Rainbow Six Mobile Season 2 Adds House Map, Doc, and New Modes
Ubisoft's second Rainbow Six Mobile season added House, Doc and a weekly mode rotation, pushing the phone shooter harder toward tactical identity.

Rainbow Six Mobile’s second season landed as a pointed test of what the game wants to be on phones: not just another seasonal shooter, but a stripped-down version of Rainbow Six’s tactical DNA. Operation Trauma Front brought in House, a support Operator in Doc, refreshed playlists, Site & Spawn Selection, and 1v1 matchups through Private Matches, making this feel like a systems update as much as a content drop.
House is the clearest sign that Ubisoft is leaning into close-quarters tension. The map is built around tight interiors, sudden encounters, careful clearing and coordinated pushes, the kind of layout where a bad peek or a sloppy rotation can snowball fast. That suits Rainbow Six Mobile’s slower, more deliberate identity. If the phone version is going to win over core shooter players, it needs maps that reward callouts, utility use and timing. House does exactly that.
Doc is the other important addition, and probably the one that matters most for squad play. Ubisoft positioned him as a dedicated support Operator on Defense, and his Stim Pistol can heal allies from a distance, revive downed teammates and give Doc a temporary health boost. That gives squads a real support anchor instead of another pure fragger, which matters in a mobile shooter where class roles can get flattened fast. Ubisoft also made Doc available to all players in the House Showcase playlist without requiring an unlock, a smart move for a season that wants players to feel his value immediately.

The live-service pacing is just as aggressive. House Showcase kicked off the rotation as a Bomb mode playlist on House, then 3v3 House ran in weeks 2 and 3, followed by 2v2 Face-off in weeks 4 and 5. House also rotated against Oregon in week 1 and Border in week 2. Deimos was free to play in 2v2 Face-off, while Vault: Toxic Fog returned in weeks 3 and 5, letting players earn Obsidian for Vault packs and Ash Outbreak cosmetic items. Best of 7 Ranked ran every weekend, giving competitive players a steady reason to log back in.
Ubisoft also stacked the season with broader rewards: a new Ranked skin for Hibana, a new Battle Pass with Doc and cosmetics, plus fresh operator outfits and weapon skins in the store. That is a lot of motion for a game that only launched worldwide on February 23, 2026, after years of closed testing and soft launch iteration. Operation Trauma Front arrived fast, and that speed says everything about Ubisoft’s plan. It is trying to prove Rainbow Six Mobile can sustain the franchise’s tactical identity on mobile, not just survive on seasonal churn.
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