Home News T1’s Riftbound cards revealed during MSI, showcasing players and collectors versions

T1’s Riftbound cards revealed during MSI, showcasing players and collectors versions

Riftbound has unveiled a special collector’s product honouring T1’s victory at the 2025 League of Legends World Championship. It comes after Riot teased a collaboration prior to MSI. The T1 collaboration was announced during the Mid-Season Invitational in Seoul on day 1 of the main stage action.

The collection commemorates what was a remarkable Worlds run from T1. The organisation entered the tournament as the fourth seed, fighting in the play-in stage and proceeding to battle through to claim their sixth World Championship title and third consecutive victory. Two product tiers have been announced, with very different price points and target audiences.

It’s worth noting that both will be available on the Riot Merchandise website. The draw for both products should begin sometime in August, so keep an eye out for any of the items you might want from the below to be eligible for the draw.

Riftbound’s T1 2025 Worlds Champion Signature Edition

Image of the signature cards for T1 Riftbound cards.
Image via Riot Games.

The Signature Edition is a premium collector’s item, limited to 10,125 copies per language across English, Chinese and Korean. That number is actually intentional and not plucked from thin air, with each set including one serialised card numbered from 1 to 2025, the year of T1’s victory. The cards themselves mirror the champions getting Worlds Skins.

The five cards are Choi “Doran” Hyeon-jun’s Ambessa the Wolf, Lee “Faker” Sang-hyeok’s Galio Indefatigable, Lee “Gumayusi” Min-hyeong’s Miss Fortune Buccaneer, Ryu “Keria” Min-seok’s Seraphine Not Alone, and Moon “Oner” Hyeon-joon’s Xin Zhao Vigilant. Worth noting that Seraphine Not Alone is from the upcoming Riftbound set Radiance and will not be tournament legal until that set releases. Yunara was also a worlds skins, but the card does not yet exist in Riftbound. Also note that Serpahine’s card will likely be shipped and printed before Set 5 releases, so Seraphine will be an illegal card till then.

Additional features include a new unique foiling effect and a gold stamped player signature on the serialised card. The English version goes on sale via a drawing on the Riot Merch store in August, priced at $360. Chinese and Korean versions are handled separately in-region, priced at ¥2,025 and ₩500K respectively.

The art and serialisation also looks differently from the other cards below

Rifbound’s T1 Worlds Champion Player Bundle

Image of the player art cards from T1's Rifbound card celebration.
Image via Riot Games

For fans who want to play with the cards rather than shelf them, the Player Bundle offers the same five cards with different artwork at a considerably lower price point. 

The bundle also includes a sleeves pack, a deck box, a binder, and a metal die, with a 1-in-10 chance of the die being the black-and-gold variant. English pricing is $70, with the Chinese version at ¥399 and Korean at ₩100K.

It’s a strong product launch for Riftbound at a meaningful moment, tying a collector’s item to T1’s historic three-peat and using it as the vehicle to announce the game’s Korean expansion simultaneously.

It comes as Riot has been teasing upcoming Riftbound cards during the MSI play-ins, with Jayce and Mel, alongside another overnumbered Ahri coming too.

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