How To Get Cabbie in A Dusty Trip? Let me tell you something β getting that slick yellow taxi in Dusty Trip isnβt just about grinding; itβs about understanding the journey, every detour, every wallet, every plate you pick up along the way. I didnβt just wake up one day with the keys to the Cabbie, I earned that ride.
So, if youβre trying to get your hands on the Crown Vic-inspired taxi β nicknamed Cababi in-game β youβre in the right place. This isnβt a dry checklist. This is how it feels to chase that car down and roll out in style.
How To Get Cabbie in A Dusty Trip?
First Stop: Meet the Man, Cole the Cabbi
It all begins in the dusty corners of the garage lobby, where youβll find Cole β a cabbie who doesnβt hand over the keys just for showing up. Nah, Coleβs got a challenge for you: find 20 wallets or license plates scattered across random buildings.
It sounds simple, but if youβve played Dusty Trip, you know nothingβs ever that straightforward.
The Hunt Begins: Loot Like You Mean It
So, I hit the road β checking every room, every truck stop, every creepy gas station bathroom. And boom, there it was: my first wallet. Looks just like something youβd forget at a diner.
Then came the license plates β crusty, rusted, and hidden behind vending machines or under beds. Once I found them, I stuffed them into my backpack like I was carrying the crown jewels.
π Pro tip: Youβll need space in your backpack. Donβt hoard junk β these plates and wallets are your ticket to taxi heaven.
The Math That Matters

Coleβs quest can be a little confusing. See, I thought I had enough, but then realized my backpack had only 4 items. That means I still needed 16 more to hit the 20 mark. So back into the wild I went.
At one point, I had 8 items β getting close, but still not there. I kept grinding, stuffing every new find into my pack like my life depended on it. Eventually, I hit 20.
And then⦠Cole handed me the keys to the Cabbie.
Letβs Talk Car β The Real Review
I rolled over to the garage, popped the trunk, and there she was. Yellow, boxy, and nostalgic. A love letter to the Ford Crown Victoria β except the trunk? Yeah, itβs useless. Try putting a gas can in there, and it just sinks into the car.
The passenger seat? Surprisingly perfect. But when I sat in the driverβs seat? That steering wheel covers half the speedometer β bad positioning. Still, the dashboardβs classic radio and old-school buttons made up for it.
π οΈ Itβs like driving a memory. Flawed, but charming.
Numbers Donβt Lie: The Performance

Letβs break it down:
- Fuel: I filled her up with 18L of gas.
- Top Speed (Speedometer): 160 km/h
- Acceleration (0β100m): 11.57 seconds
- Actual Top Speed (Road Test): 75 km/h β yep, that slow
- Braking: Surprisingly good
- Fuel Efficiency (5,000m run):
- 0.5L of gas used
- 0.1L of oil
- 0.6L of water
Pretty decent consumption β this cab can go places.
Big Wheels, Big Change?
I decided to slap on some big wheels to see if that helped.
- Top Speed (Speedometer): 295 km/h
- Acceleration (0β100m): 14.46 seconds
- Actual Top Speed: 137 km/h
Still not breaking records, but definitely a boost.
Final Thoughts
Look, the Cabbie isnβt perfect. It’s slow, clunky, and the trunkβs practically a black hole. But if youβre into roleplaying or just want a car with character β this is it. Itβs not just a car; itβs a badge of honor. You hunted for it, piece by piece, and earned it.
π So if youβre cruising down the dusty highways and someone honks behind you β just smile. They donβt know what it took to drive that cab.
And hey, if youβre still grinding for it β donβt give up. Your rideβs waiting.
Until next time,
Drive dirty. Drive proud. Drive Cabbie.