Your GTA RP city deserves better than an oversold game panel. Dedicated bare-metal nodes in Dallas (central US ping), txAdmin out of the box, ESX/QBCore ready — online in minutes.
Small team, dedicated single-tenant bare metal, our own stack top to bottom — no oversold cloud, no reselling.
Every FiveM server ships with txAdmin for recipes, restarts, player management and live console.
Run ESX, QBCore, vMenu or a custom framework — full file access, no artificial limits on resources.
Your players connect to Dallas, TX — balanced latency from both US coasts. US East node available too.
RP servers hate noisy neighbours. Your server runs on single-tenant hardware we control entirely.
Network-level protection included — rival cities can't take yours offline.
Automatic daily backups of your server files. Your city's progress is safe.
Monthly, no contracts. € billing via Stripe. Cancel anytime.
Fully automated — no ticket, no waiting for a human.
6 GB runs a fresh ESX/QBCore city comfortably; upgrade any time as your city grows.
Choose FiveM/GTA in the game picker. Pay via Stripe (€, monthly, cancel anytime).
Your Pterodactyl login arrives by email — start txAdmin setup with your cfx.re key.
Install your framework, scripts and MLOs with full file/FTP access. Invite your players.
Straight answers.
Yes — like every FiveM host, you bring your own free cfx.re license key. You enter it during txAdmin setup, which takes about two minutes.
A fresh ESX or QBCore server runs well on 6 GB. Cities with many custom scripts, MLOs and 64+ player slots should go 8–12 GB.
Yes, txAdmin is the default way to manage your server — recipes, scheduled restarts, player management and live console included.
Yes — full file access via the panel and SFTP. ESX, QBCore, vMenu, custom frameworks, custom maps: all fine.
Dallas, TX (central US — balanced ping for both coasts) and a US East node. Hardware is dedicated single-tenant bare metal.
Provisioning is automated: panel credentials usually arrive within minutes of payment, any time of day.
6 GB Standard is the sweet spot for new ESX/QBCore servers.