Path of Exile 2 Review: Did the King of Diablo Finally Fall? (Release Day Verdict & Starter Guide)
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Path of Exile 2 Review: Did the King of Diablo Finally Fall? (Release Day Verdict & Starter Guide)

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1. Introduction: Return to the Shores of Death

Today, Thursday, December 11, 2025, marks a pivotal moment in the history of the Action RPG genre. Path of Exile 2, a project years in the making by New Zealand-based studio Grinding Gear Games (GGG), has officially launched.
If you check Twitch or YouTube right now, you will see a mass migration. The hardcore community has packed its bags, left Sanctuary (Diablo), and is currently queuing to wash up on the unforgiving shores of Wraeclast.
PoE 2 was originally pitched as a mega-expansion, but it has evolved into a standalone behemoth. It promises to fix the "clunky" combat of the first game while retaining the obsessive depth that math-loving gamers adore. Did they succeed? Let's dive in.

1.1. Launch Day Report

Unlike the infamous "Error 37" days of Diablo III, the PoE 2 launch has been surprisingly stable. While queue times peaked at 20,000 players in the first hour, server stability once inside has been rock solid. No rubberbanding, no disconnects—just pure, unadulterated loot farming.

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2. Combat & Gameplay: Farewell, Mindless Clicking

2.1. The Soulslike Shift

The biggest shock for veterans of PoE 1 is the pacing. In the original game, the meta was "Zoom-Zoom"—moving at light speed and exploding screens of enemies with one button.
Path of Exile 2 slows things down. The combat is heavy, physical, and deliberate.
The addition of a universal Dodge Roll (with i-frames!) changes everything. You can now cancel animations to evade boss slams. You cannot simply "face-tank" damage anymore; you have to respect the mechanics. It feels less like a spreadsheet simulator and more like Elden Ring from an isometric perspective.

2.2. The Mercenary Revolution

We spent our review time playing the new Mercenary class, and it felt like we were playing a different game entirely.
This class utilizes Crossbows and fully supports WASD movement.
It plays like a twin-stick shooter. You aim with the mouse and move with the keyboard. You have to manage ammo types (Armor Piercing, Incendiary, Permafrost) and reload manually. It is visceral, tactical, and incredibly satisfying—a far cry from the "hold right-click to win" style of older ARPGs.

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3. The Skill System Overhaul

3.1. No More Fusing Anxiety

If you played the first game, you know the pain of trying to "6-link" a chest piece. It was an RNG nightmare that could bankrupt you.
In PoE 2, that system is gone. Sockets are now on the Skill Gems themselves, not the armor.
This is a massive Quality of Life improvement. It means every character can easily run multiple 6-linked skills.
For example:

  • Your main attack (e.g., Lightning Arrow) can have 5 support gems.
  • Your single-target nuke (e.g., Barrage) can also have 5 support gems.
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This opens up "Infinite Build Diversity." You are no longer restricted to just one main skill because of gear limitations.

3.2. Dual Specialization

Another game-changer is the ability to assign passive skill points to specific weapon sets. You can have a "Cold Damage" tree for your ice spells and a "Protection" tree for when you swap to a shield. The game automatically switches your stats when you swap weapons. It’s genius.

4. Visuals & Atmosphere: The Beauty of Decay

4.1. A Visual Leap

Let's be honest: PoE 1 looked dated. PoE 2, however, is built on a brand-new engine that rivals Diablo IV in fidelity.
The dynamic lighting in caves is stunning. Spell effects cast real-time shadows. The physics engine is gruesome—enemies don't just fall over; they shatter, melt, or explode depending on the element you kill them with. The world of Wraeclast feels oppressive and wet; you can almost smell the rot and the rain.

5. The Great Debate: PoE 2 vs. Diablo IV

This is the comparison everyone wants to see. Let's break it down:

Feature Path of Exile 2 Diablo IV
Price Free to Play (Ethical MTX) $70 + Expansions + Battle Pass
Complexity Extreme (Requires a PhD in Gaming) Medium (Accessible to everyone)
Combat Feel Tactical, Soulslike, Combo-heavy Fluid, Fast, Arcade-style
Endgame Infinite Mapping & Bossing Seasonal Loops & Helltides

The Verdict: If you want a polished, cinematic story and a game you can play while listening to a podcast, Diablo IV is still great. But if you want a game that respects your intelligence, offers thousands of hours of depth, and doesn't ask for your credit card every season, Path of Exile 2 is the clear winner.

6. Endgame & Economy

6.1. The Chaos Orb Standard

GGG has resisted the urge to add "Gold" as a trade currency between players. The economy is still based on bartering crafting materials (Chaos Orbs, Divine Orbs).
This keeps the economy stable and inflation-resistant compared to games with gold auction houses. The new Endgame Atlas is vast, featuring over 100 new bosses, each with unique mechanics that you must learn—or die trying.

7. Tekin Plus Verdict

Path of Exile 2 is a masterclass in sequel design. It takes everything that made the original a cult classic—depth, freedom, complexity—and wraps it in a modern, visceral combat engine that feels incredible to play.
It is unapologetically complex. It will not hold your hand. You will ruin your first character. You will die to traps. But when you finally piece together a build that melts a screen full of monsters, the feeling of power is unmatched in the genre.
The King is dead. Long live the new King.

Tekin Game Score: 9.5/10

Pros: Stunning next-gen graphics, revolutionary Skill Gem system, the Mercenary class (WASD), fair Free-to-Play model.

Cons: Extremely steep learning curve for beginners, inventory management can still be tedious.

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Majid Ghorbaninejad

Majid Ghorbaninejad, designer and analyst of technology and gaming world at TekinGame. Passionate about combining creativity with technology and simplifying complex experiences for users. His main focus is on hardware reviews, practical tutorials, and creating distinctive user experiences.

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Path of Exile 2 Review: Did the King of Diablo Finally Fall? (Release Day Verdict & Starter Guide)