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It’s not run-and-gun, but that’s exactly why Rainbow Six Mobile works for me

Rainbow Six Mobile’s tactical pacing makes it more fun than Call of Duty: Mobile and PUBG Mobile.

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Ubisoft

After playing Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six Siege (now Siege X) on PC for nearly a decade, I’ve seen metas rise and fall, operators get nerfed to irrelevance, and some baffling changes from Ubisoft. But despite many controversial updates, R6S remains one of the most profitable games under the studio’s umbrella. So when Rainbow Six Mobile was announced, it didn’t seem like something I’d be interested in. Translating such a mechanic-rich experience to an accessible form seemed like a Herculean task.

Mobile shooters usually follow a familiar formula that involves sprinting towards the nearest enemies for a gunfight. While that’s a broad generalization, even battle royale titles like PUBG Mobile are built around quick engagements and constant stimulation. Siege, on the other hand, has always been about tension; from the seconds before you pull the trigger to the meticulous setup before rushing into the site, ‘shock-and-awe’ style. The game always felt tactical. 

That said, Rainbow Six Mobile doesn’t copy Siege X perfectly, and it makes sense. It is faster. The maps are smaller. The flow is tighter. But crucially, it doesn’t abandon what makes Siege fun. The core gameplay loop makes a return here, and that’s why it works.

The Friction Is the Fun

Rainbow Six Mobile is not a run-and-gun shooter. If you try to play it like one, you’ll lose quickly. Rushing into the objective as an Attacker or running out as a Defender can still work as a surprise tactic. But more often than not, you’ll get punished.

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You still need to drone. You still need to respect traps. And you always check those corners.

And that friction? That hesitation before pushing into a room? That’s the fun. You can now find the deeply satisfying feeling of clearing an area and taking space methodically on a phone. Not because the gameplay feels slower, but because every decision feels consequential. You’re not mindlessly chasing kills; you’re solving a problem in real time.

That kind of deliberate pacing feels rare on mobile. Most shooters reward aggression first and awareness second. Rainbow Six Mobile flips that dynamic. If you ignore a Kapkan trap or fail to check a corner, you don’t get punished softly. You get deleted. 

Smaller maps, bigger pressure

The maps are more compact than their PC and console counterparts, but that doesn’t make them shallow. If anything, the reduced scale amplifies the pressure. True to its mobile nature, the smaller maps mean less downtime. Rotations happen faster, and engagements feel more immediate.

Since destruction, gadgets, and operator abilities remain central to the experience, every square inch of space matters. You’re not blowing up a wall as a spectacle. These are new sight lines or opening a fresh path of traversal. That layered design is what separates Rainbow Six Mobile from most of its competition.

A different feel for Siege veterans

Even with the core gameplay loop intact, this isn’t the exact Siege beloved by PC and console veterans. The game feels faster, the time-to-kill is higher, and there’s barely any recoil, which R6S is infamous for. It’s also the first title in the franchise to introduce aim assist in PvP. So naturally, the mechanical ceiling feels different on touch controls.

Hardcore PC purist won’t see the appeal immediately. 

But here’s the thing, I stopped comparing it to PC Siege after a few matches. I only started appreciating what it is after I treated it on its own terms. For the R6S console player base, the controls should seem a bit more familiar. I’ve already seen the precise movement and crisp aim of some high-elo players, so there is definitely a challenge here. This isn’t a replacement. It’s pocket Siege that is compressed, accelerated, but still tactical.

A shift in gear for mobile shooter fans

If you primarily play mobile shooters, Rainbow Six Mobile will feel different. Many mobile shooters offer constant respawns, incentivize kill streaks, and lean heavily into arcade-style chaos. This game asks you to slow down; not in tempo, but in thought. The game becomes incredibly rewarding once you get used to its pacing. 

Don’t get it twisted, this isn’t chess. Winning gunfights still shifts the odds in your favor. Solid mechanics and good aim absolutely matter. Though winning a round because you droned properly and avoided traps feels better than winning purely because you out-aimed someone in a chaotic firefight. Rainbow Six Mobile isn’t trying to outdo other shooters at their own game. It differentiates itself through its systems.

A tactical approach that stands out

What stands out most is that the game respects its tactical identity. Environmental destruction isn’t cosmetic. Operators aren’t just skins with different guns. Droning isn’t a gimmick. Interacting with these systems is how you gain an edge.

That’s rare on mobile, where complexity is often shaved down in favor of accessibility. And since depth creates replayability, every round plays out differently depending on how players approach the sandbox.

Speaking of operators, several iconic characters from R6S appear in the mobile version, complete with their classic weapon loadouts and signature gadgets. This includes fan favorites like Ash and Sledge on attack, and Kapkan and Caveira on defense.

It just clicked for me

Ubisoft, best known for its massive franchises like Assassin’s Creed and Far Cry, has done a surprisingly competent job with Rainbow Six Mobile. As someone who’s played R6S since 2017, it was refreshing to see a mobile adaptation that avoids diluting itself into a generic FPS. The Siege DNA is still present, just in a shorter format. In a mobile market saturated with quick dopamine hits, that restraint makes it stand out.

Players are already grinding toward the top ranks, and a distinct meta is beginning to take shape. The competitive potential is clearly there. Ubisoft doesn’t have the strongest track record when it comes to long-term mobile support, but hopefully, this is one title that gets the sustained attention it deserves.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
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