Grinding for loot is the name of the game, and while Diablo 4 isn’t quite as bad as other loot-grinds when it comes to the various rarity tiers, it’s still worth knowing what each color grade means. In service of that goal, this page will cover all the item rarities in Diablo 4, detailing where you can expect to find items of various rarities and what the differences between them actually are.
Equipment Stats and Modifiers in Diablo 4
Equipment in Diablo 4 comes in three broad archetypes: weapons (including off-hand weapons, shields and focuses), armor and jewelry (2x rings and an amulet). Weapons generally increase your Attack Power, which is a crude measurement that includes, among other things, your Damage Per Second (DPS). Armor increases your Armor score, a purely additive value which determines how much damage you resist from physical attacks. Jewelry bears resistances to elemental damage instead of Armor. Higher level gear will have higher base stats (Damage, Armor, Resistances), while rarer equipment will have more random stat modifiers with more substantial boost to various stats.
Every item has an Item Power score which roughly gauges the gear’s overall potency, and while you can coast through much of the main story by just equipping whatever has the highest Item Power (at least on lower difficulties), if you want to successfully play on higher World Tiers, however, you’ll actually need to pay attention to the individual stats on magical, rare and legendary items and seek out equipment with specific modifiers that benefit your build.
The least valuable and potent, common gear provides little aside from base damage, armor and resistances.
Common Items in Diablo 4
As the name implies, common (white) items are the least valuable and most abundant grade of gear in the game. At least, it is early on. Defeated trash mobs will frequently yield common gear, as will lower-grade containers - stumps, corpses, and mundane chests being prime examples. You’ll quickly grow out of this gear, and it will ironically become less common as times goes on, as magical (blue) items quickly become the low-tier standard. Ideally you’ll grow out of this grade of gear by the time your level is in the double digits, and you’ll hopefully never have to look back (although rings and amulets may take a few more levels). Common weapons, shields, rings and amulets usually have one random modifiers appropriate for the item type, while common armor has no random modifiers (they just provide armor bonuses).
- Common weapons and shields usually possess one random modifier.
- Common amulets and rings usually possess two resistances (in lieu of Armor) and no random modifiers.
- Common armor usually possesses no random modifiers.
Magical gear boasts higher stats than common equipment, as well as one or two random stat modifiers.
Magical Items in Diablo 4
Magical (blue) items are a step up from their common counterparts, having generally higher stats and more random modifiers. These will become more common as times goes on, and while initially a welcome improvement over common gear, by the time your level is in the teens magical gear will become inventory clutter fit for little more than salvaging or selling. Still, general boons like stat bonuses, cooldown reduction and resistances are welcome enough.
- Magical weapons and shields usually possess two random modifiers.
- Magical amulets and rings usually possess one random modifier.
- Magical armor usually possesses one random modifier.
The workhorse rarity for most of the game, rare gear boasts several random stat modifiers.
Rare Items in Diablo 4
For most of the game, rare items will be the standard gear you’ll be wearing, albeit only because until you reach max level you won’t be able start stockpiling top-tier legendaries. Rare (yellow) gear is another step up from magical (blue) gear in terms of potency, usually bearing higher base stats and more numerous and potent modifiers. Notably, rare items very frequently bear skill-boosting mods, which can make individual rare items more or less useful for certain builds than their pure Item Power would otherwise suggest.
- Rare weapons and shields usually possess 3-4 random modifiers.
- Rare amulets and rings usually possess 3-4 random modifiers.
- Rare armor usually possesses 3-4 random modifiers.
(1 of 2) The chime sound effect and pillar of light that accompanies legendary drops makes it clear these are special.
The chime sound effect and pillar of light that accompanies legendary drops makes it clear these are special. (left), Legendary gear has higher stats than other rarities of the same level and boasts more random stat modifiers, including a unique modifier not found elsewhere. (right)
Legendary Items in Diablo 4
The best gear in the game are legendaries (golden), and the game isn’t shy about letting you know. When a legendary item drops you’ll hear a chiming sound and a pillar of light will beam towards the sky from the wondrous drop. It’s a great effect, even if a bit toned down from Diablo 3. These weapons have the highest stats and the most modifiers, but suffer - if that’s the word for it - somewhat in variability. Many legendaries have unique stats that don’t vary (at least, not in effect - sometimes magnitude is another story), and these are what makes legendary items special… aside from the aforementioned higher stats/more random modifiers. In addition to functionally being “super rares”, their unique effect can make or break builds, usually significantly altering a specific skill or key aspect of gameplay. One legendary is interesting enough for how it alters skills, but numerous legendaries equipped at once can drastically change how a class plays. They’re the rarest items in the game, and are well worth farming if you have endgame/high World Tier aspirations.
- Legendary weapons and shields possess 4+ random modifiers.
- Legendary amulets and rings possess 4+ random modifiers.
- Legendary armor possesses 4+ random modifiers.
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