But Leo was tired.
He typed a new README:
The constant pings. The chargebacks. The kids who stole his code, renamed it “EliteGarage,” and sold it on sketchy forums. The 2 AM bug reports that turned out to be user error. qbcore garage script free
Leo’s Discord exploded. Not with complaints this time. With thanks . “Dude, this saved my server. I’m 16, no job, couldn’t afford paid scripts.” “I learned how vehicle data works by reading your code. You’re the reason I started scripting.” “Can I donate? Actually, I’m donating anyway.” His Ko-fi page — dormant for months — suddenly had $340. A week later, Leo received a DM from a user named Kai_Dev . Profile picture: a cartoon fox wearing a hoodie. Kai_Dev: “Hey. I’m the one who leaked your old paid version on that forum last year. I just wanted to say… I’m sorry. I was 15 and stupid. Your free release made me realize how much work actually goes into this. I’ve been contributing docs and examples to the repo all week under a different account. Hope that’s okay.” Leo opened the repo’s pull requests. Sure enough — someone had rewritten the entire installation guide, added a video tutorial link, and even submitted a performance optimization for the MySQL queries. But Leo was tired
Then he pushed the commit. The last one. The kids who stole his code, renamed it