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How did Valve almost delist Rainbow Six Siege?

Valve reportedly considered delisting Siege after Ubisoft price push

Valve is reportedly facing a fierce commercial standoff around Rainbow Six Siege on PC distribution. According to the provided story, Valve was nearly involved in a delisting action for Rainbow Six Siege—along with other titles—after Ubisoft attempted to sell the game cheaper via Ubisoft’s own store (Uplay/Ubisoft Connect).

What happened

  • Ubisoft tried offering Rainbow Six Siege at a lower price on its own platform.
  • In response, Valve reportedly threatened to retaliate by pulling the game from Steam.
  • A separate entry in the pool repeats the same theme: Valve allegedly threatened broader delisting-style retaliation if cheaper pricing occurred elsewhere.

Why it matters

Steam remains the dominant PC marketplace for many mainstream shooters. A near-delisting threat is significant because it highlights how publishers’ pricing strategies across storefronts can trigger platform-level disputes—especially when a developer/publisher finds it easier to undercut on one storefront.

From a player perspective, this kind of platform conflict can affect: - Where and how you can buy a game most cheaply - The timing of price changes and discounts - The long-term availability of titles on particular storefronts

What’s unclear

The pool doesn’t provide details on whether the parties reached an agreement, whether the threat ever became action, or what specific games were ultimately impacted beyond Rainbow Six Siege. The core takeaway is the leverage dynamic: price competition between storefronts can provoke serious friction at the platform level.


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