Framework-neutral hub
Open the standalone scripts hub
Compare the broader standalone catalog before buying a resource that may still depend on voice, NUI, ACE permissions, webhooks, or shared utility libraries.
Browse standalone scriptsStandalone chat scripts are built for server owners who want a focused resource without binding the whole feature to QBCore, ESX, or QBOX. This shortlist focuses on framework-neutral chat scripts that can fit custom cores, mixed stacks, or lightweight FiveM servers.
The strongest choices are evaluated for FiveM chat events, command registration, ACE permissions, moderation filters, and optional Discord logging. Before installing one on production, validate command prefixes, staff channels, anti-spam limits, chat visibility rules, and server-side validation. The common failure mode is that chat scripts look simple until spam, command leaks, or staff-channel mistakes become public moderation issues.
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Top Picks
| Product | Price | Frameworks | Rating | Sales | Top Features |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | €23.00 | esx qbcore qbox standalone | No reviews | — | — |
![]() | €23.99 | esx qbcore qbox standalone | No reviews | — | — |
| €13.00 | esx qbcore qbox standalone | No reviews | — | — | |
| €7.49 | esx qbcore standalone qbox | No reviews | — | — |
Standalone chat scripts are commonly free to €20. Paid versions usually justify the cost with moderation tools, staff channels, logging, and clean UI.
Install the resource in your server resources folder, ensure it after shared dependencies such as ox_lib or voice resources if required, then configure command prefixes, staff channels, anti-spam limits, chat visibility rules, and server-side validation. Test the flow with at least two accounts, restart the server, and verify that the script does not conflict with existing resources before enabling it for production players.
A good standalone chat script should provide the core chat workflow, clear config files, server-side validation, and compatibility with FiveM chat events, command registration, ACE permissions, moderation filters, and optional Discord logging. The best options also document exports, event names, permissions, and optional framework bridge behavior.
Usually yes, if the script truly stays framework-neutral. Confirm that the resource uses FiveM-native events, exports, ACE permissions, or optional bridges instead of assuming one framework's player, job, inventory, or money APIs.
Install it on a staging server, configure command prefixes, staff channels, anti-spam limits, chat visibility rules, and server-side validation, and test with fresh characters plus production-like resources enabled. Verify server console logs, client F8 errors, restart behavior, and conflicts with any existing resource that controls the same feature.
Review admin tools, Discord logging, report systems, anti-spam filters, and player onboarding. These adjacent resources usually decide whether the chat script feels flexible and stable or becomes another isolated add-on that needs custom glue.
Standalone buyers need to validate more than a no-framework label. Use these connected pages to compare flexible products, test free resources, and decide when a full server template is faster than stitching isolated tools together.
Framework-neutral hub
Compare the broader standalone catalog before buying a resource that may still depend on voice, NUI, ACE permissions, webhooks, or shared utility libraries.
Browse standalone scriptsPremium catalog
Move from the shortlist into live listings with pricing, screenshots, reviews, framework labels, and add-to-cart paths.
Compare standalone productsFree testing path
Use free standalone mods to validate install flow, dependencies, and compatibility before spending on a production-critical premium resource.
Browse free standalone modsFull builds
Use full server packs when isolated standalone tools no longer cover the launch scope, support expectations, or setup timeline.
Browse server templates