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Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege

Released: 12/1/2015

Critics
76
vs
Users
83

Score Breakdown

76.5

Critic Average

17 reviews

83

Steam User Score

1,478,721 reviews

70

Metacritic User Score

1,683 reviews

Disparity Breakdown

Steam Disparity
-6.2

76 vs 83

Metacritic Disparity
+6.5

76 vs 70

Combined Disparity
+0.1

Average of both sources

Review Disparities

Positive = critic higher than usersNegative = critic lower than users

Each point represents a critic review. Hover for details. Positive = critic higher than users. Negative = critic lower.

6/11/2025

Late Review

Rainbow Six Siege now finds itself in the best position it's ever been in for player onboarding.

90

90/100

Read

6/10/2025

Late Review

Siege X is a bold, uneven evolution that both honors and undercuts what made Rainbow Six special in the first place. It’s more polished and more ambitious, but also less focused, less grounded, and occasionally less fun. Whether you love it or hate it will depend entirely on what you want from Siege in its tenth year.

70

70/100

Read

5/4/2020

Late Review

More than four years after the game's release, Rainbow Six Siege has evolved into not only a compelling shooter but one of the best examples of the genre.

100

100/100

Read

3/30/2018

Late Review

A joyous, deep and rewarding tactical shooter.

80

80/100

Read

1/18/2018

Late Review

Rainbow Six Siege's focus on teamwork and strategy over just aiming prowess sets it apart in exciting ways, and the constant stream of new maps and operators have made it a wonderfully varied FPS. All that new content has made it harder for new players to catch up, and I wish more work had been done to address this, but smart play and good communication will still win you more games than having the newest operator. It's got some growing pains to sort out, but the future continues to look bright for Siege.

85

85/100

Read

12/11/2015

Launch Window

Rainbow Six Siege is already fighting a difficult battle trying to enforce a more methodical vision of a competitive shooter. It's a minor miracle that Ubisoft Montreal has built such a solid foundation in that regard. But the bizarre progression hooks Siege borrows from free-to-play games, its dearth of content and its network problems make for an awful lot of frustration to overcome in search of those rare moments of unit cohesion.

60

60/100

Read

12/8/2015

Launch Window

Something unlike any other game on the market.

80

80/100

Read

12/5/2015

Launch Window

Rainbow Six Siege is a pretty dopey military FPS at first glance, but insists players learn to work together with minimal error. Further, it invites a maddening cycle of thought—it makes me think about how I'm thinking the more I play. We were constantly disrupting our own habits.

90

90/100

Read

12/5/2015

Launch Window

It's a great multiplayer game and well worth playing, but it certainly won't hurt to wait a bit until the price comes down. Better still, if you wait you can go and buy two or three copies with friends and play it the way it's meant to be played: As a team.

80

80/100

Read

12/5/2015

Launch Window

Is it so wrong to expect more from video games? Is it asking a lot for a game to have polish and substance around its cool central idea? These might seem like questions with obvious answers, but this is what we need to ask when titles come out that feel more designed to print cash than they do to sustain a player base.

50

50/100

Read

12/4/2015

Launch Window

An FPS where your weapon should be the last thing you use, not the first, Rainbow Six Siege is a fantastic tactical shooter.

80

80/100

Read

12/4/2015

Launch Window

The lone multiplayer mode has great promise, but technical shortcomings need to be ironed out. Single-player fans will be disheartened by the lack of meaningful options

70

70/100

Read

12/3/2015

Launch Window

Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege has the polish of a big budget release, but the amount of content that one expects to see from a low budget free-to-play game.

60

60/100

Read

12/2/2015

Launch Window

Although the single-player side of the game is weak, Rainbow Six: Siege's multiplayer modes are a huge amount of fun. Tense, thoughtful, and tactical, they play very differently to most run-and-gun shooters. While the game's content does feel a little slim at launch, there's no denying it's highly enjoyable to play - especially when you have a team of players working together.

80

80/100

Read

11/30/2015

Early Review

The biggest problem is its Rainbow Six Siege alarming shortage of initial content. Right now it looks more like a demo of himself

75

75/100

Read

11/30/2015

Early Review

While lone players are left cold, and hit detection can be inconsistent, the new tactical environmental destruction and tense atmosphere make for a fierce and focused multiplayer experience.

70

70/100

Read

11/30/2015

Early Review

Few shooters feel as good as this to play

80

80/100

Read