Every major game release comes with the same dilemma: the base version, the expensive version, and the nagging feeling that you’re going to regret whichever one you pick. GTA VI is no different — except this time, the gap between the two editions isn’t just about a few extra outfits.
Rockstar built something unusual into the Ultimate Edition: exclusive venues with actual gameplay functions that Standard players won’t be able to access. Not temporarily. Not with a workaround. Just… locked. That changes the conversation from “cosmetics vs no cosmetics” to something worth thinking about before you hit pre-order.
Here’s everything you need to know.
Table of Contents
Before Anything Else — The Physical Copy Situation
If you were planning to pick up a physical box, there’s something Rockstar quietly slipped into the fine print. The disc inside the case doesn’t actually contain the game. It’s a code. An activation slip in a box that looks like a game but functions like a digital purchase.
The studio’s reasoning is straightforward — prevent retail copies from leaking gameplay weeks before launch. It makes sense from a business perspective. From a collector’s perspective, it stings a little. Either way, it’s worth knowing now rather than after the unboxing.
| Edition | Price | Platforms |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Edition | $80 | PS5, Xbox Series X|S |
| Ultimate Edition | $100 | PS5, Xbox Series X|S |
The Pre-Order Bonus — Free Regardless of Which Edition You Choose
Pre-order either version and you walk away with the Vintage Vice City Pack — a collection that feels less like a bonus and more like a genuine starter kit. There’s also a free month of GTA+ that kicks in the moment you place the order, not when the game launches.

What’s actually in the pack:
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1955 Vapid Stanier — a vintage sedan with its own private garage near Ocean Beach. The garage isn’t decorative either: it stores weapons and holds stolen goods, making it genuinely useful from hour one
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Character outfits for Jason and Lucia — a soft linen suit and period-accurate haircut for Jason; a red sequined dress for Lucia that’s clearly built for chaos rather than comfort
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Tommy Vercetti weapon wrap — a tropical print applied across most firearms, pulling directly from Vice City’s most iconic wardrobe choice
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One month of GTA+ — activates on pre-order, not on launch day
What the Ultimate Edition Actually Contains
The $100 version isn’t just a bigger box of cosmetics. Rockstar made a specific decision to put functional, reusable gameplay content inside it — places you’ll return to, mechanics you’ll build around. That’s a different proposition than a day-one outfit you wear once and forget.
Vehicles
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1995 Grotti Cheetah — a 90s supercar with a clean retro-futurist finish. The kind of car that does most of the talking before you open the door
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1967 Vapid Dominator — a proper off-road machine that comes paired with the “Paradise” garage in Watson Bay, complete with weapon storage
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Dinka Enduro motorcycle — military colorway, built for riders who find four wheels unnecessarily committal
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Crest Kayak — slow, quiet, and somehow the most appealing vehicle on this list after a long session
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Shitzu Squalo speedboat — pink-to-blue gradient hull, docked at Washington Beach, with a weapons crate already loaded on deck
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Vapid Ganado upgrade kit — exclusive performance and visual mods for Jason’s pickup, unavailable anywhere else in the game
Weapons
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Hawk & Little Morgan Revolvers — a matched pair from the Vercetti family’s personal collection. Palm engravings on the grip, ornate barrel detailing, high-magnification sights on both
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Custom sidearms — a personalized Girardi ES9 for Jason and a Klose K17 for Lucia, each finished to match their respective aesthetics
Exclusive Venues — The Real Reason to Consider Upgrading
Five locations. All of them functional. None of them available in the Standard Edition.
| Venue | What It Offers | Who It’s For |
|---|---|---|
| Custom Rides Body Shop | Full tuning, donk builds, interior work | Anyone who spends more time in the garage than on missions |
| One-Eyed Willie’s Workshop | Off-road modifications, hand-painted finishes | Off-road build enthusiasts |
| Sara’s Unisex Salon | Haircuts, shaving, makeup, nail styling | Players who treat character creation as a game within the game |
| Stock 305 Clothing Store | Exclusive streetwear drops in the Stockyard | Style-focused players |
| Electrofang Tattoo Parlor | 50+ original tattoos by art collective FAILE | Players who sweat the details |
Bonus Content Rounding Out Ultimate Edition
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“Feel Good” Apparel Collection — a full clothing line built around Mackey the alligator, a breakout character from a fictional TV show popular inside the game’s world
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Green Chickens Gang Hideout — a contraband warehouse in Southside with exclusive items and special pickups not found elsewhere
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Wyman’s Classic Car Assignment — a dedicated side quest that sends you across Leonida to find and restore abandoned vintage vehicles. More substantial than a typical collectible hunt
So — Standard or Ultimate? Here’s the Actual Answer
There isn’t a universal right choice here, and anyone who tells you otherwise is selling something.
If you’re buying GTA VI for the story — to follow Jason and Lucia through Leonida, to see what Rockstar has built over the past decade of silence — the Standard Edition is completely sufficient. Nothing in the Ultimate upgrade touches the main narrative. You’ll get the full game, the full world, and the pre-order pack. The $20 difference won’t cross your mind once the opening sequence hits.

On the other hand, if you’re the kind of player who treats open-world games as long-term projects — who builds characters deliberately, customizes vehicles obsessively, and wants every system available from day one — the Ultimate Edition is the cleaner choice. The exclusive venues aren’t one-time rewards. They’re recurring destinations. The gap between editions compounds over a 60 or 80-hour playthrough.
There’s some speculation online that Ultimate Edition content might eventually open up for Standard players through story progression. But Rockstar’s official language — “available in Ultimate Edition only” — doesn’t leave much room for optimism there. Don’t pre-order Standard expecting a workaround.
GTA VI Launch Date and What We Know About Platform Support
GTA VI releases on November 19, 2026 for PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S. No PC release has been confirmed for launch — consistent with how Rockstar has handled every major release since GTA V. A PC version will almost certainly come eventually, but not on day one.
Multiple language options will be available from launch, covering subtitles and UI. The full voice cast performs in English.
At the end of it, this is a simpler decision than it looks. The Ultimate Edition costs more because it genuinely offers more — not padding, not recolors, but systems that shape how you interact with the game’s world across the full run. Whether that’s worth $20 to you depends entirely on whether those systems are the part of GTA you actually play. For story-first players, Standard is fine. For everyone else — the upgrade has a case.
Either way, November 19 can’t come fast enough.
