My interest in Blizzard Entertainment and their products started when I was a young boy. I started out in the early 2000s playing StarCraft: Brood War single player skirmish matches, I was about 9 years old. A couple years later I got 56k (dial-up internet) and I hit the multiplayer scene online. I would play a lot of use map settings games, and even make my own maps when I was about 10-12 years old. I loved StarCraft, I would play Brood War (and SWAT 3, another amazing game) online almost everyday after I came home from school and on the weekends. I loved it so much I even bought the Diablo Battle Chest, this was when it used to come with Diablo 1 also, but it doesn't now that Activision owns Blizzard and found a way to save money by ripping their customers off. I also bought the Warcraft III Battle Chest. I would play all of these games on Battle.net, the original Battle.net, not Battle.net 2.0, which I really hate since it's absolutely horrible compared to how amazing Battle.net 1.0 is.
Then I became a teenager and at the age of 13 and I continued playing StarCraft, Diablo, and other Blizzard games online. I never got into World of Warcraft, which came out around the time I became an teenager/advlt. I was totally interested in StarCraft: Ghost, this was before they put it on hold indefinitely. At the age of 13 I could legally join forums without my parents permission since I wasn't considered a kid/child anymore, and I gained an interest in forums. I started out with joining a Code Lyoko forum, but I eventually joined other forums, and even created my own forums. At around the age of 15, I found myself losing interest in gaming, but continued posting on forums, I still played the occasional game here and there though. It was around this time that I finally purchased the only Battle.net game I didn't have, Warcraft II: Battle.net Edition. Now I had owned every single Battle.net game, as well as other Blizzard-esque items such as Blizzard books, t-shirts, and other items. I even bought the Collector's Edition of Hellgate: London, which actually isn't a bad game, it was just way too buggy at launch.
Then StarCraft II came out last year, when I was 17 years old. I was so excited for the game at the start of it's development, but like most of fans of the serious, I was deeply concerned at the removal of Battle.net from the game, and how Blizzard replaced Battle.net with the World of Warcraft (aka: Battle.net 2.0) system. When the game came out, it had a good single player and the gameplay wasn't all that bad, but unfortunately it didn't live up to my expectations. It was inferior to StarCraft in almost every way, especially in terms of multiplayer. Now here I am today, with Diablo III not so rapidly approaching...
