Article YBVH Rainbow Six: Siege review – a serious contender, hamstrung by microtransactions

Rainbow Six: Siege review – a serious contender, hamstrung by microtransactions

by
Rich Stanton
from Technology | The Guardian on (#YBVH)
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With its taut, tense action and destructible environments, Siege is the best Rainbow Six for years - if only Ubisoft would rethink its business model

Death is a contradiction in the modern competitive shooter. Call of Duty and Battlefront, the big mainstream titles, are all about empowering the player and making them feel like a one-man army - easy enough in single-player, if your explosions are big enough, but much harder in multiplayer. And so dying becomes an inconvenience, with near-instant respawns alongside constant experience points for common in-game actions. Even if someone plays badly, goes the reasoning, it should still be rewarding.

You won't find such sunshine and lollipops in the Rainbow Six: Siege. The earlier entries in this Tom Clancy-branded series were popular for their unforgiving, simulation-heavy approach to virtual combat, and when later titles attempted to make this more accessible, they predictably flailed (with the exception of the excellent R6: Vegas). Siege is not just a return to form, but a return to first principles - and it's not aiming at Call of Duty, but at Counter-Strike.

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