The annual All-Stars match has been the most anticipated part of the NRL's pre-season fixture since its inception in 2010.
It began as the Indigenous All-Stars versus NRL All-Stars, then the World All-Stars before evolving into its current form; Indigenous versus Maori All-Stars.
The All-Stars have always been the players' chance to showcase their culture while entertaining the footy-starved fans in February.
To date, there have been 11 All-Stars matches, but which one was best?
We've narrowed it down to our three favourites:
1. 2010: Indigenous All-Stars beat NRL All-Stars (16 - 12)
The inaugural All-Stars clash takes the top spot, not only for its significance in introducing the concept to the rugby league calendar but also because of the calibre of players that took part.
Jarryd Hayne, Darren Lockyer, Benji Marshall and Cameron Smith all made up the starting lineup for a Wayne Bennet coached NRL All-Stars side
Other notable figures included Sam Burgess, the Morris twins, Robbie Farah, Manu Vatuvei, Israel Folau and Kurt Gidley.
Neil Henry's Indigenous outfit had its own smattering of world-class talent, including the likes of Johnathan Thurston, Scott Prince and Preston Campbell but even, so it was a huge ask for this side to overcome their opposition - which is what made the result even more special.ย
Both teams were in the contest right until the final siren; a runaway try to Jamie Soward was all that separated the two after 80 minutes.
Play of the day:ย Wendell Sailor
In his farewell outing, Wendell Sailor made history becoming the first try scorer in All-Stars football and capping the moment off with an iconic celebration.
The play began 5 metres away from the NRL All-Stars try line on the opposite end of the ground before being pushed through centre field.
The ball eventually fell into the hands of Scott Prince, a decoy runner on a Thurston ball creating a two man overlap on the outside.
A deft grubber from Prince in behind Vatuvei opened up an acre of room for Sailor to fly over the white stripe one final time.
Upon scoring Sailor reefed the corner post out of the ground and began to play it like a didgeridoo, a celebration he would later reveal was pre-planned by himself and Johnathan Thurston.