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The company is clearly hoping that players introduced to the game for free will become hooked and buy it. Ubisoft’s generosity isn’t unbounded, alas: the buddy passes only last for 14 days.
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You get two buddy passes, so make the most of themīecause Rainbow Six Extraction was specifically designed to be a three-player co-op game, Ubisoft has decided to provide everyone who buys it with two buddy passes, which let you invite two friends to download the game for free and play it with you. Plus, if the need to operate as a member of a close-knit team, executing precise tactics, was what drew you to Rainbow Six Siege, that approach is still required in order to prosper in Rainbow Six Extraction, albeit as part of a smaller team. Yet Extraction still feels very much like a Rainbow Six game – and its PvE nature even triggers reminiscences of pre- Siege Rainbow Six instalments. The REACT tech which Extraction’s operators are able to access (spanning various types of grenades and explosives, along with recon and defensive devices) differs from that of Rainbow Six Siege, with new gadgets designed specifically for the threat posed by the Archaeans, such as a REACT Laser, which zaps the progress-impeding “sprawl” with which the Archaeans cover floors and walls. But they have been noticeably tweaked to make them better suited for taking down Archaeans rather than human enemies, especially as far as each operator’s ability is concerned.
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Plus all 18 of Rainbow Six Extraction’s operators have been carried over from Rainbow Six Siege. Extraction very much preserves the modern Rainbow Six vibe that Siege established, with largely familiar weapon loadouts, a need to employ closely co-ordinated teamwork with your squadmates, touches such as destructible scenery and first-person shooter mechanics that feel just like its predecessor.

That’s not to suggest that it will feel particularly unfamiliar to anyone who has played Rainbow Six Siege – especially if they played Outbreak, a PvE mode pitching players against aliens which was added to Siege in 2018 and clearly acted as inspiration for Extraction. In other words, Extraction is a PvE (Player versus Environment) game, rather than a PvP (Player versus Player) one. So it offers a completely different gameplay experience to Rainbow Six Siege, in which two five-person teams, all controlled by humans, slug it out against each other. In Rainbow Six Extraction, you play as one member of a three-person co-op team, taking on AI-controlled aliens called Archaeans. As a three-player co-op game, it probably has more in common with L eft 4 Dead than Siege

Here’s what you should know about it before deciding to splash out on a copy, along with some tips that should speed your progress through it and details of its endgame. Indeed, while Extraction builds on many of Siege’s strengths, Ubisoft has moved into new gameplay territory with their new co-op shooter.
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In NME’s review – which you can read by clicking above – Jake Tucker described the game as “compact, dense and interesting” pointing out that if you have the mates to make play worthwhile, Rainbow Six Extraction is “an excellent retooling of a lot of the things that made the multiplayer-focused Rainbow Six Siege work so well, with a sci-fi skin and oodles of progression.” READ MORE: ‘Rainbow Six Extraction’ review: a compelling alien shooter from the bones of ‘Siege’.So there was bound to be an air of excitement around the release of the latest iteration of Rainbow Six: Rainbow Six Extraction. It’s over six years since Ubisoft released Rainbow Six Siege, the game which took its much-loved tactical first-person shooter franchise into esports territory.
