Aphelios, the Weapon of the Faithful - Champion Trailer, Abilities, & Champion Insights

More details on our newest champion, Aphelios, the Weapon of the Faithful are now available!
Continue reading for a closer look on his kit specifics, champion insights & more!

Table of Contents


Aphelios: The Weapon of the Faithful | Champion Trailer

A champion trailer is now on Riot social media:

"True power comes at a cost. By taking the poison, Aphelios channels the voice of his sister, Alune. In turn, she grants him her abilities: five moonstone weapons for him to master."

Aphelios Kit Primer

Here's details from Riot Aether on Aphelios' kit:
"Most champions can be summarized relatively quickly, but Aphelios isn't most champions. Learning to wield the Weapon of the Faithful demands discipline, focus, and mental acuity, so consider this primer your first test of faith along the path to mastering a champion with one of the highest skill ceilings in the game. (But really, this page has a ton of info to process. Read it a couple times, probably.
We're going to start with the overall structure of Aphelios' kit, then get into what each of his weapons does. 
How the kit works 
Guns, basic attacks & ammo
Aphelios cycles through five weapons, each with its own basic attack. He attacks with his main-hand weapon, but always carries an off-hand weapon he can swap to with W. 
Aphelios can't pick and choose which two weapons he equips at any given time. His weapons have 50 ammo ("Moonlight") each, and when a weapon runs empty you get the next one in line. Empty weapons go to the end of the line to recharge. 
Since Aphelios can swap between his main-hand and off-hand, weapon order changes throughout the game based on which weapons you use first. 
Abilities 
Aphelios only has three buttons: Q, W, and R. W swaps between his main- and off-hand weapons, leaving him with two actual abilities. Kind of. 
Each of Aphelios' five weapons has its own Q ability when equipped as his main-hand weapon. Each Q applies bonus attacks and effects based on his off-hand weapon. All five Qs cost mana and ammo, and each has its own cooldown (you can Q, switch guns, then immediately use the other Q). Aphelios automatically learns Q at level 2 and it slowly becomes stronger over the course of the game. We'll get to what each Q does in the weapon sections below. 
Aphelios' ultimate, Moonlight Vigil, sends forward a moon bomb that explodes on the first enemy hit, damaging nearby enemies. Then, Aphelios follows up with enhanced basic attacks from his main-hand weapon against all enemies caught in the explosion. He automatically learns R at level 6, and it automatically levels up at levels 11 and 16. 
Level-ups 
Since Aphelios automatically learns his Q and R, he puts his 18 level-up points into stats rather than abilities: 
  • Attack Damage
  • Attack Speed
  • Bonus Armor Penetration 
Calibrum, the Rifle

Calibrum 
Calibrum is a poke/harass weapon. Its basic attacks have extra range. 
When abilities deal damage with Calibrum, they mark enemies hit. Aphelios can right-click marked enemies anywhere on the map to follow up with a basic attack from his off-hand weapon (or his non-Calibrum weapon, in cases where he swaps Calibrum to his off-hand before firing). This attack detonates other nearby marks for bonus damage against the marked targets. 
Calibrum Q: Moonshot 
Fire a skillshot that damages the first unit hit and marks them. 
Moonlight Vigil Calibrum effect 
Moonlight Vigil's follow-up attacks mark all enemies hit. These marks deal higher damage when consumed. 
Severum, the Scythe Pistol 

Severum 
Severum is a sustain weapon that heals Aphelios for a portion of the damage it deals. Overhealing from Severum is converted into a small shield.

Severum Q: Onslaught 
Gain movement speed and rapidly fire your main-hand and off-hand weapons at the nearest enemy, prioritizing champions. Onslaught shots behave like basic attacks but deal reduced damage.

Moonlight Vigil Severum effect 
Moonlight Vigil grants Aphelios a flat heal. 
Gravitum, the Cannon
Gravitum
Gravitum is a utility weapon that applies a decaying slow to enemies. 
Gravitum Q: Eclipse 
Damage and root all enemies on the map affected by Gravitum's slow. Eclipse doesn't use Aphelios' off-hand weapon. 
Moonlight Vigil Gravitum effect 
Moonlight Vigil's follow-up attacks apply a massively increased slow. 
Infernum, the Flamethrower
Infernum 
Infernum is an AoE/waveclear weapon. It deals increased basic attack and ability damage and creates a damage cone behind enemies hit. 
Infernum Q: Duskwave 
Spout a wave of flame, damaging enemies. Then basic attack all enemies hit with your off-hand weapon. 
Moonlight Vigil Infernum effect 
Moonlight Vigil's follow-up attacks create damage circles around enemies hit instead of damage cones behind them. 
Crescendum, the Chakram
Crescendum 
Crescendum is a close-range DPS weapon that behaves like a boomerang. Once Aphelios basic attacks with Crescendum he can't attack again until it returns to him, but his attack resets when it does. Attack speed increases Crescendum's travel speed instead. The closer Aphelios is to his target, the less distance Crescendum has to travel—and the faster Aphelios can attack. 
When abilities or their follow-up attacks deal damage with Crescendum, they create temporary copies of it for each enemy hit that increase the strength of Crescendum's basic attack. 
Crescendum Q: Sentry 
Deploy a turret that shoots the nearest target with your off-hand weapon. 
Moonlight Vigil Crescendum effect 
If Moonlight Vigil hits fewer than three enemies, its follow up attacks still increase the damage of Crescendum's basic attacks as if at least three enemies were hit. 
Custom HUD 
All the stuff above is a lot to take in, and a lot to track. Aphelios has a unique HUD to ease this burden. 
  • Passive, explaining Aphelios' weapons and level ups. The tooltip is as long as this article.
  • Aphelios' main-hand weapon and its remaining ammo.
  • Q.
  • Aphelios' off-hand weapon and its remaining ammo. If its Q is on cooldown, the icon will also indicate remaining cooldown.
  • The next weapon you'll get once one of your weapons runs out of ammo.
  • R. 
Additionally, if your main-hand gun has 10 or less ammo remaining, an ammo tracker will appear on the right side of your screen so you can track your remaining shots. 
The Weapon of the Faithful 
Mastering Aphelios' moonstone arsenal may prove to be one of the most daunting challenges in all of League. Are you devoted enough for the task? Ready yourself, the Weapon of the Faithful arrives during patch 9.24."

Aphelios Champion Insights

Check out Aphelios' champion insights from Riot Cashmiir:
"Sometimes when we release a new champion, we’re greeted with a chorus of, “What the heck Rito, you’ve gone too far! TOO FAR!!”

Aphelios is probably definitely going to get that reaction. And that’s fine. In fact, it’s great. Aphelios is here to test what you’re willing to sacrifice. Are you willing to relinquish control over which weapons you wield? Are you willing to learn around 30 different abilities? Are you willing to blindly trust that the voice only you can hear knows exactly what you need? 
If you believe it’s your fate to find victory in the whispers of the moon, then it’s time to lock in Aphelios (and Alune). And the results of your faith can be a thing of beauty. 
Faith is Perseverance 
Aphelios’ journey from early concept to creation was a long one. Well over a year, in fact. But he started, as all champions do, with a goal. His was to allow creative adaptation by using combinations of abilities, instead of twitch reflexes. Basically, he was designed to be the Yasuo of 200 IQ, galaxy brain plays. 
But where do you begin with a goal like that? What path brought the team to Aphelios, the mute Lunari religious assassin with an arsenal of magical moon relic weapons? The answer is obvious: It all started with wizards and battle royales. 
“Even after almost 150 champions, League of Legends doesn’t have a wizard,” explains senior narrative writer David “Interlocutioner” Slagle. “It has a shirtless blue guy… Seven versions of him, in fact. But still no wizard.” 
To the team, the classic wizard archetype is someone who defeats evil with knowledge. Not fast reflexes, landing skill shots, or perfectly timed abilities. All that matters is the knowledge of what tool to use at the exact moment. 
“I don’t know who made the call to turn Aphelios into a marksman,” says game designer Stash “Riot Stashu” Chelluck. “The early wizard idea was really cool, but the gameplay experience wasn’t that unique for the current roster of mages. We thought it would be a really unusual space in the marksman roster. What if instead of an arsenal of spells, Aphelios had an arsenal of weapons?” 
Marksmen largely play the same across all champions. You go to lane, farm minions, forget about the mini map, die a bunch, maybe get a kill or two, and build items. The abilities change, but the overall gameplay is familiar. 
With a clear role and general “weapon swapping marksman” design in place, the team needed to discover exactly who Aphelios was. 
Some early Aphelios concepts including Braum’s mean older brother, one of Quinn’s Demacian Ranger friends, a Zaun Assassin, a Knight, a Shuriman Wizard, and a Zaun ‘Bard’
“I started thinking of different factions in Runeterra that might have a gunswap marksman,” concept artist Sunny “Kindlejack” Pandita shares. “One of them was Braum’s mean older brother, who carried a totem pole that channeled Freljordian animal spirits to swap abilities.” 
Zaun was another option: A mad scientist mixing chemicals and conducting experiments to create unique abilities or weapons. And if not Zaun, then what about Piltover? 
“Interlocutioner had a really great idea based on this ‘right tool for the job’ concept,” says Kindlejack. “And it kind of felt like a bounty hunter. It was a person you’d hire because they knew how to hunt anyone, or anything, because they had the right weapon for every situation.” 
The idea culminated in a Piltovan bounty hunter who had imprisoned his last bounty. His “assistant” rode a sky-cycle around the Rift, throwing weapons down to its master whenever he required them. 
But it just didn’t feel like Aphelios. 
“I’d been looking at the outfits from the Met Gala that year, and they had combined religious iconography with high fashion,” says Kindlejack. “I thought it was something worth exploring, so I started drawing it.” 
The high-fashion-monk-meets-almost-selflessly-romantic-assassin design struck a chord with the team. A champion who believes so strongly in his cause, with unshakable devotion… It was admirable, but scary. It was perfect. But where did he belong in Runeterra? 
“I’d been talking to one of the lead concept artists on another project. He told me they’d been doing a lot of research into different factions within Runeterra,” Kindlejack explains. “So he shared the visual explorations with me. The Lunari stuck out because they’re a faction that’s recognisable to players, but still unexplored.” 
Until Aphelios, Diana stood as the lone Lunari in our champion roster. And she didn’t offer players much information about her people. What do we really know about the Lunari other than “moon?” What are they fighting for? What do they care about? 
“With Aphelios, we had a chance to make the whole world around him spring to life,” adds Interlocutioner. “What’s going on on Mount Targon? Now we finally get a glimpse into that.” 
Aphelios is a Lunari assassin who finds no pleasure in killing. But he still kills… and he’s not alone. 
Faith is Trust 
“Aphelios and Alune are twins, born during a rare celestial event,” explains Interlocutioner. “The moon in Runeterra has an orbit, and the moon in the spirit realm reflects that. Every once in a while there’s a convergence, and the magic gifted to those born during it is incredible among the Lunari.” 
Alune spent her life training to be an oracle to harness the moon’s magical light to reveal hidden truths and pathways—whereas Aphelios trained to eliminate any who would do the Lunari harm. The pair represents the two sides of the Lunari faith: magical mysticism and grounded realism. And the connection they share manifests multiple ways in game. 
“We were looking for a narrative justification for where the weapons came from,” says Riot Stashu. “Why does the player not get to choose which weapons they use? How does Aphelios get them? Why doesn’t this trained assassin monk have any control over it?” 
Because Alune always knows what Aphelios needs. 
When a match begins, Aphelios drinks poison to open a psychic(ish) connection with Alune. In order for her to speak to Aphelios and send him the magic-infused weaponry, she must be in her sanctuary fortress within the spirit realm. But the poison does more than create a connection. It fills Aphelios with the night’s power. His muscles tense, he can channel the magic—Alune’s magic. But not without sacrifice. 
“The poison causes Aphelios’ throat to tighten. It’s why he doesn’t speak. But there’s more to the poison than that. The connection allows Alune to know his thoughts, their souls converge,” explains Interlocutioner. “I think if we ever knew exactly what someone else was thinking, we’d get hurt most of the time. There’s a rawness to our realities that often doesn’t match someone else’s. And Aphelios and Alune have to face this every time they connect. They can’t lie to each other. Or themselves.” 
“From our fortress I will guide you... I promise”
Aphelios’ silence presented a unique challenge—would players feel emotionally connected with a champion who doesn’t speak? Would the connection be hampered if they heard the voice of someone who doesn’t really appear? How do you approach the sound design for someone who’s speaking telepathically from another realm? 
“It was really important to get the ‘voice over the walkie talkie’ part of Alune’s VO right,” voice over designer Julian “Riot Zimberfly” Samal explains. “It needed to communicate that she was in a remote location without being too intrusive. Because if it was too jarring, it could cause confusion and interrupt gameplay.” 
Aphelios first move sound effects

Aphelios move sound effect

To accomplish this, Riot Zimberfly processed unintelligible incantation-esque whispers from Alune’s voice actor and used them to create the “walkie talkie” sound effect. The implication is that a few of Alune’s own thoughts are escaping through the lunar conduit to Aphelios. Her fragile, but still strong, reassuring voice uses textural and musical layers to create the feeling that it comes from within your head. 
Guidance comes in forms other than Alune’s magically gifted weapons and gentle words of encouragement. 
“When we decided on Aphelios’… unique kit, we all piled into a room to discuss how to explain his abilities to players in game,” explains Kindlejack. “I’d wanted to create a custom HUD since we started experimenting with Ultimate skins. And Aphelios gave us a real reason to do it.” 
Aphelios has a Q, an R, and… another R. No Passive, no (real) W, and no E. 
Weapon swapping in Aphelios’ HUD
League’s never had a champion that required an entirely different HUD. Some of the Ultimate skins offer addons, and champions that evolve their skills require extra love. But a champion that doesn’t level up in the traditional sense, has “fewer” abilities, the ability to weapon swap, and uses an “ammo” system requires a little bit more than just some extra love. 
Different versions of Aphelios’ HUD
“It was a really cool and scary moment,” Kindlejack explains. “I’d never done anything like this before. But I think his bespoke HUD creates this unique experience for the dedicated, true believers. (And none of this would have been possible without the work of Bryce “The King of Rad” Mercado, the HUD’s engineer.)” 
With Alune watching over you, giving you guidance, encouragement, and, most importantly, a deadly host of celestial weaponry, you can use that bespoke UI to focus on what really matters… Big. Brain. Plays. 
Faith is Unwavering 
How do you ensure that a champ with five weapons remains cohesive? How do you make the weapons feel unique but still recognizable? And how do they fit in with the Lunari when Targonians use spears and swords? 
… Aphelios’ weapons aren’t exactly as they seem.
“These aren’t traditional projectile weapons with magazines,” explains Kindlejack. “Instead, they’re like sacred Lunari artifacts. When I was designing them I imagined they were normally on display in a temple. It’s the combination of Aphelios’ and Alune’s gifts that turns them deadly.” 
Because of League’s top-down perspective, the guns’ silhouettes would be difficult to see. Their design needed to feel familiar, so we somewhat imitated silhouettes of other guns to help communicate gameplay—for example, the long-range weapon looks similar to Caitlyn’s rifle. But even with this, guns can be pretty difficult to read in-game, so Aphelios’ stance and animations do a lot of the heavy lifting. His posture and movements vary with each weapon to make them distinct and intuitive so players know which abilities (and basic attacks) he has access to. 
Pose explorations for Aphelios’ weapons
“After we landed on ‘Lunari assassin’ for his character design, we just went with it,” laughs Kindlejack. “There was some refinement, but compared to most champions his visual design didn’t really change. But his arsenal? I redesigned it about 10 times over the course of a year.” 



A few of Aphelios’ weapon ideations
Every time a weapon was changed, added, or removed, the art needed to be updated to reflect that. The colors and shapes all had to be unique, along with the way Aphelios held them. But the need for clarity didn’t just stop at the weapons’ physical designs. 
Moon sound explorations 
Aphelios switching to his secondary weapon 
“It’s really hard to make guns sound magical,” shares lead sound designer Brandon “Riot Sound Bear” Reader. “Aphelios isn’t casting spells. He’s shooting guns. But they aren’t traditional guns, so they still had to sound… magical.” 
But why does Aphelios need to switch weapons at all? Because of their moonlight “ammo,” obviously. And because Alune’s magic eventually wanes, the weapons fade back across the veil to be recharged with the moon’s might. That means you need to adapt and react. 
“One of the benefits of not being able to choose which weapon you have is that we could make the combination of his weapons super OP in different situations,” says Riot Stashu. 
“Because of the ammo, you force players into a scenario where they need to recognize their strengths at that exact moment. You can give them this combination of weapons that’s really strong for dueling so they think, ‘Oh damn. I have to fight RIGHT NOW.’” 
This is the galaxy brain moment. Aphelios’ unique weapon combinations create opportunities for him to set up his teammates to engage, or to siege towers and objectives, or maybe even to go toe-to-toe with some of the best duelists in the game. It requires players to recognize and even predict their strengths to be the most effective sad moon boi out there. If not, you’ll limp away and (hopefully) use your given weapons more successfully next time. 
The Faithful Shall be Rewarded 
Just as Aphelios trained for years to become a Lunari assassin, so too must you train to understand and trust your own abilities. Aphelios knows how to do the job, and eventually you will too. 
When a time of darkness comes to Mount Targon, will your faith see you through?"

Look for more on Aphelios when the 9.24 PBE cycle starts up soon!

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