The rumor dropped mid-stream, as these things tend to do. Former LPL pro Kim 'Doinb' Tae-sang told his audience that a League of Legends Classic server is set to launch "next month," pointing to July as the target window. Fellow retired pro Jian 'Uzi' Zihao echoed the sentiment, stopping just short of confirming anything outright: "it should be coming soon" was all he offered before going quiet on the subject.
That combination of a known leaker and a cagey confirmation is hard to ignore.
Why Doinb's word carries weight
Doinb has a documented history of leaking LPL business, complete with fines to show for it. He's not the type to speculate casually. When he says a Classic server is dropping in July and that he's already planning to stream it with former Weibo Gaming teammates, that's a specific enough claim to take seriously. The exact release date hasn't been confirmed, he admitted, but the framing was "early next month," not "someday maybe."
Then there's Tim 'Esfand' Esfandiari, one of the most recognizable faces from the World of Warcraft Classic streaming scene, who attended a mystery event at Riot HQ on June 6. His presence there is circumstantial, sure. Riot was also revealing new champion Locke around that time, so there's a reasonable alternative explanation. But the timing stacks up in a way that's hard to dismiss entirely.
Riot has not commented on any of this.
What 'Classic' could actually mean here
Here's the thing: the version of LoL Classic that gets built matters enormously. The game launched in 2009 with roughly 40 champions. Go back even further and you're looking at the original 17. Every era of League of Legends plays differently, and picking the wrong snapshot could produce something that feels more like a history lesson than a fun experience.
The most appealing version, at least conceptually, is the pre-systematic-balance era. Release-day Morgana with a Black Shield that lasted close to two hours. Twisted Fate teleporting globally, slowing everyone on the map with one card. Champions that were genuinely broken in ways that felt exciting rather than frustrating, because the game was still figuring itself out.
That chaos had a specific energy that 16 years of balance patches have methodically removed. Whether Classic comes as a permanent server, a limited-time mode, or something else entirely hasn't been established yet.
The nostalgia trap and what Riot should actually take from this
The excitement around these rumors is real. But so is the fatigue. The gaming industry has leaned hard into nostalgia-driven releases over the past several years, and Classic modes are increasingly a way to buy goodwill without shipping something genuinely new.
What's worth paying attention to is what players are actually responding to when they get excited about Classic LoL. It's not just the old champion designs or the original item shop. It's the feeling that the game was looser, more unpredictable, and less sanitized. Riot killed off Gangplank mid-season once. It canonized bizarre off-meta builds in recent patches. Those moments generate the same kind of energy that Classic promises.
The current game has moved in interesting directions too. If you want to see what's changed mechanically, the LoL Patch 26.5 breakdown covering every buff, nerf, and meta shift shows just how far the balance philosophy has evolved from the early days.
The smarter move for Riot isn't just shipping a Classic server and calling it done. It's using the data from what players love about that era to inform where the live game goes next. Classic as a research project dressed up as a nostalgia trip is actually a compelling idea. Classic as a one-time content drop to spike engagement and then fade out is less so.
With League Next on the horizon and Riot actively experimenting with the game's direction, there's a real argument that the studio is already thinking along these lines. The Classic rumors landing right now, during a period when Riot is clearly willing to shake things up, might not be a coincidence.
For anyone wanting to get up to speed on where the game stands heading into this potential shift, the League of Legends Season 2026 guide covering everything new in Patch 26.1 is a solid starting point before Classic potentially rewinds the clock.








