CBHelper 2.1.0 adds wanted level lock and armor refill
CBHelper 2.1.0 gave LSPDFR patrols faster controls, with wanted-level locking, armor refill, and cleaner teleport tools built for quick in-game use.

CBHelper 2.1.0 stayed true to its original pitch as a lightweight, RAGEPluginHook-based in-game menu, but the new build made patrol work noticeably smoother for LSPDFR players who want fast controls without hauling around a full trainer suite. Instead of digging through bulkier menu trees during a chaotic callout, players could now lock the wanted level from the Players tab, refill armor instantly, and keep the session moving.
That wanted-level lock was the headline quality-of-life change. In practice, it gave patrol scenes a pause button when escalation was getting messy, whether the goal was to stabilize a traffic stop, hold a pursuit at a certain intensity, or keep a scripted situation from spiraling while setting up the next step. It was the kind of function that mattered most in the middle of play, when speed and simplicity beat feature bloat.

The other additions followed the same logic. CBHelper 2.1.0 added a full armor refill option, a new Known Places entry in the Teleport tab, and copy-position tools for both vec3 and vec4 coordinates. That made the menu more useful not only for free-roam sessions, but also for mod testing, mission staging, and scene setup, where precise positioning and quick resets save real time.
What separated CBHelper from larger alternatives was restraint. The file page described it as intentionally minimal and performance-friendly, a utility meant to sit beside a mod stack rather than become the center of it. For players who already know the muscle memory of Native Trainer-style menus, that matters: CBHelper aimed to answer the small, repeated problems that slow a patrol down, not to replace every tool in the loadout.
The creator also noted that AI tools were used in some minor areas, including optimization and error fixing, but the package still landed as a straightforward helper built around quick access. For LSPDFR users, that is the point. The update did not try to impress with a giant feature list. It trimmed friction from the exact moments when a patrol session needs to stay moving.
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