PSA: Diablo 4 lets you disable your character's annoying 'out of mana' bark
Now you can try and fail at using skills o🌞n empty without being interrupt𝓡ed

Diablo 4 players are celebrating after learning you can switch off your character's incessant reminders that you're out of mana/fury/energy/spirit/essen🌌ce.
If you've played Diablo 4 for any length of time, you've probably been told you've run out of whatever resource your character uses in fights. Personally, the sound of my Necromancer ☂telling me I'm "out of essence" just blends in with tﷺhe cacophony of scythe swings, corpse explosions, and demon death cries, but apparently other Diablo 4 players find the reminders a lot more irritating.
A Redditor was kind enough to alert those unaware t♚hat you can simply disable these voice lines in the in-game options menu. I checked to confirm, and if you scroll all the way to the bottom of the Sound tab there's a setting called "play audio on error," and it's automatically set to "on." However, if you turn it off completely you'll stop hearing any sounds when using skills with an empty resource tank, and if you set it to "simple" you'll just hear a little error sound instead of the dia🦂logue.
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To 🐻some folks, this little re🐻velation is a game-changer.
"I'm literally u♕gly (but happy🦩) crying I'm so relieved to know this," one Redditor . "Thank you many times over, kind soul. Thank you!"
"Holy thanks. thats good to know," another .
Another grateful player they ⛦"HUGE needed t♒his" and said the reminders were "killing" them.
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It's no su𝓡rprise a lot of people are just now finding out about this handy option, but I definitely wasn't expecting such an intensely celebratory reaction. I mean, am I the only one completely 🐠desensitized to monotonous error dialogue, particularly in fast-paced hack-and-slash games? Apparently so.
Blizzard has its own reminder for Diablo 4 players: the Ashava trophy mount was exclusive to the May beta and you can't get it anymore.
After earning an English degree from ASU, I worked as a corporate copy editor while freelancing for places like SFX Magazine, Screen Rant, Game Revolution, and MMORPG on the side. I got my big break here in 201🍰9 with a freelance news gig, and I was hired on as GamesRadar's west coast Staff Writer in 2021. That means I'm responsible for managing the site's western regional executive branch, AKA my home office, and writing about whatever horror game I'm too afraid to finish.