Siege Synchronicity: My Journey Through Life's Tactical Ops

September 03, 20258 min read

Siege Synchronicity: My Journey Through Life's Tactical Ops

Hey everyone! If you're a fellow gamer who's poured countless hours into Rainbow Six Siege (or just loves a good story about passion, setbacks, and creative outlets), this post is for you. Today, I'm diving into the progress of my personal "Siege Synchronicity"—how the game's seasons have eerily mirrored my real-life adventures, from epic wins to brutal defeats. We'll also touch on my recent Gears of War binge, the current state of Siege drama, and my resin art project inspired by the game: the Rainbow Spectrum Balls.


It’s time to catch everyone up on what’s been going on, and step out of the shadows a little bit. (But not too much).


This all started as a casual ramble in a video (check it out on YouTube if you prefer visuals!), but I've organized it here for easy reading. Grab your favorite operator charm, settle in, and let's breach into it.

Lo-Fi Vibes and Musical Warm-Up

I kicked things off in my video by belting out some lyrics from Survivor's "Eye of the Tiger"—you know, the ultimate pump-up anthem. It's got that raw energy: Did my time, took my chances... It's the eye of the tiger, it's the thrill of the fight. Perfect for gaming sessions, right?


Luckily, I cut that for your sake.


What really gets me going lately is listening to heavy metal and hard rock tracks reimagined as lo-fi beats. There's something magical about it—chill vibes with that underlying intensity. I was jamming to "Tears Don't Fall" by Bullet for My Valentine, a string of Ozzy Osbourne classics, and some Slipknot before switching to "Eye of the Tiger." If you're into lo-fi remixes, give them a try; it's a game-changer for late-night grinds.

Gearing Up: My Dive into Gears of War Ultimate Edition

Lately, a big chunk of my brain space has been occupied by the memories of Gears of War Ultimate Edition and now Reloaded—the re-remastered version of the original. This is my first time playing a Gears game on PC with mouse and keyboard, and surprisingly, it's clicking fast. I've got years of PC experience from Siege, Hell Let Loose, and the Splinter Cell series under my belt, so the transition wasn't as brutal as I feared.


Of course, the community is up in arms about the Gnasher shotgun and new bugs that release right alongside the remaster. Is it OP? Underpowered? Shooting feathers at point-blank? This debate has raged since 2006! I remember my college days, playing on a buddy's Xbox and chainsawing my first enemy—pure adrenaline in the dorm room.


I'm eyeing some multiplayer action and maybe chasing the "Seriously" achievement. We'll see; it depends on how hooked I stay. It’s sort of a” been there, done that” sort of thing. If you're a Gears fan, drop your tips in the comments!

The State of Siege: Passion, Complaints, and the Tightrope of Content Creation

As a die-hard Siege player for the past 10 years, I have to address the elephant in the room: the game's current chaos. Big-name creators are threatening to quit over cheaters, stream sniping, buggy updates, and endless meta shifts. I've been there—when your passion turns into a job, it's a delicate balance. You want to monetize what you'd do for free, but losing that spark? It sucks.

Next week marks Year 10 Season 3: Operation High Stakes, with Denari dropping. I've been grinding the test server, and while cheaters are rampant, I know it's cyclical. Something's OP now? It'll be nerfed next month. Anti-cheat gets an upgrade, hackers adapt—rinse and repeat. The devs play Siege too, which is kinda cool… but with your emotions, and that’s kinda not cool, but it is the game they play. Are you going to fall for it too? If not in this game, then in some other game of life?


Do they keep it unbalanced on purpose? Maybe—to keep us frustrated just enough to grind harder, not quit. Stream sniping killed my vibe once, so I pivoted to a style that works for me. Focus on the fun, not the rage bait.

Introducing Rainbow Spectrum Balls: My Siege-Inspired Resin Art

This is where things get creative. I saw a post saying, "I have more fun thinking about playing Siege than actually playing it," and it hit home. Enter my Rainbow Spectrum Balls—resin art spheres representing operators, squads, and my coolest (or hilariously mediocre) moments. I'm almost 40, not a pro, but I'm here for the joy. Screw the complainers!


In the video, I demoed the Maestro ball: starting with green (nod to Alibi), a Tuscan Sun layer for Villa vibes, and a dark tint for his Evil Eye. I use alcohol ink for transparency—no opaque messes here. I also touched up a Black Ice comb (my first sold piece!) and a Mexican Train Domino station.

Siege is woven into my life—my German Shepherd is named Caveira, after all. These balls capture backstories, playstyles, and memories. I've got clips saved for future content, and plans for more ideas once I finish the collection.


Want one? Head to rogueconsciousness.com to grab your piece of Siege art. It's about celebrating the game's magic, not the toxicity.

Siege Synchronicity: Life Events Mirroring Game Seasons

The heart of this post (and video) is how Siege seasons synced with my life. It's uncanny—cosmic, even. Here's the timeline of posts, chapters, and other content that’s been released or will release in another format soon:

Launch and Beta (2014-2015): The Tactical Shooter I'd Waited For

E3 2014 trailer blew me away—realistic rappels, one-headshot deaths. Unlike CoD or Battlefield, this felt right (Gears is third-person monster-slaying, totally different). Played the open beta while cutting weight for a fight (135 lbs for nothing—fight canceled). Everything felt vital; the game matured in real-time.


Moved north for MMA training, ditching the long commute. Started as a nutrition counselor/personal trainer, losing 100 lbs myself. This was me finding purpose, like strategies evolving into meta.

Full release? Same week as my second fight. Delayed buying to stay focused—then went all-in post-fight. Vivid memories: Early Thanksgiving, friends rotating controllers.

Operation Black Ice (February 2016): The ACL Tear Day

Downloaded it, then tore my ACL in Jiu-Jitsu/sparring. Face-planted in agony, knee like a Sub-Zero  ice puddle from Mortal Kombat 2. Ironic cosmic humor.

In-game highlight: Frost on Presidential Plane, trapping stairs with the ridiculous Super 90—nailed 3-4 kills off one mat. Spent the season relearning to walk, body "patching" backward.

Operation Dust Line (May 2016): Coaching and New Perspectives

Resigned to coaching—cornering fights, strategy advice. Happiest time despite haze; figured things out. Operators Valkyrie (cameras for angles) and Blackbeard (shield for safety) mirrored gaining views without risk.

Got stronger elsewhere: Squats/deadlifts fine, just no athletic toes. Team learned rotates, traversing maps safely.

Operation Skull Rain (August 2016): Survival Mode

Brazilian ops Caveira and Capitão—perfect while recovering from surgery (day before release) and studying BJJ/Muay Thai. Sat in recliner post-op, watching teammates fight online, blogging, building sites.

Hopeful at PT, crushing goals—then insurance cut off. Non-contact injury from imbalances; dedicated to fixing it. Felt like drowning, but optimistic.

Operation Red Crow (November 2016): Grounding and Change

Pushed too hard in recovery—scared after upending life for MMA/gaming content. Friend group fallout over streaming (offensive chatter on broadcast). Cat Tony's blackbird "hangouts"—omen, as he had months left.

Red (root chakra: health/grounding) + Crow (change) symbolism. Healing takes time, can't force it. Cold north wore me down.

Velvet Shell (February 2017): Flimsy Plans and Mobility

Coastline map: Open, no exterior protection—Mira shines for safe watches, Jackal tracks footprints for mobile defense.

Streaming fights with friends led to bowing out. Cussed out for being 5 mins late to unlock gym (stuck in ranked). Realized gaming/coaching plan was a "velvet shell"—flimsy. Tried bots/programs, some banned accounts.

Operation Health (May 2017): Fixing the Foundations

No new ops/maps—focus on bugs/matchmaking. Mirrored my hits: Cat Tony passed, mom's hospitalization. Mental health tanked; fragility of life wake-up.

Switched to PC mouse/keyboard—brain grew! Sucked at first, but persisted. Watched KixStar (RIP) for inspo.

Operation Blood Orchid (August 2017): Blooming Amid Toxicity

Theme Park's creepy aesthetic (pre-rework). Ops: Lesion (gu mines), Ying (candelas), Ela (Grzmots/Scorpion).

Felt fragile, like hallway mines. Business trip to Destin: Met Mortal Kombat's Scorpion actor—fanboyed hard! Started (failed) podcast; gym changes, friend left.

Grew despite toxicity, like an orchid in sludge.

Operation White Noise (November 2017): Static and Highlights

Adopted white Turkish Angora cat Thor (punched me first sight!) during release week. Named after Thor: Ragnarok. White kitty in "White Noise"? Perfect.

Ops: Vigil (cam invis), Dokkaebi (hacks/calls), Zofia (launcher). Tower map static; life felt like unorganized noise. Thor was the highlight.

Wrapping Up: More to Come

My collection goes beyond Year 2—favorite ops, easy colors first. Every season flips the meta, just like life. Next up: Show-and-tell on the balls, and deeper dives into later seasons.

Thanks for reading! If this resonated, like, share, and comment your Siege stories. For art that captures the game's essence (teamwork, backstories, epic moments), visit rogueconsciousness.com. Stay positive, operators—see you in the next breach.


Health and Wellness Coach that has personally lost 100 lbs. and maintained an ideal body composition for over 10 years.

2017 Coach of the Year for Amateur and Professional MMA

ACL Injury Recovery Specialist

Amazon Best Selling Ghostwriter

The Sam Fisher of Content Creation and Streaming

The Bob Ross of Rainbow Six Siege

Video Game Enthusiast: Rainbow Six, Gears of War, Mortal Kombat, Ghost Recon, Splinter Cell, and the classics

Gamified Avatar Coach For Multimillion Dollar Marketing Company

Spiritual Sage

Marty White

Health and Wellness Coach that has personally lost 100 lbs. and maintained an ideal body composition for over 10 years. 2017 Coach of the Year for Amateur and Professional MMA ACL Injury Recovery Specialist Amazon Best Selling Ghostwriter The Sam Fisher of Content Creation and Streaming The Bob Ross of Rainbow Six Siege Video Game Enthusiast: Rainbow Six, Gears of War, Mortal Kombat, Ghost Recon, Splinter Cell, and the classics Gamified Avatar Coach For Multimillion Dollar Marketing Company Spiritual Sage

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