LoL Worlds Winner Skins Guide 2011–2025 – Full List, Rules & How to Get Them
World Championship winner skins are some of the most iconic cosmetics in LoL. Every year, Riot celebrates the team that lifts the Summoner’s Cup by giving each player a custom skin on one of their signature champions. Since 2011 these skins have turned legendary Worlds moments into permanent, playable history that you can show off on the Rift.:contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
This updated 2025 guide explains how Worlds skins work today, how to get them, what makes them different from Victorious and Championship skins, and gives you a timeline from the first Fnatic set all the way to recent T1 three-peat skins. You’ll also find a legacy archive at the end with detailed, story-style breakdowns of the 2011–2016 sets from the original article for nostalgia and historical flavor.
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How Worlds Winner Skins Work in 2025
Riot’s Worlds winner skins (often called World Championship skins or simply “Worlds skins”) follow a pretty strict set of rules. Understanding them helps you predict who might get a skin each year – and when you’ll be able to buy them.
1. Who gets a Worlds skin?
- Only the winning team receives Worlds skins.
- Each starting player can choose a champion that they actually played on stage during the tournament. Substitutes who appeared on stage can also be eligible.:contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
- Normally this results in a set of five champion skins. In some years there are six (if a sub is included) and sometimes there is also a themed ward skin or additional chromas.
- Coaches usually do not receive champion skins; the famous exception is kkOma, who was honored with a ward skin during SKT’s 2016 run.:contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
2. How Riot designs Worlds skins
After Worlds ends, Riot’s skins team sits down with each player for an interview. They discuss:
- Which champion from Worlds feels most “theirs” (comfort pick, iconic performance, pocket pick, etc.)
- Preferred themes and color schemes – from team colors and national motifs to references to the player’s personality
- Details like recall animations, voice lines, emotes or small Easter eggs (signatures, team logos, trophies)
The result is a unified cosmetic line where each champion skin feels unique but still part of the same Worlds collection – almost like the team’s victory parade frozen in time.
If you want to see how Riot treats rarity and limited availability in general, their official guide to legacy and limited skins explains how event and legacy skins rotate in and out of the store.:contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
3. Availability, pricing & legacy status
Worlds skins are event-driven releases:
- They usually hit the live servers several months after Worlds, often during a themed event or patch in the following year.
- At launch, they cost roughly the same as other epic-tier skins (typically 1350 RP, though older sets started at 750–975 RP as you can see in the legacy section below).
- After their initial sales window, Worlds skins are treated as Legacy: they leave the store and only return in special bundles, loot events, or anniversary sales.:contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
- More recent sets come with event chromas, icons, loading screen borders and potentially a Prestige edition for one champion (often the Finals MVP).:contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
For collectors, this means two important things:
- If you love a new Worlds set, it’s best to grab it while it’s in store – you never know when it will return.
- Past sets may show up again in rare Legacy sales or loot, but you shouldn’t rely on it if you want the full collection quickly.
4. How to buy Worlds skins
There are three main ways to get Worlds skins once they exist in-game:
- Direct RP purchase from the Store during their featured period.
- Event tokens and bundles during Worlds or special retrospective events (skins, borders, icons, chromas).
- Hextech Crafting & Mythic Essence – rerolling skin shards or opening special orbs that sometimes drop Worlds shards.
Worlds skins are never tied to ranked rewards like Victorious skins – you don’t need to reach Gold or higher to unlock them. You simply need RP or luck in loot. If you’d rather invest time into climbing than grinding missions or farming BE, that’s where Boosteria’s LoL boosting and coaching can help speed up your progress so you get more rewards from each season.
Year-by-Year Worlds Skins Timeline (2011–2025)
This section gives you a concise, up-to-date overview from the first Fnatic set to the modern three-peat T1 era. The legacy section later in the article goes into story-level detail for 2011–2016; here we’ll focus on who won, which champs were picked, and what’s special about each set.:contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
Worlds 2011 – Fnatic
Champion team: Fnatic defeated Against All Authority 2–1 in Jönköping to win the very first Worlds. The skins were released later and set the visual template for future sets: team colors, trophy references and clean readability.:contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
- Fnatic Karthus – honoring xPeke
- Fnatic Gragas – honoring Shushei
- Fnatic Jarvan IV – honoring Cyanide
- Fnatic Corki – honoring LaMiaZeaLoT
- Fnatic Janna – honoring Mellisan
These skins are visually simple by modern standards – mostly recolors with new models and a few sound tweaks – but incredibly rare and nostalgic for old-school LoL fans.
Worlds 2012 – Taipei Assassins (TPA)
Champion team: Taipei Assassins shocked the world by defeating Azubu Frost 3–1 in Los Angeles. Their skins leaned into the “TPA superfan” look – jerseys, mascot vibes and casual gear.:contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}
- TPA Shen – Stanley
- TPA Dr. Mundo – Lilballz
- TPA Orianna – Toyz
- TPA Ezreal – bebe
- TPA Nunu – MiSTakE
Compared to Fnatic, some TPA skins received extra details like new particles or small sound changes, but they still belong to the “old era” of Worlds cosmetics.
Worlds 2013 – SK Telecom T1
Champion team: SK Telecom T1 crushed Royal Club 3–0 and began the T1 dynasty. This was the first Worlds win for Faker and the start of one of esports’ most famous legacies.:contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}
- SKT T1 Jax – Impact
- SKT T1 Lee Sin – Bengi
- SKT T1 Zed – Faker
- SKT T1 Vayne – Piglet
- SKT T1 Zyra – PoohManDu
The SKT 2013 line kept things relatively grounded – tracksuits, trophy references, clean VFX – but you can feel the step up in polish and identity compared to 2011–2012.
Worlds 2014 – Samsung White (SSW)
Champion team: Samsung White dominated the bracket and defeated Star Horn Royal Club 3–1. The set is remembered for its very clean white-and-blue theme and some extra flair on Thresh and Twitch.:contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}
- SSW Singed – Looper
- SSW Rengar – DanDy
- SSW Talon – PawN
- SSW Twitch – imp
- SSW Thresh – Mata
SSW Thresh and SSW Twitch, in particular, are still considered standout picks thanks to their distinctive effects and animations.
Worlds 2015 – SKT T1 (second title)
Champion team: SKT returned and defeated KOO Tigers 3–1 in Berlin, becoming the first two-time Worlds winner. Their 2015 set was the first with six champion skins, including a skin for the coach in later content.:contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11}
- SKT T1 Renekton – MaRin
- SKT T1 Elise – Bengi
- SKT T1 Ryze – Faker
- SKT T1 Kalista – Bang
- SKT T1 Alistar – Wolf
- SKT T1 ward skin – kkOma (coach)
From this point onward, Worlds skins became much closer to modern epics: new animations, high-impact VFX, and more complex theming.
Worlds 2016 – SKT T1 (third title)
In 2016, SKT defeated Samsung Galaxy 3–2 in Los Angeles, earning a historic third Worlds trophy. The 2016 Worlds skins were delayed initially but have long since been released, and they’re now a standard part of the Worlds collection.:contentReference[oaicite:12]{index=12}
- SKT T1 Ekko – Duke
- SKT T1 Olaf – Bengi
- SKT T1 Syndra – Faker
- SKT T1 Zac – Blank
- SKT T1 Jhin – Bang
- SKT T1 Nami – Wolf
- SKT T1 ward skin – kkOma
In the original version of this article, we mentioned that Riot hadn’t yet released these skins. That’s now outdated and moved to the legacy section below.
Worlds 2017 – Samsung Galaxy (SSG)
Champion team: Samsung Galaxy returned to the finals and swept SKT 3–0 in Beijing, ending SKT’s reign and starting a new chapter in competitive LoL. Their Worlds skins, released in 2018, showed how far the line had evolved: bright VFX, modern models and flashy recalls.:contentReference[oaicite:13]{index=13}
- SSG Gnar – CuVee
- SSG Jarvan IV – Ambition
- SSG Ezreal – Haru
- SSG Taliyah – Crown
- SSG Xayah – Ruler
- SSG Rakan – CoreJJ
Worlds 2018 – Invictus Gaming (IG)
Champion team: Invictus Gaming swept Fnatic 3–0 in Incheon, giving the LPL its first World Championship trophy. Their skins leaned heavily into a sleek black-and-white palette, with art-style flourishes that made them instantly recognizable.:contentReference[oaicite:14]{index=14}
- IG Camille – TheShy
- IG Fiora – Duke
- IG LeBlanc – Rookie
- IG Kai’Sa – JackeyLove
- IG Rakan – Baolan
Fun fact: this was Duke’s second World Championship skin after his SKT Ekko in 2016.:contentReference[oaicite:15]{index=15}
Worlds 2019 – FunPlus Phoenix (FPX)
Champion team: FPX defeated G2 Esports 3–0 in Paris with a wild, high-tempo style. Their skins embraced a fiery phoenix motif with gold and red highlights.:contentReference[oaicite:16]{index=16}
- FPX Gangplank – GimGoon
- FPX Lee Sin – Tian
- FPX Malphite – Doinb
- FPX Vayne – LWX
- FPX Thresh – Crisp
Worlds 2020 – DAMWON Gaming (DWG)
Champion team: DAMWON Gaming beat Suning 3–1 in Shanghai, reclaiming the Cup for the LCK. Their blue-teal cosmic aesthetic fits both the team’s branding and the Worlds trophy motif.:contentReference[oaicite:17]{index=17}
- DWG Kennen – Nuguri
- DWG Nidalee – Canyon
- DWG Twisted Fate – ShowMaker
- DWG Jhin – Ghost
- DWG Leona – BeryL
Worlds 2021 – EDward Gaming (EDG)
Champion team: EDG pulled off a legendary 3–2 victory over DWG KIA in Reykjavík. Their skins pushed the futuristic knight concept with detailed armor and glowing crystal motifs.:contentReference[oaicite:18]{index=18}
- EDG Graves – Flandre
- EDG Viego – Jiejie
- EDG Zoe – Scout
- EDG Aphelios – Viper
- EDG Yuumi – Meiko
Worlds 2022 – DRX
Champion team: DRX, the miracle underdog story, beat T1 3–2 in San Francisco from the play-in stage all the way to the finals. Their skins leaned into light-blue, crystalline energy with narrative callbacks to their Cinderella run.:contentReference[oaicite:19]{index=19}
- DRX Aatrox – Kingen
- DRX Kindred – Pyosik
- DRX Akali – Zeka
- DRX Caitlyn – Deft
- DRX Ashe – BeryL
Worlds 2023 – T1 (fourth title)
Champion team: In Seoul, T1 dismantled Weibo Gaming 3–0, giving Faker his fourth Worlds trophy and cementing T1’s status as the most decorated organization in LoL history. Their 2023 skins are themed around South Korean culture – traditional patterns, flag colors and martial arts references.:contentReference[oaicite:20]{index=20}
- T1 Jayce – Zeus
- T1 Lee Sin – Oner
- T1 Orianna – Faker
- T1 Jinx – Gumayusi
- T1 Bard – Keria
Worlds 2024 – T1 (fifth title)
In 2024, T1 defended their title, defeating Bilibili Gaming 3–2 at London’s O2 Arena. Faker secured his fifth Worlds championship and a second Finals MVP. The 2024 Worlds skins follow a darker, more dramatic fantasy theme, with a special Prestige skin for Faker.:contentReference[oaicite:21]{index=21}
- Worlds 2024 Gnar – Zeus
- Worlds 2024 Vi – Oner
- Worlds 2024 Yone + Prestige Sylas – Faker
- Worlds 2024 Varus – Gumayusi
- Worlds 2024 Pyke – Keria
Worlds 2025 – T1 (sixth title, three-peat)
Worlds 2025, held in Chengdu, saw T1 defeat KT Rolster 3–2 in a historic “Telecom War” final. This gave T1 an unprecedented third consecutive Worlds trophy and six titles overall. At the time of this update, the exact champion picks for the 2025 Worlds skins have not been fully confirmed, but we already know they’ll follow the usual pattern: one champion per player, all of which were played on stage during the tournament.:contentReference[oaicite:22]{index=22}
Once the 2025 skins hit PBE and later the live servers, expect them to be available for direct RP purchase during their event window, then rotated into Legacy status like previous sets.
Worlds Skins vs Victorious & Championship Skins
Because there are multiple “prestige” lines in LoL, it’s easy to confuse Worlds skins with Victorious and Championship skins. Here’s a quick breakdown:
Victorious skins
- Earned by hitting at least Gold rank in a ranked queue before the end of a season.
- One champion per year, chosen by Riot – not tied to Worlds results.
- Cannot be bought for RP; they’re rewards for ranked performance.
Championship skins
- A separate, store-bought line originally themed around Worlds (e.g., Championship Riven, Championship Thresh, etc.).
- They release around Worlds but are not tied to specific teams or players.
- Often become Legacy skins after the event, similar to Worlds skins.
Worlds winner skins
- Created specifically to honor the World Championship-winning team.
- Each skin corresponds to a particular player and their signature champion from that Worlds run.
- Available for RP during a limited window, then moved to Legacy status.
If you’re a collector, many players treat Worlds skins as the most “personal” cosmetics in the game because they’re attached to real players and real series – especially legendary names like Faker.
How to Prepare for Future Worlds Skins
Because Worlds skins are time-limited and often come with event passes, it pays to plan ahead if you want to grab them efficiently.
1. Follow LoL esports news
Riot announces new Worlds skins and showcases splash art, in-game previews and behind-the-scenes dev talks on the official LoL Esports site and on Riot’s news pages.:contentReference[oaicite:23]{index=23}
Following these channels lets you:
- See early concept art and decide if you want to save RP
- Learn which patches they’ll ship on
- Know whether chromas, icons, and ward skins are bundled or sold separately
2. Plan your RP & event tokens
Worlds skins are usually priced as epic skins, and chromas or bundles add extra cost. To make the purchase painless:
- Set a rough budget around Worlds each year.
- Decide in advance whether you want just the skin or also border + chromas + icons.
- Use event passes to farm tokens if you’re actively playing during the patch.
If you don’t have the time to grind but still want your main champs looking fresh, you can let Boosteria’s boosters handle some of the heavy lifting in ranked, while you focus on events and missions on your schedule.
3. Think cross-game: from LoL to Valorant
Many players who enjoy Worlds also follow Valorant Champions and other Riot esports. If you’re the type who splits time between the Rift and tactical FPS, you might want to align your grind and purchases in both games. Boosteria supports that ecosystem with Valorant rank boosting as well, so your account progression can keep up with your skin collection across titles.
4. Use community resources for research
If you want deep dives into Worlds skins, timelines, and rarity, the community maintains detailed pages such as:
- Esports World Champions list on LoL Fandom – good for cross-checking teams, rosters and skin champions.:contentReference[oaicite:24]{index=24}
Combine these with official Riot posts and your own experience in game to decide which sets are worth your RP.
Legacy Archive: Original 2011–2016 Worlds Skins Breakdown
This section preserves the original, long-form breakdown from the earlier version of the article. It reflects how things looked around the end of Season 6–7, so expect some outdated details (especially regarding the release of SKT’s 2016 skins). The main guide above has been updated for 2025; keep this part as a historical deep dive and a nostalgia trip.
How Riot Started Gifting Worlds Skins
Since 2012 Riot Games has gifted the team that won the LoL World Championship with a set of skins – one World Championship skin for each member of the roster. The design and champion are selected after an interview with each player. All their wishes are taken into account: any changes to concept art, small flavor details, and many other things.
Besides this guide, we also provide various services for competitive players, including LoL boosting services if you want to experience higher-level gameplay yourself.
2011 World Championship Winner – Fnatic | Season 1
Team Fnatic is a professional esports organization with players all over the world. They participate in various games, but here we focus on their LoL division and its historic Season 1 victory.
Fnatic began participating in LoL tournaments on March 14, 2011. In May 2011, right before the Season 1 World Championship, WetDream left the roster.
Fnatic roster:
- xPeke
- Shushei
- CyanideFI
- LaMiaZeaLoT
- Mellisan
Riot invited eight teams to qualify for the Season 1 Championship, and Fnatic was one of them. In the group stage (18–20 June 2011), Fnatic placed 3rd, losing only to Against All Authority and Epik Gamer.
Fnatic had a rough start because one of their core players, xPeke, couldn’t arrive in time due to a delayed flight. The mood changed once he joined; in the playoffs they won:
- Fnatic vs Counter Logic Gaming (relegation round)
- Fnatic vs Epik Gamer (semi-finals)
- Fnatic vs Against All Authority (final)
These victories carried Fnatic into the World Championship Grand Final, where they again faced Against All Authority. Fnatic started with a 1–0 advantage from the upper bracket and won the series 2–1, becoming the first LoL World Champions and earning a $100,000 prize.
Fnatic Skins – 2011 Winner Set
Fnatic Corki is Corki in Fnatic colors. As an older skin, it only changes the model, not animations. It was played by LaMia in the Season 1 final.
Fnatic Gragas gets a new model and a new sound effect for his Drunken Rage attack. Representing the team with Fnatic branding, this skin was played by Shushei.
Fnatic Janna includes a new model for both Janna and her air elemental Zephyr, plus new particles. It was played by Mellisan.
Fnatic Jarvan IV and Fnatic Karthus round out the set, giving the roster a unified on-stage identity with team colors and logos across all champions.
You can buy Fnatic skins separately for RP or as a bundle at a discount when they rotate into the store.
2012 World Championship Winner – Taipei Assassins | Season 2
Taipei Assassins (TPA), later known as J-Gaming after Jay Chou bought the team in 2016, is a LoL team based in Taiwan. Besides LoL, they also participated in Alliance of Valiant Arms. TPA were the Season 2 World Champions.
TPA roster:
- Stanley
- Lilballz
- Toyz
- bebe
- MiSTakE
TPA won the IGN ProLeague Season 5 Taiwanese qualifiers on 15 July 2012. They went 3–0 in the group stage, then defeated WhyTrollMe 2–0 in the semi-finals and Corsair 2–0 in the Grand Finals, finishing the event undefeated and securing a Worlds spot.
At Worlds 2012 in Los Angeles (4–13 October), four teams, including TPA, received a free pass out of groups. In the quarterfinals they beat Najin Sword 2–0, then defeated tournament favorites Moscow Five 2–1 in the semi-finals thanks to clutch performances like Alex Ich’s Evelynn.
In the Grand Final, TPA faced Azubu Frost. They dropped game one but bounced back with relentless pressure, winning the series 3–1 and becoming World Champions 2012, with a $1,000,000 prize.
TPA Skins – 2012 Winner Set
TPA Dr. Mundo gives Mundo a new team-themed model and cleaver, plus new sounds for auto attacks and Infected Cleaver. Played by Lilballz in the final.
TPA Ezreal dresses Ezreal like a hardcore TPA fan with team colors and merchandise, though he only receives a new model, not new animations. Played by bebe.
TPA Nunu looks like a TPA mascot carrying a gamer on his back – a fun model change without new sounds. Played by MiSTakE.
TPA Orianna reimagines Orianna as a mechanical mascot with a spiked metal ball and team shirt, again focused on model changes. Played by Toyz.
TPA Shen swaps ninjatos for glowsticks and adds TPA logos, along with new particles for Ki Strike and sound effects for auto attacks and Vorpal Blade. Played by Stanley.
You can buy TPA skins individually or as a bundle with a 25% RP discount, with different pricing depending on whether you already own the champions.
2013 World Championship Winner – SK Telecom T1 | Season 3
SK Telecom T1 is a South Korean LoL team originally founded as a StarCraft: Brood War squad called Orion in 2002. Their 2013 Worlds victory in Los Angeles kicked off a historic era.
2013 roster:
- Impact
- Bengi
- Faker
- Piglet
- PoohManDu
In the group stage, SKT dominated Group A with 7 wins and 1 loss. In the quarterfinals they defeated Gamania Bears 2–0. The semi-finals versus NaJin Black Sword were a tense 3–2 series, but SKT prevailed and advanced to the Grand Final against Royal Club, which they swept 3–0 to claim the title and $1,000,000 prize.
SKT T1 Skins – 2013 Winner Set
SKT T1 Jax gives Jax a new model, weapon and sound effects for Leap Strike and auto attacks. He holds the trophy as a weapon, representing Impact.
SKT T1 Lee Sin dresses Lee Sin like a street dancer with the SKT logo, focusing on a new model without extra VFX. Played by Bengi.
SKT T1 Vayne features a golden crossbow, SKT outfit and new projectile particles, especially notable during Final Hour. Played by Piglet.
SKT T1 Zed transforms Zed into a modern street ninja with SKT branding and redesigned blades, honoring Faker.
SKT T1 Zyra includes a new model and yellow-tinted effects for plants and abilities, representing PoohManDu.
These skins and the matching ward can be bought individually or as a discounted bundle when they rotate into the store.
2014 World Championship Winner – Samsung White (SSW) | Season 4
Samsung Galaxy White is a LoL team backed by Samsung Electronics. Previously known as Samsung KHAN, they became Samsung Galaxy when the org acquired the MVP LoL roster in September 2013.
SSW roster:
- Looper
- DanDy
- PawN
- imp
- Mata
The group stage ran from 18–28 September 2014. SSW entered as favorites and dominated, dropping only one game. In the quarterfinals they beat TSM 3–1. In the semi-finals, many expected a close series versus sister team Samsung Galaxy Blue, but SSW swept them 3–0.
With only one loss in the entire tournament, SSW faced Star Horn Royal Club in the Grand Finals. After two dominant wins and a longer third game where Royal Club tried to fight back, SSW closed the fourth game in just 23 minutes, winning 3–1 and taking the $1,000,000 prize.
SSW Skins – 2014 Winner Set
SSW Rengar gives Rengar casual modern clothing and new blades but no new sounds or particles, representing DanDy.
SSW Singed recolors Singed into Samsung Galaxy’s palette with the logo on his shield and trophy on his back, played by Looper.
SSW Talon wears a white cloak with the Samsung logo and gains new particles for Rake and Shadow Assault, representing PawN.
SSW Thresh is packed with extras: new model, glow, golden souls, updated particles and recall animations with new sounds. This skin honors Mata.
SSW Twitch gets a fully new model, crossbow, projectiles and recall animation, colored in Samsung’s blue-white palette for imp.
2015 World Championship Winner – SKT T1 | Season 5
By the time of the 2015 Worlds, SKT was already a feared name. Riot increased the number of Worlds participants and formalized the Head Coach role: coaches had to be present on stage and communicate with the team during pick/ban, making them official team members.
2015 roster:
- MaRin
- Bengi
- Faker
- Bang
- Wolf
- KkOma (coach)
After dominating the LCK Summer Split, SKT qualified for Worlds 2015, where they defeated KOO Tigers 3–1 in the Grand Final. This was the first time we saw a six-champion Worlds set plus a ward skin, fully embracing the idea that every player and the coach should be immortalized.
SKT T1 Skins – 2015 Winner Set
SKT T1 Alistar features a new model, particles, animations and VFX. He wears the SKT jersey and looks like a massive, unstoppable support tank.
SKT T1 Azir recolors Azir into SKT colors with new animations, death and recall, plus fancy particle updates.
SKT T1 Elise includes brand-new models for both human and spider forms, plus new animations and particles for her abilities.
SKT T1 Ryze carries his trophy as a staff and dons SKT colors with updated animations.
SKT T1 Renekton and SKT T1 Kalista both receive new models, VFX and animations linked to their players’ tournament impact.
At launch, these skins cost 975 RP each, or you could grab the full set in a discounted bundle with option to include champions.
2016 World Championship Winner – SKT T1 | Season 6 (Legacy View)
The 2016 Worlds were held in the USA (Chicago, San Francisco, New York City, and Los Angeles). Sixteen teams competed across four groups of four. This year’s prize pool was much larger because it was partially crowdfunded: 25% of revenue from specific in-game content (like Championship skins and wards) went into the pool, raising it to around $6.7 million.
SKT faced Samsung Galaxy in the Grand Final and won a dramatic 3–2 series, securing their third Worlds title. The final drew over 43 million total viewers with a 14.7 million peak concurrent viewership.
Legacy note (outdated but preserved): In the original version of this article, we wrote that “Riot Games still do not release Championship Skins for World 2016 winners. This article will be updated when they announce any new information.” That was true at the time but is now obsolete; SKT’s 2016 Worlds skins have been available in-game for years. The main guide at the top of this page reflects the modern state of Worlds skins.
Legacy Links & Further Reading
If you enjoy deep cosmetic and gameplay guides, you may also like these older but still useful pieces:
- How to get FREE skins in LoL
- LoL champion guide: Lee Sin
- How to be a good support in LoL
- June sale in LoL – which champions to watch for
Combine these legacy resources with the updated Worlds skins overview above and you’ll have a complete, 2025-ready understanding of how the most prestigious skins in LoL work – and how to build a collection that truly reflects your love for esports.




