In order to theory craft compositions and draft strategies, LS assigns each champion in League of Legends a color pairing. Integrating the theory of deck. LS' YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/lastshadow9/LS' Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/imls/LS' Twitter: https://twitter.com/LSXYZ9LS Other playlist: https.
This is a subreddit devoted to the game League of Legends. Color plays a huge role in defining the theme of a spell. In this section we'll underline appropriate use of saturation levels, color relationships, and basic color palettes for a few themes in League.
LS promotes the idea of playing other games at high levels to supplement League of Legends at the professional level. I can't speak for LS, but he probably created this system to allow pro players/analysts/coaches to have a new way to look at the draft phase, potentially leading to new ideas and more refined way to play the game. The theory is that teams can choose comps using the camps in the list.
But just knowing the champs and how good they are can help you draft for your ranked games. LoLTheory isn't endorsed by Riot Games and doesn't reflect the views or opinions of Riot Games or anyone officially involved in producing or managing League of Legends. So Game Theory just came out with a new video in which MatPat uses League of Legends as an example for how color affects us.
You can watch it here, but I'll be quoting/explaining some of his points below. Game Theory: Red vs Blue, The SECRET Color Strategy. "Colorful Drafting" is a new series from TGH that will walkthrough how LS' draft strategy differs from traditional theory, and how his "color theory" of drafting works using real life examples.
Kicking off the new column is the opener for Cloud9's 2022 LCS Spring campaign. Cloud9 squared off against Golden Guardians to being the year, and got the audiences believing in the Church. As skin catalogs grow and chroma catalogs grow with them, clarity does become more of a challenge.
There are only so many colors in the color wheel, and we use a lot of the same color theory techniques when designing skins and chromas (complementary, analogous, triadic, tertiary color combinations).