Image via Riot Games

Riot awarded $10 million in League of Legends scripting lawsuit

A major League of Legends scripting site has effectively been shut down after settling in-court with Riot Games.

Recommended Videos

In the recent settlement with script site LeagueSharp, the League of Legends developer won a $10 million payout, a court-ordered ban from Riot games, and control of LeagueSharp websites.

LeagueSharp, a subscription hacking service, put its users at an unfair advantage in League matches, using scripts and hacks to manipulate games. In August, Riot filed a complaint against the company, its three founders, and a Peru-based shell company they allegedly created to throw off Riot.

The complaint alleged that LeagueSharp violated League’s DMCA, as its product evades Riot’s anti-cheating software. U.S. District Judge Ronald S.W. Lew signed off on the settlement and injunction, awarding Riot a win against the defendants.

In addition to the hacking and scripting claims, Riot alleged that LeagueSharp also “attacked its servers” and “leaked private information about a [Riot] employee,” according to Law360.

Players using LeagueSharp paid $15 a month to the company in exchange for its services and software. For $50 a month, LeagueSharp offered a “botting service,” the press release said, that allows players to “automate multiple accounts simultaneously.”

An earlier report estimated that LeagueSharp fielded a massive League community, earning hundreds of thousands of dollars in revenue each month.


Dot Esports is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more
related content
Read Article T1 thrash FlyQuest at MSI 2024 in LoL’s fastest ever international best-of-3
Ryu "Keria" Min-seok of T1 during MSI Play-Ins.
Read Article LoL Arena returns with a bang, but players are already bored of the meta
Read Article LoL’s free champion rotation: April 16
A cast of League of Legends champions.
Related Content
Read Article T1 thrash FlyQuest at MSI 2024 in LoL’s fastest ever international best-of-3
Ryu "Keria" Min-seok of T1 during MSI Play-Ins.
Read Article LoL Arena returns with a bang, but players are already bored of the meta
Read Article LoL’s free champion rotation: April 16
A cast of League of Legends champions.
Author
Nicole Carpenter
Nicole Carpenter is a reporter for Dot Esports. She lives in Massachusetts with her cat, Puppy, and dog, Major. She's a Zenyatta main who'd rather be playing D.Va.