ Super Unique Monsters: Andariel Blizzard Entertainment Accessed September 8, 2007
- ^ Super Unique Monsters: Lilith Blizzard Entertainment Accessed September 8, 2007
- ^ Super Unique Monsters: Hephasto Bizzard Entertainment Accessed September 8,2007
- ^ Super Unique Monsters: Izual Bizzard Entertainment Accessed September 8,2007
- ^ Super Unique Monsters: Lilith Blizzard Entertainment Accessed September 8, 2007
- ^ Super Unique Monsters: the Smith Bizzard Entertainment Accessed September 8,2007
- ^ Super Unique Monsters: the Summoner Bizzard Entertainment Accessed September 8,2007
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