Taric/Development

Champion Update: Taric, the Shield of Valoran
hit the Rift just a few months after League’s release, and while a bunch of the OG champs have gone through the champion update team’s brush up, the champion formerly known as the Gem Knight had to wait his turn. Until Now. We’re about to send the stunning Aspect back out to the PBE replete with a whole new story (check out his comic and new bio!), kit, look - including the most glorious hair the Rift has ever seen - and audio. Read on for the details.

Passive= Taric infuses his next two basic attacks whenever he casts an ability. He swings faster with these two attacks, which deal increased damage and reduce his cooldowns.
 * Abilities
 * Bravado

Taric heals himself and all nearby allies based on the number of Starlight's Touch charges he’s stored. Taric generates up to three charges over time.
 * -|Q=
 * Starlight's Touch

All of Taric’s abilities are simultaneously cast from both Taric and his linked ally.
 * -|W=
 * Bastion
 * Bastion increases Taric’s.
 * Taric Bastion Buff.png links with an ally, shielding them from damage. Bastion remains on Taric’s ally until he recasts it onto another ally, or the two move far enough apart to break their Bastion Buff.png link.

After a brief delay, Taric fires out a short wave of celestial energy in a target direction that all enemies struck.
 * -|E=
 * Dazzle

Taric calls on the stars themselves for protection. After a moderate delay, he and all nearby allies become invulnerable for a few seconds.
 * -|R=
 * Cosmic Radiance



Taric’s one hell of an eye-catching character in lane, and not just because of that magnificent mane. Clever aim with will land his trademark stun and gift Taric the chance to walk up and weave in a couple of basic attacks. gives those attacks an extra kick, of course, but also significantly lower his cooldowns, offering him the chance to get back to all the sooner. And after he’s his opponent a couple of times, he can head back to safety before healing up with.
 * Laning

But don’t mistake Taric for a one-trick pony, because once he unlocks, the Shield of Valoran’s utility, options and threat ramp up significantly. By linking up with his ally, Taric can essentially double down on his abilities in intensely creative and intelligent ways. The twin heal on means he no longer needs to hang out beside his lane pal all the time, while smart positioning and aim with  can utterly wreck even the most determined ganks or tower dives. What’s more, isn’t an ability solely reserved for Taric’s marksman. He can recast the ability on a friendly jungler as they approach to give them a quick damage-soaking shield, then start doing Taric things as the gank begins. Smart casts will again stun multiple enemies, while  will help sustain Taric’s jungling pal as they dive deep to finish off their kill. Speaking of the, it’s often an ability that Taric will want to play around. Even though the Shield of Valoran can cast it pretty frequently, he’s usually better off saving until he’s stacked all three charges. The mana cost doesn’t change, and by enacting a gank or other proactive call when Taric’s fully loaded his, he’s all the more likely to keep his team ticking.

Taric boasts a whole box of tools around neutral objectives thanks to his inherent tankiness and powerful teamfighting abilities. He can fend off enemy teams around, for example, absorbing enemy poke with well-timed shields and his burgeoning health pool. Enemy junglers looking to chance a steal have to deal with, too, which - if landed - pretty much gifts Taric’s team an easy kill alongside a guaranteed  dragon stack. If, on the other hand, Taric’s team is running late and looking to stop the enemy from securing, Taric can charge in with his jungler, using to keep them both alive while  and  work together to spew out twin lines of AoE stuns.
 * Skirmishing

Taric and his allies can claim and defend objectives even harder while basking in the azure invulnerability glow of his ultimate,. In last-minute contests, he can cast  on his jungler, providing them the perfect window to brazenly contest their winged bounty. Similarly, he can cast on an allied assassin before  to give them the perfect window for otherwise desperate tower dives. Either way, with smart timing, can pull a whole bunch of would-be suicide missions into the realm of smart, realistic plays.


 * Teamfights



Taric gets to choose from a few different approaches once the two teams decide to rumble together. The first is the backline peeling role that other supports typically play. This sees Taric sticking by his marksman and protecting them with his self-targeted abilities, while using to  project his efforts from an allied frontliner. Alternatively, he can take up a spot at the front of his team’s formation before casting on a backline ally. Either way, Taric ends up with boatloads of utility options and presence on both ends of his team’s formation, although he’ll have to keep an eye on all the action all the time, and will often be forced into some hard decisions. He can save allies with or cast, for example, but if he chooses to save his dying assassin, he’ll lose his  for his nearby marksman when they run into trouble. Similarly, he can to stun the enemy assassin about to turn his backline bro into mincemeat, but doing so might rob him of the chance to help kill the wounded squishy fleeing from Taric’s   buddy. Ultimately, Taric has a huge impact in teamfights however he plays, but the choices he makes from moment to moment will often dictate who lives and who dies.


 * Synergy

Champion Insights: Taric, the Shield of Valoran
By Cactopus

'''As we've tuned the visuals on 's co-stars, the crystal-coated, pizza-footed Demacian has begun to feel like an eyesore by comparison. Couple his outrageous visuals with an outdated kit, and we had a prime candidate for a rework - but our goal wasn't to completely replace him. Instead, we sent the Gem Knight on an epic journey to transform him into the Shield of Valoran.'''



Sometimes, as with, we actually do have to melt a character down and start fresh when we rework them, but we prefer to avoid complete retcons when we can. "My personal mandate is do no harm and make it better", says senior narrative writer George "Glorft" Krstic. "Don’t wreck a champ by destroying the things that players really like. You can’t make suddenly not have claws."

When we originally created Taric, we came up with this pretty vague backstory about him being a space alien obsessed with gems. As a result, most players had the impression that he was just a weird dude who's always moaning about gems. The challenge was to write a story that could turn Taric into a believable character with a purpose and a justifiable explanation of his obsession with geology.
 * Finding grace atop the mountain



We began by looking for a place for Taric to live that fit him thematically. He's supposedly a Demacian, but nothing about his gameplay or pointy wardrobe particularly fit that region's theme. Our first impulse was to do away with that aspect of his story and reinvent him from scratch, but we had a better idea: what if we made the old Taric better by giving him a second act? We began writing a draft for "chapter two" in the tale of the Gem Knight: one which would send Taric on a perilous journey up the epic Mt. Targon.

Upon reaching the summit, Taric fought and defeated a celestial entity known as "The Protector". The epic creature was impressed by Taric's determination, and it bestowed new protective powers upon the fallen Demacian. Thus the Gem Knight became Valoran’s Shield.

The newer, more glorious Taric is the same absurdly handsome Demacian you know and love. But his new story tells how he fell from grace, then found it again atop Mt. Targon. Taric's journey redefines him as someone who fights for beauty, who defends the delicate. He'd fight two armies at once to defend a flower (or two juggernauts at once to defend an ADC, which is sort of the same thing).

Taric's trip to the mountaintop gave him new purpose, but he needed more than that before he was ready for the Rift. He needed some fresh duds.


 * Shine bright like a diamond



Old Taric’s model is the most conspicuously heinous aspect of the champ; it's about 75 percent gems and crystals exploding out of every part of him. Frankly, it doesn’t look like it belongs in a video game from this decade.

But his crystals don't have to look bad, nor should his epic, flowing, cover-of-a-romance-novel hair. We wanted to keep both of these things but execute them in a way that felt in tune with our current standards. Once we got Taric near Mt. Targon, we just needed to ask ourselves what his crystals actually are: Are they like regular gemstones that you could mine and find in the ground, or might they be something more interesting? We landed on the idea that the crystals represent a power that Taric received during his journey up Mt. Targon.



The crystals aren't stones; they're made of starlight. Throw away your physics textbook, unfollow on, and believe us when we tell you that if you slow down starlight and concentrate it, it will condense into a solid object imbued with strange, kinetic powers. These crystals (or gems, if you will) are the source of Taric's newfound powers.

To preserve Taric's unique vibe, we tuned up the over-the-top visual aspects of his visual design. When the Shield of Valoran struts around the Rift, his luscious mane flows wildly behind him, as if he’s constantly standing near a fan. It’s longer, wavier, more eye-catching. This is a man who could star in a shampoo commercial. And you'd buy that shampoo.



Emphasizing the best parts of Taric meant embracing and surgically enhancing his masculine, handsome beauty. We gave Taric's base model a stronger jaw and gave his jacket a plunging V-neck. In early playtests, we had his V-neck going to the bottom of his pecs, but during internal testing a few Rioters gave the feedback that the V-neck needed to reveal more, to go deeper. They wanted all the Taric they could get. So deeper we went.


 * Functional and stylish



Old Taric's kit wasn't obviously terrible, but it did suffer from one big problem: almost nothing he did felt or looked impactful. The Taric player pressed a button, and that caused something to happen, but the result was rarely clear to everyone in the fight. Playing as old Taric rarely offered you the chance to feel the sparkling glee of landing a  or the earth-shattering BOOM of a   - the fun was all in quietly  prolonging fights while  truly outrageous amounts of damage. His abilities were functional, but we needed to make them stylish.

This was in part a visual clarity issue, but it was also a result of how widely dispersed and invisible Taric's abilities were - it mattered to the team as a whole when Taric gave to his teammates, but those players were unlikely to notice the impact on their individual play and react accordingly. To make abilities feel more impactful, we make them more concentrated; so we killed some of his messy abilities and replaced them with noticeably flashier moves like his new ult,, which grants his allies temporary invulnerability. You'll feel like a star when it hits.



Point-and-click abilities have their place, but Taric's old stun was taking up far too much of his power budget. By turning his E into a skillshot, we were able to ramp up its potential power (it now stuns all struck enemies instead of just one targeted baddie) in lieu of the lower guaranteed power of his  old on-click ability. Talented Taric players will have more, clearer opportunities to make plays for their team, and bad Taric players will have more opportunities to disappoint you.

Taric is still a tank, and he still heals his friends with his Q, but the crystal-sharing mechanic of his new W  further cements Taric's role as a protector of those in need. That the Shield of Valoran can only link up with one ally at a time would suggest that he's best when he focuses on helping only that champion, but this isn't the case; he can use his  -  buddy as a way to be two places at once, both  enemy backline carries and  for his own squishies as needed. He's here healing his, there peeling for his. Taric is everywhere, always protecting those in need.



League Podcast: Taric
 This week, designer David “RiotRepertoir” Capurro, writer George “Glorft” Krstic, and concept artist Josh “HUGEnFAST” Smith share the behind-the- scenes story on updating the Shield of Valoran.

Media
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 * -|Videos=


 * -|Gallery=

Taric/Desarrollo