Rainbow Six Siege Faces a Second Security Crisis Following December Hack
Rainbow Six Siege is dealing with a new security-related crisis only days after Ubisoft resolved a major backend breach in late December. The latest incident involves a fresh wave of account bans, which has raised new concerns across the player community.
Ubisoft confirmed that it issued these bans after reviewing account activity once services returned online. While the company has not described the situation as another confirmed hack, the timing and scale of the bans have led many players to view this as a second, distinct incident. TheGamer reports that Ubisoft is still reviewing affected accounts.
Timeline of the Two Rainbow Six Siege Incidents
The first incident occurred in late December, when attackers gained unauthorized access to Rainbow Six Siege backend systems. Players suddenly received large amounts of in-game currency, rare cosmetic items unlocked automatically, and random bans or unbans appeared across accounts.
Ubisoft responded by taking Siege servers offline worldwide. The company later rolled back progress tied to the breach. Coverage from PC Gamer and IGN confirmed that Ubisoft treated the December event as a serious security failure. Ubisoft also stated that personal account data was not compromised.
The second incident surfaced shortly after servers returned to normal. Players began reporting sudden account bans with similar suspension lengths and vague violation labels. Many affected players reported no unusual gameplay or exploit use.
What Ubisoft Has Said About the New Ban Wave
Ubisoft stated that the new bans resulted from post-incident reviews aimed at identifying players who intentionally abused the earlier exploit. According to the company, these reviews focus on intent rather than accidental exposure.
Ubisoft also clarified that players who passively received unauthorized items or currency should not face penalties. As noted by TheGamer, Ubisoft continues to process appeals and correct false positives.
Why This Is Being Viewed as a Second Crisis
The two incidents differ in scope and impact. The December breach disrupted inventories, currencies, and live backend systems. The newer issue centers on account enforcement and moderation outcomes.
Because the ban wave appeared after Ubisoft restored services, many players believe this represents a separate failure linked to post-breach systems. Ubisoft has not confirmed that explanation, but it has also not dismissed the possibility of continued fallout.
Community Reaction and Ongoing Concerns
Community reaction has been mixed. Some players support Ubisoft’s effort to punish deliberate exploit abuse. Others worry that enforcement decisions made so soon after a major security failure may lack accuracy.
Players have also criticized the lack of detailed explanations tied to individual bans. Ubisoft has encouraged affected users to submit appeals through official support channels.
What Comes Next for Rainbow Six Siege
Ubisoft says it has added new safeguards following the December breach and continues to review systems tied to account enforcement. The company has not announced additional downtime.
For players, the situation shows how backend security problems can cause lasting disruption even after servers come back online. Whether Ubisoft later confirms this as a separate breach or extended fallout remains to be seen.
