Ubisoft has announced that the R6 North Rainbow Rumble 2023 multi-stage Siege tournament will take place over the summer.
The Rainbow Six Siege esports tournament will be hosted across the UK, Ireland and Nordics region and is also open to the best up-and-coming teams from across Europe.
The R6 North Rainbow Rumble 2023 has a prize pool of €40,000 and 12 team spots overall.
The tournament will commence on July 1st 2023 with the first of four qualifier tournaments, culminating with the playoffs and final through to August 27th 2023.
Ubisoft said the R6 North Rainbow Rumble 2023 will ‘provide teams with another chance to compete against opponents from across Europe, improve their skills and make a name for themselves in Rainbow Six Esports following the announcement of the R6 Central Combine’ tournament.
The schedule will be as follows:
Tenstar won the Rainbow Six Siege UKIN Rainbow Rumble 2022.
Update: The groups and teams are as follows:
R6 North Rainbow Rumble 2023 community streams and more
For the Northern competition, all the games from the group and playoffs phases will be broadcast from official Ubisoft channels.
Community streams will be encouraged and promoted for the R6 North Rainbow Rumble 2023 qualifier stages, with support for alternative language community stream for all phases. You can apply for this by joining the official R6 North Discord server and heading to the community streams channel.
You will also be able to watch the group and playoff stages with our partnered co-streamers. Applications to apply for this will be shared at a later date.
Sign-ups are now live, head to r6north.gg now for all the information.
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Dom is an award-winning writer and finalist of the Esports Journalist of the Year 2023 award. He graduated from Bournemouth University with a 2:1 degree in Multi-Media Journalism in 2007.
As a long-time gamer having first picked up the NES controller in the late ’80s, he has written for a range of publications including GamesTM, Nintendo Official Magazine, industry publication MCV and others. He worked as head of content for the British Esports Federation up until February 2021, when he stepped back to work full-time on Esports News UK and offer esports consultancy and freelance services. Note: Dom still produces the British Esports newsletter on a freelance basis, so our coverage of British Esports is always kept simple – usually just covering the occasional press release – because of this conflict of interest.