Sion, the Undead Juggernaut, revealed[]
To take a life is a simple enough thing, yet no-one perfected it quite like
. He led army after army through the jaws of death, charging through the massed ranks of Noxus' enemies time and time again until his burgeoning city-state stood above all nations. But even the mighty fall, and though Sion's death shocked the people of Noxus, it ultimately also brought them safety from Demacia's now leaderless forces.But Sion's story did not end with his death. Seeking to exploit the Noxians' hero worship, Noxus' Grand General took the drastic step of attempting to return their greatest champion from death. But if taking a life is a simple enough thing, restoring life is anything but. Sion rose again, but as something different. Without his intelligence and martial prowess, he was reduced to a simple killing machine, destroying anything - friend or foe - that stood in his way. Unable to control their weapon, the Noxians locked their former champion away. Centuries passed before another
returned to Sion's tomb determined to fully resurrect the great champion once again.Death is no longer an obstacle for Sion - every time he falls, his commanders simply piece him back together and revive the once great man. But within his sundered body lies a soul desperately searching for the sense of self he once had, and when that sense is most awakened in times of war, then war shall be had.[1]
- Glory in Death
- Decimating Smash
- Soul Furnace
- Passive: Sion earns bonus max health every time he kills a unit.
- Active: Sion creates a bloody shield around him. If the shield stays intact for its duration, it explodes, dealing magic damage to all nearby enemies. Sion can also detonate the shield early by the ability.
- Roar of the Slayer
- Unstoppable Onslaught
- Gameplay
Sion's a stubborn and tanky behemoth capable in both the solo lanes and jungle of Summoner's Rift. With slow and telegraphed attacks, Sion thrives when he chains his assault together, and revels in the thick of battle.
- Laning
Sion's early game power lies in the brute strength and implied threat of his abilities. Smart positioning allows Sion to aim
- which deals plenty of damage along with a hefty knock-up when fully charged - over both his and the enemy's minion frontline, forcing Sion's opponent to choose between securing valuable last hits and staying healthy in lane. But as he levels up, Sion's able to start asserting his dominance with increasing confidence. Using to slow his rival and shred their armor, Sion can line up and reliably deliver more meaningful damage with . Meanwhile, gives him a shield strong enough to negate a meaningful chunk of the enemy's retaliation should his opponent go toe-to-stump with Noxus' faded glory, or offers enough defense to keep Sion alive as he retreats.Even if the enemy laner decides to shove lane and force Sion to last-hit minions under his tower, he still has a couple of tricks to help him earn the gold he needs to itemize. Standing outside his turret's range, Sion can take advantage of
shield to tank minion damage as he winds up , which is broad enough to pummel an entire minion wave. And with the enemy laner far from their tower, Sion's perfectly positioned to call on his jungler and take a kill. He's a beast during friendly ganks thanks to and , which provide enough crowd control to let his ally deal their damage. Things are a little less favorable during enemy ganks, however: with slow base speed and no dashes, Sion's an extremely immobile champion who relies on his , , and health to keep him alive as he trudges back to his tower.That immobility disappears - albeit briefly - once Sion hits level six.
is a monstrous ability, capable of charging Sion halfway across Summoner's Rift. It has numerous uses, including chasing down fleeing enemies and escaping otherwise deadly encounters. Most enticing, though, is the roam potential Sion gains with his . Though he's somewhat cumbersome to aim as he charges, there are few sights more awesome than a full-speed Sion barreling directly toward an unsuspecting suspect a full lane away.- Jungle
With his sturdy frame and area of effect abilities, Sion's also well-placed to make his presence felt in the jungle. All of his basic abilities give him tremendous clear speed, and while he can attempt ganks before he unlocks his
, he needs to either approach his overextended victim from the direction of their own turret, or work with crowd control-centric allies to deal his full damage salvo. Once he earns access to though, things change significantly. The ability's extreme range and tricky aim make Sion most effective when he ganks up the lane. By starting his charge well behind the action, Sion's able to barrel into the thick of the fight with relative reliability, knocking his target into the air before butchering them with and .- Teamfights
While Sion's a terrifying enough prospect in the early game, he truly comes into his own once teams group and fight together. He thrives in the heart of battle, triggering
before charging in with to initiate the bloodshed. Once in the enemy's midst, he works best aiming his abilities to strike as many targets as possible, disrupting his opponents with both the crowd control and sheer damage output of his attacks. Sion's presence demands attention, but even after the enemy team finally cuts the great man down, their work's not done. provides Sion with a chance to enact his revenge after falling, giving him huge attack damage and attack speed and making the undead juggernaut a colossal threat even beyond the grave.- Synergy
Works well with: | Struggles against: |
---|---|
Ashe - the Frost Archer , and all slow Sion's enemies, allowing him to close distance and set up his punishing but slow attacks. |
Lucian - the Purifier The movement speed boosts from and dashes from make Lucian a nimble and slippery target for Sion's sluggish attacks. Death comes quickly to Sion's enemies, but the Undead Juggernaut has to get his hands on his victim first. |
Nautilus - the Titan of the Depths Sion and Nautilus combined form an unrelenting crowd control nightmare for the enemy team. Together, they have more than enough , and to disrupt multiple targets while their damage dealers take their toll. |
Azir - the Emperor of the Sands Azir isn't just nimble enough to away from Sion - he also has plenty of zone control and crowd control of his own to hinder Sion's already lumbering gait. And while is an immense engagement tool, blocks Sion's charge and nullifies his immediate engagement potential. |
Zilean - the Chronokeeper Though Sion's a somewhat lumbering giant, Zilean's gives him all the movement speed he needs to chase down targets and power into the enemy team. Zilean can also plant a on Sion to complement his staggering area of effect damage. |
Swain - the Noxian Grand General Nevermove and give Swain the tools he needs to keep Sion at bay, and while other mages meet a quick demise at Sion's axe, Swain has the inherent tankiness - particularly when he activates Ravenous Flock - to withstand his damage output. |
Dev Blog: Reimagining Sion[]
By Conor 'fizzNchips' Sheehy[2]
Sooooo...
. We first toyed with the notion of updating him years ago - now that it's here, we figured we'd talk about what was wrong with old Sion, and how we created the juggernaut that's currently crushing skulls on PBE.
- Out with the old...
Old Sion had countless problems: he was a mage with an axe, he'd end up with two redundant abilities regardless of how he built, his model had aged horribly, and he had some pretty... interesting voiceover. Worst of all, none of these 'qualities' actually worked together, so while modern champion designs try to create a cohesive identity through their gameplay, story and art, Sion was all over the place. After deliberating as a full group, we - the Champion Update team - decided to undertake our grandest project yet, updating Sion's art, narrative and gameplay. We basically buried old Sion, ordered the orbital strike, then picked through the rubble to find the diamonds we could carry through in his update.
But where did we start with making new Sion? First, we needed to identify the key pillars that we'd use to mechanically, artistically and narratively define him. This is a process we go through with all new and updated champs; here's what we came up with:
- Undead
- Unstoppable Juggernaut
- Faded Glory of Noxus
Essentially, we wanted Sion to be an unrelenting war machine, a ragged Noxian titan who'd be sewn back together after battle and pointed in the rough direction of the enemy army when they next rolled up. This sense would have to seep into every aspect of Sion's identity to make him a cohesive champion. Here's what that meant to some of the key guys behind Sion's update.
- Gameplay
- Gameplay design by Riot Scruffy
More than anything, old Sion was just confused with no clear sense of identity. Some of his abilities worked with attack damage, some with ability power, and he sort of functioned as a tank. Thing is, no matter how you built him, you'd end up actively forgoing the effective use of a number of your abilities and stats. On top of that, there were almost no interesting interactions in his kit: Sion had a fixed play pattern with zero skillshots, and abilities that gave players really few opportunities to express their skills or mastery. Basically, when we got together to start working on Sion, we knew we'd pretty much start from scratch with his design because almost none of it - aside from his
and health gain - was compelling or consistent.So, we knew he'd be a hulking and unstoppable undead warrior, but what does that mean from a design perspective? First off, he'd be slow but tough, a walking cadaver that could take a bunch of punishment before going down. This gave us a basic design concept: new Sion would be tanky and slow with powerful but telegraphed attacks and abilities. This meant that enemies would be able to work around the areas that Sion was about to attack, but also meant that Sion could use that same knowledge to make cerebral plays.
, for instance, has a huge and very visible wind up that shows Sion's enemies exactly where he's about to swing his axe. This alone gives Sion immense zone control, but he can also swing his axe early, meaning his enemy has to work around the window of assault that he's created and anticipate exactly when Sion's going to attack. , the only of Sion's active abilities to survive the update, has a similar psychological element: activating the shield tells your opponent you're ready to fight, but they still don't know when or even if you're planning on detonating it. How you use the ability, and how you use the threat of the ability's damage, is something that you and your opponent get to play around. What's more, with his huge area of effect abilities, Sion absolutely thrives in the heart of a fight, where he can hurt multiple targets and zone enemy assassins away from his team's squishies.Next we wanted to emphasize Sion as an unstoppable juggernaut. We used the idea as a gameplay hook in his
, giving him the chance to turn berserk and take down enemies as he dies, just as he does in his updated lore. We used the same theme to define his , , which has huge range and turns the otherwise lumbering zombie man into a terrifying man missile. But again, there are trade-offs: Sion's hard to steer and has to stick to a largely straight line, so it's down to Sion players to pick clever locations and figure out optimal timing to ensure that when he does arrive, he charges into an unsuspecting and trapped enemy team. Seeing Sion into the enemy after in behind them during our internal tests was a terrifying sight, and we can't wait to see how you guys make the most of his .
- Narrative
- Narrative design by Riot Entropy
Whenever we update a champion we begin by taking everything we know about them and paring down all that information until we identify the essential elements, the immutable traits that are so core to the champion that changing them might very well turn them into an entirely different character. It might have been easy to write off old Sion entirely and start from scratch, but at the end of the day the core concept of 'hulking undead warrior' has always been a solid foundation. The problem was a lot of the elements we hung on that skeleton weren't complimentary to that core identity. We took Sion down the humorous route, made him bright and colorful, and gave him Arnold Schwarzenegger inspired voice-over, all of which ultimately undermined what was cool about the core concept. This time around we decided to play the concept straight and holistically construct a truly fearsome warrior through identity, art and gameplay.
At this point we knew we were making Sion a giant undead killing-machine, but we still needed to explore what makes Sion unique. Axe-wielding Noxian badass was a space
was already doing a good job filling, and with firmly in the reanimated horror arena there was a need to give Sion some space to thrive. Rather than look at these similarities as redundancies, we used them as inspiration. We started asking big questions: If Noxus can raise the dead, why wouldn't they have thousands of undead in their ranks? Why did they reanimate through entirely different means than Sion? Who was Sion in life? Why did Noxus want to bring him back to life? How would feel about Sion, about undeath? How old is Sion, really? How did Sion's resurrection affect him?What we landed on in the end was a great warrior of Noxus' past, the first Hand of Noxus who met his end dealing a crippling blow to his nation's greatest enemy. We made Sion a man who was granted immortality for his deeds, but decided that gift should be a curse rather than a blessing. We found something noble and tragic in the transformation robbing him of what made him great: his identity. Sion is the echo of his former self driven by an instinctual need to feast on life, but we didn't want him to just be a bloodthirsty monster. We still wanted Sion to be a character capable of supporting a compelling story in the present as well as the past, so we instilled a small glimmer of hope in his condition. In reliving the bloodshed of his former life, Sion begins to remember who he is and realize what he's become, if only for a short time. Can he hang onto himself long enough to break free of the cyclic remembrance and loss he's bound to? Time will tell.
All of this backstory would ring a bit hollow if the champ you played in game didn't really reflect the uniqueness of Sion's condition, so we tried something experimental with Sion's voice over. When Sion fights with champions or dives into the enemy team he begins to feel more alive and his voiceover set changes to reflect that he's more the warrior he used to be: exhilarated, brutal and at home in war. As Sion spends time away from the fray, he begins to slip back into the haze of his undeath where his thoughts are clouded and his need is singular.
- Art
- Art design by HUGEnFAST
By 2014's standards, old Sion looked like crap. There, I said it. He was one of the League's oldest, and like most other launch champs, had not aged well at all. But that's not exactly a revelation. In fact, we'd been avoiding eye contact with Sion's old model for a while, but - knowing the narrative and gameplay guys were equally peeved by him - had to wait for the right time to really pull him apart and figure out what needed to be tossed, and what could be kept. Once we all finally got together, we realized that a decent number of old Sion's visual hooks - specifically his axe, size, and undead nature - were worth keeping. Thing is, they were poorly executed on, which gave up as a pretty simple goal: to really execute better this time around, and tie new Sion visually to his Noxian home.
So taking his key pillars into account, how did we set about updating Sion? Well, first off we wanted to identify and emphasize the role of magic in the big guy's resurrection. His obvious source of power might be his
, but when resurrected him, he also imbued him with a form of magic. So while Sion's now something of a hollow corpse, his body's been filled with the red most notable on his stomach - the same energy that forms shield. Next we wanted to address Sion's axe and armor, specifically in relation to , the man who's taken on Sion's role of general in contemporary Noxus.There are some pretty clear similarities, including the general shapes and colors (Noxus is... very black and red) but we also wanted to hint at some of the military changes that had occurred since Sion's initial death. Essentially, Sion's more brutal, whereas
is a little more refined. Sion's armor is bolder and stronger, and he uses his axe more as a club than a slicing weapon. Hundreds of years have refined Noxian warfare, so while is still definitely brutal, he's more precise - someone who'll your jugular and let you to death. This carries through in his appearance: is a relatively refined weapon, and his armor hasn't got the same sheer bulk or weight as Sion's.Next we wanted to showcase Sion's undead characteristics. We started looking at his skin hue, and ultimately decided to use an ashen, pale tone that would contrast well with the rich reds and blacks of his armor. Speaking of armor, you might notice a relative lack of it compared to other Noxians. That's deliberate: we found that as we added armor pieces, he lost the undead feel we wanted. Also, look close and you'll see that the armor he has is actually bolted on. Sion's not the kind of guy who changes from his outdoor cardigan to his indoor cardigan after a fight - he's a living war machine who, when he's not fighting, is locked away so he can't rampage his way through his own people. Another change you'll notice is his hair, or lack of!
After trying a few different styles out, we discovered that any hair detracted from the undead feel of the guy. At the same time, we really liked this top-knot look, so we started tinkering around with other non-hair things we could add in to give Sion something unique and break up an otherwise fairly smooth silhouette. The dagger idea was perfect - unique and brutal - and we quickly incorporated it into his resurrection ritual. Speaking of brutality, check out Sion's : it's Jarvan I's crown!
This relatively small touch was just one of the ways we ended up tying Sion's story to his model, and really emphasized how utterly brutal this guy is - he literally
at his enemies using the crown of the Demacian king he killed.Trivia[]
- Sion is voiced by J.S. Gilbert, who also voices , , , , and .
- Sion's dance references Moskau by Dschinghis Khan.
- A side-by-side comparison can be seen here.
- In the Founding Interns of League of Legends YouTube video, concept art for Sion was shown to depict him with blue skin, a red beard and an overall wildly different design.
- Sion's inception is heavily influenced by Arnold Schwarzenegger.
- Sion was one of the first six champions designed (along with [3][4] , , , , and ).
- Sion once had a double sided axe; but the back of it mysteriously disappeared in a patch. Unable to find it, Riot opted to remove the back of the axe from his splash art.[5]
- Sion is voiced by Scott McNeil in both League of Legends and Legends of Runeterra.
- , pre-V7.9 , , 4Veigar in Legends of Runeterraand .
- Sion's Japanese voice actor is Kenji Nomura, whom also voiced Japanese .[6]
- Sion's dance references Chris Farley's audition for the Chippendales.
- A side-by-side comparison can be seen here.
Media[]
Sion's Theme |
- Related Music
Mecha Zero Sion Theme |
- Related Videos
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