
Games such as FIFA 20 and Fortnite are seemingly targets for the website as well. Rainbow Six Siege was not the only potential target.

A monthly subscription reportedly costs around $30, whereas a lifetime subscription goes for $299.85. Ubisoft claims that hackers are participants of SNG.ONE, which provides its users with monthly or lifetime access to subscription services. The hackers would be ranked, whereas the other team would have a penalty for going early. Hackers are using attacks to delay matches and servers to likely crash them and get their rivals to quit early. Ubisoft says that users on the accused platform could have Rainbow Six Siege attacked for a price. DDoS attacks act by loading a server with unworkable data, filling it up and leaving it inaccessible. Ubisoft, its valuable players, and business interests have reportedly received serious damage from ongoing DDoS attacks. The lawsuit (via Polygon), filed under US cyber and California common law in California, lists several people from all over the world. Ubisoft recently filed suit against the operators of a website, SNG.ONE, allegedly involved in distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks on Rainbow Six Siege networks.
