If you caught the Still Sane Podcast with Jonathan Rogers and TalkativeTri, you probably felt that same mix of hype and relief I did. It finally sounds like the team is playing their own game, hearing the pain points, and then actually doing something about them, which makes planning your build and even your PoE 2 Currency stash feel worth the effort again. The 0.4 "Last of the Druids" update is not just another dump of numbers and patch notes, it feels like them pulling the game back towards what players have been asking for through the whole early access mess.

Druid That Actually Feels Right

The big headline is the Druid, and it is not just a lazy pet class with an army of wolves doing all the work while you stand off‑screen. You get that strength and intelligence hybrid vibe where you are tanky enough to take a hit, but still doing clever stuff with forms and skills. Internal buffs to werewolf form and wolf packs matter more than they sound on paper; those builds felt fine on day one, then fell off hard once people started pushing higher content. Now they sound like they can actually keep up. Wyvern form is where things start getting silly. The fire breath stacking ignites per hit, instead of just refreshing one big burn, screams boss‑melter. You can already see people planning around ignite scaling, defense layers, then letting that breath delete bosses while they dodge around.

Spell Totems With Training Wheels

Spell totem support getting a proper yes, but with charges attached, might be the quiet win of the patch. Players have been abusing brainless totem dumping for years, and in early access it was heading right back into that territory. With charges, you get totem builds staying strong and strategic without the full "cover the entire screen in free casts" nonsense. It pushes you into picking your moment, not just holding down the key and watching the game play itself. It is the kind of tweak where you still feel powerful, but you also feel like you are the one making the decisions, not just following a meta script.

Endgame That Wastes Less Time

On the endgame side, the Arbiter of Ash changes hit a nerve in a good way. Before, unlocking those questlines felt like rolling dice while the rest of the game waited on you to get lucky. Fixing that randomness and making progression more predictable means you can actually plan your path instead of praying to the map device. The monster pack size "nerf" drama was overblown too. Turns out it was more of an implementation screw‑up than a real design shift. They are fixing density so you are not drowning in pointless AoE spam, but they are also boosting rewards to match, so you get roughly the same value out of a run without the screen turning into a slideshow. Less clutter, clearer fights, and the same loot sounds like the right call.

Melee, Mapping And What Comes Next

The melee stance from the devs is not going to please everyone, but at least it is clear. No attacks while moving, they want that heavier, committed swing feel, and they are not backing off it just because some players want full zoomer action. If you are eyeing a Druid start or planning to juice maps hard on day one, you are going to notice how much smoother things feel when you have your gear and poe 2 cheap currency sorted before the rush. Looking at the 0.5 roadmap and beyond, the plan is not some huge instant expansion, but slow, targeted buffs to older leagues so they match the newer systems. 0.4 feels like the baseline the game needed: Druid builds that can actually compete, endgame that respects your time, and devs who talk like players instead of PR. That is enough to make the next few patches worth waiting for.