About CSLOL Manager

The story behind one of League of Legends’ most popular modding tools – and the independent resource we built around it.

CSLOL Manager changed how League of Legends players interact with custom skins. Before this tool existed, installing cosmetic mods required manual file replacement, risked breaking game updates, and confused anyone who wasn’t already deep into the modding scene. CSLOL Manager made the entire process straightforward: import a mod file, check a box, hit run.

This page covers the history of the tool, the people who built it, and what cslolmanager.com is all about.

The Story of CSLOL Manager

From a small community project to the go-to mod manager for League players worldwide.

Early Origins

CustomSkin for LoL

The project started as “CustomSkin for LoL” (you can still see that name in older builds). Its original purpose was simple: let players swap default skin files with custom ones without manually digging through League’s game directory. The first versions were bare-bones command-line tools that required some technical know-how.

The Fantome Era

A Standardized Mod Format

A major turning point was the adoption of the .fantome mod format. Instead of loose files that broke with every patch, mods could be packaged into single distributable files. CSLOL Manager became the primary tool for importing and managing these packages, and the format became the community standard on sites like Runeforge.

Qt GUI Rewrite

A Proper Desktop Application

The tool was rebuilt with C++ and Qt (QML for the interface), giving it a real desktop application feel. Profile management, search/filter, system tray integration, and automatic update checks all came during this period. The dark-themed UI with its magenta checkboxes and teal action buttons became immediately recognizable in the community.

macOS Support

Beyond Windows

While League on Mac has always been a smaller player base, CSLOL Manager added native builds for both Intel and Apple Silicon Macs. The tool pattern-scans the game executable and injects platform-appropriate shellcode, making it one of the few League modding tools with genuine cross-platform support.

2026 and Beyond

Transition to LTK Manager

The LeagueToolkit team shifted active development to LTK Manager, the next-generation successor. CSLOL Manager entered maintenance mode but remains widely used. With over 40 releases on GitHub, it has a stable and battle-tested codebase that many players still prefer.

What CSLOL Manager Does

A mod manager that handles importing, organizing, and applying custom skins to League of Legends.

Mod Import

Drop in .fantome or .zip mod files and CSLOL Manager handles the rest. No manual file copying, no directory hunting.

Profile System

Create separate profiles for different mod sets. Keep a competitive loadout, an anime skin collection, and a themed setup all organized independently.

Client-Side Only

Every modification stays on your machine. Other players see default Riot skins. The tool intercepts file requests at runtime without touching the original game files.

Mod Creation

Build your own mods from RAW folders or pack/unpack WAD files. Useful for skin creators who want to distribute their work in the standard format.

The Team Behind It

CSLOL Manager is built and maintained by the LeagueToolkit community.

LeagueToolkit

LeagueToolkit is an open-source community of developers who build tools for the League of Legends modding ecosystem. Key contributors include Moonshadow and Morilli, who have driven the project’s development over the years.

The project lives on GitHub under the LeagueToolkit organization, licensed under GPL-3.0. Anyone can inspect the source code, contribute fixes, or fork the project for their own needs. This transparency is a big part of why the League modding community trusts it.

The team also develops LTK Manager (the successor project), along with various libraries and tools used across the broader League modding scene.

40+ Releases
GPL-3.0 License
C++ / Qt Built With

Why Players Use It

CSLOL Manager has built a loyal following across Reddit, Discord, and the League modding community.

On r/LoLcustom and various League modding Discords, CSLOL Manager is consistently recommended as the most reliable skin-changer tool available. Players use it for everything from casual skin swaps to full-themed champion overhauls.

The Fantome format, which CSLOL Manager popularized, became the distribution standard on Runeforge and other mod-sharing platforms. If you download a custom League skin in 2026, there’s a good chance it comes as a .fantome file designed for this tool.

Even with newer alternatives like Bocchi and Celestial entering the space, CSLOL Manager’s stability and large existing mod library keep it relevant. Many players have hundreds of mods organized in profiles and see no reason to switch.

About This Website

What cslolmanager.com is and what it is not.

Independent Resource

cslolmanager.com is a fan-made, independent informational website. We are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the LeagueToolkit team, Moonshadow, Morilli, or Riot Games in any way.

We built this site because finding clear, organized information about CSLOL Manager was harder than it needed to be. Documentation was scattered across GitHub READMEs, Reddit threads, and Discord messages. We wanted to put everything in one place: download links, setup guides, feature explanations, and answers to common questions.

Official Sources Only

All download links point to official GitHub releases. We never host, modify, or redistribute the software.

Accurate Information

We research every detail and keep content updated as new versions are released.

Developer Respect

We genuinely appreciate the work the LeagueToolkit community puts into these tools. We encourage all users to support the developers directly.

Get in Touch

Have questions, feedback, or spotted something inaccurate?

Visit our Contact page to reach out. For official CSLOL Manager support, bug reports, or feature requests, head to the GitHub Issues page.