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Jhin Concept 01
Jhin
Jhin (Universe)Jhin (Universe)
Jhin (League of Legends)Jhin (League of Legends)
Jhin (Esports)Jhin (Esports)
Jhin (Teamfight Tactics)Jhin (Teamfight Tactics)
Jhin (Legends of Runeterra)Jhin (Legends of Runeterra)
Jhin (Wild Rift)Jhin (Wild Rift)
Jhin (Development)Jhin (Development)
Jhin (Trivia)Jhin (Trivia)

Champion Reveal: Jhin, the Virtuoso[]

Jhin divider
Jhin's Jhin's assembling his gun gun and orchestrating his grand entrance onto the Rift. He's meticulous and calculating - League's slowest marksman yet. But when the murderous artist gets you in his sights, when he catches catches you off-guard, there's not much that'll save you from an inevitable, perfect death.[1]
Abilities

Whisper
Whisper

Jhin's gun - Whisper - chambers four shots, the last of which always Critical strike icon crits and applies extra damage based on a portion of his target's missing health. After firing all four shots, Jhin takes a moment to Disarm icon reload.

Jhin's Critical strike icon crits deal less damage than normal, and his attack speed doesn't actually scale with attack speed. Instead, Jhin gains attack damage from any attack speed and crit chance he earns through itemization and runes, while Critical strike icon crits give him a burst of movement based on his attack speed.

Dancing Grenade
Dancing Grenade
Jhin throws a canister at a nearby targeted enemy. After landing, the canister bounces up to four times on other nearby enemies. Killing an enemy with Dancing Grenade causes the following bounces to deal extra damage.

Deadly Flourish
Deadly Flourish
  • Passive: Enemy champions that have been struck by Jhin's basic attacks, Captive Audience Captive Audience, or any allied damage are marked marked for a few seconds.
  • Active: Jhin fires a massively long range shot that damages all enemy minions and the first enemy champion in a target direction. If the enemy champion he strikes has already been marked marked, they're briefly Root icon rooted, while Jhin himself gains a burst of movement speed.

Captive Audience
Captive Audience
Jhin places a trap on the ground that turns invisible after arming. Enemy champions that walk over the trap trigger it, True Sight icon revealing and marking marking them with Deadly Flourish Deadly Flourish and creating a large Slow icon slowing zone. After a brief pause, the trap detonates, damaging all enemies inside its explosion.

Curtain Call
Curtain Call
Jhin fully assembles his weapon before taking aim in a target direction, True Sight icon revealing all marked marked targets in a huge area. He can then fire four rounds rounds that stop at the first enemy champion struck, Slow icon slowing them and dealing damage based on their missing health. Jhin's fourth and final shot shot with Curtain Call deals massively increased damage and is guaranteed to Critical strike icon crit.

Jhin Screenshots
Laning

Jhin's a different kind of marksman. While most look to whittle their opponents down with a constant barrage of sapping attacks, Jhin's fastidious to the extreme, and thrives when he handpicks his opportunities to strike. In lane, he's best off saving his valuable bullets bullets for last-hitting, keeping track of his ammo count and looking for moments when he can expend his fourth fourth bullet - his deadliest - on his lane opponent. Jhin's basic attack range is distinctly average at best, making him relatively easy to harass in lane. That's where the Virtuoso can turn to Dancing Grenade Dancing Grenade, using the bouncing canister to secure last hits from relative safety, and even apply effective harassment if his opponents stick too close to their minion waves.

Still, Jhin's low attack speed will often see him pushed under tower, and having to fire off his shots to last hit instead of harass. Here's the thing, though: when Jhin correctly plans for this, when he places a few of his Captive Audience Captive Audience traps as he falls back, he'll be perfectly placed to call on his jungler and slowly close the noose around his hapless opponents' necks. As the gank starts, Jhin and his allies work best initiating the attack and corralling their targets towards their pre-set traps. Once they trigger, Jhin can follow up immediately with Deadly Flourish Deadly Flourish, damaging his target and rooting rooting them inside the trap's slow zone slow zone as it ticks down toward zero. The explosion, which they're now guaranteed to be caught inside, chunks them down further, setting the stage for Jhin's fourth fourth and final bullet. They'll die, one way or another.

Traps Traps being traps, they also make perfect defensive cover for Jhin when he decides to aim his iron sights at his enemies and get aggressive. While these opportunities are rare, a fortuitous crit crit against a weakened enemy doesn't just give Jhin the chance to kill his target, but also the means to chase. Jhin excels here, following up on enemy marks marks with Deadly Flourish Deadly Flourish to root his target as he blows them away with basic attacks. Overextending generally attracts enemy junglers, of course, but if Jhin manages to pull the trigger on his fourth fourth and final shot, the guaranteed crit (and therefore guaranteed speed boost) should help him speed away as his would-be killer slogs through the Virtuoso's traps.

Jhin butterfly
Skirmishing

Once he's set up, Jhin's great at objective control, thanks in part to his traps. By placing Captive Audience Captive Audience traps on the enemy team's easiest path to Dragon Dragon, Jhin earns his team advance notice of any impending arrivals, and can temporarily root marked marked enemy junglers with Deadly Flourish Deadly Flourish. Even if they continue their advance, Jhin can throw in a Dancing Grenade Dancing Grenade to apply damage to grouped enemies before carefully picking off his targets with basic attacks. He's poor at securing objectives himself - his slow attack speed alone sees to that - but he gives his team a huge boost toward securing objectives when he plans out and prepares for the fight in the areas around them.

Then there's Jhin's ultimate ultimate. Curtain Call Curtain Call gives Jhin and his team huge leverage over objectives when the Virtuoso is able to set up and prepare his sniper nest. The ability has huge range, but only within a set angle, giving Jhin a few key considerations to think about as he searches for his grassy knoll. Set up too close and he'll make an easy target for enemy assassins; too far and he'll render himself irrelevant after he's spent his ult ult; set up poorly and he'll risk losing sight of the battle as it shifts around. Get his position just right and Jhin will wreak havoc from afar before moving in to finish the fight up close.

Jhin flower
Teamfights

Jhin has two viable strategies in teamfights: either appear at the start of the battle, or at the end. If he chooses to stick with his team, he takes up a traditional backline position, setting up traps traps to protect his fellow squishes while aiming Deadly Flourish Deadly Flourish at marked marked targets. Dancing Grenade Dancing Grenade only adds to the carnage, and when the enemy team starts to flee, Jhin's perfectly positioned to fully assemble Whisper Whisper and cut the remaining enemies down with Curtain Call Curtain Call.

Alternatively, Jhin can choose to set the stage early by firing off his ult ult first. This makes him an unusual character in a teamfight because he won't actually be seen, at least initially. And while enemy teams might first revel in the apparently lopsided fight, they'll quickly realize that the Virtuoso's absence is deliberate. Jhin's presence may not be felt, but his bullets bullets absolutely will. Curtain Call Curtain Call deals less damage to high health enemies, but the ability's slow will hinder enemy frontliners from getting to where they want to be, and stop vulnerable enemies from squirming away from Jhin's damage dealing allies. More importantly, Curtain Call Curtain Call will start to pin Jhin's enemies down, forcing them to hide behind their tankier allies or run for cover. And even when his ult's ult's spent, Jhin can contribute to fights, locking down marked marked targets with Deadly Flourish Deadly Flourish so his allies can clean up the fight and push on toward victory.

Synergy
Works well with: Struggles against:

Darius OriginalSquare
Darius - the Hand of Noxus

Darius and Jhin make for an unusual combination. While most marksmen deal more damage than juggernauts, Darius is such an oppressive force that Jhin can actually complement his strengths by simply pinning pinning targets down with Deadly Flourish Deadly Flourish and Curtain Call Curtain Call while Darius does... well, what Darius does. Which is dunk dunk.


Yasuo OriginalSquare
Yasuo - the Unforgiven

Concentrating Jhin's power into four four deadly bullets means that champions that can negate one or two of said bullets will effectively halve the Virtuoso's short term damage output. Enter Yasuo, who will happily Wind Wall Wind Wall Jhin's basic attacks away before cutting him down under a flurry flurry of steel.


Nautilus OriginalSquare
Nautilus - the Titan of the Depths

One of League's crowd control supertanks, Nautilus has enough snares snares, knock-ups knock-ups, pulls pulls, and slows slows to stop multiple enemies from reaching Jhin. This helps keep the Virtuoso alive, obviously, but more importantly, encourages him to get closer than he'd otherwise be comfortable and do some serious damage with his basic attacks.


Jarvan IV OriginalSquare
Jarvan IV - the Exemplar of Demacia

Four Four bullets are enough to take down plenty of targets, but not J4, who'll happily flag flag n drag drag his way over to Jhin before laying into him inside Cataclysm Cataclysm. All while shouting 'Demacia' really loudly, of course.


Morgana OriginalSquare
Morgana - the Fallen

Morgana's super strong alongside Jhin because she has plenty of reliable ways to mark mark his enemies. The dream is Dark Binding Dark Binding into Deadly Flourish Deadly Flourish, obviously, which wrecks most enemies, but even if Morgana tags tags her enemy with Tormented Shadow Tormented Shadow, Jhin will still have opportunities to fire off his W W and snare snare his enemy for a few moments, which in turn sets up a perfect Dark Binding Dark Binding opportunity.


Lucian OriginalSquare
Lucian - the Purifier

Lucian makes for a pretty hefty thorn in Jhin's side. Not only is he mobile enough to dodge most of Jhin's abilities with Relentless Pursuit Relentless Pursuit, he also packs plenty of burst. So, while Jhin's forced to rely on his basic attacks to deal reliable but slow damage, Lucian can tag the Virtuoso with Ardent Blaze Ardent Blaze before rushing in to apply the hurt with Piercing Light Piercing Light. This is not Jhin's favorite gun show.

Jhin gun
Jhin divider

Champion Insights: Jhin[]

By Conor 'fizzNchips' Sheehy[2]

Jhin The Man with the Steel Cane 01

We started with a blank page, and ended with a killer.

Here are the steps in between.

Design notes by August 'August' Browning
Art notes by Larry 'TheBravoRay' Ray
Narrative notes by Odin 'WAAARGHbobo' Austin Shafer

Our initial goal was pretty clear: we wanted to deliver on a sniping fantasy that was notably different from Caitlyn's Caitlyn's long range gunning. If anything, her fast rate of fire and unlimited ammo aligns her closer to a semiautomatic rifle-wielding gunner, whereas we wanted to really explore what it felt like to use an old fashioned, bolt-action sniper rifle. We aimed for a champion who had slow and impactful shots, who could express skill through their long-range snipes snipes, and who'd apply pressure pressure with their shots even if they missed. One way or another, every shot would count.

Early Inspiration
Jhin Concept 02

Early sketches focused on a mysterious robot cowboy bounty hunting sniper - not the easiest elevator pitch - but the concept quickly hit the proverbial icebox as we focused on other further developed concepts. A couple of champs progressed from concept into production, in fact, while our sniper chilled out in his icebox, including a certain death-centric death-centric duo. After we figured out Kindred's Kindred's theme, we felt that a bounty bounty system was a better fit for them, so pulled the mechanic from the sniper. Without the bounty hunting, we were still left with a mysterious robot cowboy sniper - still a cool idea, and still something we wanted to explore. So we came back, set on executing this long-range sniping fantasy. Initially, we just gave him a sniper rifle, but the range and speed still felt too close to Caitlyn Caitlyn, so we started thinking of ways to differentiate him. We eventually settled on the concept of a constructible constructible weapon, something that looked like a short-range sidearm sidearm for basic attacks, but that could be assembled for long-range sniping with his abilities. The idea stuck, so August started looking at ways to necessitate planning and execution, emphasizing carefully timed and placed shots as opposed to your average marksman's attack speed-fueled barrage of withering basic attacks. As we started discussing the concept internally, we quickly realized that the term 'sniper' felt wrong - there was just too much overlap with Caitlyn Caitlyn, and the term implied that everything he did would be at supreme range - so we started thinking about a better development term for the character.

Jhin Concept 06
The Deadeye
Jhin Concept 13

The term 'Deadeye' fit perfectly, encompassing aspects of a long range killer without the excess baggage that came with the sniper term. August started diving into this Every Shot Counts Every Shot Counts idea, and implemented an ammo system for his basic attacks. Meanwhile, Deadly Flourish Deadly Flourish quickly turned into the longest range basic ability in the game, but would be most effective when his allies had already marked marked his target. This was our attempt to bring the feeling of spotting - where others call out targets for their sniper to shoot - to League! What's more, Deadly Flourish Deadly Flourish, along with Curtain Call Curtain Call, tied into the sniping fantasy much better, because they cover huge range, but most importantly, can miss. This added a ton of skill into the abilities, of course, and would mentally affect Deadeye's target even if he didn't land his shot. You've seen movies where soldiers run for cover after a sniper takes his first shot, and that was a heavy inspiration for the feel we wanted to convey with Deadeye.

Massive range meant that Deadeye needed to set up his sniping nest too, which became a really important part of his gameplay as we started testing his kit. Deadeye had to think about where he could be most effective, and while enemy teams would start piling in thinking they were on the better end of a 4v5, they quickly learned their lesson and started asking themselves that single, fear-laced question: "Where's the sniper?"

Four is the magic number

August fixed Deadeye's ammo count to four four - the low number meant that every shot count, and meant we could ramp up the damage so that, well, every shot hurt, too - and we liked the idea of the fourth fourth shot being the deadliest from a mechanics perspective. But why would Deadeye save his most powerful shot for last? We started looking at his character, and actively turned the number four into a common repeating motif for him. Deadeye doesn't want to just kill you - he wants to kill you perfectly by slowly building up to a sublime death. Odin started thinking of Deadeye as an artist, and built in references to music - specifically opera - in his voice lines and personality. We doubled down and repeated four as a key number in his kit, with four bounces on his grenades grenades, and four Curtain Call Curtain Call shots. We found that this actually echoes well with our own world, where the word 'four' sounds like the word 'death' in Chinese, and is, because of that, a deeply feared and unlucky number in many parts of Asia. It was perfect for Deadeye.

Jhin Concept 18
It's all in the eyes

His theme and mechanics were taking shape, so we started experimenting with Deadeye's visuals. We were still trying ideas around this robot cowboy look, but wanted to see how different factions around Runeterra would shape Deadeye's appearance. We tried out some Zaun designs, gave Deadeye a mask and made his gender ambiguous. Next we wanted to try adding some unsettling asymmetry to his shape. Larry drew up a few silhouettes, and one really grabbed the team:

Jhin Concept 07

Why the hump? What was that thing? It formed a strong point of curiosity for us that we loved, alongside the constructible gun. Next Larry drew up some animation studies, and we saw what the hump actually was - part of his weapon - and how he moved. Stakeholders were instantly on board, so we iterated further, turning Deadeye into a Darkin, then a woman. Next we tried Ionia, and immediately found traction with their ornate architecture and form over function design ethos. Settling there, we elongated his body and turned his mask into a real intricate work of art. We steered away from robotics because it lacked the elegance that Deadeye's character was fast developing, and didn't click with his burgeoning feel. In fact, we knew the character was turning into a pretty nasty killer, but in order for him to be truly terrifying, we wanted him to look approachable. Deadeye needed to appear human, appear normal, only to realize as you drew closer that something was off. Really off. We came to call this 'The Lie'.

The Lie
Jhin Concept 12

Odin continued refining Deadeye - now named Jhin Jhin - into a monster. But not the Rek'Sai Rek'Sai-style rip-your-head-off-and-eat-your-heart kind of monster. We wanted Jhin to be a real psychopathic killer, someone who you could interact with, but who wasn't all there. He seems to be smiling, but he's not: that's just his mask. Jhin searches for a justification for doing what he does, and similar to Dexter, Deadeye might appear normal, but is a true monster inside, hellbent on his art and giving his victims the perfect death.

Butterflies and Roses

We were on the home stretch. We took a look at Jhin's weapons, and aimed specifically at creating magical guns rather than strictly ballistic weapons. Hammering home his artistic aspirations, we looked at Jhin's rifle rifle, and added a fountain pen-like nib to its barrel. Finally, we applied a color pass to him, and decided to give him bright, lively shades that emphasized his peacocking. His main three shades - purple, white, and gold - directly reference Roman emperors, so while Jhin's very much equipped to kill, he's also dressed to impress.

Finally, and this isn't normally something we reference in these articles, but that original robot cowboy concept did actually make its way onto the Rift. It's his launch skin - High Noon Jhin High Noon Jhin - a nice little hat-tip to the original concept that created the Virtuoso.

Jhin Concept 19
Jhin Concept 20
Jhin Concept 03


Jhin[]

League Podcast - Episode 6 Jhin

This week, we sit down with Champion Designer August 'gypsylord' Browning - join us as we chat with him about his board game habit, champ design at Riot, and developing Jhin Jhin.

Media[]

Jhin's Theme
Related Music

Related Videos

Trivia[]

  • Jhin and Dark Cosmic Jhin Dark Cosmic Jhin are voiced by Quinton Flynn.
  • Jhin's Jhin's theme, PROJECT: HUNTERS PROJECT: HUNTERS theme and Dark Cosmic Jhin's Dark Cosmic Jhin's theme were composed by Edouard 'EdTheConqueror' Brenneisen.
    • Dark Cosmic Jhin's theme is actually named Cosmic Jhin.[1]
  • Jhin was the first champion released in 2016 and was the product of the need for a brand new Marksman.
    • His first designer was Jordan 'Wrekz' Anton but his initial concepts ended up becoming the stepping stones for Kindred Kindred. Jhin was in production for seven months (the usual timeframe is one year).
  • During development, he was called Deadeye.[5]
    • There were 6 candidates for his name at some point, one of which is Khada which would end up being part of his stage name.[6]
  • One of the story pitches for Jhin was similar to the canon but with Graves Graves and Twisted Fate Twisted Fate instead of Shen Shen and Zed Zed.[7]
  • The words Jhin and Deadeyed were first datamined from the game's website during his teasers.
    • The Virtuoso's name (albeit misspelled) was even spoken by a Rioter before his reveal.[8][9]
  • His writer Odin 'WAAARGHbobo' Austin Shafer "had to fight really hard to make Jhin an Ionian with a gun due to potential complications of incorrectly depicting Asian historical contexts"[10].
  • Jhin was named after his Visual Effects Artist, Jin Ho Yang.[11]
    • His production name and title were 'Jin, the Artisan Killer'.
  • At one point Whisper's Whisper's fourth shot was able to one-shot a Zed Zed at full health.
  • Dancing Grenade Dancing Grenade used to be able to be recast from an enemy's location but the burden of knowledge was deemed too high.
    • It also used to bounce an unlimited number of times.[12]
  • Deadly Flourish Deadly Flourish used to reveal marked champions for a few seconds even through fog of war.
    • Its tooltip implies Jhin uses Whisper's Whisper's barrel as a walking cane, which he actually does when not 'performing'.
  • Due to miscommunication during production, Jhin differs between artwork and in-game.
    • His eyes are drawn reddish-brown, but are blue in-game.
    • He has seemingly-prosthetic robotic limbs, even though he merely wears golden armor on top to handle Whisper's Whisper's recoil when fully assembled. when fully assembled.
  • Blake 'Squad5' Smith was the Quality Assurance Analyst on Jhin and implemented the camera zoom, facing lock, and execute damage to his ultimate. It was his work on Jhin that convinced upper management to allow him to design his first champion.[13][14]
  • One of the potential names for Curtain Call Curtain Call was "Make them beautiful".[15]
  • Jhin's obsession with the number four came about when they found his character defining gameplay, four shots from his passive passive, which then informed the amount of shots for Curtain Call Curtain Call. His obsession with his weapon was the starting point for naturally highlighting the number of bullets in his gun.[16][17] This is also reflected in many elements surrounding him.
    • His login theme is built around 4-note motifs / written with a 4/4 time signature (each bar is separated into 4 distinct beats)
    • His name and title themselves have four letters and four syllables respectively.
      • A fourth wall breaker is that on common computer keyboards (QWERTY, AZERTY, etc.) the keys that spell his name make the number 4 diagonally.
    • IIII is the archaic and uncommon alternative writing, using tally marks, for the Roman four IV, which uses subtractive notation.
  • Early sketches focused on a mysterious robot cowboy bounty hunting sniper. This would become his release skin High Noon Jhin High Noon Jhin.

References[]

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