RSVSR Why GTA 5s final choice can be undone in 10 seconds

People still treat GTA V's ending like a locked door: pick A, B, or C and live with it. But if you've been grinding missions, stacking cash, and keeping an eye on stuff like GTA 5 Money, it's kind of funny to learn the game also hides a tiny "oops" button right at the finish. The usual story is Franklin makes the call, the wheels turn, and you're committed. Except you're not. Not straight away, anyway.

What the game normally does

Choose Ending A and Franklin rings Trevor first. It's automatic. You don't even get a chance to roleplay being hesitant. Then the game sits there for about ten seconds, like it's letting the moment breathe. After that, Franklin auto-calls Michael to confirm what's happening, and only then does the map spawn the mission marker that sends you down the "kill Trevor" path. Ending B mirrors it: call Michael, wait the same beat, then call Trevor, and the "kill Michael" marker shows up. Most players never question that pause. It just feels like Rockstar pacing the drama, same as they do all game.

The ten-second window most people miss

That little gap isn't just theatre, though. It's a live window where you can still do something. If you regret your choice fast enough, pull up Franklin's phone during those ten seconds and manually call Lester. You've gotta be quick and clean with it. No wandering menus, no messing around. If you reach Lester before the second auto-call triggers, Franklin blurts out that he's in trouble and needs help. It sounds like some old forum myth until you see it happen, because the tone shifts immediately, like the script just got yanked sideways.

How it flips you onto Deathwish

Once Lester answers, the game treats your manual call like a hard override. The "T" or "M" marker you were meant to get never appears. Instead, you'll see an "L" on the map and you're pushed toward the Deathwish setup. In other words, the choice you already selected gets blocked before it can fully lock. It's not a menu reset, and it's not reloading a save. It's more like cutting in line while the game is still mid-animation. If you've ever wished GTA V had more moments where you can act like an actual person, panic and all, this is one of them.

Why it still matters in 2026

Even now, this trick feels like Rockstar quietly admitting that players change their minds, especially when it comes to Michael and Trevor. It's also a reminder to keep a manual save before the finale, because that ten-second window can be easy to fumble when your hands are sweaty. And if you're the type who likes to stay stocked up for the endgame—ammo, upgrades, and the whole "I'm not starting over" mindset—services like RSVSR can help you top up game currency and items so you can focus on pulling off the ending you actually want, not the one you clicked by mistake.

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