Late-April GTA5 mod updates bring patrol tools, callouts, and quality-of-life fixes
A late-April wave of LSPDFR updates is all about smoother patrols, with MDT, callout, and quality-of-life tools doing the heavy lifting.

The new patrol baseline
The smartest late-April installs are not the loudest ones. They are the scripts that keep a shift moving when Rockstar updates have shifted the floorboards under the mod scene again, and this batch leans hard into that kind of practical survival.
What stands out in the current GTA5 scripts-and-plugins listing is how tightly grouped the useful stuff is: RichPresence LSPDFR from Minas Store, Disable Pistol Whip, OutfitToggler, LA_Callouts, MDTPro, PropsMenuV, and PDTP all sit in the same active stretch of the directory. That clustering matters because it points to where the ecosystem is putting its energy right now, into tools that reduce friction, improve patrol flow, and make long LSPDFR sessions feel less like wrestling a menu and more like working a beat.
What to install first on a current build
If you are setting up a fresh or recently repaired LSPDFR loadout, start with the tools that solve the most immediate annoyances. Disable Pistol Whip is the most obvious quality-of-life win in the group, because it targets a tiny but maddening problem that can break immersion in the middle of an encounter. OutfitToggler comes next in spirit, because fast wardrobe control is the kind of thing you notice only when you do not have it, especially if you swap between duty states, plainclothes moments, and different patrol roles without wanting to rebuild an entire outfit from scratch.
PDTP also belongs in the first wave if you care about getting on scene quickly. A quick-travel utility for police stations sounds simple, but in practice it trims dead time between calls, briefing, and deployment. Those are the tools that make a current build feel stable and usable before you even add larger content layers.
The tools that change the flow of a shift
MDTPro is the standout for players who want the whole patrol loop to feel more like a working department than a loose collection of scripts. Its page describes a local web server that opens in any browser, which means it is not just another in-game panel, but a separate terminal-style workflow that sits alongside the action. It handles reports, shift management, officer profiles, vehicle and person searches, and incident-style paperwork, which makes it the most ambitious utility in this late-April batch.
That kind of system is a big deal for roleplay because it turns the downtime between calls into something structured. Instead of treating paperwork as a chore bolted onto the end of a stop, MDTPro gives you the tools to build a patrol rhythm around records, identity checks, and case handling. If your ideal LSPDFR session lives and dies by believable procedure, this is the piece that can reshape the whole experience.
Why RichPresence matters more than it sounds
RichPresence LSPDFR from Minas Store is easy to underestimate until you think about how many patrol sessions now happen inside a broader Discord or squad ecosystem. Better status integration sounds cosmetic on paper, but for players who run coordinated shifts, stream patrols, or just like the feeling that the game is plugged into the rest of the crew, it adds connective tissue that standard police scripts often miss.

That makes it one of the more modern-feeling additions in the batch. It is not trying to replace core gameplay, it is trying to make the session feel visible and social in the places where GTA roleplay actually lives now. When a tool helps the patrol feel joined up with the server or the group around it, it earns a place in the first install pass.
The callout pack that adds real variety
LA_Callouts is the content piece that gives this update wave a bigger mission than maintenance. The listing calls out 14 unique callouts along with custom dialogue, which immediately puts it in the category of a genuine gameplay expansion rather than a cosmetic helper. That is the kind of pack you add when the core patrol loop already works and you want new situations, new voice texture, and more reasons to keep a shift rolling.
This is also where the late-April wave shows its balance. The directory is not just full of utility scripts trying to patch pain points, it is also still producing the traditional patrol content that makes LSPDFR feel alive over the long haul. LA_Callouts gives you the cases, the chatter, and the surprise turns that make the smaller quality-of-life tools worth installing in the first place.
Props and station hopping for the in-between moments
PropsMenuV and PDTP sit in the supporting-cast category, but that should not be mistaken for unnecessary. PropsMenuV is about easy prop placement, which is the sort of feature that becomes invaluable when you are trying to stage a scene, block off an area, or make a callout feel more grounded without spending half the stop wrestling with placement tools. It is a classic helper mod: not flashy, but quietly useful every time a patrol needs a little scene dressing.
PDTP, meanwhile, sounds like the kind of convenience script that saves time repeatedly instead of dramatically. Quick travel between police stations is not glamorous, but in a roleplay environment it can keep the session moving between intake, dispatch, and the next call. Together, these two tools fill the spaces between big encounters, where a lot of LSPDFR’s realism is actually won.
What this late-April wave says about the scene
Taken together, these updates show a script ecosystem that is still moving fast on lightweight, build-friendly tools. The most useful creators right now are not necessarily chasing spectacle. They are solving the daily frustrations that show up during long patrols: awkward inputs, clumsy outfit changes, slow station movement, thin callout variety, and the need for a better administrative layer.
That is the real story of this batch. If you want the clearest path into a current LSPDFR setup, build around the utilities that keep the patrol smooth, then add MDTPro for deeper process, RichPresence for connected play, and LA_Callouts for the extra cases that keep the shift from going stale. In a scene that keeps getting nudged around by game updates, the mods that win are the ones that make the police work feel immediate again.
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