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First Look at Tesla’s New 3D Buildings and Maps in Update 2025.38 [VIDEO]

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By Not a Tesla App Staff

Tesla has introduced the latest Tesla update, version 2025.38, to the masses, or at least to the lucky 1% of owners who’ve received it so far.

While this update isn’t huge, it does include major new features, with the most noteworthy being new 3D buildings in the map view.

3D Buildings

3D buildings can be enabled in the map view, allowing you to view almost any house or building in 3D. It makes the maps pop and adds a much-needed feature that has been available on other vehicles like Rivian.

To view 3D buildings, the user must enable them, which is a new toggle on the right side of the screen on the Model 3 and Y, right next to the radar button. 3D buildings are then automatically displayed at higher zoom levels; however, they’re hidden if you zoom out too far. You also can’t combine 3D buildings with satellite view as expected.

You can drive with the 3D buildings being displayed, which makes it not only a nice visual effect but also beneficial in navigation. The buildings can make it more obvious where to turn by connecting the intersection with your surroundings.

3D Maps

3D buildings aren’t the only addition to the maps. While you could always zoom in and rotate Tesla’s maps, you could tilt the view before, adjusting the angle you’re looking at the maps.

While this only works with 3D buildings enabled, you can put two fingers on the touchscreen and pan up and down to adjust the viewing angle of the map.

Future Updates

With the addition of 3D buildings, Tesla is closing in on duplicating what’s shown in the vehicle’s visualization and what’s displayed in the map view. We could see Tesla eventually merging these two features and incorporating map data, such as the buildings and your route path, into the vehicle’s visualizations.

While the vehicle’s visualizations serve more as real-time visuals of the surrounding environment, and the map view is more for archived or map data, the lines are getting increasingly blurred. Tesla now displays map data in the visualization view to help both the vehicle and its users better understand their surroundings.

During the Cybertruck’s prototype stage, Tesla shared a prototype UI that did exactly this. The vehicle’s visualizations were a part of the map view. You could see your vehicle, the navigation route, 3D buildings, streets, and your path, all together in one view.

Tesla has also been experimenting with adding 3D terrain to the visualization view, letting roads show elevation and surroundings show hills. If they’re still planning to do this, it may make sense to show 3D buildings that are near the vehicle in the visualization view as well.

Google API

Tesla is likely leveraging the Google API to get the data needed for the new 3D buildings, which is how they’ve been able to launch the feature across most countries. The feature appears to be available worldwide, except in China, where Tesla uses a different map provider.

Availability

The new 3D buildings are available on the Model 3 and Model Y with the AMD Ryzen infotainment unit. While we haven’t seen the 2025.38 update go out to the Cybertruck and new Model S and Model X vehicles, it’s expected to be available on those models as well.

However, the feature does require Premium Connectivity. While some Premium Connectivity features are available on WiFi, this isn’t one of them.

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By Karan Singh

As Tesla owners across North America have finally begun receiving the highly anticipated FSD V14.1 update this week, Cybertruck drivers quickly noticed that their futuristic trucks were once again left out of the initial rollout. While the omission was a disappointment, executives at Tesla spoke out to say that the step-change update would make its way to Tesla’s halo vehicle soon.

The good news came directly from Tesla’s Director of AI, Ashok Elluswamy. When asked if the Cybertruck would finally receive the full-featured version of FSD V14, including whether it can reverse and park itself, Ashok replied in the affirmative. He also confirmed that the update for the Cybertruck was coming soon. 

However, he didn’t say whether Smart Summon and regular Summon, two features long missing from the Cybertruck, would make their way as well, but we’ll step out on a limb and assume that they are included in the list.

The Technical Hurdle: All-Wheel Steering

So, why all the delays with FSD on Cybertruck? Elon Musk provided an explanation for the first time since the launch of Tesla’s stainless steel beast.

This highlights the challenge the Cybertruck poses to Tesla’s neural network. FSD has been trained on billions of real-world miles, but almost exclusively with data from vehicles with traditional front-wheel steering. 

The Cybertruck’s ability to turn its rear wheels introduces a completely new set of vehicle dynamics and a higher degree of maneuverability. The AI model needs to learn this new body language from scratch to ensure it can navigate safely and smoothly, especially at low speeds and in tight-quarter situations, where all-wheel steering is the most beneficial.

Essentially, FSD is being sent back to school to learn a new skill before it can truly graduate to the Cybertruck.

A Frustrating Pattern

While the technical delay is sound, the V14.1 delay is not an isolated incident. For many Cybertruck owners, it’s the latest chapter in a frustrating pattern that has seen Tesla’s truck consistently lag behind the rest of the fleet in terms of FSD capabilities. The Cybertruck still doesn’t include Summon, Start FSD from park, or the ability to change between reverse and drive while FSD is enabled.

The issue seems to be the very hardware that makes the truck so advanced. The integration of the completely new 48-volt architecture, steer-by-wire system, and the aforementioned all-wheel steering into the FSD software stack has proven to be a more significant and time-consuming challenge than Tesla initially anticipated.

The Cybertruck has had multiple delays for FSD, starting from its inception. When it launched in December 2023, it only shipped with Traffic-Aware Cruise Control (TACC). FSD arrived on the Cybertruck 10 months later, in September 2024. At that point, many of the features, like Smart Summon, Reverse, Start FSD from Park, and more, were listed in the Upcoming Features section of Tesla’s software updates.

Since then, we’ve had no meaningful changes between the initial launch on V12.5.5 and the upgrade to V13.2, leaving Cybertruck owners in limbo. This is especially concerning because the Cybertruck will not receive Autopilot, which means there are only two options: TACC and FSD.

For now, the message to Cybertruck owners is one of patience. While the current delay fits a familiar pattern, the promise of a feature-complete FSD V14 is the most concrete sign yet that the gap between the Cybertruck’s groundbreaking hardware and its software is finally set to close.

By Not a Tesla App Staff

With the release of FSD V14.1 to influencers, we now have our first look at Tesla’s latest and greatest version of FSD. Recently, we discussed the updated UI and new features in this FSD update, which is version 2025.32.8.5.

While the latest version of FSD has only been available for about a day and a half, early access testers have already put it through its paces and tested a variety of scenarios.

Below, we’ve put together a collection of some of the most impressive videos so far.

Emergency Vehicles

In Tesla’s release notes for FSD V14.1, Tesla mentions that this update includes improved handling of emergency vehicles, specifically mentioning police cars, fire trucks, and ambulances.

In this clip, we can see some of this improved handling. The vehicle not only makes room for the ambulance, but it also actively pulls over, something you’d expect in the Robotaxi.

Navigating a Parking Garage

In addition to being able to park in parking lots and garages, Tesla also stated that it improved the vehicle’s ability to handle gates.

In the two videos below, we can see how it’s able to not only navigate the parking garage but also stop at the gate and then proceed once it has lifted out of the way.

Parking in Garage at Home

In this video, we see a new milestone for FSD, where the vehicle arrives at the owner’s home and parks directly in the garage without any further input from the driver.

FSD Requesting “Increased Attention”

While this feature isn’t called out in the release notes, the vehicle will actually alert you when it feels you need to pay extra attention, either due to a sudden slowdown, construction, or something else that reduces the vehicle’s confidence rate.

While there’s no audible alert, the vehicle will now display “Increased Attention Required” on the screen in certain scenarios, where it presumably may have a harder time.

Avoiding Debris on Roads

Here, the vehicle can be seen reacting to and moving over for debris on the road. What’s interesting here is that the debris is reflective and not easily visible, so the fact that the vehicle detected it and knew to avoid it is impressive.

How Fast Can You Start FSD

While we’ve been able to start FSD from Park for a while now, this is a nice clip of how quickly and easily you can start FSD and have the vehicle drive off.

Drive Thru

Here’s another impressive clip from DirtyTesla showing the vehicle’s capabilities at a drive-thru. This is exactly what Elon means when he says FSD V14.3 will start to feel sentient. In this video, the vehicle stopped at the ordering spot without the driver having to hit the brakes at all. What’s more impressive is that as soon as Chris stopped talking and completed his order, the vehicle moved up. It then proceeds to the pick-up window, only to stop again for Chris to get his food. It finally drives off after Chris grabs his food.

Ashok Elluswamy, Tesla’s VP of AI, touched on what’s happening here when FSD was seen automatically stopping at a toll booth, only to then proceed once the driver had paid. Ashok said that the vehicle can see the transaction happening using the cameras, and although it hasn’t been specifically trained on this, it has seen it enough times to know how it should behave.

In Chris’s example, it appears that the vehicle may also be using its microphone to determine when Chris is finished ordering, and the vehicle should proceed to the pick-up window. Very impressive and a good example of what we can expect more of in the future.

While these videos only give us a glimpse at the new capabilities of FSD v14, it seems like this version is certainly going to live up to the hype.

Tesla is expected to release multiple versions of FSD V14 this year, with FSD V14.2 coming in just a couple of weeks. That version will likely be the one that goes out to the wider user base and gives us all the chance to experience Tesla’s latest version of FSD.


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