Others flamed Blizzard for its lack of security on Battle.Net. "You know what you have stolen from my account, and I hope you can live with yourself for what you did." "I hope you get this message you sad excuse for human being," the player wrote. One player posting on the bulletin board aimed his comments at the digital thieves. Players have been livid about the loss, scowling over their scalped sorceresses and plain peeved over the pilfered paladins. Each account contains up to eight characters that a player can use to battle others. Over the past week, cybervandals have systematically hacked and stolen player accounts on Battle.Net, the free multiple-player service run by Blizzard, according to posts on the company's Diablo II Realms bulletin board. Action-oriented fantasy gaming such as Blizzard Entertainment's "Diablo II" has long been known as "hack and slash," but now it has another reason to sport the moniker.
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