I think your question is vague, but I also think I understand what you are asking. It seems like you are asking if you should create the relationship between the user table and the events table or simply just store the user id in the events table without the relationship.
In short order, yes, you will be "shooting yourself in the foot" in multiple ways. First, having foreign keys between related entities enforces integrity into your database. Meaning you can't tie an event to a non-existent user. Second, SQL uses these foreign keys to better index and query your tables. Lastly, you lose a lot of the abilities of Entity Framework such as being able to do the following:
var user = db.Users.First(x=>x.Id == userId);
var userName = user.Name;
var events = user.Events.ToList();
In this example, I only have to reference my DataContext once, yet, can access any properties or related entities to that object. Of course, this works both ways.
var event = db.Events.First(x=>x.Id == eventId);
var eventOwner = event.User;
With that said, this article should give you some really good guidance on doing relationships and code first. Using your example, it should be as easy as the following:
public partial class User{
public User(){
this.Events = new HashSet<Event>();
}
public Guid UserId {get;set;}
public string Name {get;set;}
//...other properties as needed
public virtual ICollection<Event> Events {get;set;}
}
public partial class Event{
public int EventId {get;set;}
public Guid UserId {get;set;}
//...other properties
public virtual User User {get;set;}
}
As for storing something as a string that is actually a GUID, the foreign key will not allow you to map to columns of different data types. Either they both need to be varchar or that both need to be Guid (uniqueidentifier in SQL). Keep with the GUID, better indexing than a random set of characters.