Why Quasar Mods Has a Bad Reputation in the FiveM Community
If you've spent any time in the FiveM server development scene, you've heard the name Quasar Mods — and you've probably heard it alongside a warning: don't buy it. But why?

If you've spent any time in the FiveM server development scene, you've heard the name Quasar Mods — and you've probably heard it alongside a warning: don't buy it. But why? On the surface, Quasar Store looks like a premium operation: polished product showcases, slick UI demos, and even Apple-style announcement events called "Quasar Direct." Yet beneath the marketing gloss lies a pattern of systemic failures that has earned them one of the worst reputations in the FiveM ecosystem.
Here's the full breakdown.
1. The Marketing vs. Reality Gap

Quasar sells the dream. Their scripts — housing systems, inventory overhauls, crime frameworks — are presented in cinematic promotional videos with flawless performance and breathtaking visuals. But the moment you deploy these scripts on a real, populated server, the illusion collapses.
Server owners who invested hundreds or even thousands of dollars in the Quasar ecosystem consistently report the same story: the scripts work fine in a sterile test environment but disintegrate under real server conditions.
Quasar Housing 5.x, marketed as "the most complete housing system ever created," becomes a source of constant crashes. Players get teleported to wrong coordinates, screens go black, and the server console fills up with Lua errors like attempt to index a nil value — a fundamental mistake that signals rushed, unvalidated code. When a housing script can't reliably spawn a player into their property without crashing the client, features like animated bathtubs and robot vacuums are entirely irrelevant.
The features are real. The stability is not.
2. Catastrophic Performance Problems
In FiveM development, performance is everything. Scripts are measured in milliseconds (ms) of CPU time per frame using the in-game Resource Monitor (resmon). Community standards demand scripts sit at near 0.00ms idle and stay well under 0.05ms active. Quasar scripts routinely blow past these thresholds.
Users report:
- Thread hitch warnings locking up entire servers
- Rubber-banding and severe client-side lag for every player
- Memory leaks that accumulate until the server crashes
- CPU spikes so severe that owners had to completely remove all Quasar scripts just to get their server stable again
The root cause is architectural: Quasar builds for screenshots, not for servers. Massive feature bloat — 350+ MLO integrations, RGB lighting, animated water effects, robot vacuum cleaners — is prioritized over efficient loop design and proper asynchronous database handling. When you combine that with GTA V's already aging engine, the result is catastrophic for any populated server.
3. Predatory Support Practices
This is where Quasar's reputation truly collapses. The pattern is disturbingly consistent across hundreds of independent reports:
- Pre-sale: Support is fast, friendly, and attentive. Every question answered, every concern addressed.
- Post-sale: Tickets are closed without resolution. Bugs are dismissed as "not a problem." Staff call paying customers incompetent — one infamous response blamed the user for what was happening "between the screen and the chair."
The support team weaponizes the ticketing system itself. Tickets are shut down prematurely, often while the user is still actively providing diagnostic information. When users ask for a fix, they're told to update — even when they already have the latest version. When they ask for a refund for demonstrably broken software, they're denied. Quasar's strict no-refund policy ensures that once they have your money, nothing can get it back.
This creates a vicious sunk-cost trap: owners have spent hundreds on a broken ecosystem and, unable to recover their funds, are forced to attempt impossible workarounds on encrypted code they are legally barred from fixing themselves.
4. Community Censorship and the Discord Echo Chamber
Quasar maintains a manufactured image of satisfaction through systematic censorship. Their Discord server — the primary touchpoint for prospective buyers — shows nothing but praise because everything else gets deleted.
- Users who post bug reports in public channels are permanently banned
- Reviews rated below 5 stars are quietly deleted
- Critical feedback is suppressed before new buyers can ever see it
The result: prospective buyers enter the Discord, see universal positivity and hype from "Quasar Direct" announcements, and buy. Only after purchase do they discover the reality. When they attempt to warn others, they are banned — perfectly perpetuating the cycle of deception for the next wave of buyers.
This isn't just poor moderation. It is an intentional system designed to perpetuate sales by hiding the truth from people who need it most.
5. Plagiarism Allegations
Perhaps the most damaging accusations are the persistent claims that Quasar's profitable catalog is built largely on stolen open-source code. Multiple community whistleblowers have presented evidence suggesting that Quasar takes freely available community scripts, wraps them in polished UI, encrypts them via the Cfx.re escrow system to hide the underlying logic, and sells them at a premium.
The term that keeps appearing in community discussions is "parasite." Not a developer building original tools — an opportunist monetizing other people's work without credit or compensation.
The Cfx.re escrow system — which encrypts all commercial FiveM scripts — has acknowledged security vulnerabilities that make this type of extraction technically feasible. Because the code is encrypted in the final product, buyers cannot verify its origin. They can only notice structural similarities and identical variable naming conventions when comparisons surface in whistleblower posts.
The Verdict
Quasar Mods has built a business model around one strategy: sell the dream, collect the money, disappear behind a wall of moderation and encryption.
The scripts are aesthetically impressive. The marketing is world-class. But the code is brittle, the support is hostile, the community is a censored echo chamber, and the ethics are deeply questionable.
For server owners building long-term communities, Quasar represents a massive financial and operational risk. The decision to invest in their ecosystem means betting your server's stability — and your players' trust — on software that has been repeatedly shown to fail under real-world conditions, from a developer who will not fix it, will not refund it, and will ban you for telling anyone the truth.
The FiveM community's verdict is clear. Quasar's reputation didn't collapse by accident.
Looking for reliable alternatives? Check out our guide to the best FiveM housing scripts and best FiveM inventory scripts — vetted by the community for real-world stability.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does Quasar Mods have a bad reputation in FiveM?
Quasar Mods is criticized for severe performance issues (high resmon usage, server crashes), hostile post-sale customer support, systematic censorship of negative feedback on their Discord, a strict no-refund policy, and persistent plagiarism allegations.
Are Quasar Store scripts worth buying?
Community consensus among experienced developers is that Quasar scripts look impressive in promotional videos but frequently cause instability on live, populated servers. Most experts recommend caution and thorough research before purchasing.
Does Quasar Mods ban users for leaving negative reviews?
Multiple verified reports indicate that users who leave critical feedback or bug reports in the Quasar Discord are permanently banned. Reviews below 5 stars have reportedly been deleted from their server.
