Close Menu
  • Support Us
  • Newsletter
  • News
  • Features
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
    • Video Games
      • Previews
      • PC
      • PS5
      • Xbox Series X/S
      • Nintendo Switch
      • Xbox One
      • PS4
      • Tabletop
    • Film
    • TV
    • Anime
    • Comics
      • BOOM! Studios
      • Dark Horse Comics
      • DC Comics
      • IDW Publishing
      • Image Comics
      • Indie Comics
      • Marvel Comics
      • Oni-Lion Forge
      • Valiant Comics
      • Vault Comics
  • Podcast
  • More
    • Event Coverage
    • BWT Recommends
    • RSS Feeds
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Support Us
But Why Tho?
RSS Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
Trending:
  • Features
    The First Descendant Season 3: Breakthrough keyart

    The First Descendant Season 3 Looks Like A Gamechanger

    05/11/2025
    Mafia: The Old Country promotional still

    Everything We Know About ‘Mafia: The Old Country’

    05/08/2025
    Sunderfolk Phone Players

    10 ‘Sunderfolk’ Tips To Help You And Your Party Thrive

    05/02/2025
    Bob in Thunderbolts But Why Tho

    ‘Thunderbolts*’ Visualizes Depression As Only A Superhero Movie Can

    05/02/2025
    Games to Play After Expedition 33

    5 Games to Play After Beating ‘Clair Obscur: Expedition 33’

    05/01/2025
  • Star Wars
  • K-Dramas
  • Netflix
  • Blood of Zeus
  • MCU
But Why Tho?
Home » Features » ‘Diablo 4’s’ Season of the Construct is a Patchy One

‘Diablo 4’s’ Season of the Construct is a Patchy One

Arron KluzBy Arron Kluz01/28/20245 Mins ReadUpdated:02/01/2024
Diablo 4 Malphas
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit WhatsApp Email

Diablo 4 has had a tumultuous life so far. Blizzard Entertainment’s prized ARPG was released to high praise for its deep build mechanics, amazing atmosphere, and fun story. The game’s first season was disappointing, however. It heavily nerfed builds, extended grinds, and featured seasonal content that felt like reskins of base game content. Season two faired better with a vampiric theme. It introduced a timed event, vampire powers to augment builds, and close synergy with the established whispers mechanic, making its activities especially rewarding. But what about the lastest DLC, “Season of the Construct?”

Diablo 4‘s highs and lows have put a lot of pressure on season three to establish a majority for either side of the spectrum. Known as “Season of the Construct,” it fails to do so by riding the line between strong and weak. It features a buried vault of automatons unleased on Sanctuary by the demon Malphas.

Get BWT in your inbox!

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter and get the latest and greated in entertainment coverage.
Click Here

Get BWT in your inbox!

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter and get the latest and greated in entertainment coverage.
Click Here

Like all of Diablo 4‘s seasons thus far, the story of season three is largely negligible. The story’s presentation is helped by allowing the player to go straight through it without tying progress to the season journey, but that is the only improvement. Season 3’s story is short and predictable at its core. Players learn about the construct threat, track down Malphas, and kill them like most demons in the series. The season’s story ends up not adding much to the lore or world of Diablo 4, but hopefully, that is being reserved for its coming expansion, Vessel of Hatred.

Diablo 4 construct enemies

You can find the real meat of Season of the Construct in the seneschal companion and new seasonal activities. Let’s start with the seneschal. The seneschal is a small spider-like construct that shares the player’s attributes, like attack speed and critical hit chance. You can equip Seneschals with two abilities at any given time, ranging from shooting lightning bolts to projecting a protective barrier around the player. The abilities share enough variety between them to fit well alongside any class or build. However, players have to unlock most of them through the seasonal activities. This means that you can easily spend dozens of hours with a suboptimal setup.

Each ability has three slots each that players fill with modifiers known as tuning stones to augment them. Tuning stones include various effects. They allow an attack to hit more enemies, increase the player’s critical hit chance, or cause an ability to damage over time. You can use these to customize your seneschal’s capabilities more granularly while leveling them up as you play. The seneschal is a fun idea, but it fails to match up to the second season’s build-defining powers. It is easy for the player to set up once before forgetting about it moving forward.

“Season of the Construct” and its activities are a similar exercise of fun ideas being implemented in disappointing ways. The activities are built around the central theme of construct traps. Traps like arrow turrets, spinning flamethrowers, and spiked floors that add environmental hazards in a way the game has been sorely missing. The season’s new randomized dungeons, known as vaults, feature long stretches of traps. Sometimes there are even entire rooms that mix them together to create interwoven hazards. Players fight around the traps to make some very interesting and fun encounters. The experience is much less fun when there is nothing but traps, resulting in a slow easy crawl.

Players can also find new towers that spawn throughout the overworld. Enemies spawn around the towers while they act as traps themselves. Players that kill the enemies can interact with the tower to collect elemental essence. You can then turn in numerous elemental essences at a brazier to summon a difficult enemy that drops seneschal options. These side activities also reward pearls that can be spent at the start of vaults to gain stacks of Zoltun’s Warding. Traps hitting players in the vault remove one stack of Zoltun’s Warding. Players with at least one stack at the end of the vault are rewarded with an extra chest. It is a fun mechanic, but is frustrating when you get stuck in a quick series of hits from traps.

Diablo 4 sorcerer fighting constructs

Season three also comes with a variety of quality-of-life changes and end-game additions that help round out the package. It introduces a new weekly dungeon called the Gauntlet that features a leaderboard for players with end-game builds to compete with. It also adds timers for world bosses and legion events, decreases the wait time between Helltides, and increases stash space. These additions help Diablo 4 as a whole feel more well-rounded and polished. Although, they do little to counterbalance the patchy quality of the seasonal activities toward the positive.

Diablo 4‘s third season, “Season of the Construct,” makes a solid case for jumping back in to level a new character and flesh out a new build, but it fails to be as strong of a season as Diablo has proven it can support. Season three’s misses are disappointing, but seeing the developers trying so many new ideas each season is encouraging. We can only hope that future seasons are more successful in those ideas.

Daiblo 4: Season of the Construct is available now on PC, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X/S.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
Previous ArticleSUNDANCE 2024: ‘Black Box Diaries’ Shows The Power of Documentary Filmmaking
Next Article REVIEW: ‘Howl’ Crafts A Gorgeous Folk Tale (PC)
Arron Kluz

Arron is a writer and video editor for But Why Tho? that is passionate about all things gaming, whether it be on a screen or table. When he isn't writing for the site he's either playing Dungeons & Dragons, watching arthouse movies, or trying to find someone to convince that the shooter Brink was ahead of its time. March 20, 2023

Related Posts

The First Descendant Season 3: Breakthrough keyart

The First Descendant Season 3 Looks Like A Gamechanger

05/11/2025
Mafia: The Old Country promotional still

Everything We Know About ‘Mafia: The Old Country’

05/08/2025
Sunderfolk Phone Players

10 ‘Sunderfolk’ Tips To Help You And Your Party Thrive

05/02/2025
Bob in Thunderbolts But Why Tho

‘Thunderbolts*’ Visualizes Depression As Only A Superhero Movie Can

05/02/2025
Games to Play After Expedition 33

5 Games to Play After Beating ‘Clair Obscur: Expedition 33’

05/01/2025
Lily James in Cinderella (2015)

‘Cinderella’ (2015) 10 Years Later: Disney’s Live-Action Jubilant Peak

04/28/2025
TRENDING POSTS
The First Descendant Season 3: Breakthrough keyart Features

The First Descendant Season 3 Looks Like A Gamechanger

By Kate Sánchez05/11/2025

At PAX East 2025, NEXON previewed the groundbreaking mega-update for The First Descendant Season 3: Breakthrough.

Razer Joro product image
9.0
Product Review

PRODUCT REVIEW: The Portable Razer Joro Is A Travel Gamechanger

By Kate Sánchez05/08/2025Updated:05/08/2025

Reliable and uncompromising in its gaming features on the go, the portable Razer Joro is a travel gamechanger.

The Devil's Plan Season 2 key art
4.5
TV

REVIEW: ‘The Devil’s Plan’ Season 2 Is Off To A Rough Start

By Charles Hartford05/07/2025Updated:05/07/2025

The Devil’s Plan Season 2 challenges its contestants to outsmart and outmaneuver each other. Unfortunately, it does so in pace grinding ways

Together (2025) still from Sundance
8.0
Film

REVIEW: Have a Grossly Good Time ‘Together’

By Kate Sánchez01/27/2025Updated:05/05/2025

Dave Franco and Alison Brie’s Together (2025) is disgustingly funny, genuinely ugly, and just a good time at the movies.

But Why Tho?
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest RSS YouTube Twitch
  • CONTACT US
  • ABOUT US
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER
  • Review Score Guide
Sometimes we include links to online retail stores. If you click on one and make a purchase we may receive a small contribution.
Written Content is Copyright © 2025 But Why Tho? A Geek Community

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

But Why Tho Logo

Support Us!

We're able to keep making content thanks to readers like YOU!
Support independent media today with
Click Here