Waves

Curated drops of widebody builds released together in themed collections.

WAVE 04

Mom’s Car Widebodied — When the Family Ride Gets Rowdy

Mom’s minivan, the family SUV, or the grocery getter usually gets zero respect from the aftermarket world. Boring? Sure. But we decided to crank the volume to eleven on these everyday heroes and give them some wild widebody vibes that scream personality and purpose. From the Brooklyn Bruiser’s brutal street corner assassin vibe to the Southern candy-painted donk that turns parades into block parties, these builds flip the script on what a 'mom’s car' can be. We took the quiet grocery runs and made them loud, fast, and unapologetically aggressive or dazzlingly flashy — depending on which story you want to roll with. Our builds are wild crossroads where function meets freak show. We pushed the Buick LaCrosse and Hyundai Santa Fe into underground street racers, swapped out the Nissan Rogue for a mud-slinging swamp beast, and even flipped the Toyota Previa into a neon-lit cyberpunk shuttle. These aren’t your grandma’s rides anymore — they’re brutal wide-track monsters, candy-coated showstoppers, and sleeper hits hiding serious firepower. If you think mom’s car culture is snooze city, buckle up. We’re rewriting the family chapter in the most insane ways possible.

WAVE 05

Hillclimb Madness: Widebodies for the Vertical Warriors

Alright, buckle up because we just finished crafting a wild collection of hillclimb beasts that redefine what it means to conquer mountains. Forget what you know about SUVs, city cars, or muscle classics—they’re all morphed here into gravity-defying, aero-spiked monsters built to tear up Pikes Peak and beyond. These builds aren’t just slapping on some fender flares and calling it a day; every millimeter is engineered for insane grip, brutal downforce, and mechanical wizardry that laughs in the face of thin mountain air. Our Wrangler, Tesla Model Y, and Ford GT have all undergone some serious mechanical and aerodynamic sorcery, turning them into apex predators of the switchbacks with wings, ducts, and wide tracks that make stock cars look like toys. But it’s not just about the tech. These rides tell the story of what could’ve happened if a handful of passionate maniacs decided to push their platforms into uncharted hillclimb territory. The collection spans from ’60s muscle all the way to post-2020 electric warhorses, each drenched in livery and aero that scream purpose and aggression. Whether you’re into brutal American muscle or clean minimalist electrics, these cars embody the pure, unrelenting spirit of the climb. The only question left is: who’s ready to throw down on the mountain in a machine that laughs at gravity and laughs even harder at tradition?

WAVE 01

Widebody Syndicate Volume 1 — The Cars That Should’ve Been But Weren’t

Welcome to the first chapter in the Widebody Syndicate saga, where we’ve taken the humble, the overlooked, and the downright unexpected and given them an attitude adjustment so fierce it could start a fight with your favorite tuner car. From the muscle memory of the Rust Haven Restomod’s 1984 Dodge Aries to the mud-spattered madness of the Camaro-based Mud King Slingshot, our builds don’t just widen fenders — they widen the very possibilities of automotive culture itself. We’re talking about cars that flip the script on what enthusiasts thought was possible, blending wild aero, brutal powertrains, and cultural mashups that somehow make perfect sense in our alternate timeline. This release is a cross-section of everything that’s too good to be true but totally believable — a street-savvy Nissan Armada drifting like a samurai warrior, a Volvo V70 laser-focused on alpine switchbacks, and a Nissan Rogue hitting the Baja desert like a trophy truck with a grudge. We didn’t pick these rides just to stare at pretty wide fenders; we picked them to show how rich, diverse, and downright nuts car culture could get if no one played by the usual rules. So buckle up, because these builds are the kind of rebellious, gearhead daydreams you didn’t know you needed — until now.