I Paid Players $10,000 to Destroy My GTA 5 Supercar Collection

I Paid Players $10,000 to Destroy My GTA 5 Supercar Collection



I Paid Players $10,000 to Destroy My GTA 5 Supercar Collection

In GTA 5 Online, most people do everything they can to protect their cars. We armor them, hide them in garages, and rage when someone blows them up. But one day, I decided to flip the rules completely. I told my friends and random players, “I’ll pay you $10,000 for every one of my supercars you destroy.”

Yes, I really did that. And yes, it was just as painful (and hilarious) as it sounds.

The Idea

I was bored scrolling through my garages one day, looking at my expensive car collection — all the shiny rides I had spent hours grinding for. Then I thought, “What if I turned all this wealth into chaos?” That’s when the idea hit me: I’d offer real in-game money to anyone brave enough to blow up my cars.

The rules were simple:

  1. Each destroyed car = $10,000 paid by me.
  2. They had to destroy it themselves — no suicide bombing with me in the car.
  3. Once a car exploded, I couldn’t replace it until the challenge ended.

I sent messages around the lobby and within seconds, I had a full squad ready to “help.” Some players even joined just to watch the madness unfold.

Preparing the Collection

I lined up all my favorite supercars at the Los Santos Airport. There were 10 of them in total — custom paint jobs, turbo upgrades, and maxed-out armor. They looked beautiful sitting there under the sun. I took a few screenshots for “memories” because I knew what was about to happen.

Cars included my Ocelot Pariah, Itali GTO, Entity XXR, and my personal favorite, the Pegassi Zentorno. Each one had cost me hours of heists and races. Seeing them all together made me proud… until the explosions started.

The First Explosion

It started off calm. One player pulled out a rocket launcher, looked at me, and asked, “You sure about this?” I nodded. A second later, my $2 million Pariah turned into a ball of fire. Everyone screamed and laughed while I just stood there in silence, watching my baby burn.

“There goes $10,000,” I said over voice chat. The guy who blew it up started celebrating like he won the lottery. It was hilarious — and painful. But there was no turning back now.

Total Chaos Begins

After the first car went up in flames, everyone lost control. Rockets, grenades, sticky bombs — it was chaos. Cars were flying through the air, flames everywhere, smoke filling the runway. My screen looked like a war zone. One by one, my beautiful supercars disappeared in explosions.

Players were laughing and cheering while I kept transferring $10,000 per car. My in-game wallet was dropping faster than my FPS. It was honestly one of the most ridiculous scenes I’ve ever seen in GTA 5.

At one point, two players started fighting over who got to destroy the next car. They ended up blowing each other up instead, which somehow made it even funnier. The chat was just full of “LMAO” and “This is insane.”

The Painful Ones

Some cars hurt more to lose than others. My Zentorno, for example, had been with me since the early days of GTA Online. I used it for missions, races, and everything in between. Watching it explode felt like saying goodbye to an old friend. I may or may not have shed a virtual tear.

Then came my favorite car — the Grotti Itali GTO. Custom red and black paint, gold rims, and perfect handling. I told everyone, “Okay, leave this one for last.” They agreed… then instantly blew it up. The explosion hadn’t even faded when one player typed in chat, “Sorry, muscle memory.” I couldn’t even be mad — it was too funny.

Halfway Through

After five cars, I’d already spent $50,000. My bank account was starting to look thin, but the laughter made it worth it. The players in the session were having the time of their lives. Even random cops spawned in to join the madness, shooting at everyone and making the explosions even bigger.

I spawned in a few backup vehicles just to keep the chaos going. Someone called in an airstrike, another person used a tank — it went from a “car challenge” to a full-on war zone. The airport was completely covered in fire and debris. I could barely see the runway anymore.

The Final Car

After nearly 30 minutes of nonstop chaos, only one car remained — my Progen Emerus, worth a fortune. I stood next to it with my hands up, saying, “Anyone who destroys this one gets $20,000.” You could practically feel the excitement in voice chat.

Three people fired rockets at the same time. The explosion was massive — it looked like a small nuke went off. My last car was gone. My collection, wiped out completely. I sent the final payment and just stood there laughing.

Ten cars, gone. $100,000 spent. Zero regrets.

The Aftermath

When the smoke cleared, all that was left was a giant field of wreckage. I took a screenshot of the crater where my cars once stood — it looked like a movie set after filming an action scene. I couldn’t even be mad. The destruction was too beautiful.

Everyone in the lobby thanked me for the “event.” Some even said it was the most fun they’d ever had in GTA 5. I realized something — the cars can always be replaced, but moments like that can’t.


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