If you want one place to check who is playing for who in China, this is it. Our goal with this LPL Roster hub is simple: give you the full league in one scroll, with every team’s expected starting five listed by role, plus a quick read on what the lineup suggests heading into Spring 2026.
Even when an LPL Roster looks locked in on paper, the LPL can move fast once matches begin. One bad week, a meta shift, or a role that is not clicking can trigger swaps and role experiments. That is exactly why we are here to help you.
Anyone’s Legend (AL)
This LPL Roster is built around experience and stability. AL looks like a team that wants to win through structure, controlled mid game setups, and clean objective fights rather than constant coin-flip skirmishes.
- Top: Flandre
- Jungle: Tarzan
- Mid: Shanks
- ADC: Hope
- Support: Kael
Bilibili Gaming
BLG’s LPL Roster screams win-now. With strong lanes and a bot side that can take over games, the key will be how quickly the team hits rhythm in mid game decisions and objective setups.
- Top: Bin
- Jungle: Xun
- Mid: Knight
- ADC: Viper
- Support: ON
EDward Gaming
EDG looks like a roster built for stability first. If their lanes stay consistent and they avoid messy mid game fights, they can be a tough team to beat in best-of-threes.
- Top: Zdz
- Jungle: Xiaohao
- Mid: Angel
- ADC: Leave
- Support: Parukia
Invictus Gaming
IG mixes legendary names with obvious question marks, which usually makes for chaos, and great viewing. The spine of this roster is strong, but top and bot will decide whether IG is a contender or a rollercoaster.
- Top: Soboro
- Jungle: Wei
- Mid: Rookie
- ADC: Photic
- Support: Jwei / Meiko
JD Gaming
JDG feels like a fresh build with a clear bot lane carry identity. If mid-jungle coordination clicks early, this team can rise quickly because the win condition is easy to understand.
- Top: Xiaoxu
- Jungle: JunJia
- Mid: HongQ
- ADC: GALA
- Support: Vampire
JunJia and HongQ arrive on the big stage after a strong run with CFO in the LCP. Now the real test begins, it will be fascinating to see how quickly they adapt and whether they can carry that form into the LPL.
LGD Gaming
LGD’s direction looks straightforward: create more reliable mid game structure and become harder to punish. For teams in this tier, the first big step is learning how to lose less, then learning how to win clean.
- Top: sasi
- Jungle: Heng
- Mid: Tangyuan
- ADC: Shaoye
- Support: ycx
LNG Esports
LNG is one of the biggest reset projects. When an LPL Roster changes this much, the early season is usually about fundamentals, simple drafts, clear first objectives, and fewer unforced errors.
- Top: sheer
- Jungle: Croco
- Mid: BullDoG
- ADC: 1xn
- Support: MISSING
Ninjas in Pyjamas
NiP looks like a team with upset potential. The pieces suggest aggression and confidence, but the challenge will be consistency, especially when series slow down and macro decisions matter more than mechanics.
- Top: HOYA
- Jungle: Guwon
- Mid: Care
- ADC: Assum
- Support: Zhuo
Oh My God
OMG’s roster reads like a team trying to win through cohesion and steady improvements rather than star power. If their early game stays stable, they can turn games into controlled teamfight setups.
- Top: Hery
- Jungle: re0
- Mid: Haichao
- ADC: Starry
- Support: Moham
Team WE
WE has a clean, simple structure. If the bot lane settles quickly and the team keeps its mid game calm, this roster can grind out a lot of regular season wins.
- Top: Cube
- Jungle: Monki
- Mid: Karis
- ADC: About
- Support: Yaoyao
Top Esports
TES is always a headline, and this LPL Roster has built-in drama because of role pressure and expectations. If their early game planning is sharp, they can overwhelm teams fast. If not, they can still win series through sheer carry threat.
- Top: 369
- Jungle: naiyou
- Mid: Creme
- ADC: JackeyLove / JiaQi
- Support: Hang
TT Gaming
TT is clearly in development mode. The goal is to find a real core, build confidence, and make the team harder to read week to week as players gain experience.
- Top: Keshi
- Jungle: Junhao
- Mid: Heru
- ADC: Ryan3
- Support: Feather
Ultra Prime
Ultra Prime looks like a roster aiming for growth without losing its identity. If jungle timing and mid game calls improve, UP can move from “scrappy” to “consistent,” which is usually the path toward playoffs.
- Top: Liangchen
- Jungle: luoyiyu
- Mid: Saber
- ADC: Baiye
- Support: Xiaoxia
Weibo Gaming
WBG’s LPL Roster is built to win now. With huge carry potential and recognizable names, the question is chemistry: if they coordinate early objectives and play mid game with discipline, they can run through teams. If not, they still have enough talent to win messy games.
- Top: Zika
- Jungle: Jiejie
- Mid: Xiaohu
- ADC: Elk
- Support: Erha
LPL roster FAQ
What does “LPL Roster” mean?
An LPL Roster in this format means the expected starting five listed by role. Some teams have additional players and staff, but the five names are the quickest way to understand who the team is built around.
Can an LPL team change its starting lineup during the split?
Yes. A roster can rotate based on form, champion pools, meta changes, or specific matchup plans in best-of-threes.
Why do some teams show two players for one role?
That usually means the team is still deciding who starts, or they plan to rotate. It is most common at ADC or mid early in a split.
What should I look for to tell if a roster move is working?
Look at mid-jungle coordination, support roams, and objective setups. If those improve, the change is usually paying off even before the wins stack up.
Where can I follow the latest LCK Roster updates?
Keep this page bookmarked. Whenever there is a meaningful change to an LPL Roster, we will update the lineup here so you always have a clean, current reference.
If you want to follow the LPL, you can find more information about the league right here. We collect our LPL coverage in one place, so you can quickly check the latest roster changes, read the biggest storylines, and stay updated on what is happening in the league.


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