GOBLIN “INFINITE” LOOP: BLIZZARD JUST ACCIDENTALLY CREATED A GOLD MINE! 💰💎

Stop clearing your War Plan dungeons! A massive oversight in the Lord of Hatred “War Plan” system has just been discovered, and it allows you to lock your character into a permanent Treasure Breach state. Imagine a dungeon overflowing with Goblins that resets every time you leave, keeping the most broken affixes in the game active forever—even if you log out, restart your PC, or go walk your dog.

The secret lies in a “sticky affix” property that the community is calling the ultimate seasonal reward. But there’s a catch: if you accidentally kill the final boss, the loop is broken and you’ll lose your 1-in-100 roll forever. People are literally creating “Farmer Alts” just to hold this state while their mains push the ladder. Is this a genius strategic reward or a game-breaking bug destined for the May 13 chopping block?

Find out how to “stick” your Treasure Breach, which boss to avoid at all costs, and how to trigger the “Goblin Dungeon inside a Goblin Dungeon” loop below! 👇

In the world of Sanctuary, greed is usually a death sentence. But for a growing number of Diablo IV players, it’s a business model.

A startling new discovery within the Lord of Hatred expansion’s War Plan system has revealed what many are calling an “Infinite Treasure Breach.” By exploiting the way Nightmare Dungeon affixes interact with the new War Plan teleportation mechanic, players have found a way to farm Treasure Goblins indefinitely, bypass intended progression, and accumulate wealth at a rate that threatens to destabilize the seasonal economy.

The ‘Sticky Affix’ Oversight

The core of the controversy centers on the random Nightmare Dungeons generated through War Plans. Unlike traditional dungeons opened with player-crafted Sigils, the affixes assigned to War Plan dungeons appear to be “character-bound” and permanent until the dungeon’s objective is completed.

“These affixes are separate from the dungeon instance itself,” explains Sliver of Time, a prominent community theorist. “If you get a Treasure Breach affix—which has a less than 1% spawn rate—and you simply don’t kill the boss, that affix stays with your character forever. You can log out, reset the dungeon, or even exit the game. When you come back, the Goblins are waiting.”

The ‘Farmer Alt’ Strategy

The discovery has led to a bizarre new meta-strategy: the “Farmer Alt.” Since keeping a Treasure Breach active prevents a player from progressing further in their War Plan rewards, hardcore enthusiasts are dedicated secondary characters specifically to “hold” the Treasure Breach state.

These “Farmers” enter the dungeon, slaughter every Goblin in sight, and teleport out before the boss encounter. By resetting the dungeon from the world map, they can re-enter an entirely new layout but with the exact same treasure-heavy properties. This method is being hailed as the only viable way to hit the expansion’s “Insane” achievement, which requires a staggering 6,666,666 Goblin kills.

Goblins Within Goblins: The ‘Greed is Good’ Synergy

The stakes are even higher for those who have unlocked the “Greed is Good” node in the War Plan skill tree. This node gives every Goblin a chance to open a portal to the Secret Goblin Dungeon.

In a Treasure Breach loop, the frequency of these portals increases exponentially. “It’s a Russian Nesting Doll of loot,” one Discord user reported. “I’m finding Goblin Dungeons inside of my infinite Goblin farm. My stash tabs were full in thirty minutes.”

A ‘Feature,’ Not a Bug?

While the community is bracing for a “hotfix” in the upcoming May 13 update, some argue that this mechanic is working exactly as intended. The War Plan system was designed to allow players to carry progress and challenges across sessions; the “infinite” nature of the farm is simply a byproduct of that persistence.

Blizzard has yet to comment officially on whether “affix sticking” will be patched. However, with the May 13 patch only 48 hours away, the message among the elite is clear: Find your Breach now, or spend the rest of the season wondering what could have been.