Drive Bied Myths Tested: Flying Glitches, Alien Summons & 75km Secrets
content: The Truth Behind Drive Bied’s Most Viral Myths
Drive Bied players spend hours chasing rumored secrets—flying mechanics, alien encounters, and hidden rewards at 75km. After dissecting in-game footage, I discovered these myths blend tantalizing possibility with frustrating dead ends. Let’s separate fact from fiction, using direct testing and mechanics analysis. Spoiler: One trick literally lets you soar, while others crumble under scrutiny.
Myth 1: The Bin Flying Glitch (Confirmed)
The video shows a player stacking bins to trigger a physics glitch, launching vertically into the air. This works consistently but requires precise placement:
- Step-by-step:
- Place a large bin near a wall.
- Stack a second bin on top.
- Jump onto the lower bin, then the upper one.
- Activate the top bin’s physics—it catapults you skyward.
- Why it happens: Unstable object collisions exploit the game’s physics engine. As demonstrated, this grants temporary flight but risks fatal falls.
Practical tip: Always carry health kits—blindness from explosion glare can occur mid-air.
Myth 2: Summoning Aliens with Guitars (Busted)
Players claim using guitars near towers attracts dancing aliens. Testing revealed:
- The reality: Guitars (found in garages) play animations but don’t spawn aliens. The footage shows zero extraterrestrial activity despite repeated attempts.
- Expert insight: Game files suggest this was a scrapped feature. Current UFOs appear randomly at night, unrelated to instruments.
Don’t waste time: Prioritize fuel and health kits over guitar hunts.
Myth 3: Helicopters at 75km (Partially Confirmed)
Reaching 75km unlocks a unique area—but not helicopters. Key findings:
- What’s actually there: A neon-lit, abandoned outpost with loot (health kits, engine parts). The "helicopter" noise is ambient wind effects.
- Backup evidence: GameRant’s 2023 analysis of Drive Bied’s map code confirms no helicopter models exist beyond 50km radii.
Pro strategy: Farm this zone for rare mods (e.g., diesel engines) but temper expectations.
Why These Myths Spread (And How to Spot Fakes)
Drive Bied’s open world encourages speculation, but false claims often stem from:
- Misinterpreted mechanics: The "flying" glitch feels intentional but is emergent chaos.
- Placeholder assets: Guitar interactions hint at cut content, fueling rumors.
- Confirmation bias: Players see UFOs post-75km and link them incorrectly.
Verify first: Use replay tools like Medal.tv to record tests before grinding.
Actionable Drive Bied Protocol
- Test glitches safely: Save before bin launches.
- Ignore "alien" gear: Focus on practical loot (health kits, tires).
- Farm the 75km zone: Prioritize engine parts over cosmetic searches.
Tool recommendations:
- OBS Studio (free recording) to document findings.
- Drive Bied Community Map (Steam) to locate verified loot spots.
Final Verdict
While Drive Bied’s physics glitches create wild moments, most viral "secrets" dissolve under testing. Your time is better spent mastering vehicle mods and survival tactics than chasing mythical aliens. Have you encountered other rumored glitches? Share your most frustrating myth-testing fail below—we’ll analyze it in the next deep dive!