My thoughts to your comments are below.

Quote Originally Posted by dranger7070
See I don't know if I like a raise here. He's playing a FR game with FIVE limpers. And if he's playing at 10nl or less there's pretty much no amount that he's gonna bet (short of shoving) that will get called. In my experience (which is limited) a lot of fish at lower stakes LOVE to limp/reraise with their big hands. They think it's "tricky" lol.
QQ-AA, AK and AQ are a big part of this "tricky" range. If you flop either a J or an A you are behind half of this range. This, plus a couple of other factors makes the second part of your plan for this hand extremely hard to play.

Plus if most of the original limpers are full stacked (close to 100BB) then you should be able to get them to fold to a raise here.

Quote Originally Posted by dranger7070
Here is what I would do. I would just check, see the flop cheaply. No sense in building a big pot out of position with 4-5 more people left to act.
A couple of things here. You will not be building a big pot then playing OOP against 4-5 people. This is where table dynamics, stack sizes, etc. come into play. In most situations a raise here should limit the field to one or two opponents, making your post flop play much easier to read.

Note: If you are on a "calling station" type of table and think a raise here would get called by a majority of the people then I agree that a raise here is not a good play.

Quote Originally Posted by dranger7070
If you flop an Ace a Jack or both (or straight cards) play it fast. Bet out about 2/3-3/4 pot and extract as much value as possible.
Playing a TPTK/TPGK fast when you are OOP and in a multi-way pot is a leak. With that many players there are very few boards that a top pair hand will be a favorite against. If you play these types of hands you will get called/raised/semi-bluffed on quite a few draw heavy boards. It will also be very hard to determine (without putting a bunch of money in the pot) if you are up against a two pair/set type of hand.

Quote Originally Posted by dranger7070
This is kind of one of those pain in the ass spots where there really isn't a RIGHT answer. It's kind of in the gray area. There are good arguments for raising PF, but what do you do when you raise it up 9.5xbb like Harley said and then some guy in LP beefs it up to 30x? You have to think about what the other people in the hand are liable to do when you raise. Will they raise you back? Will they all fold? Call?
OP's situation is definitely an example of a difficult hand to play in a difficult spot. As for your question above about what I would do if villain in LP raises it up to 30X, that one is easy. I am folding here and moving on to the next hand.

Your comment about what other people in the hand will do reiterates my comment earlier about understanding table dynamics before you make a move here.

My general recommendation for beginners is as follows (GENERAL is the key word there as there are many situations where this general advice would change):

If you are comfortable with your post flop play and reading opponents PLUS if you don't have a read that you are on a "calling station" type of table then raise it up here and play the hand post flop against the one or two villains who call.

If you are uncomfortable playing this type of hand post flop while being out of position then limp and play it VERY carefully post flop with the understanding that you don't have a good hand unless you hit 2p or better (and even 2p may not be a good hand on some boards). If you limp behind this many opponents you MUST be willing to let go of a Top Pair type of hand without investing a ton of money.