Point taken. It's not a contract. But it is still legally binding, and that's all I was going for when I said equivalent.
I can imagine R* encouraging modding. I just know some games that are mainly multi-player based restrict modding in the EULA (in forms of cheating, etc).
Did you read the entire EULA? I know I didn't. But it's the equivalent of signing a contract. If they included anything in there about not modding the game (as I know many games with multiplayer support often include), then yes. You may well have signed a contract saying you couldn't tweak the game. Admittedly, not when you bought it, but rather, when you installed it.
Point taken. It's not a contract. But it is still legally binding, and that's all I was going for when I said equivalent. I can imagine R* encouraging modding. I just know some games that are mainly multi-player based restrict modding in the EULA (in forms of cheating, etc).
Maybe it says something in the EULA?
Did you read the entire EULA? I know I didn't. But it's the equivalent of signing a contract. If they included anything in there about not modding the game (as I know many games with multiplayer support often include), then yes. You may well have signed a contract saying you couldn't tweak the game. Admittedly, not when you bought it, but rather, when you installed it.