GTA V Modder Combines SPA II and PDM Scripts Into Unified 2026 Package
qiangqiang101 merged SPA II, Premium Deluxe Motorsport, and LS Tuner Garage into one V2.0 script with nine documented fixes and dual Legacy/Enhanced compatibility.

The scripter known as I'm Not Mental, or qiangqiang101, dropped a unified V2.0 package on April 8 that bundles three long-running GTA V community tools into a single installation. The release, titled SPA II & Premium Deluxe Motorsport 2026, pulls together INM's Single Player Apartment enhancements, Premium Deluxe Motorsport fixes, and LS Tuner Garage support, eliminating the need to manage each script separately and manually reconcile the conflicts that come with stacking them.
For single-player modders who have been running SPA II and PDM in parallel, the friction has always been real. Both scripts touch the same vehicle ownership and garage persistence systems, meaning updates to one could break the other, and installation order mattered more than most mod pages bothered to explain. The V2.0 package treats the three tools as one codebase, which is the right call.
The changelog lists nine distinct changes and fixes. The most visible behavioral shift is the menu system: the old iPhone-style interface is gone, replaced by a menu-on-keypress trigger that matches how most modern GTA V script menus operate. Teleport-to-property on purchase is now built in, as is an option to add cash directly from the menu. The package also ships with MLO additions, new markers, camera corrections, and a fix for an infinite loop that fired when players left garages. That last one had been a known frustration for anyone who spent serious time cycling through a modded property.
Compatibility covers both the current Legacy build of GTA V and the Enhanced version, which the mod page notes is "now fully tested in Enhanced." That dual support matters given that the GTA V player base is currently split between those who upgraded to Enhanced and those still on Legacy.
The source code is available on GitHub, meaning server operators and other scripters can fork the project or pull specific components without starting from scratch. That open-source posture gives the package a longer maintenance runway than closed scripts typically enjoy, and it signals that the INM contributor group intends this to be a living project rather than a one-off drop. For long-term single-player modders, that continuity is the real value of the release.
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