New GTA V Mod Transforms Los Santos Into a Full Ride-Sharing Career
FlareXll's LSRSS BETA 1.0.1 turns GTA V into a ride-sharing career with Uber-style fares, driver ratings, and full progression.

Scripter FlareXll released LSRSS (Los Santos Ride Sharing Services) BETA 1.0.1 on GTA5-Mods on April 9, converting GTA V's open world into a fully structured ride-sharing career with request acceptance, dynamic fares, and a driver reputation system that accumulates across sessions.
The mod, distributed as a ScriptHookVDotNet .NET script, builds a complete job framework around passenger transport. Players accept ride requests across Los Santos, pick up and deliver passengers, collect fares, tips, and bonuses, and accumulate a driver rating tied to a full career progression system. FlareXll's page bills it directly as a script that "transforms GTA V into an Uber-style experience," and the feature set delivers on that framing.
That architecture puts LSRSS in different territory from the taxi mods that have circulated in the GTA V community for years. Older scripts typically assigned a static pickup point and a fixed destination fee. LSRSS layers in the modern ride-sharing model: a dynamic request UI, variable tips, rating mechanics, and career-track progression. Those structural elements are borrowed from the economy and job frameworks that have driven player retention on FiveM roleplay servers for years, but LSRSS packages them in a single-player-native format. That lowers the barrier considerably for streamers and content creators who want to demonstrate those systems without running a full server.

FlareXll carries an established catalogue of .NET scripts and utilities on GTA5-Mods, and the BETA 1.0.1 label signals the project is open for community testing and active iteration. Early download and comment counts showed rapid uptake within the first 24 hours, concentrated among roleplayers and content creators looking for plug-and-play career mechanics.
The beta designation means bugs should be expected and patches will likely follow quickly. For server administrators, the more significant takeaway may be the design patterns LSRSS introduces. Its rating system, fare economy, and request-acceptance loop are all adaptable to larger RP frameworks, and the weeks after a mod like this lands tend to produce forks, integrations, and expansions built on the original structure.
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