
League of Legends Patch 26.03 is set to bring a wide-ranging set of changes as the first major balance update of the 2026 season following its opening competitive weeks.
Most major LoL Esports leagues will play the playoff stage on this patch, making its impact especially relevant for teams aiming at taking part in this year’s First Stand.
Patch 26.02 laid the foundation for the early-season meta, heavily shaping jungle priorities and vision control. With Patch 26.03, Riot is stepping in to refine those systems, introducing adjustments to Faelights and early vision while also addressing major outliers such as Mel, whose kit is being reworked to allow for more counterplay.
- How will League of Legends Patch 26.2 affect the esports scene?
- “Best-of-ones don’t satisfy me”: Los Ratones’ Rekkles on LEC Versus, his champion pool, and the support role.
- “These drafts are just boring to play”: Team Vitality’s Naak Nako on the LEC current meta
From an esports perspective, expectations are high for this patch to encourage greater draft diversity and strategic depth. With Fearless Draft now coming in best-of-three and best-of-five series, teams and players will be pushed to fully exploit champion pools, adapt across games, and find value in picks that were previously overshadowed by must-ban or must-pick options.
Fearless Drafts New Champions Picks
Patch 26.03 reshapes laning and jungle priorities without introducing radical new meta champions.
AD junglers might be back in favour, mid lane flex picks gain small benefits, and a few nerfs slightly reduce lane dominance, which may encourage more creative drafting in best-of-three and best-of-five Fearless Draft matches.
After Patch 26.02, AP farming junglers dominated drafts due to faster clear speeds and safer scaling. Meanwhile, most AD junglers struggled to keep up. In Patch 26.03, Riot Games is choosing to buff AD junglers rather than roll back the new systems, thus champions such as Xin Zhao, Vi, Trundle, and Hecarim re-enter the competitive pool
Beyond the jungle, several champions received adjustments that could subtly shift competitive priorities. Ahri’s reduced W cooldown and Jayce’s Q and R buffs favour aggressive early trades, giving players more trading power. Xin Zhao, Vi, Trundle, and Hecarim are the main AD junglers who could re-enter drafts, offering early game pressure and teamfight utility that AP-focused junglers often lack.
Meanwhile, situational picks like Bel’Veth or Heimerdinger may remain niche due to the small scale of their buffs. Still, teams looking for specific matchup advantages could pick them to catch opponents off guard.

Fog of War and Faelight Vision
Vision changes will likely play a major role in shaping pro play, especially for the bot lane.
Reduced Faelight coverage, longer early trinket cooldowns, and the removal of some Scryer’s Blooms all weaken early-game vision density. Supports will be pushed to finish their role quest faster, while junglers will have more room to pressure lanes through fog of war, especially in the early game — especially if paired with a fast AD jungler who can gank before level 6. This will most likely increase the value of lane priority and coordinated vision setups around neutral objectives.
Overall, Patch 26.03 represents a clear attempt by Riot to stabilise the early 2026 competitive meta. By reducing extremes introduced in Patch 26.02 and restoring counterplay across key systems, the patch should lead to more diverse drafts, cleaner early games, and fewer must-ban champions in upcoming esports matches.
The post How League of Legends Patch 26.3 will affect esports appeared first on Esports Insider.
