Riftbound doesn’t have one single “starter deck” the way some TCGs do — Riot sells individual Champion Decks built around specific League characters, plus a multiplayer-focused box for groups. If you’re trying to figure out which $20-40 box to actually buy first, here’s the real breakdown.
Best for Solo Beginners: Vi Champion Deck

Vi runs one of the most direct strategies in the entire game — buff your units, slam them into the board, and win through straightforward combat math rather than a pile of conditional triggers you need to track. That directness is exactly what makes her the most commonly recommended pickup for someone who’s never played Riftbound before. The deck comes with the 56-card preconstructed deck, a booster pack to start customizing, a full-size playmat, and a deckbox — everything you need for your first games out of the box.
Riftbound Vi Champion Deck
Grab Riftbound Vi Champion Deck to start playing.
The Other Easy Pick: Jinx Champion Deck

If Vi’s sold out near you or you’d rather play the more chaotic, explosive version of “aggressive,” Jinx is the other beginner-friendly option — she wants to deal direct damage fast, before your opponent has time to stabilize. Less about board state, more about racing the clock. Same contents as the Vi deck: preconstructed 56 cards, booster pack, playmat, deckbox.
Riftbound Jinx Champion Deck
Grab Riftbound Jinx Champion Deck to start playing.
Playing With Friends? Get Proving Grounds Instead

Proving Grounds is the actual multiplayer starter set — four prebuilt decks (Annie, Garen, Lux, Master Yi) deliberately balanced against each other, plus custom acrylic champion figures for table presence. At $39.99, it’s a better value per-player than buying four separate Champion Decks if you’ve got a group learning together, and it supports 2-4 players with different play modes. The catch: it’s been in and out of stock since launch — there’s a new printing partner now and reprints have been shipping, but check availability before counting on it as your first purchase.
Riftbound Proving Grounds Starter Box
Grab Riftbound Proving Grounds Starter Box to start playing.
What About Buying Singles Instead?
If you’ve already got an idea of who you want to play and don’t mind building a deck yourself, buying singles can be cheaper than a precon deck — but it’s a much bigger ask for someone who hasn’t played a single game yet. Start with a Champion Deck, play it as-is for a few games, and once you know what you actually like about the game, that’s the right time to start picking up singles to upgrade it.
The Bottom Line
Solo and just want to start playing tonight: get the Vi Champion Deck. Playing with two or more friends who are all new: get Proving Grounds if you can find it in stock, since it’s the better value and comes pre-balanced for fair games. Either way, you’ll be ready for whatever comes out of Set 4: Vendetta once you’ve got the basics down.
Product details and pricing sourced from the official Riot Games Store as of late June 2026 and subject to change. As an Amazon Associate, NerdSnack earns from qualifying purchases.
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