| Aspect | Official 100GB Version | 30GB Compressed Version | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | 15 minutes (Steam) | 3 - 5 hours | | CPU Usage | Normal | High (decompression lags PC) | | Texture Quality | High / Ultra | Low / Medium | | Audio Quality | CD Quality (1.4 Mbps) | MP3 Quality (128 Kbps) | | Stability | Very High | Frequent crashes (missing assets) | | GTA Online | Yes | No |
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 @ 2.40GHz / AMD Phenom 9850 Quad-Core @ 2.5GHz. RAM: At least 4GB (8GB recommended).
Yes, but with caveats. Legitimate game "repacks" (compressed versions of the game installer) can reduce the initial download size to roughly 30GB to 35GB . However: Installation Time: gta 5 highly compressed 30gb
First, I'll open the search results that provide information about the concept of compression, the official game size, and the specific FitGirl repack. search results returned with cursor IDs, but the open command expects the cursor parameter to be an integer representing the search result's position. The initial search result is an array of items, each with an index. I need to refer to the search result by its index. The cursor in the open command is not an array index but a reference to the search result. The documentation says "cursor" is the index of the search result in the conversation. However, the search result I have is from the first search. The user's initial search returned 5 results. I should refer to them as cursor 0, but the open command says "cursor" is "the index of the search result in the conversation". In the conversation history, there is a search result from the user's first turn. That search result is likely at cursor 0. But the error says "Invalid cursor [0] ". Let me check the format. The open_list parameter expects an array of objects, each with "id" and "cursor". The "cursor" should be the index of the search result in the conversation. In this case, the first search result is at cursor 0. However, the error might be because I used "[0]" instead of the integer 0. The parameter says "cursor": "type": "integer". So I should use 0, not [0]. Let me try again. seems the tool is not recognizing the cursor. Perhaps the search results are not stored in the conversation state. The user has provided a search result in the initial user message. That search result is a list of items. Maybe I need to treat them as separate items. The open command's "cursor" parameter might refer to the index of the search result in the conversation, but the conversation history includes the user's message which contains a search result. However, the tool might not have access to that. Alternatively, I might need to use the "open" tool without specifying a cursor, but with an ID that is a URL. Let me check the documentation: "id": "description": "ID or URL", "anyOf": ["type": "integer", "type": "string"]. So I can use a URL. I'll extract the URLs from the search results. FitGirl page shows original size 122.2 GB and repack size from 51.2 GB, not 30 GB. This suggests that a 30 GB version might be an even more compressed version from other sources or a misinterpretation. I'll need to address this discrepancy.
This public link is valid for 7 days and shares a thread, including any personal information you added. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted. If you share with third parties, their policies apply. Can’t copy the link right now. Try again later. | Aspect | Official 100GB Version | 30GB
To hit an aggressive target like 30 GB, repackers often have to remove optional data. This can include deleting multiplayer files (GTA Online), removing non-English audio tracks, or heavily downscaling 4K cinematic videos to 720p or lower resolution. The True Cost of Highly Compressed Files
—at least 6 GB of RAM (including virtual memory) is required for installing the FitGirl repack. Legitimate game "repacks" (compressed versions of the game
Windows has a built-in command-line tool called Compact.exe that can compress installed game folders losslessly at the operating system level, saving you 10–20GB of disk space without breaking game stability.