The truck that was supposed to revolutionize everything is flopping fast.
The hype is dead. The Tesla Cybertruck, once billed as the future of electric vehicles, is now looking like a commercial bust.
In the second quarter of 2025, Tesla sold just 4,306 Cybertrucks, down a staggering 50.8% from the 8,755 units it delivered during the same period last year, according to new data from Kelley Blue Book. This plunge is a signal that America’s most hyped truck may already be out of gas.
The specific one I worked on is internal as we were assessing how OEMs use chips designed by the company for which I work. There are reverse engineering sites like a2mac which (for a pretty hefty price tag) provide you the surface level assesment (chips used, supposed functions etc). It’s really expensive though since the sheer volume of work that goes on in reversing and analyzing is incredibly tedious.
I don’t know of any open-access ones, and (at least at the time when I worked on that project) we couldn’t find any official Tesla documentation.