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Emerald Taric from League of Legends prays while healing a tree root.
Image via Riot Games

What is LoL’s new Emerald rank?

No, it's not worse than Iron.

League of Legends has had a number of competitive ranks since 2010, ranging from Bronze, Silver, Gold, and Iron to Platinum and Diamond, and three Apex Tiers⁠—Master, Grandmaster, and Challenger. It’s a well-worn and familiar system that’s been in place for more than a decade.

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This season, Riot Games has decided to rework the system, starting from Split Two. This includes the removal of promotion series and a reduction in placement games⁠—dropped from 10 to just five⁠—to speed up ranked play.

It also includes League’s first rank in six years: Emerald.

Deleting promotions makes sense, especially in my eyes after falling victim to it so many times over the years (and I doubt very much I’m alone in that experience either), and having to play fewer placement games each season should speed up how quickly we can start our ranked grinds, but an extra rank whacked into the middle of the long-standing competitive ladder has given many players pause.

There are plenty of questions to be asked about Emerald, but the League devs are fairly adamant it will be a positive change.

League’s new Emerald rank, explained

The new Emerald rank sits between Platinum and Diamond. It has been introduced to fix what Riot has described as a “very bottom-heavy distribution of rankings.” Stats from the last few seasons found more than 60 percent of players fall between Bronze and Silver, which Riot doesn’t really like.

Instead, Riot wants those regularly ranked between Iron (the lowest on the competitive ladder) and Silver to be below-average players.

The Emerald rank has been added as a way to flatten the curve in a way that won’t negatively impact Diamond-ranked players. From July 2023, it will live between the Platinum and Diamond ranks and is expected to have a percentage of players somewhat similar to the old Platinum.

I’m a visual learner, so I know this graph (below) can help.

A graph showing how the new Emerald rank will change the ranked distribution in League.
League’s ranked distribution will flatten quite a bit after these changes. Image via Riot Games

As a League player who has actually progressed from originally being placed in Bronze to climbing through Silver and Gold, and before eventually breaking into Platinum last season, I’m very interested to see this all come into effect; especially with Emerald now shaping as a new frontier to challenge.

This should create a more even spread between Silver and Platinum. It will also see the Bronze rank become the below-average League rank the Riot devs are suggesting it was always intended to be.

At the very bottom, Iron should see no changes.


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Isaac McIntyre
Isaac McIntyre is the Aussie Editor at Dot Esports. He previously worked in sports journalism at Fairfax Media in Mudgee and Newcastle for six years before falling in love with esports—an ever-evolving world he's been covering since 2018. Since joining Dot, he's twice been nominated for Best Gaming Journalist at the Australian IT Journalism Awards and continues to sink unholy hours into losing games as a barely-Platinum AD carry. When the League servers go down he'll sneak in a few quick hands of the One Piece card game. Got a tip for us? Email: isaac@dotesports.com.
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Alex Tsiaoussidis
Staff Writer for Dot Esports. I am a passionate gamer with years of experience covering all things gaming, esports, and streaming. I have extra love for Dota 2, Pokémon, and Apex Legends.
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