Overview
The transcript reviews and tests various popular “unlimited money” glitches and scams in GTA 5, ultimately finding that none of them deliver as promised and cautioning players against believing these claims.
Testing Common GTA 5 Money Glitches
- Tried selling a street car at Los Santos Customs for millions; glitch did not work.
- Attempted a "secret ladder" wall glitch, surviving a VIP challenge for 10 minutes; earned only $21,000, not millions.
- Calculated it would take nearly 8 hours to make a million dollars with this method; deemed impractical.
- Tested spinning the casino wheel on Xbox for a guaranteed podium vehicle; did not win, method failed.
- Used the “look up while spinning slots” myth at the casino; had minor wins but lost all chips overall.
- Dialed multiple phone numbers allegedly giving money, including supposed “cheat” numbers; none worked except one legitimate story mode cheat.
Evaluating Robbery and Casino Methods
- Robbed gas stations multiple times as per a personal video, but the cash registers stopped providing money after the first attempt.
- Attempted to pay for “live” GTA money drops on YouTube; lost $10, received nothing in return.
- Waited at a specific location for a “golden money truck” to spawn; nothing happened after a long wait.
- Bought a Manchez bike and completed the “Wheelie Rider” challenge; prize ($12,000) was much lower than claimed.
- Tried selling Elegys for inflated amounts and attempted “money freezing” by toggling Wi-Fi; neither method worked.
- Searched random map locations (banks, safes, secret rooms) for easy money; found no evidence of hidden cash.
Sponsored Content & Alternative Suggestions
- Recommended Grand RP, a roleplay server, as a legitimate and more enjoyable way to earn money and play GTA.
- Noted that real jobs and in-game activities on Grand RP provide fair rewards, unlike the false glitches tested.
Conclusions & Warnings
- Every “unlimited money” glitch tested turned out to be fake or highly exaggerated.
- Warned viewers against sending money to strangers online promising in-game riches or falling for viral glitch videos.
- Expressed concern over the prevalence of scams in the GTA community and urged caution.
Decisions
- Declared all tested GTA 5 money glitches to be scams or ineffective.
Recommendations / Advice
- Avoid believing or attempting viral money glitches in GTA 5.
- Do not send money to online streamers or websites claiming to offer GTA money drops.
- Engage in legitimate in-game activities or approved servers to earn money safely.