Riot Games celebrated 10 years of League of Legends today with a big blowout livestream. The big anniversary show featured several new announcements from Riot Games, including a new champion in League of Legends and multiple new video game announcements.

IGN's Top 25 Modern PC Games 26 IMAGES

New League of Legends Champion, Senna

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League of Legends Hero Shooter, Project A, Announced

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Riot's Fighting Game, Project L, Detailed (Sort of)

Mysterious LoL Social Game, Project F, Announced

Legends of Runeterra Is Riot's Free to Play Card Game

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Wild Rift Is League of Legends for Mobile and Consoles

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Teamfight Tactics is Coming to Mobile

League of Legends Animated Series ‘Arcane’ Announced

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League of Legends Esports Manager. Yes, It’s a Real Thing

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League of Legends Origins Is a Feature-length Documentary Series About LoL

Some of the announcements Riot Games made today were expected, like Riot’s long-rumored fighting game. Other projects were newly announced today. Here’s everything Riot Games announced during today’s 10th-anniversary livestream. League of Legends will have a new champion for the Rift next month. Fans rightfully guessed online that the new champion would be Senna, and they are correct. Senna was originally trapped in Thresh’s lantern as revealed in Lucian’s story, but she’s ready to join the fray.Senna will have a “marksman-like playstyle” and she is the newest support character to join Riot’s massive League of Legends roster. Senna will be available in Public Beta on October 29 and will be officially live on November 10.Riot Games also announced big changes coming to the Rift. On October 22 in the beta servers, Riot will introduce Rise of the Elements, which are gameplay changes focused around the Elemental Drakes. The changes go live on November 20.Riot is also bringing back Ultra Rapid Fire, with full champion select, as a limited-time game mode. If you have a Riot account before October 15, 6 pm PT, you’ll receive 10 days of in-game gift every day until the official 10th anniversary on October 27.Riot Games announced Project A, a competitive, character-based tactical shooter for PC . The game is set on a near-future Earth and includes a roster of characters, each with unique abilities. Riot is promising more information sometime in 2020.Project L is Riot’s long-rumored fighting game set in the League of Legends universe. Riot says Project L is in early development, despite being the longest-rumored project in Riot’s lineup. Riot officially announced the fighting game at this year’s EVO tournament, but the company says there’s no further information at this time.Riot also announced the mysterious Project F. Like the other new announcements Riot made today, there’s only a codename available for Project F. But Riot is promising a new social experience where players can explore the world of Runeterra with friends. Is this a mobile game? a top-down RPG? Who knows!Legends of Runeterra (or LoR) will include iconic champions from Riot’s popular MOBA as well as new characters and allies from the same universe. Riot says there will be “multiple options” to acquire cards, including both free-to-play and direct purchase options using either earned or paid currency.Riot Games officially announced a mobile and console version of League of Legends subtitled Wild Rift. The 5v5 MOBA will feature similar gameplay as League of Legends on PC but adapted for mobile and console platforms. Wild Rift includes a new twin-stick control scheme (versus PC’s click-based movement) and the gameplay has been overhauled for 15-18-minute matches.Riot says Wild Rift is not a port of the PC version of LoL, but rather a new game built “from scratch.” Though we’ll have to wait until we get some hands-on to see how the two versions compare. Riot’s autobattler (better known as Auto Chess, but that’s a specific game), Teamfight Tactics, is coming to mobile I Q1 2020. Pre-registration will open on October 15 on the Google Play Store.The autobattler genre took the MOBA community by storm after the Auto Chess mod for Dota 2 was released in January this year. Riot’s take on the genre is currently only available on PC but will soon be coming to mobile devices.Riot has faith in the genre as it announced that there will be a new set of champions and abilities releasing every three to four months for both PC and mobile. The next set will be released first on PC and will be based on the Rise of the Elements.Riot Games also announced ‘Arcane’ a League of Legends animated series developed and produced by Riot Games. The company says it’s set in the utopian Piltover and the underground of Zaun and will star “two iconic League champions.”Riot Games has been producing animated cinematics and music videos for years, so the company certainly has the animation chops to produce a full animated series. How that will look and where it will premiere is not yet revealed, but it will be released in 2020.If you’ve played a sports management sim in recent years, you’ll know that they’re no joke. Riot Games seems to know this as well as the company announced League of Legends Esports Manager , a team management game centered around LoL esports.Players will build world-class League of Legends esports teams by signing players to their teams. LoL Esports Managers will be an ongoing game, and Riot announced a revenue-sharing plan with featured pro teams, which seems to suggest real players and their data will be used for the Esports Management sim.Esports Manager will launch in the League of Legends Pro League region next year and will expand to other regional leagues later on.Not content with just having a new animated series, Riot announced League of Legends Origins, a documentary film by Academy Award-nominated documentarian Leslie Iwerks. The film will focus on the rise of League of Legends as a game and track the growth of its community. The film is available right now on Netflix and other video streaming platforms.It’s safe to say that after 10-years of building League of Legends, Riot Games is ready to expand beyond its MOBA game. While Riot is firmly staying within the fictional League of Legends universe it created, the studio is finally venturing into new genres and spaces. With excursions into card games, shooters, fighting games, and more, the future for Riot Games is looking to be a big departure from the Riot we’ve known for the past 10 years.

Matt Kim is a reporter for IGN. You can reach him on Twitter