Miami man has wrapped his Tesla Cybertruck in fur to create the ‘Cybeartruck’ in wild transformation

  • Somebody wrapped this Cybertruck in fur
  • The fur covers every inch of the Cybertruck body
  • The truck was ‘unveiled’ at Miami Art Week

Published on Dec 11, 2024 at 8:21 PM (UTC+4)
by Alessandro Renesis

Last updated on Dec 11, 2024 at 8:21 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by Tom Wood

A man in Miami has wrapped his Tesla Cybertruck in fur, and now he calls it the Cybeartruck.

The truck is entirely covered in fur, basically every inch of its body panels, and it looks weird.

Cybertruck is famously only available in one color, so it lends itself particularly well to this sort of thing.

But this is just something else.

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How this man in Miami turned his Cybertruck into a Cybeartruck

Cybertruck is only available with one color option, which isn’t even paint, by the way, it’s just stainless steel.

It’s polished and treated, but left unpainted, which is something automakers often do with carbon fiber, but almost never do with stainless steel.

But Tesla did that, and this is why we’ve seen so many Cybertrucks with weird liveries and wraps.

This one is a bit stranger than usual.

It’s tridimentional.

Fur isn’t painted on, it is instead actual (synthetic) fur, probably the sort of thing some companies use to manufacture plushies.

It looks totally weird, but it’s probably super soft.

To be fair, we should point out that this Cybertruck was created for Miami Art Week, the same event that Jaguar used to unveil its new Type 00 concept car.

Lamborghini did the same with the one-off Urus SE inspired by Miami.

What happened to the ‘factory wrap options’ Tesla promised

Shortly after launching the truck, Tesla promised they would create a variety of ‘factory’ wrap options customers could select.

They did, but it didn’t last long.

There were two issues with this idea.

For starters, these wrap options were not cheap, with prices starting from $6,000-$7,000.

The other problem is Cybertruck owners saw this as an opportunity to properly go to town with these wraps.

That’s why we’ve seen the Iron Man wrap, the digital camo one and even one that made it look like a Toyota Tundra, although some say that was a prank on the part of the company itself.

But the point is, Tesla’s factory options were a tad bit conservative and ‘normal’, and people just didn’t really want that.

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Experienced content creator with a strong focus on cars and watches. Alessandro penned the first-ever post on the Supercar Blondie website and covers cars, watches, yachts, real estate and crypto. Former DriveTribe writer, fixed gear bike owner, obsessed with ducks for some reason.