Difference between revisions of "Diablo III Easter Eggs"

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The monster is a large skeleton, whose full name is "Caretaker McCree, Deceased Mustachioed Groundskeeper." The monster seems to be a play on [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groundskeeper_Willie The Simpson's Groundskeeper Willie], with the name taken from [[Jesse McCree]], a Blizzard employee best known for his work on [[World of Warcraft]]. The status of his mustache is unknown.
 
The monster is a large skeleton, whose full name is "Caretaker McCree, Deceased Mustachioed Groundskeeper." The monster seems to be a play on [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groundskeeper_Willie The Simpson's Groundskeeper Willie], with the name taken from [[Jesse McCree]], a Blizzard employee best known for his work on [[World of Warcraft]]. The status of his mustache is unknown.
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Update: after a little research online. it has been found that the "Mustachioed" in the car3etakers name refers to the lead level designer for World Of Warcraft.
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"Another Reddit thread details how a player found and entered the "Quality Well," whose wretched inhabitants were all named after Diablo 3's quality assurance testers. Yeah, that'll teach them for letting so much unquality pass their supposedly competent hands. Is that not enough literal Blizzard-bashing for you? There's evidence of a mustachioed WoW level designer roaming Diablo 3 as well. So what are you waiting for? Complaining on forums has done nothing. It's time to whale on the developers and hope they learn something from this."
  
 
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File:Boss-caretaker-mccree2.jpg|Shockwave attack.
 
File:Boss-caretaker-mccree2.jpg|Shockwave attack.
 
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===The Secret Unicorn Rainbow Level===
 
===The Secret Unicorn Rainbow Level===

Revision as of 19:19, 30 October 2012

Diablo III Easter Eggs are humor and clever surprises and inside jokes found in Diablo III. These range from minor things like items and monsters named after Blizzard employees, to major game features such as secret levels.

This page lists all known Diablo III Easter Eggs, and is updated regularly.


In-Game Diablo III Easter Eggs

Easter Eggs found in the game, both confirmed and rumored. This list will be greatly expanded and sorted once the game is released and discoveries increase apace.


Artists' Names on the Wall

This section of wall from the Act One Cathedral was spotted by at least two fans[1][2] during the Diablo 3 Beta test. It lists four names, all environmental artists from Diablo III. They are:

Two views of their names on a monument section of the wall can be seen below.


Caretaker McCree

Battling a Monk.

This very rare superunique boss monster is sometimes found in the Cathedral Garden, near a waypoint and just outside the Tristram Cathedral in early Act One. McCree was first spotted during the beta, and documented extensively in an article on Diablo.IncGamers.com. See D3 Cryptozoology #1: Caretaker McCree, Deceased Mustachioed Groundskeeper for full details.

The monster is a large skeleton, whose full name is "Caretaker McCree, Deceased Mustachioed Groundskeeper." The monster seems to be a play on The Simpson's Groundskeeper Willie, with the name taken from Jesse McCree, a Blizzard employee best known for his work on World of Warcraft. The status of his mustache is unknown.

Update: after a little research online. it has been found that the "Mustachioed" in the car3etakers name refers to the lead level designer for World Of Warcraft. "Another Reddit thread details how a player found and entered the "Quality Well," whose wretched inhabitants were all named after Diablo 3's quality assurance testers. Yeah, that'll teach them for letting so much unquality pass their supposedly competent hands. Is that not enough literal Blizzard-bashing for you? There's evidence of a mustachioed WoW level designer roaming Diablo 3 as well. So what are you waiting for? Complaining on forums has done nothing. It's time to whale on the developers and hope they learn something from this."

The Secret Unicorn Rainbow Level

Rainbow attack unicorn "fan" art by Bashiok.

The most likely early contender for a secret level style of Easter Egg in Diablo 3 developed shortly after the game was announced. The early fan complaints about rainbows and bright colors that turned into the Art Controversy led to numerous jokes about rainbows, unicorns, happy clouds, and such. The D3 Team parodied this idea with their hugely-popular Blizzcon 2008 t-shirts, and some months later, when Diablo 3 Community Manager Bashiok posted a photoshopped Diablo 3 screenshot featuring a unicorn apparently farting a rainbow that created a deadly "love combo" of slaughtered monsters, the "Secret Rainbow Level" rumors were off and running.

If this genesis seems unlikely remember that the Diablo II Secret Cow Level got its start in similar fashion; it was a fan rumor in Diablo I that Blizzard ran with, first teasing the level through a humor April Fools' screenshot in 1999. The D3 Team is under no compunction to include a joke secret level, but Blizzard designers have always shown a good sense of humor, and as famous and enjoyed as the D2 secret level was, they've go to be feeling some pressure to live up to that standard with Diablo III.

Data-mining during the Diablo III beta uncovered numerous clues and strong hints that such a level was in the game, including a mysterious crafting recipe that can be seen below:

The Staff of Herding crafting recipe, via the Blacksmith, as seen in the Beta patch 10.

Alot

Named versions of the Savage Beast, normally appearing in the Southern Highlands or Northern Highlands of Act I, are often called "Alot". This is a direct reference to the online comic strip Hyperbole and a Half, and especially its episode The Alot Is Better Than You At Everything, where the grammar mistake of writing "a lot" as "alot" was portrayed by a beast-like creature called "an alot". In one panel, the "alot" is even shown charging at the reader, much in the way the Savage Beast charges at a player character.


Non-Game Diablo 3 Easter Eggs

These are Easter Eggs related to Diablo III that Blizzard released in other means than through the game, such as through screenshots or news posts.

  • See the main Easter Eggs article for Easter Eggs related to Diablo found in other games.


Random Character Builder

Blizzard's Diablo III game info site includes a character builder that allows players to experiment with all of the active skills, passive skills, and runestones for each class. Sometime in September 2011[3] fans noticed that a click of the chat gem looking object at the bottom of the page would generate a random build.

This is purely an Easter Egg as it has no function or utility; it's just a fun little bonus feature.


Diablo NYAN Space Cow

This Easter Egg was served up through the Battle.net log in screen, during the early days of the Diablo III beta. A hidden text entry box in the forum account only accessible to Diablo 3 beta testers seemed without function, until after various hints and guesses, a fan figured out that "starcow" was the correct phrase to unlock a special animation of a space cow playing Nyan Cat music.

  • See the news post for a fuller explanation, plus screenshots and videos of the secret animation and related materials.


Christmas 2010 Barbarian Santa

Barbarian Santa.

Blizzard released this image of a demonic-looking Barbarian Santa Claus as a special holiday image for Christmas 2010. The image was also included on the December page in the 2010 Diablo III wall calendar.

It appears to be a regular piece of Barbarian concept art that's been modified for the season, with the hat and Barbarian costume, the elf (a Fallen Imp) added and given a hat, the presents, the snow, etc.


Diablo 2 Act Five Mercenary Name Change

This mysterious event occurred when the D2 v1.13 patch was released in 2009. The patch.txt said that two Mercenary names, "Klar" and "Tryneus" were added, and when fans dug into the code they discovered: [1]

In 1.13, MercX136 is called 'Klar', in 1.12 it was 'Weohstan'.
In 1.13, MercX135 is called 'Tryneus', in 1.12 it was 'Erfor'.

Blizzard has offered no explanation for this inexplicable change. There is some fan speculation that it's meant to set up some plot development in Diablo 3, since there didn't seem any other reason to change those two merc names eight years after D2X was released.

If there's some plot reason to use the names of two Act Five mercs in Diablo 3, Blizzard could easily have just used two existing merc names. That they changed the names in this fashion, intentionally calling attention to their actions, makes it seem meaningful.


References

  1. "v1.13, Act 5 Merc Name Changes". Diii.net. 2010-12-15. http://diablo.incgamers.com/blog/comments/the-mystery-of-klar-and-tryneus/. Retrieved 2010-08-13. "One of the odder tidbits in the v1.13 patch notes is this little line, “Updated two Act 5 mercenary names to Klar and Tryneus.” What does this mean? Why was the change made?"