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Rainbow Six Siege Hit by Massive Hack: Players Wake Up to Billions in Free Credits

Rainbow Six Siege Hit by Massive Hack: Players Wake Up to Billions in Free Credits

8h
Thales Costa

Rainbow Six Siege players logged in on December 27, 2025, expecting a normal gaming session. Instead, they found their accounts loaded with billions of R6 Credits, thousands of Alpha Packs, and access to ultra-exclusive developer skins they never purchased. Things went south fast.

Everything Broke at Once

The chaos started when players noticed something wasn't right. Accounts were getting hit with random bans that made no sense, displaying strange messages instead of player names. But that was just the beginning. When players returned to the main menu, they discovered their accounts had been flooded with approximately two billion R6 Credits and Renown, along with rare cosmetics like the coveted Glacier skins and developer-exclusive items that aren't supposed to be available to regular players.

Both PC and console players were affected. Screenshots started flooding social media showing the absurd credit counts. Some players got banned immediately after logging in, even though they hadn't touched the mysterious currency that appeared in their accounts. The whole situation felt surreal.

Ubisoft Hit the Emergency Brake

Ubisoft caught wind of the breach quickly and released a statement acknowledging the problem. "We are aware of an incident currently affecting Rainbow Six Siege," the developer posted. The company didn't waste time and shut down the game servers along with the R6 Marketplace about thirty minutes later to prevent players from using the fraudulent credits.

The swift action stopped the bleeding, but it also left players in limbo. Ubisoft hasn't confirmed what caused the security breach or how attackers managed to compromise their backend systems so thoroughly. The lack of clarity only added to the confusion and frustration building in the community.

Nobody Knows if They're Safe

The community response has been a mix of panic and dark humor. Some players immediately started spending the credits, thinking it might be a visual glitch or an early Christmas present from Ubisoft. Others stayed away from their accounts entirely, worried they'd get punished for something that wasn't their fault.

Now everyone's expecting account rollbacks to reverse the damage. The big question is whether innocent players who logged in during the exploit will face consequences. Some argue that banning a large chunk of the active player base would be a disaster for the game, especially for a title celebrating its tenth anniversary. The pressure's on Ubisoft to handle this carefully.

The Wait Begins

For now, Siege players are stuck waiting for official updates before they can safely return to the game. The incident raises serious questions about account security and authentication systems, particularly since even streamer accounts and potentially official Ubisoft profiles were affected.

This breach comes at an awkward time for Rainbow Six Siege, which recently implemented stronger anti-cheat measures and player protection systems. The irony isn't lost on the community that just weeks after celebrating improved security, the entire economy got compromised.

Ubisoft needs to provide transparency about what happened and how they'll prevent similar incidents in the future. Until then, players are advised to stay away from the game and wait for the all-clear signal. The situation remains fluid, and the community's watching closely to see how one of the biggest security breaches in Siege history gets resolved.


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Feature image credit: Ubisoft

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