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Twelve years on, GTA V still feels like it's everywhere, and you can burn through hours without even noticing. Whether you're grinding heists, messing about in Free Mode, or just trying to stay stocked up on ammo and cash, stuff like GTA 5 Money ends up on a lot of players' minds because the game's economy is a beast. And yet, for all the polish Rockstar's added over three console generations, there's one tiny weapon oddity that keeps popping up like it owns the place.
You'll spot it fast if you do drive-bys a lot. Put a suppressor on something like the AP Pistol or Micro SMG, hop on foot, and everything looks right. Nice little can on the barrel, the sound's muted, job done. Then you slide into a car and—poof—the suppressor model just isn't there anymore. Fire out the window and it gets even weirder: the audio snaps back to the loud, default crack like you never equipped anything. In first-person it's honestly kind of brutal, because you're expecting that soft pop and instead the game yells in your headphones.
Here's the part that messes with people. Even while the gun looks and sounds unsuppressed, NPCs often behave like you're still shooting quietly. You can dump a mag from the driver's seat and the nearby enemies don't always react the way they should if you were actually making that much noise. It's like the game is running two truths at once: the visuals and audio say "loud," but the underlying stealth flag still says "suppressed." So if you're worried your approach is ruined, it usually isn't. It just feels broken, and that's the annoying bit.
Try the same setup on a motorcycle and suddenly everything behaves. The suppressor stays on the weapon, and the sound stays muffled like it's meant to. That contrast makes the most believable explanation pretty simple: in enclosed car animations, the suppressor length would clip through dashboards, doors, and window frames constantly. Rather than rework a ton of vehicle shooting animations, Rockstar likely hid the attachment model in cars and called it a day. The sound bug feels like a side effect of that workaround, one they never circled back to fix.
While you're thinking about silencers, there's a small trick during Cayo Perico setup that saves you from wasting cash. The prep screen offers suppressors as an optional purchase, and loads of people buy them out of habit. If you choose a stealthy finale approach, the game typically gives your loadout suppressors anyway, so paying extra is often pointless. That kind of hidden convenience is classic GTA: messy in one spot, oddly generous in another. And if you're trying to keep your bankroll healthy for upgrades, weapons, or even a quick top-up through services like RSVSR, it's worth knowing which purchases the game is already handing you for free.
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