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League of Legends Patch 26.10 Minion Aggro Rework Splits the Community


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League of Legends Patch 26.10 is making a small but surprisingly controversial change to one of the game’s oldest lane mechanics. With this update, attacking enemy minions will no longer put a champion into the opposing minions’ aggro priority list.

Riot says the goal is to stop minions from feeling like they randomly switch targets during lane, but the community is already split over whether this is a healthy quality-of-life update or another case of Riot sanding down skill expression.

What Is Changing With Minion Aggro In Patch 26.10?

In the official League of Legends Patch 26.10 notes, Riot explained that previously, when an enemy champion attacked an allied minion, that champion would enter the minions’ aggro priority list. In simple terms, if you hit a minion, nearby enemy minions could treat you as a higher-priority target and start changing focus.

That specific interaction is now being removed. After Patch 26.10, attacking minions by itself will no longer trigger that specific minion’s aggro behavior. Minions will still aggro if a champion attacks an enemy champion, so this does not remove the basic punishment for trading aggressively in lane. It only changes the way minions respond when champions are hitting minions rather than directly hitting enemy champions.

Riot Says The Goal Is To Make Minion Targeting Feel Less Random

Riot’s reasoning is pretty straightforward. According to the Riot, the team wants to prevent situations where minions feel like they suddenly change targets for no obvious reason. The line in the patch notes even jokes that minions “have a nexus to take down,” making it clear Riot wants them to stay more focused on their main job.

League already has a steep learning curve, and minion behavior is one of those systems that can feel invisible until someone explains it. If a new player is last-hitting or pushing a wave and minions randomly swap onto them, it can feel confusing. Removing this specific trigger should make the minion’s behavior a little more predictable.

Some Players Think This Hurts Skill Expression

The pushback mainly comes from players who see minion aggro manipulation as part of League’s deeper lane skill. At higher levels, minion targeting is not just background noise. Players can use it to influence wave states, disrupt freezes, protect teammates, or change how minions behave during small lane movements.

This mechanic allowed players to pull minions around more easily, bait them into awkward positions, or interfere with wave control. Players who have spent years learning those tiny lane details, removing one of those interactions can feel like Riot is simplifying the game in a way that weakens mastery.

On the other side, plenty of players believe this is exactly the kind of change League needs. Their argument is that not every hidden rule needs to exist forever just because veteran players understand it.

League of Legends is already one of the hardest competitive games for new players to learn. Between champions, items, runes, jungle paths, wave control, vision, matchups, and objective timings, there is already a lot to process. If minions occasionally change target because of a rule most players cannot clearly explain, then removing that rule could make the game feel cleaner without seriously damaging the core experience.

There is also a fair point that many players may not have consciously used this mechanic at all. Some community discussion around the change has already pointed out that a large portion of the player base probably would not have noticed it if Riot had not mentioned it in the patch notes.

This Does Not Mean Minions Ignore Champion Attacks Completely

One of the biggest misunderstandings around the change is that some players think minions will no longer react to champions at all. That is not the case.

If you attack an enemy champion near their minion wave, you should still draw minion aggro as usual. The Patch 26.10 change is specifically about champions attacking minions and being added to the minions’ aggro priority list because of that action. Community explanations have also pointed out this distinction, since the wording caused some confusion after the change started spreading on social media.

So, trading into your lane opponent will still carry risk. The real difference is that farming, shoving, and interacting with the minion wave should now create fewer unexpected aggro swaps.

The post League of Legends Patch 26.10 Minion Aggro Rework Splits the Community appeared first on GameRiv.

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