Catalyst of Aeons is shaping up to be one of the cleaner control utility spells revealed so far in Riftbound: League of Legends TCG.
At four mana, it’s a mid-game hinge play—either accelerating your rune engine or giving you a slight dig to stabilize when you’re short. It’s not flashy, but it is efficient.
And in a game that leans heavily on rune synergies, that matters.
Gameplay / Cool Mechanics
Let’s get right to it. Catalyst of Aeons exhausts two runes. If it can’t do that—if there aren’t two active or available—it draws you a card instead.
It’s a binary effect that keeps you safe on either side of the interaction.
This flexibility makes Catalyst of Aeons a tech piece for slower decks that want guaranteed value.
You either ramp your rune count directly (synergizing with late-game payoffs), or you cycle into your next answer. There’s zero dead draw risk here.
It also plays well with rune-chaining cards, the kind that give buffs or discounts based on total runes exhausted this game.
In that sense, Catalyst of Aeons functions like a delayed combo accelerant—you don’t win with it, but you absolutely win because of it.
The only caveat? Four mana is not cheap. If you’re behind on board, this won’t stabilize you unless your next card does.
So it slots best into decks that already plan around rune stacking or tutoring.
Visuals
The art for Catalyst of Aeons leans into minimalism—but not softness. A massive, jagged crystal floats in stasis, glowing with ancient blue runes.
The background radiates cold light, giving it the feeling of something sealed, untouched for centuries, yet humming with latent energy.
No motion, no figures, no action. Just presence. It’s a visual metaphor for everything the card does—channeling centuries of dormant power in a quiet moment that could change the course of the match.
Pull Rate & Value Speculation
Catalyst of Aeons is card 138/298 in the OGN set. No rarity stamp is visible yet, but given its utility potential, expect this to land at uncommon or rare.
A foil version with pulsing animation on the runes feels inevitable.
No alternate or overnumbered variant confirmed at time of writing, but it’s a strong candidate for a special print—especially if rune decks become meta.
As a collector card, this won’t be top-tier on visuals alone. But if control or rune-combo decks hit competitive tiers, Catalyst of Aeons could become a quietly expensive staple.
Catalyst of Aeons won’t blow up highlight reels, but it will quietly win games behind the curtain. That’s the kind of card you respect—not because it flexes, but because it enables.