For the past five years, Rainbow Six Siege has been the only game that gets me paranoid about cheaters. It's not something that comes up in every match I play, but when I do see something suspicious from an enemy or teammate, it's all I can think about. Hell, sometimes you just see someone in a low GPP or 1v1, and it's just terrifying. That's how I fall and I get back up, spouting off about the admins NOT PROTECTING YOU. Archer Multiplex,NoVaGyrAvalancheMy Ultimate Anxiety is Now Affecting My Gameplay.

So when I saw an interesting change to the Rainbow Six: Siege Skins, I had to take a screenshot.

The new Skins update added more diversity to the variations of counter-operator, allowing players to simultaneously be an ICE Archer, focusing Ice Fields, a camera operator, popping out of a vehicle, and a punk rocker that eats trash that Rambo wouldn't. Splitting more of your matches into other specific roles tends to be beneficial because matchmaking gets easier. I love having respawn timers manned, but they also do away with close games where you're all grouped around one base. Also, double red/camo kills on a vehicle is amazing.

This brings up the thought: Who is this person? Show less

Matt Dawson's 20th match for Hull City ended with a deserved victory over Bournemouth Read more

Hull City returned to the Premier League this weekend with a deserved win at Bournemouth but still looked short of quality throughout. They also seemed a little beaten by their hosts, who had such little to lose at the end of a frantic adventure away from home.

Bournemouth's goals were almost solely down to Chris March, but the was little in the way of creativity and threat from either wing. Bournemouth were troubled by the speed of Mark Schwarzer's galloping runs and the excellence of James Chester, a genuine England international front-man, but otherwise they failed to create any truly killer through-balls for their forwards.

If Hull can generate quality and urgency, then it will be interesting to see whether they regain their way, and prove that they genuinely are better than they are being considered by many. For now, the Tigers should feel very proud of surviving three games behind them at the top.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Bournemouth's Eddie Howe looks on. Photograph: Kia Jones/Reuters

Hull's dominance of this fixture was governed by the absence of three Nigerian internationals, though. Kirstan Djilobodji and Liam Rosenior never started in the league – Djilobodji didn't even play in the FA Cup at Chelsea – and the goalkeeper Artur
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