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Things like this are done on purpose specifically to stop people from modding and enjoying single player.
They want everyone playing online where they can push the sale of extremely overpriced shark cards.
This is why they sued the mod maker who made a mod that added in the so called "free" DLC content into single player. A mod that didn't even work online, but Rockstar blatantly lied and claimed that legally killing off this single player mod would somehow eliminate all cheating online. (it didn't remove a single cheater)
See in reality the "free" content isn't really free, thus Rockstar had to take legal action to prevent players from being able to have the "free" content in single player. (because if you can have it in single player, there's no reason for you to buy any shark cards)
Rockstar requiring their games to check for an internet connection to "verify the purchase" is easily one of the worst, most anti-consumer things ever done by any gaming company to ever exist.
This is what people say about RDR2 also, yet for me that game requires an internet connection to "verify the purchase" literally every single time it launches.
It doesn't "save" the validation for a week or two like some people claim. I can launch the game right now, have it verify the purchase, close the game, disable internet, then try to launch the game again and it will fail due to being unable to connect to the internet to verify the purchase.
In reality the game shouldn't need to "verify the purchase" at all. It is an extremely anti-consumer practice that does nothing but prevent people from being able to play the game they bought.
The purchase was already "verified" twice, once when you bought the game and had it added to your library, and again when you installed it.