Rahe Speakers System
Immersive spatial audio speakers for unforgettable in-game events
ESX is still the framework most FiveM roleplay servers run, and this page collects paid scripts built for it. Everything here targets es_extended, with ESX Legacy and oxmysql as the baseline, and product pages list dependencies like ox_lib or ox_inventory before checkout.
Immersive spatial audio speakers for unforgettable in-game events
Replicate ProdigyRP 2.0 Target UI, ox_target Optimized.
Run the whole Beanmachine, from cooking to 40 delivery stops
Hire AI bodyguards, gang recruits, and police backup instantly
Ten drugs, every interaction run through the target system
Deploy optimized, multi-stage, role-based bank heists.
Multi-framework vehicle rentals with five preset categories included
One lightbar script covers all 22 cars, no duplicate models
A working Burgershot on Gabz with 40 delivery drops
Mix base uniform colors independently of department patches and insignia
Standalone 10-player dodgeball arena for ESX, QBCore, Qbox servers
One script replaces every restaurant resource on your server
Issue licenses, documents, and IDs with realistic photos.
Immersive gold panning job with NPC sales and rewards
Fourteen restaurant jobs preconfigured, from Burgershot to Bean Machine
27 vehicle hacks from one CRT-styled device
Four-stage cocaine production on its own handcrafted island
Custom graffiti spray script with full sync and anti-exploit
Drop-in minigame pack for ESX, QBCore, Qbox heists
Spin the cylinder and test your players' nerve
Scan faults, code mods, and read live data in-game
Own a laundromat, or break into someone else's
YouTube-powered car radio with realistic 3D positional audio
High-performance QBCore/ESX/Qbox garages, impounds, private, job, gang.
More FiveM roleplay servers run ESX than anything else, which is why most script developers build for es_extended first and port to other frameworks later. That head start cuts both ways. The ESX catalog is the deepest in the scene, but it is also full of abandoned resources written for ESX 1.1 that throw errors the moment you load them into ESX Legacy. This category exists to sort that out. Every listing here is a paid ESX script with a maintained release, a stated framework version, and a product page that tells you what it needs before you check out.
The range covers the systems a roleplay server actually runs on. Job scripts with bossmenus and society accounts. Heists that stage police response instead of spawning a bag of cash next to the player. Drug loops with processing steps and dirty money that has to be washed. Beyond those you will find HUDs, multicharacter, garages, player owned dealerships and admin panels. Some listings are escrow protected through the cfx keymaster, others ship fully open source, and each product page says which.
Everything in this category targets es_extended, and each product page states the minimum version it was tested on, almost always ESX Legacy with oxmysql. Where a script needs ox_lib, ox_inventory or ox_target, the dependency sits at the top of the listing so you are not discovering it in a console error at 2am. A number of scripts also include a QBCore bridge. If the page does not mention one, assume ESX only.
Installation follows the usual pattern. Drop the resource into your resources folder, run the included SQL file against your database, add the ensure line to server.cfg below es_extended and its dependencies, then restart. Escrow assets transfer through keymaster to your cfx account after purchase. Most scripts here are genuinely drag-and-drop if your server already runs the ox stack, and the ones that need item entries or job rows added by hand say so in their docs.
We run ESX servers ourselves, so listings get loaded onto a live ESX Legacy build before they go up, not just skimmed for screenshots. Product pages carry the details that actually decide a purchase: dependencies, escrow status, supported inventories, and resmon under load where the developer provides it. Files and keys deliver instantly after checkout and updates are included for as long as the developer maintains the script. If something conflicts with your stack, support means a real answer from someone who has debugged an ESX server before, not a canned reply pointing you back at the docs you already read.
Yes. Every listing states the es_extended version it was tested on, and the standard target is ESX Legacy with oxmysql. If a script also supports older ESX builds, the product page says so.
Not by default. Some developers include a QBCore bridge, and where one exists it is listed on the product page. If no bridge is mentioned, treat the script as ESX only.
Only when the product page lists it as a dependency. Many item-based scripts support both ox_inventory and the stock ESX inventory, with a config toggle to pick between them. Check the requirements section before buying.
Escrow scripts are encrypted through the cfx keymaster, so core files stay locked while configs remain editable. Open source scripts give you full access to every file. Pick open source if you plan heavy customisation, escrow is fine if you only need config changes.
Drop the resource into your resources folder, run the included SQL file, and add the ensure line to server.cfg below es_extended and any listed dependencies. Escrow purchases transfer to your cfx account through keymaster. Most scripts here take minutes to set up if your server already runs oxmysql.
Where the developer publishes resmon numbers, the product page shows them, including figures under load rather than just idle. As a rule of thumb, a script sitting at 0.00ms idle and staying under a few hundredths of a millisecond in use is safe for a full server.
Yes, updates are included with your purchase. es_extended and ox_lib change over time, so we favour developers with an active changelog. New versions download from your account, or through keymaster for escrow assets.