Your Source for Free Game Cheat Codes and Information
Game: Rainbow SixConsole: Nintendo 64
Cheat:
Level Passwords
On the main menu got to quick start and input on of the following codes:02 - 12B1S2Q22MQQ
03 - BJBBC3Q22VQQ
04 - BZBBC3Q22!RQ
05 - CJBCGQQ2FGRQ
06 - SZBCW5Q2F45Q
07 - TJVDKYQ2FW59
08 - TRVT6882F!W8
Level Passwords
On the main menu got to quick start and input on of the following codes:02 - 12D1S2Q22MQQ
03 - BJDBC3Q22WQQ
04 - BZDBSMQZZ!QQ
05 - CJTCCQQ2FGSQ
06 - K2TK65Q2F4SQ
07 - T2TT68QGF!WQ
08 - 5JR5L1QGGGSQ
09 - 52T572Q4G4SQ
10 - VJVVLJQGGWSQ
All Levels Password
VZRFTMQ2G8SQInvincibility
At the title screen, press C-Right, then hold Z + B and quickly press R.255 grenades
Change your weapon to the grenades and hold Z until the throw meter is filled. When the grenade is being thrown, hold Z again until the meter is full. Repeat this until you are on the last grenade. When it is thrown, you will have 255 grenades.Flash bang grenade survival
To be unaffected by the flash bang grenades, turn on night vision goggles. Leave them on untill the effects of the grenade wear off.How to kill tangos
Without being detected In Mission: Deep MagicThis (Believe or not) is very simple, all you have to do is bring grenades (Mission: Deep Magic) and you can kill everybody with them without being detected ;)
Team-mate picks lock
Use the following trick to make your teammate following you pick a lock. Quickly press Up, Right, Down and quickly move away. This does not always work the first time -- you may have to try again. If done correctly, you will see the teammate that is following you rubbing his hand on the door, and you will hear a lock picking sound.Manufacturer: Red Storm Entertainment
Release Date: 18 March, 2003
ESRB Rating: Mature

Description:
The Rainbow Six game franchise gets its name from the Tom Clancy novel of the same name; both the game and the book detail the exploits of an elite international counter-terrorism unit codenamed Rainbow ("Six" is tactical lingo for "leader"). Rainbow Six pioneered a genre known as "squad-based tactical combat," and eschews fast pacing and exotic weapons in favor of methodical gameplay and realistic combat--a single bullet can take down a target. In Raven Shield, the third game in the franchise, the men and women of Rainbow return to thwart the plans of an evil madman out to recover hidden Nazi loot. This barebones plot is merely a tool to link the objective-based missions that are the meat and potatoes of the game.
A standard mission will start you off with a situational briefing and overview of your objectives. After the briefing you'll pick your team of up to eight operatives in as many as three different fire teams, and then outfit them with a wide variety of realistic weaponry. You can choose to map out a mission plan for you and your AI-driven teammates, or you can just drop into the mission and figure things out on the fly. Speaking of AI, this is one of the areas of the game that deserves the most criticism. Despite a largely improved AI that will show enemies using great teamwork or even running away in fear, there are still moments when nearby opponents will walk directly into weapons fire, or even ignore nearby gunplay.
Raven Shield allows for cooperative and competitive online play, but unfortunately there's no mechanism that allows you to play cooperatively with friends through missions in a linear order with the storyline intact. This missing feature aside, cooperative play is still a great feature, and a refreshing break from standard deathmatch play.
There are several significant improvements in Raven Shield, most notably the use of the Unreal graphics engine. It's vastly superior to previous games and provides crisp, clean graphics that are beautiful enough to help suspend disbelief--a feat that's typically more difficult for games with modern settings. Moreover, the inclusion of the Karma "ragdoll" physics engine typically models realistic collapsing animations for fallen enemies, though occasionally there are problems with oddly angled body parts. New controls in Raven Shield such as incremental door-opening and fluid movement controls allow for much stealthier (and thus more fun) movement around the map.
Rainbow Six 3: Raven Shield is both a hoot and a holler to play, and I highly recommend it to anymore, but especially for anyone who favors realism in games and is tired of fast-paced but mind-numbing first person shooters. --Jon "Safety Monkey" Grover
Pros:
- Squad-based tactical combat a refreshing change from standard FPS fare
- New Unreal engine cranks out terrific graphics
- Lots of cool new features like fluid door-opening and fluid movement
- There is something undeniably fun about yelling "Tango down!" in multiplayer
Cons:
- Rag doll physics are sometimes painfully unrealistic
- Normally great AI is sometimes inexplicably awful
- Cooperative mode doesn't include the planning mode, linear progression, or story offered in single player