League of Legends coloring pages: 100+ free printable PDF designs covering Ahri the nine-tailed fox, general champion portraits, chibi and cute style versions, and real official skins. Print any page as a PDF or color it right in the browser, no account needed either way.
Riot Games built this entire game around a business idea that investors initially thought was reckless: give League of Legends away for free, and only charge players for optional cosmetic skins, never for anything that affects actual competitive power. Founders Brandon Beck and Marc Merrill launched the company from an apartment in 2006 and released the game in October 2009. It’s since grown from 40 champions at launch to well over 150 today, and it has become one of the most-watched competitive games in the world, with World Championship viewership that has genuinely rivaled major traditional sports broadcasts.
Ahri, who appears more times in this set than any other champion, has real cultural roots behind her design. Riot’s own writers built her around gumiho, the Korean nine-tailed fox spirit, timing her release to coincide with the game’s Korean server launch. According to the developers, they deliberately avoided blending gumiho with related fox spirits from Chinese and Japanese folklore, worried that mixing distinct traditions into one character would be disrespectful to each culture’s own version of the story.
Longtime players who already know these champions by name, kids drawn to the chibi and cute-style versions, and anyone curious about the real thought that goes into a character like Ahri will all find something worth coloring here.
Quick Answer
League of Legends coloring pages are a free set of 100+ printable PDFs and browser-based coloring sheets covering Ahri, general champion portraits, chibi and cute style versions, and real official skins.
Best for: children aged 5 and up, longtime League of Legends players, and fans of the chibi-style character art
Formats: printable PDF and online coloring
Popular pages: Ahri, Caitlyn, the chibi champion versions, and the Arcade and Dragonslayer skin pages
Creative uses: an Ahri mythology fact card, a skins-versus-power discussion card, a chibi gallery, and a real-history fact card about the game itself
What’s Inside League of Legends Coloring Pages
Ahri, the Nine-Tailed Fox
Ahri gets a whole group to herself, with multiple portraits, including pretty, lovely, and beautiful takes, plus a chibi version.
Her nine tails are the detail most worth the effort here. Since they’re rigged in the actual game to move independently while still reading as a single elegant group, giving each tail its own slight curve rather than a uniform fan shape captures something true about how she’s actually animated.
General Champion Portraits
This is the largest and most varied group, covering champions like Aatrox, Ashe, Amumu, Alistar, Akali, Annie, Caitlyn, Lee Sin, Lucian, Master Yi, Miss Fortune, Orianna, Pantheon, and many more in their standard designs.
Since these are real, established characters with specific canonical color schemes, checking a reference image before coloring is worth the extra minute, especially for champions readers may already know from actual gameplay.
Chibi and Cute Style Versions
A large group reimagines many of the same champions, plus a few extras like Baby Anivia, in a rounder, softer, chibi-inspired style.
These pages are far more forgiving than the realistic portraits, since the whole point of the chibi style is exaggeration rather than accuracy, making this the best entry point in the set for a younger or less experienced colorist.
Real Official Skins
The rest of the set covers actual alternate costumes from the game itself: Arcade Sona, Project Katarina, Dragonslayer Vayne, Pulsefire Caitlyn, Officer Caitlyn, Nightblade Irelia, and Mercenary Katarina, among them.
Each of these skins belongs to a specific real theme, retro arcade, cyberpunk, high fantasy, and so on, so pulling up a quick reference for the specific skin is genuinely worth it here, since these designs depart significantly from each champion’s default look.
What These Pages Do
There’s a real business story worth knowing behind why this game even has skins to color in the first place. Riot’s founders bet the whole company on giving the game away free and earning money purely through optional cosmetics, an idea publishers of the time considered close to reckless. That bet paid off, and it’s part of why League of Legends grew into one of the most-played competitive games on the planet.
Fine motor development benefits from real design variety across this particular set. The American Academy of Pediatrics identifies structured coloring as a genuine contributor to fine motor growth in children roughly between two and seven years old, and moving between a retro arcade skin, a cyberpunk skin, and a high-fantasy skin in the same sitting asks a child to shift textures and color logic far more than a set built around a single consistent art style would.
There’s something genuinely worth discussing in how carefully Ahri was built. Riot’s writers have said openly that they chose not to combine different Asian fox-spirit myths into one convenient version, specifically because doing so risked disrespecting each individual culture’s own story. Art Therapy Practitioners have pointed to this kind of care, treating a real cultural source with specificity rather than flattening it for convenience, as a good model for how children’s media can draw from real-world traditions responsibly.
This set also reflects something worth naming about the game’s own values. Riot drew a hard line between skins, which are purely about self-expression, and anything that affects actual in-game power, keeping the two completely separate on purpose. Coloring a skin however a child wants, with no wrong answer and no competitive stakes attached, mirrors that same idea: how something looks is allowed to matter entirely on its own terms, separate from how good anyone is at anything.
How to Color League of Legends Coloring Pages
Give Ahri’s nine tails individual curves rather than a uniform fan. In the actual game, each tail moves somewhat independently, and reflecting that on paper makes her read as more dynamic.
Check a champion’s established colors before coloring the realistic portraits. These are specific, recognizable characters, so matching their real color scheme matters more here than on a generic character page.
Let the chibi pages be more forgiving and experimental. Their whole style is built on exaggeration, so they’re a good place to take creative risks that wouldn’t suit the realistic portraits.
Match each skin page to its actual theme. Arcade, cyberpunk, and high-fantasy skins each call for a genuinely different palette, so a quick reference check keeps the result recognizable.
5 Creative Craft Ideas with League of Legends Coloring Pages
Ahri Mythology Fact Card
Color one of the Ahri portraits and add a short note about gumiho, the real Korean nine-tailed fox spirit she’s based on – ten minutes of coloring, plus a genuine piece of folklore.
Skins-Versus-Power Discussion Card
Color one of the real skin pages and talk through the idea that in this game, how a character looks is kept completely separate from how strong they are – ten minutes, built around a genuinely interesting design philosophy.
Chibi Gallery
Color four or five chibi champions together and display them as a colorful, low-stakes group gallery. Twenty minutes for a lighthearted set.
Real-History Fact Card
Color a general champion portrait and add a short note about Riot’s real free-to-play, cosmetics-only business model – ten minutes of coloring, plus a genuine piece of gaming business history.
Skin Theme Board
Color the Arcade, Project, and Dragonslayer skin pages together, each keeping its own distinct theme intact, and arrange them as a study in contrast. Twenty minutes for a genuinely varied display.
FAQ About League of Legends Coloring Pages
Are these League of Legends coloring pages free, and can I color them online?
Completely free, with nothing to sign up for. Print the PDF for the table, or open the online tool to color straight from the browser.
What age group are these League of Legends coloring pages best suited for?
The chibi and cute-style pages work well for ages 5. The realistic champion portraits and the detailed skin pages suit kids already familiar with the game.
Is Ahri based on a real myth?
Yes. She’s built around gumiho, the nine-tailed fox spirit from Korean mythology, and her release was timed to coincide with the launch of the game’s Korean servers.
Why doesn’t Ahri combine fox myths from different countries?
Riot’s own writers have said they deliberately avoided blending gumiho with related fox spirits from Chinese and Japanese folklore, out of concern that doing so would be disrespectful to each culture’s distinct version of the story.
Who created League of Legends, and when did it come out?
It was created by Riot Games, founded in 2006 by Brandon Beck and Marc Merrill, with the game itself releasing in October 2009.
Why is League of Legends free to play?
Riot built the entire business around giving the game away and earning money only through optional cosmetic skins, deliberately avoiding anything that would let players pay for a competitive advantage.
Are these pages official Riot Games products?
No. These are fan-style coloring pages inspired by the champions and are not official merchandise. They are not licensed by or affiliated with Riot Games or any other rights holder connected to League of Legends.
Can I use these pages for a gaming-themed party or classroom activity?
Yes. The chibi portraits work well as party favors for a gaming-themed event, and Ahri’s real mythological background makes a genuine, interesting addition to a classroom conversation on East Asian folklore.
Start Coloring
Download any page by clicking the design. No account, email, or payment is required. Pages print directly from the browser at full resolution or open in the online coloring tool for screen use. Share finished pages on Facebook or Pinterest using the share buttons at the top of each design page.
