This also happens to be important for Australia's ratings of Entertainment and other locales, though the USA is stressed in the article. The Modding community seems a small section, but this case REALLY put into play stringent rating overhaul so that anything NOT mentioned by developers would STILL hold them accountable when a game goes to a board for it's retail rating requirements. I'll be scanning this for Photobucket since it's a lot to just type up, however, most of you guys know Patrick Wildenborg discovered it, and he's still a member of the GTAForums, of course, well respected, This noted article comments on his position at the time, even declining an ABC TV news interview, and probably because he was not there to defend Modding, or Speak to it's relevance in gaming, from the interview conducted prior for the game, Rockstar rep said that the studio had an open policy that precipitated modding by those who well, Mod. What it misses, as it went to press, it covered JUST HAPPENING legal measures regarding Take2 and Rockstar, the backlash took some time to build. While it was disabled for the launch of the game, a mod for the PC version enabled access. I got my hands on two issues of the same Computer Games magazine, Both cover the controversy over Hot Coffee. Hot Coffee was an inaccessible sex minigame in the original 2004 release of Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas.