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Claim Purchase

After buying an EclipSys script on Tebex, the download comes through the FiveM Keymaster — not as a direct zip attachment. Here's exactly how to get it onto your server.

Make sure you are logged into Tebex with the same FiveM (Cfx.re) account that owns your server's license key. If they don't match, the escrow system will block the script from running.

Step 1 — Purchase on Tebex

Head to the EclipSys Studios store and complete your purchase. You'll be prompted to log in with your Cfx.re account during checkout — this is what links the script to your FiveM account.

Step 2 — Find it in Keymaster

After purchase, the asset will appear in your Cfx.re Keymaster under Granted Assets. It can take up to 5 minutes to show up after buying.

1
Go to Keymaster
Visit keymaster.fivem.net/asset-grants and log in with your Cfx.re account.
2
Find the asset
Look under the Granted Assets tab. Search for eclipsys to filter if you have many assets.
3
Grant it to your server
Click the asset row, then click Add server and select the license key your server uses. This links the script to your server key.
4
Download it
Click Download on the asset. You'll get a .zip file — extract it to get the resource folder.

Step 3 — Add to your server

1
Copy the resource folder
Place the extracted folder into your server's resources directory.
2
Add to server.cfg
Add ensure [resource_name] to your server.cfg. Check the script's Installation page for the exact load order.
3
Full server restart
Do a full server restart — not just ensure in the console. The escrow system needs a full restart to validate the new license grant.
When transferring your server to a new host or new license key, you'll need to re-grant the asset in Keymaster to the new key. Cfx.re lets you transfer an asset to a different account once — after that it's locked.

Hidden files (.fxap)

Escrowed resources contain a hidden .fxap file that the FiveM runtime needs. Some FTP clients (like FileZilla) skip hidden files by default and won't transfer it.

If you're uploading via FTP, use WinSCP instead — it transfers hidden files correctly. Or upload via your host's file manager panel directly.