Quinn’s Callouts adds a lightweight starter pack for LSPDFR patrols
Quinn’s Callouts trims LSPDFR to eight focused scenarios, making it an easy first pack for players who want variety without risking a messy install.

A small starter pack with a clear purpose
Quinn’s Callouts lands as exactly the kind of LSPDFR add-on a careful patrol player can appreciate: compact, readable, and built to slot into an existing build without turning setup into a project. Quinn Development pitches it as a lightweight starter pack for LSPDFR and RAGE Plugin Hook, and that framing matters because the best first callout pack is usually the one that adds life to a patrol without adding baggage.
That approach gives the mod its appeal. Instead of flooding a save with a huge library of scenes, Quinn’s Callouts focuses on a tight set of incidents that can freshen a shift fast and keep the patrol loop moving. For anyone who has watched larger callout packs swell into a maintenance headache, the smaller scope is the main selling point.
Eight callouts that cover both calm streets and high-risk scenes
The pack’s incident list is short enough to understand at a glance, but broad enough to keep a shift from feeling repetitive. It includes Active Shooter, Armed Conflict, Stolen Package, Trespassing Complaint, Police Impersonator, Suspicious Person, Public Intoxication, and Noise Complaint. That mix is the point: it gives you both danger-heavy responses and slower community-policing moments.
- Active Shooter
- Armed Conflict
- Stolen Package
- Trespassing Complaint
- Police Impersonator
- Suspicious Person
- Public Intoxication
- Noise Complaint
That balance matters in practice. A patrol that jumps from a quiet complaint to a life-threatening scene feels more like a living city and less like a scripted checklist, and this pack keeps that rhythm without demanding a massive content stack. It is the sort of lineup that can fit into a regular LSPDFR rotation instead of taking over the whole experience.
Simple controls and less setup friction
Quinn’s Callouts also leans into convenience, which is a major part of why it reads as a starter pack rather than a showcase mod. The page highlights straightforward keybinds for accepting callouts, ending scenes, opening the callout interface, and forcing a random callout, so you can get into patrols without digging through config files first. That kind of accessibility is what makes a new pack feel usable on day one.
The author also notes that the pack uses dialogue and is meant to be easy to use. For players who like their patrol mods to feel natural rather than mechanical, dialogue goes a long way toward making each scene feel like a real response instead of a bare trigger event. It also helps the pack earn its place in a working install, because the flow stays clean instead of asking you to micromanage every encounter.
Where it sits in the wider LSPDFR ecosystem
The broader context matters here. LSPD First Response is the police modification for the PC version of Grand Theft Auto V, and the homepage currently shows version 0.4.9 alongside an Enhanced Edition preview. That helps explain why fresh, lightweight callout packs still have a real audience in 2026: players are still building patrol stacks around a living mod framework, not a finished product.
Quinn’s Callouts also depends on RAGE Plugin Hook, the official plugin framework used by the LSPDFR community. RAGE Plugin Hook’s own site says it is not affiliated with or endorsed by Rockstar Games or Take-Two Interactive, and its requirements page lists a legal copy of GTA V, .NET Framework 4.6.2 or higher, and Visual C++ redistributables. In other words, this is not a standalone toy mod, it is a piece of a bigger policing ecosystem that rewards clean installs and predictable behavior.
That is where Quinn’s smaller footprint becomes a real advantage. Larger callout collections can be tempting, but they also tend to bring more friction, more overlap, and more reasons for a stable build to wobble. Quinn’s Callouts is aimed at the opposite instinct: keep the patrol stack lean, keep the scenes varied, and let the game breathe.
Release details, reception, and the AI disclosure
The download page gives the pack a very fresh profile. Quinn’s Callouts is listed as version 1.0.0, with a file size of 1.65 MB, 379 views, and 41 downloads, and it is marked compatible with all versions. The page also says the file has no known threats detected, which will matter to players who are trying to keep a working setup intact rather than gambling on a random install.
There is also a notable disclosure attached to the mod. The LCPDFR page notes heavy AI use in both the description and the mod content, and that is relevant in a community where polish, authorship, and workflow all shape how a pack is judged. Support is being offered through a Quinn Development Discord server, which gives the release a direct line back to its creator if players run into issues.
For a scene that already has established names like Regular Callouts, which says it was once among the Top 10 most downloaded callout packs and includes 23 calls, Quinn’s Callouts does not try to win by size. It tries to win by staying useful, easy to live with, and light enough to drop into a patrol without destabilizing the rest of the build. That is exactly why it stands out as a strong first callout pack for players who want more action, not more trouble.
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