

IGDB
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Blizzard Entertainment dropped Heroes of the Storm on June 2, 2015. It is a MOBA that runs on PC and Mac. The game gathers icons from Warcraft, StarCraft, Diablo, and Lost Vikings to fight in the Nexus arena. You pick one character and join four others for a five versus five match. This setup differs from traditional MOBAs because heroes level up together as a team rather than individually. The developers wanted to speed up matches and reduce micro-management. Players can switch between competitive versus modes and cooperative scenarios against computer opponents. It remains a unique entry in the genre thanks to this crossover approach.
Matches take place on a single lane map where teams push toward enemy bases. You control one hero with basic attacks and special abilities tied to a cooldown system. Unlike other games, you do not buy items or earn gold directly. Instead, your whole team shares a level that unlocks talent choices for everyone. This shifts focus entirely to positioning and team coordination. You must secure map objectives like dragon shrines or relics to gain global experience. The pace feels frantic because deaths reset your position instantly without penalty. Controls rely on mouse clicks for movement and ability usage. Sessions typically last twenty minutes since there is no late-game item scaling to prolong fights.
The PlayPile community has mixed feelings about this title despite its ambitious scope. IGDB users gave it a score of 76.1 out of 100 based on 311 ratings. Many players report average playtimes hovering around fifteen hours per account, suggesting quick session turnover. Review snippets highlight frustration with the lack of individual progression systems found in other MOBAs. Community moods fluctuate between excitement during ranked matches and boredom during unbalanced team compositions. Some users praise the shorter match times while others miss the deep itemization loops. The cooperative mode sees lower participation rates compared to standard versus matches. Overall, the data points to a dedicated but niche player base that appreciates the speed over traditional depth.
This game works best for players who want faster matches without managing inventory screens. The price is free to play on PC and Mac platforms. You can unlock achievements by completing specific challenges or reaching certain ranks. Do not expect a deep meta with hundreds of build options since talent trees replace gear. If you enjoy Blizzard characters and prefer team synergy over solo carry potential, this fits your needs. Otherwise, the simplified mechanics might feel too restrictive compared to competitors. Try a few matches to see if the shared leveling system clicks for you before committing hours.
In an environment called The Nexus with eternal fights, heroes from famous Blizzard franchises such as World of Warcraft, StarCraft, Diablo and Lost Vikings are grouped per franchise and role to battle for control of the battleground.
Game Modes
Multiplayer, Co-operative
IGDB Rating
76.1
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