Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Riot Games to expand League of Legends universe with help of other developers

Add as a preferred source on Google

League of Legends developer Riot Games will expand the universe of its massively popular online battle arena game with the help of other developers, through its newly launched publishing label Riot Forge.

Greg Street, Riot Games’ vice president of IP and entertainment, shared his excitement about Riot Forge through Twitter.

Recommended Videos

I have been fortunate to be a part of some truly amazing game franchises, but I joined them all after they launched.

Riot Forge is something I am proud to have helped create. We are now an indie game publisher! The story-based games you want in the League universe are coming!

— Greg Street (@Ghostcrawler) December 5, 2019

Riot Forge will create partnerships with smaller studios to developer more League of Legends games, with multiple titles already in development. The publishing arm will provide support to its studio partners, including localization, voiceovers, research, and marketing, as they work on expanding the lore-heavy universe of the popular multiplayer game.

“One of the key elements we often look for is the studio having previously shipped a great game or games,” Riot Forge head Leanne Loombe told The Verge regarding the publishing arm’s search for potential partners. She added that there is no specific genre being targeted, as the aim is to roll out a wide variety of League of Legends-based titles instead.

Loombe explained that Riot Forge will function as a supervisor, specifically in helping developers work with the deep lore of League of Legends. The studio partners will then have full control on how they wish to create and design their game based on the universe that Riot Games created.

According to the Riot Forge website, it will publish games for PCs, consoles, and mobile devices, but not every game will be available in all platforms.

Riot Forge has so far been secretive of its current partners and their projects, but League of Legends fans should look forward to The Game Awards 2019, where the first Riot Forge project will be revealed.

We're excited to welcome @riotgames to #TheGameAwards for the first time! Don't miss the first @riotforge developer announce their @leagueoflegends game live next Thursday night! Streaming globally around the world. pic.twitter.com/54OlHJdOtI

— The Game Awards (@thegameawards) December 5, 2019

The launch of Riot Forge follows the series of new projects that were announced for Riot Games’ 10th anniversary. The developer is expanding from the MOBA genre with a collectible card game titled Legends of Runeterra, which uses characters and lore from League of Legends. There’s also a first-person, character-based tactical shooter codenamed Project Athat has drawn comparisons to Overwatch and Counter-Strike: Global Offensive.

Riot Games is also working on League of Legends: Wild Rift, which will bring the game to mobile devices and consoles in 2020. It will not be a direct port though, as the MOBA is being rebuilt specifically for its new platforms.

Aaron Mamiit
Aaron received an NES and a copy of Super Mario Bros. for Christmas when he was four years old, and he has been fascinated…
Smash hit Hades 2 is finally coming to PlayStation and Xbox
Video Game, Hades

After making console players for far too long, Hades 2 is finally making its way to PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S. Supergiant Games has just confirmed that the acclaimed roguelike sequel will launch on April 14, with the Xbox version also arriving on Game Pass the same day.

This is a pretty big moment for fans of the franchise with consoles as their main gaming platform. Supergiant's first-ever sequel debuted back in September 2025, going on to become the best-reviewed game of 2025 on both Metacritic and OpenCritic.

Read more
Samsung is fixing a long-standing OLED monitor problem, and even rival brands are on board
Samsung's new QuantumBlack film reduces reflections and preserves deep blacks on QD-OLED monitors.
Samsung QuantumBlack featured.

QD-OLED monitors are known for delivering deep blacks by turning off individual pixels completely. In real-world use, though, that advantage doesn't always hold up. Ambient light reflecting off the screen can wash out those blacks, but Samsung now has a solution.

How is Samsung fixing reflections and washed-out blacks on QD-OLED monitors?

Read more
Sony announces price hikes for PS5, PS5 Pro, and PlayStation Portal
Your PS5 dreams just got more expensive
Sony PS5 Pro Shot with Blue Light

Sony has officially announced new price increases across its PlayStation hardware lineup, including the PlayStation 5, PlayStation 5 Pro, and the PlayStation Portal remote player. The changes mark another significant shift in pricing strategy for the company, as rising global costs continue to impact the gaming industry.

A Costly Update Across The PlayStation Ecosystem

Read more