First, join with friends rather than going solo. The missions technically support solo play, but teamwork makes things faster — especially when objectives involve hacking, stealing cars, or holding off waves of enemies. My crew of three from London, Birmingham, and myself made short work of the missions because we split roles carefully. One of us handled vehicles, another focused on shooting, while the third handled objectives like downloads and keycards.
Second, take advantage of the fact that all five missions appear on the map once you begin. This is a huge improvement over older contact mission structures and lets you chain them together. Instead of dropping back to menus, you can hit the next mission almost instantly, keeping momentum and earning stacked cash rewards across sessions.
Now, about those rewards — yes, the $525,000 finale payout is solid, but it's the steady progression that makes it special. Each mission adds XP, reputation, and small cash bonuses that build nicely. I saved all my earnings from this missionline and finally upgraded my garage fleet without dipping into Shark Card funds. That always feels like a win.
Don't forget to experiment with vehicles, either. Some setups let you approach in multiple ways — quiet infiltration or loud entry. Try both! Rockstar tucked enough options into these missions that you can feel your choices matter.
Another fact players often overlook is that these missions are accessible to everyone — no mansion, no business investments. That's one of the best moves Rockstar has made in a long time, breaking away from the paywall model that frustrated casual players.
Overall, my biggest takeaway from KnoWay (Avi) Missions is that they've reignited that "new DLC excitement" GTA once had. You jump in, laugh at Avi's absurd antics, score cash, and leave with a story worth retelling. That's exactly what made GTA Online legendary in the first place. You can learn more now from rsvsr.