Unlike basic cheat tables that only give you infinite health or money, Rampage injects a dynamic graphical user interface (GUI) directly into the game. You can summon any vehicle (horse, wagon, train), spawn any character model (from Micah Bell to a grizzly bear), alter weather, teleport across the map, and even manipulate the game’s internal logic (like turning off Arthur’s core drain or making all horses fly).
| Feature | Lenny's Simple Trainer (LST) | Jedijosh920 Trainer | Rampage Trainer | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Text-only, plain | Transparent, laggy | Sleek, dark, responsive | | Ped Spawning | Yes, but limited | Yes, random only | Full taxonomy search + control | | Online Content | No | Partial | Full (Horses, guns, clothes) | | Performance Impact | Low | Moderate | Very Low (optimized C++) | | Update Speed | Slow (months) | Abandoned? | Fast (weeks after R* updates) | | Favorite Hotkeys | No | No | Yes | | Ragdoll Toggle | No | No | Yes |
While Rockstar’s online mode, Red Dead Online , suffers from aggressive anti-cheat measures, the single-player story mode of RDR 2 has become a playground for modders. Among the dozens of trainers and mod menus available—from Lenny’s Simple Trainer (LST) to Jedijosh920’s Trainer —one name consistently rises to the top of the discussion: .
A: Absolutely. Rampage plays nicely with re-textures, graphic overhauls (like Visual Redemption ), and even WhyEm’s DLC (clothing mods).