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  • Valorant

    Any ‘Valorant’ stream on Twitch can now unlock a beta key

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    04.15.2020

    Riot Games is expanding access to the beta version of 'Valorant' so everyone can have a go.

  • Valorant

    'Valorant' is just the start of a massive year for Riot Games

    by 
    Nick Summers
    Nick Summers
    04.09.2020

    Riot is launching multiple games this year, including Legends of Runeterra and Wild Rift.

  • Riot Games

    Riot's competitive hero shooter 'Valorant' enters closed beta next week

    by 
    Igor Bonifacic
    Igor Bonifacic
    03.30.2020

    If you've been patiently waiting for a chance to play Riot's new competitive first-person shooter, you won't have to wait much longer to see what the League of Legends studio has been working on in secret all these years. The Valorant closed beta starts on April 7th in the US, Canada, Europe, Turkey and Russia, with expanded availability to come in the months leading up to the game's official launch sometime this summer.

  • Riot Games

    Twitch built a tool to help new players understand 'League of Legends'

    by 
    Igor Bonifacic
    Igor Bonifacic
    02.21.2020

    Jumping into a game like League of Legends is not for the faint of heart. Between a notoriously toxic community and the almost endless complexity of the game itself, there are a lot of hurdles new players have to conquer before they can start enjoying the MOBA. But Twitch hopes it can help solve at least the latter problem with a new extension that details the state of a match at any time. The hope is that the tool will both make the game easier to learn, as well as foster more interaction between streamers and viewers.

  • Loaded

    Ninja's management firm is 'actively seeking to diversify' its talent pool

    by 
    Jessica Conditt
    Jessica Conditt
    01.30.2020

    Bridget Davidson helped establish the League of Legends Championship Series nine years ago. Back then, competitors brought their own equipment to world-class tournaments and Riot Games wasn't sure if anyone would tune in to the online stream. The premiere LCS finals lasted three days in June 2011, and nearly 1.7 million unique viewers watched the show online. It was considered a success and Davidson continued to help Riot grow its esports venture. Eight years later, the 2019 League of Legends World Championship drew in a peak concurrent viewer count of 44 million, with an average of 21.8 million online audience members per minute. Hologram music groups performed at the opening ceremony and Louis Vuitton designed the trophy case.

  • Timo Verdeil/ESPAT Media/Getty Images

    Riot urges 'League of Legends' pros to keep quiet on 'sensitive' issues

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    10.11.2019

    Riot is trying to keep its hands clean after Blizzard banned a pro player for supporting Hong Kong protests on-camera. The League of Legends developer's esports head John Needham has issued a statement saying that Riot has "reminded" pro players and hosts to avoid discussing "sensitive issues" during broadcasts, including politics and religion. It argued that personal views should stay "separate" as there was no way they could be "fairly represented" in the space of a game tournament. There's not enough room for the patience and subtleties these subjects require, the studio said.

  • Riot Games

    Riot Games settles class action lawsuit over sexist culture

    by 
    Marc DeAngelis
    Marc DeAngelis
    08.23.2019

    In May, more than 150 Riot Games employees walked out of their offices in Los Angeles. The protest was held to draw attention to what the workers alleged to be a sexist corporate culture, as well as to condemn the forced arbitration of employees who filed a class action lawsuit earlier in the year. Today, the League of Legends publisher announced that "...we've come to an agreement in principle to settle the class action lawsuit against Riot."

  • TOBIAS SCHWARZ via Getty Images

    'League of Legends' might be coming to smartphones

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    05.22.2019

    League of Legends might eventually take up residence on fans' iOS and Android homescreens. Developer Riot is said to be working with parent company Tencent on a mobile version of the ultra-popular MOBA.

  • Ludovic Marin/Pool Photo via AP

    France launches government chat app after fixing last-minute flaw

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    04.21.2019

    France made good on its promise to launch a secure government-only chat app -- although it almost didn't turn out that way. The country has introduced a beta version of Tchap, a messaging app that helps officials communicate with each other through Android, iOS and the web with reportedly greater security than they'd have with off-the-shelf apps. All private conversations are encrypted end-to-end, antivirus software screens all attachments and all data is stored in France. You only need a French government email address to sign up, though, and that's where the security issue resided.

  • How Riot rebranded its European esports league

    by 
    Nick Summers
    Nick Summers
    01.18.2019

    Esports is growing up. The stages and broadcast packages are becoming more glamorous to entice viewers and traditional advertisers. Teams are investing heavily in merchandise, coaching staff and training facilities. Players, meanwhile, are commanding higher salaries, forming unions and cultivating personal brands that might help them thrive once they "retire."

  • Riot Games

    League of Legends World Championship returns to NA in 2021

    by 
    Nick Summers
    Nick Summers
    11.01.2018

    Today, Riot Games announced the regions that will host the League of Legends World Championship for 2019, 2020 and 2021. Following the grand final at the Incheon Munhak Stadium this weekend, the tournament will travel to Europe in 2019. The exact locations of the play-in, group, quarterfinal and semifinal stages are unclear, but Riot has confirmed that the finals will be held at the AccorHotel Arena in Paris. The competition will then move to China in 2020 and North America in 2021. No cities or venues have been confirmed for these two regions, unsurprisingly. For Riot, this is an unusually early announcement.

  • Riot Games

    Is Riot spending less on professional League of Legends?

    by 
    Nick Summers
    Nick Summers
    08.30.2018

    Three days ago, League of Legends owner Riot confirmed that it wouldn't be sending English commentators to the early stages of Worlds in South Korea. Instead, casters will be covering the games from Los Angeles, likely inside the NA LCS (North American League of Legends Championship Series) studio. Riot's official NA and EU interviewers, Ovilee May and Eefje "Sjokz" Depoortere, will be in attendance. But unlike previous years, US commentators won't be casting from inside South Korea until the finals. The move has worried some fans.

  • Christophe Simon/AFP/Getty Images

    Riot revamps EU 'League of Legends' circuit to retain pro players

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    03.28.2018

    Riot overhauled its North American League of Legends eSports championship to give pros a better reason to stick around, and now it's mounting a similar effort for Europe. The EU division of the League Championship Series has instituted a slew of reforms that should ensure more sustainable careers, most notably an end to relegation and promotion. There was a lot of turnover when teams knew they could fall from grace -- this lets them spend more time and money on players to create "lasting connections" with fans. In other words, a rookie with promise won't get cut just because their team had a rough first season.

  • Red Bull built an underground eSports bar in London

    by 
    Nick Summers
    Nick Summers
    03.23.2018

    London's Red Bull Gaming Sphere has everything you would expect from an eSports venue: neon-strewn PCs, large TVs, chunky headsets and the latest Nintendo, Sony and Microsoft consoles. But this isn't a stadium designed to compete with the Gfinity Arena or ESL's Studio 1 in Leicester. There are no seats, for instance, beyond a few cube-shaped blocks scattered in front of a 190-inch wall-mounted TV. It's something else, a strange hybrid of eSports arcade and Twitch-friendly streaming studio. The hardware inside is undoubtedly impressive, but on opening night, few are sure what it's actually for.

  • Karen Palmer / RIOT 2

    The outcome of this virtual riot depends on your emotions

    by 
    Chris Ip
    Chris Ip
    10.13.2017

    Consider what your first reaction would be if, during a protest turned violent, you came face-to-face with a riot cop barking at you from behind his clear shield. Not the words that come out of your mouth nor the moves you could make to escape. Before any of that, your emotions would already be fired up and broadcasting to the policeman what you might do next. In RIOT 2, an interactive film by Karen Palmer, controlling these emotions is the key to your escape. Inspired by protests in Baton Rouge and Ferguson to Turkey and Venezuela, the goal of RIOT is essentially to keep calm. It is designed to make you fearful.

  • Riot Games

    Brexit is even making 'League of Legends' champions pricier

    by 
    Jamie Rigg
    Jamie Rigg
    07.06.2017

    As if the prices of tech hardware shooting up as a result of last summer's Brexit vote wasn't disappointing enough, now it's making the cost of entirely virtual items more taxing on the wallet. League of Legends developer Riot Games has announced that from July 26th, it's adjusting the UK prices of Riot Points (RP) -- which players use to unlock champions and buy skins/other in-game swag -- to compensate for the decline in the value of the pound.

  • Reuters/Jason Reed

    CIA claims it can predict some social unrest up to 5 days ahead

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    10.05.2016

    Back in March 2015, the CIA chief began setting up a new office, the Directorate of Digital Innovation, to integrate the latest tech into the agency's data-gathering workflow along with boosting the country's cyber defense. According to its director, the department has helped the CIA as a whole improve its "anticipatory intelligence." Speaking at the Next Tech event yesterday, Deputy Director for Digital Innovation Andrew Hallman noted that, in some instances, they've been able to forecast social unrest and societal instability in other countries by as much as three to five days out.

  • Riot Games

    'League of Legends' owners open up revenue streams to pro teams

    by 
    Jessica Conditt
    Jessica Conditt
    09.23.2016

    "We recognize that the current ecosystem isn't consistently profitable yet for team owners or for the league." That's how Riot Games' directors of eSports Jarred "Bradmore" Kennedy and Whalen "Magus" Rozelle laid out the studio's plans to funnel more money to professional League of Legends teams in 2017. The changes come after four years of explosive growth across the eSports industry, with League of Legends leading the charge, but it also follows a public spat between coaches and founders about the game's booming economy.

  • League of Legends' creators made a board game

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    09.20.2016

    Riot Games is best known for League of Legends and now the developer-publisher is pushing into board games. Mechs Vs. Minions is the studio's debut effort, and it features miniatures, a modular board system, dice, a custom sand timer (think an hourglass, but on a smaller scale), quest cards and an overarching story. In addition to all that, there's a physically large mystery item locked away in the box, according to a feature article from Polygon.

  • Steve Zylius / UCI

    UC Irvine debuts the first public college esports arena in the US

    by 
    Jessica Conditt
    Jessica Conditt
    09.14.2016

    The University of California, Irvine, is serious about esports. This fall it will officially launch a competitive-gaming initiative, complete with scholarships and an already-decorated League of Legends team, and it's just finished construction on a 3,500-square-foot esports arena that's set to open Friday, Sept. 23rd. The arena is packed with 80 gaming PCs loaded with top eSports titles, a webcasting studio and viewing screens. The arena will serve as a home base for the university's gaming community and a place for its competitive players to train. It also represents another step forward for collegiate esports across the country. "Esports is the future of competition. Period," UCI's Acting Director of Esports Mark Deppe says. "It transcends language, geography, race, age, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, physical ability and many other identities. In five years many more schools will official programs and more structure will be in place to regulate and provide guidance to schools. Esports also has a huge opportunity to learn from the successes and shortcomings of traditional sports and provide a model for collegiate competition in the 21st century."