Whenever a multiplayer-focused game offers goods for players to obtain, cheaters are likely to follow. Activision has been dealing with this in its battle royale Call of Duty: Warzone by adding more detection and reporting features, and now Ubisoft is looking into measures for Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege.

Ubisoft updated its "Top Issues and Community Concerns" page for Rainbow Six Siege Thursday, saying the developers have observed "an increase in cheating mentions and reports from players." In response they have been working on "short-term" strategies to fit with a no tolerance stance on cheating, such as tracking players who freeze lobbies and increasing the barrier to access Ranked and Championship-level matches.

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The update also talks about bugs that the game's developers have scheduled fixes for or are currently investigating, as well as quality of life changes based on feedback. The push to improve Rainbow Six Siege is admirable, especially after the devs announced updates could be delayed due to coronavirus.

Earlier this year Rainbow Six Siege saw an all-time peak player count on Steam. Given the first-person shooter's popularity, it only makes sense that Ubisoft would want to keep pushing to improve the experience.

Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege is available now for PC, PS4, and Xbox One.

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Source: Ubisoft