League of Legends won’t be following the trend of having tons of collaboration skins: ‘The second you do [it], the tone of your game completely changes’

The Fortnitification of videogames has seeped into just about every live-service excursion at this point. You can play as Nicki Minaj in Call of Duty. Final Fantasy 14 is getting an Evangelion raid series in its next expansion. Tekken 8 just announced a Baki character as its final Season 3 DLC fighter. Media can no longer exist on its own, it must merge and coalesce into an amorphous glob of characters and celebrities.

One notable exception has been Riot’s games, particularly League of Legends and Valorant. While there are skins that certainly appear inspired by other famous media, it’s never outright crossed over with other characters. And it’ll be staying that way, according to League’s lead designer August Browning.

During a stream on his Twitch channel (clipped and edited by HeWhoQuacksss), Browning responded to a question on how open Riot was to including third-party skins. “We’ve been pretty not open to that,” he said. “The second you do third-party skins, the tone of your game completely changes.”

He then goes ahead and talks about some of the games that have gone all in on collaborations. “Now that doesn’t mean it’s bad—it’s really cool to play Overwatch and play all these anime characters and K-pop idols and things like that, right? It’s cool to go into Fortnite, and have Goku and Jinx fighting Ariana Grande and Peter Griffin. But tonally speaking, it is also very different from the tone of all the characters in [League].”

Browning goes on to say that “historically, Riot has been pretty hesitant to do skins from other IPs,” though highlights that the game does have a Louis Vuitton skin for Sena as well as a Swain skin that “looks very similar to certain chicken establishments.” But overall? Browning calls straight-up crossing over other characters “a big step.”

I mean, I get it. I don’t need every videogame I ever play to put all my favourite characters from other stuff in it. I love Persona 5, but I don’t need Joker making an appearance everywhere I go, you know? I have to agree with Browning’s sentiment that all of these collaborations can drastically shift your game tonally, and I’d even go so far as to say it can really water down a game’s identity.

Is putting Godzilla in Crocs and making him do K-Pop dances in Fortnite inherently funny? Obviously it is, but that ridiculousness loses its edge when everyone is doing it. Though I wouldn’t consider myself the biggest enjoyer of Riot’s library, I certainly appreciate its desire to stay in its own lane.

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