Called the Diablo Mystery Box, the package has some pretty exciting items up for grabs, including some truly unique items!
During the GeForce Greats event, Nvidia revealed what you can get in the Diablo Mystery Box if you reply to the embedded tweet on Twitter, use the hashtag #GeForceGreats (and presumably like the tweet, although the ‘greens’ didn’t mention this), and share your favorite Diablo memory. There are five items in the box, but all of them are particularly valuable.
MYSTERY BOX UNLOCKED: @Diablo🔥
🟢 GeForce RTX 4080 SUPER + Backplate
🟢 Diablo IV Collector’s Edition
🟢 Diablo III Chess Set
🟢 Sealed Diablo II copy
🟢 GeForce 256 signed by NVIDIA’s Jensen HuangWant it?! Tell us a core @Diablo memory & use #GeForceGreats to enter! pic.twitter.com/B9pUCc5kge
— NVIDIA GeForce (@NVIDIAGeForce) December 16, 2024
There is a GeForce RTX 4080 Super and a backplate, the Diablo IV Collector’s Edition (so you get the Collector’s Edition right away), a Diablo III chess set, a sealed copy (!) of Diablo II, and a GeForce 256 signed by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang. It’s good to explain what it is here, because not many people might remember… Released on October 11, 1999, the GeForce 256 was hailed by Nvidia as the world’s first GPU and the very first member of the GeForce product line. Now, 25 years later, the brand is still with us, and the latest addition to the GeForce RTX 5000 series will be unveiled at CES 2025 on January 6, where Jensen Huang will be speaking.
GeForce Greats will be part of a 48-hour gaming marathon starting on January 4, and will conclude with Huang’s announcement of the new Blackwell architecture graphics cards. One of the highlights was mentioned in yesterday’s news. There is sure to be a lot of interest in these cards as the market is already gearing up. AMD is also trying to respond to this, as they will also be showing the RX 8000 Radeon graphics cards based on the RDNA 4 architecture at CES. Intel’s Battlemage-based Arc B580 has already been released and is hardly available…
Still, a GeForce 256 is a rarity these days…
Source: WCCFTech