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For the average player who logs into Steam or Rockstar Games Launcher, this string of numbers and letters might look confusing. Is it a new update? A lost version of the game? A mod?

The phrase "Grand Theft Auto V GTA 5 v108771 v136 UL Exclusive" is not an official product, but rather a detailed fingerprint of a specific, popular pirated repack that emerged after the PC version's release. It combines the game's iconic title, its version numbers (likely a slight misspelling of v1.0.877.1 and the official v1.36 update), and a repacker's tag ("Ultra" repack). For those involved in the PC gaming and modding scene, this keyword represents a particular era of game distribution—one where community repacks offered a compressed, accessible, and often pre-configured entry point into the world of Los Santos.

Modern iterations of GTA V have introduced enhanced graphic APIs, dense rendering patches, and launcher systems that place a heavier toll on CPU and memory usage. Version 1.36 remains incredibly lightweight. It runs seamlessly on mid-tier or legacy hardware, budget gaming laptops, and portable handheld PCs (like the Steam Deck or ROG Ally running through specialized compatibility layers) without suffering from the aggressive frame drops or launcher crashes common in live builds.

Some of the game's key features include:

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