I don’t think so. The dirt coming down from the handles is very consistent with rain on a vehicle after driving through the dry Alberta dust areas. I don’t see anything particularly inconsistent with a custom stretch job here. They’d need a way bulkier frame under a stretched truck like this, and the extra height is consistent with a tall frame and lift.
Honestly I find the recently painted or cleaned Safeway exterior to be more convincing. I’ve never seen one that looks like it had been painted since 1993.
Only inconsistency I see is around the tailgate with the tow setup, specifically the blurry corner of the sedan’s body panel behind it, probably a rain drop on the glass in front of the camera.
You can see the front drive shaft dropping down, and it looks like you can see it starting the downward run in the back too.
I’ve seen all sorts of mods for off-road vehicles to “tuck up” the driveline when they do their body lifts and larger tires. Also very common on pickup truck daily drivers in Alberta, especially around the oil sands area.
Edit:
Compare with this picture of a different, lifted, dodge pickup:
2015 lifted ram 2500
Shitty mod ez. Have you lived around these vehicles? Either this AI is incredibly good or you’ve just made up your mind.
I’m not here to defend AI but jacketing leads to some dark places. Living in these places you could easily find this stuff in the wild. The simple answer is low quality camera, rainy day in the regions where Safeway exists. This would take pages of prompts and so so so much time/effort to get AI to produce this quality.
AI oddities don’t have easy explanations. So someone put 37" tires on their truck without cutting the wheel well, I’ve seen it 1000x. The wetting is consistent across everything in the picture, the AI wouldn’t understand how to change that based on material or orientation. The lighting is fucked up because it’s cloudy with a clearing sky to the left. I’m telling you the weirdest thing in this picture is that the Safeway has clean paint that doesn’t look like UV-yellowed plastic from the 1970’s.
I agree with your sentiment about AI here but you’re picking up on details that are consistent both internally to the image and with lived experience.
Man is this A.I.? All sorts of fucked up little details if you zoom in. Trucks like this exist out there, why fake it?
I don’t think so. The dirt coming down from the handles is very consistent with rain on a vehicle after driving through the dry Alberta dust areas. I don’t see anything particularly inconsistent with a custom stretch job here. They’d need a way bulkier frame under a stretched truck like this, and the extra height is consistent with a tall frame and lift.
Edit: sorry for the bad site, but here’s a 3 year old picture of another stretched dodge for you to compare with: https://www.reddit.com/r/mildlyinteresting/comments/fx5uyh/this_six_door_dodge_ram_i_saw_at_mesa_verde/
It has twin tires which are connected at the wheel hub. You can see the nuts around the hub.
You can on the front wheels, but not the rears.
The twin tires are on the rear and there is the faint of nuts around the hub (on the right, not those on top of the hub).
That’s a towing attachment - search “hidden wheel lift system”
Honestly I find the recently painted or cleaned Safeway exterior to be more convincing. I’ve never seen one that looks like it had been painted since 1993.
Consistent with a touch of front end damage on a lifted truck running on 33s
Some phone cameras do something like that, especially if the lens are dirty.
Only inconsistency I see is around the tailgate with the tow setup, specifically the blurry corner of the sedan’s body panel behind it, probably a rain drop on the glass in front of the camera.
Edit: also see https://liftandtow.com/products/z-series/
Good point. Any reflections I’ve looked at are consistent too.
Mud flap and shade on lower side of body panel curvature.
You can see the front drive shaft dropping down, and it looks like you can see it starting the downward run in the back too.
I’ve seen all sorts of mods for off-road vehicles to “tuck up” the driveline when they do their body lifts and larger tires. Also very common on pickup truck daily drivers in Alberta, especially around the oil sands area.
Edit: Compare with this picture of a different, lifted, dodge pickup: 2015 lifted ram 2500
That’s not lifted, they cut the fenders to allow bog tires without geometry changes.
Shitty mod ez. Have you lived around these vehicles? Either this AI is incredibly good or you’ve just made up your mind.
I’m not here to defend AI but jacketing leads to some dark places. Living in these places you could easily find this stuff in the wild. The simple answer is low quality camera, rainy day in the regions where Safeway exists. This would take pages of prompts and so so so much time/effort to get AI to produce this quality.
too many oddities in one picture, fucking LOOK.
AI oddities don’t have easy explanations. So someone put 37" tires on their truck without cutting the wheel well, I’ve seen it 1000x. The wetting is consistent across everything in the picture, the AI wouldn’t understand how to change that based on material or orientation. The lighting is fucked up because it’s cloudy with a clearing sky to the left. I’m telling you the weirdest thing in this picture is that the Safeway has clean paint that doesn’t look like UV-yellowed plastic from the 1970’s.
I agree with your sentiment about AI here but you’re picking up on details that are consistent both internally to the image and with lived experience.
no lug nuts on rear even though visible on front and that floating ass shit on the rear is fucked up. no license plate either.