The last frontier of illegal activities that can be carried out in GTA V do not have to do with the usual crimes: here come the games broadcast for free. How did they do it?
GTA V has just found itself at the center of a piece of news that actually seems tailor-made for the great illegal simulation by Rockstar Games.
However, it is not a question new type of contract that can be unlocked but of someone who actually managed to commit a crime taking advantage of GTA V. Online someone points out that it is a way in which, for example, friends who are far away can watch games together. In fact, however, it is one illegal activity, given that it involves streaming content that is paid for. Yet, the fact that GTA V was chosen makes it all strangely fascinating.
Games broadcast for free, inside GTA V: reality and fiction meet
A bit like what happened in the past with the various chapters of Call of Duty, GTA is often dragged by the jacket when something bad happens in the real world. Video games that are considered a little more violent are often pointed out as the cause of many criminal acts in real life.
Recently someone discovered, fortunately one might say, that perhaps there is actually no connection between those who commit crimes in the real world and the video games that these subjects choose. But this time the crime wasn't committed because people were playing GTA. But it was committed While people played GTA V.
Someone, in a server, is indeed stumbled upon a television placed in the garden of a house with several people sitting around. These people were watching a game. A basketball game which however was not a fictitious clash between teams just to make Rockstar Games' simulation a little more real. In fact it was about an NBA game.
The video that appeared on TikTok then also arrived on the social network that once belonged to the blue bird and clearly opened the controversy among those who point out how people should go out more and those who instead declare that it could be a way to watch the game with friends who are otherwise very far away and with whom, for example, you certainly can't go to the bar.
A clearly illegal activity even if it takes place through the servers of a video game but a certainly fascinating experiment that tells us how Rockstar Games' criminal life simulation has perhaps a potential that is still unexpressed. A sort of less and sweetened version of The Sims. Lastly, we note the concern of those who fear that part of the world's population will disappear when GTA 6 comes out. A more than understandable concern.