Take-Two has been issuing takedowns for GTA mods

Earlier this year, Rockstar’s parent company Take-Two Interactive played takedown whack-a-mole with reverse-engineered versions of Grand Theft Auto 3 and Vice City. The publisher has apparently gone further in the last week or so, issuing DMCA takedown notices for GTA 5 map mods like Vice City Overhaul, as well as multiple popular mods for earlier games in the series.

GTA: Liberty City was a total conversion that brought the setting of GTA 3 into Vice City’s engine, and was first released in 2005. It’s no longer available on ModDB. Vice Cry, which replaced Vice City’s textures and models with higher-resolution versions, is also gone. So is GTA: Underground, which combined the maps of not just GTA 3, Vice City, and San Andreas, but those of other Rockstar games Bully, Manhunt, and Manhunt 2, then added gang warfare. So are the mods converting San Andreas into ports of console-exclusives Liberty City Stories and Vice City Stories. And that’s not all.

(Image credit: djluin)

A thread on GTAForums has been cataloguing the removals, as well as noting that Rockstar’s statement on singleplayer mods, initially made during the back-and-forth over modding tool OpenIV in 2017, and which many modders have been assuming would protect their work, was quietly updated in 2019. It now notes that it does not apply to either the “use or importation of other IP (including other Rockstar IP) in the project” or “making new games, stories, missions, or maps”. Neither of those clauses was in the original version of Rockstar’s statement, which has been excluded from the Wayback Machine, but can still be read in our news story from the time.

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