League of Legends Classic Confirmed as a New Game Mode With Old Champions, Runes, and Items

Ali Ahmed Akib
By Ali Ahmed Akib
5 Min Read
Image Credit: Riot Games

Riot just dropped one of those announcements that makes longtime League players sit up straight. League of Legends Classic is coming as a new game mode, and you will be able to play with the old champions, runes, and items on the original League of Legends map. If you have been around since the early days of Summoner’s Rift, that one sentence probably hit you right in the nostalgia.

The League of Legends account confirmed it directly, and the teaser images that went out alongside it leave very little to the imagination. We are talking the old logo, the classic champion splash arts, the retired runes and masteries icons, and that hand-drawn early version of the Rift, complete with the Journal of Justice sitting in the corner.

What is the League of Legends Classic?

The pitch is refreshingly simple. Instead of building yet another experimental mode with brand new mechanics, Riot is rewinding the clock. League of Legends Classic drops you back into a version of the game that a lot of veterans still talk about like it was the golden era.

So, basically, it means that the original champion pool from League’s earlier years, the old item shop before years of reworks and overhauls, and the map, the way it looked before all the visual updates. The teaser art shows a grid of throwback champion portraits and a wall of legacy item icons, which lines up perfectly with the promise of an authentic old school build.

LOL Classic Heros
image via riot games
LOL Classic Map
image via Riot games

The Return of Old Runes and Masteries

Classic is also bringing back runes and masteries, the pre-game system that Riot retired back in the 2018 preseason when Runes Reforged took over.

LOL Classic Runes and items
image credit riot games

The old system let you build rune pages with flat stat bonuses and stack mastery trees for those situational edges. It was deeper, messier, and a little pay-to-win at times, but it gave you a sense of ownership over your loadout that the current system trimmed away in the name of simplicity. Seeing those hexagonal mastery icons back in the teaser felt like opening a time capsule.

Players Have Been Begging for This

The demand for a classic League experience is not new. It has been one of the most requested things from the community for years, and the chatter picked up recently when former pros like Doinb and Uzi hinted on stream that Riot was cooking something for nostalgic players.

A lot of people simply miss the older pace of the game. League has changed a ton across champion designs, item systems, jungle pathing, and map tech, and not everyone loves where the modern version landed. A classic mode scratches that itch without forcing Riot to abandon the live game that millions still play every day. You get to revisit the version you fell in love with, then jump right back to the current League whenever you want.

When Can You Play League of Legends Classic?

More information is coming on July 11 at 11 PM PDT. That reveal should fill in the blanks we still have, like exactly which patch era Riot is recreating, how big the champion roster will be at launch, and whether this is a permanent fixture or a limited-time mode that rotates in and out.

There is plenty we do not know yet. Riot has not locked down a hard release date for actually queuing up, and the studio has been open in the past about how older systems and maps are genuinely difficult to maintain. So the real question on July 11 is not just what Classic looks like, but how committed Riot is to keeping it around long term.

League of Legends Classic is shaping up to be one of the most exciting throwbacks Riot has ever teased. Old champions, old runes, old items, and the original Rift, all wrapped into a mode built specifically for the players who have been here since the beginning. Whether it lands as a nostalgia-heavy limited event or something more permanent, the July 11 reveal just became appointment viewing for anyone who remembers what League used to feel like.

ali ahmed akib
By Ali Ahmed Akib Editor-in-chief
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Ali Ahmed Akib is the Co-Founder and Editor-in-chief of GameRiv. Akib grew up playing MOBA titles, especially League of Legends and is currently managing the editorial team of GameRiv.