This is a general thing with the gaming industry. Not necessarily limited to one game.
Consoles, and games in some capacity, that you have to authenticate to the Internet to serve its intended purpose.
Back in the day, 20 or so years ago, you'd buy a console, unbox it, set it up, plug in controllers, insert the game and play. Simple. Things got a bit complicated with the seventh generation of consoles as Internet became mainstream. For PS3,
some games had a
mandatory install. Then, some updates to download. BUT, you still could enjoy the console and majority of games with Internet.
Then, the eighth generation of consoles came around. You needed to connect to the Internet to even use the console. And you had to install games from the Blu-Ray drive to play. As games would get bigger with updates, size and DLC, the finite space would fill up.
Microsoft in particular was egregious with the Xbox One. Remember their
always online DRM requirement? It was at a point where used physical games would be a thing of the past. You had to stay connected to play any game.