If you’re building out a Noxus aggro line in Riftbound: League of Legends TCG, Trifarian Gloryseeker is the kind of two-drop you don’t skip.
It fits squarely into that explosive early-game package that Noxus thrives on—pushing tempo, snowballing buffs, and making your opponent burn resources just to keep up.
This is not a flashy card, but it plays like one when it lands on curve.
Gameplay / Cool Mechanics
Trifarian Gloryseeker is a 2-cost, 2/2 unit with Legion—“When you play me, buff me. (If I don’t have a buff, I get a +1/+0 buff. Get the effect if you’ve played another card this turn.)”
The key word here is buff. Play this on turn two after something else—like a cheap spell, 1-drop, or token generator—and she enters as a 3/2. That’s solid pressure in any format.
But the real play is turn four or five, chaining this behind another card to create efficient board flooding.
She doesn’t need to survive multiple turns—she just needs to hit once, or bait a trade that puts your opponent off-curve. The Legion mechanic rewards sequencing, and Trifarian Gloryseeker rewards decks that commit to playing two or more cards a turn.
That makes her great for low-curve swarm strategies and tempo-mid hybrids. Even without the buff, you’re still dropping a 2/2 for 2—not ideal, but passable. With it? You’re punching above curve with minimal setup.
Visuals
Visually, Trifarian Gloryseeker is all focus and steel. The art captures her in a moment of calm intensity, sharpening her blade with battlefield eyes and braids pulled back.
She’s seated, but not relaxed—this is prep. Her gaze is forward, her grip is firm, and the muted backdrop of snow-covered rock and slate-grey skies reminds you this is a world where strength is earned, not given.
It’s not an action piece. It’s a prelude. And that actually fits the gameplay—this unit powers up as she enters, not after.
The art gives you a beat before the strike lands.
Pull Rate & Value Speculation
Trifarian Gloryseeker is card 217/298 in the OGN set. Art by Six More Vodka.
There’s no official rarity yet, but if Legion becomes a defining mechanic for Noxus swarm, this could be a format-relevant common or uncommon.
No alt art or overnumbered variant has been shown yet, but this kind of card could get a foil treatment that elevates it beyond its curve-cost utility.
If a meta forms around early buffs or tight sequencing, Trifarian Gloryseeker becomes a staple—not because she wins games alone, but because she opens the door for the rest of your hand to do it.
Trifarian Gloryseeker is the kind of card that rewards good players quietly. Sequence well, and she hits like a train.
Misplay her, and you’re holding a mediocre 2-drop. In the right hands, she’s a tempo enabler with just enough bite to matter.
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