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Back-to-back runs: Cayo Perico & Doomsday Act 3

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Last updated 2026-03-20

What “B2B” usually means here

Back-to-back runs are a trust exercise: players alternate hosting or rotate roles so payouts stay fair. Good partners are predictable; bad ones argue after every finale.

Etiquette that prevents drama

  • Agree on number of runs per person before you start.
  • Confirm cuts and entry fees (if any) in writing before launching.
  • Be on time — B2B nights die when one player “is almost ready” for 20 minutes.

Cayo Perico B2B

Cayo is fast to repeat, so partners care about pace and consistency. State your approach (elite challenge, gold, hard mode) up front so you don’t reset scouting disagreements mid-session.

Doomsday Act 3

Act 3 finales are longer and more fragile under mistakes. Good groups rehearse hacks, divide air/ground roles, and keep comms short. If you’re running B2B Act 3, double-check everyone knows whose facility launch is next.

Finding partners on GTAFriends

Look for hosts who post clear session titles and players who show up to verification consistently. On Find, filter for your platform and join events that spell out the loop you want to run.

Next steps

Use Find for posted runs and crews for longer-term groups — both need a quick sign-in so we match your platform.

Sign in to continue: Find sessions and Browse crews open after you log in so we can match you to the right platform.

FAQ

What does B2B mean in GTA Online?
Usually “back-to-back”: you run a finale for one player, then swap roles or hosts and run again so everyone gets a payout in a predictable rotation.
Where does GTAFriends fit for B2B?
Hosts can label sessions and expectations (including B2B-style runs where that’s common). After sessions, verification helps you find partners who actually finish runs.