Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

How to display Mario Kart’s Rainbow Road on your Tesla dashboard

Add as a preferred source on Google

Tesla Motors has released an over-the-air update for the Model S that includes a hidden, Mario Kart-inspired Easter egg. The news conspicuously comes shortly after the California-based firm announced plans to recall 2,600 examples of the Model X crossover in order to replace a faulty seat hinge.

Company founder Elon Musk called the mysterious hidden feature a “psychedelic cowbell road” on Twitter. He briefly explained that it can be unlocked by activating the Autopilot function four times in quick succession, but he stopped short of revealing what happens. As it turns out, activating Autopilot four times transforms the road displayed in the S’ instrument cluster from a bland gray street into Rainbow Road, one of the most challenging — and colorful — tracks in Mario Kart, and briefly plays the cowbell audio from Saturday Night Live over the speakers.

Recommended Videos

Tesla has a long history of hiding Easter eggs in its cars. Notably, a software update pushed in 2014 let owners transform the picture of a Model S displayed on the infotainment screen into the Lotus Esprit-based submarine from the James Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me. Users were even able to set the submarine’s depth in leagues, ranging from 2,000 to 20,000. The stereo volume goes up to 11, the much-hyped Ludicrous speed is a direct reference to the movie Spaceballs, and changing the car’s name to 42 will display “Life, the Universe, and Everything” on the dashboard and on the infotainment screen. The quote is from Douglas Adams’ book The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.

Green shells, banana peels, and a hard-to-hit shortcut are nowhere to be found in the S’ Rainbow Road-inspired instrument cluster, but all hope is not lost for Tesla-driving Nintendo aficionados. Musk tweeted that Tesla is adding “more cowbells soon,” so the Mario Kart-inspired display is just the tip of the iceberg.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
EV batteries are lasting much longer than the industry expected
The battery replacement apocalypse never really happened
Representative Image

One of the biggest arguments against buying an electric vehicle has long been battery longevity. Critics have questioned whether expensive battery packs would survive beyond a few years or require costly replacements before the rest of the car wore out.

According to a report by The Wall Street Journal, real-world data is beginning to tell a very different story. Modern EV batteries are proving significantly more durable than expected, with many vehicles retaining most of their original range even after hundreds of thousands of miles. The findings could reshape consumer confidence as the industry continues pushing electric vehicles into the mainstream.

Read more
You can now buy a frunk fridge for your Model Y straight from Tesla
The $595 Dual Zone Fridge is built to fit the Model Y's frunk and runs off the car's 12V outlet. It's part of a wider Summer Collection that also adds gear for the Cybertruck.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

If you're big on taking road trips with your Tesla, you're in for a treat. Tesla just updated its shop with a new Summer Collection of camping and outdoor gear built specifically for your car, and a few of those products solve problems you may have actually run into on the road.

Keeping it cool in your Model Y

Read more
BYD Seal 08 makes a splash for under $30K, and It gives the Tesla Model 3 a run for its money
More range, more interior, more spec, for less money than a Tesla Model 3. Just not in the US yet.
Machine, Wheel, Car

The Tesla Model 3 has spent years defining what a premium and functional EV should cost; that’s what we’re used to. However, BYD seems to think that number is way too high. 

The Chinese automaker has unveiled a new flagship sedan, the Seal 08, that packs features you don’t normally expect from cars in this segment, blurring the line between affordable and luxury. And after reading its entire spec sheet, it’s actually the price that shakes me the most. 

Read more