Lifted Chevy drives over a Lamborghini in a parking lot incident caught on video. No injuries reported, but the driver’s awareness raises serious safety concerns. The clip highlights how extreme vehicle height can create dangerous blind spots. We know what you’re thinking, and no, this isn’t AI. That alone is surprising. What’s wilder is that a situation like this is even plausible, let alone that it actually happened. The driver of a lifted Chevrolet Silverado was so oblivious behind the wheel of a three-ton truck that she missed an entire Lamborghini Huracan, drove onto it, and then put it in park to see what was going on. From the footage, the Lamborghini appears to be moving slowly through a parking lot, likely searching for a space. The Silverado enters with noticeably more speed than the setting calls for. There’s no meaningful correction, no obvious braking in time, and then CRUNCH. Except it doesn’t stop at contact. The truck climbs the Huracán’s front end and keeps going. Not a bump. Not a scrape. A scene out of an actual monster truck show. Read: After A Point, Bigger Vehicles Aren’t Safer, But They Could Hurt Others Crash compatibility is a safety term that refers to how two vehicles “match up” in a collision. In this case, it’s clear to see why they don’t. The Lamborghini is wildly low to the ground, and the Silverado is about as tall as it can get without rolling over on a 45 mph turn. When a vehicle gets this tall, forward visibility shrinks, blind zones grow, and the consequences of even a small lapse in attention get amplified fast. Based on the videos, it does not appear that anyone was hurt, thankfully. Even better, a man who appears to be the Huracan’s owner, posting on Instagram as 1realramon, shared footage of the aftermath himself and seems to be handling the whole thing with rather more grace than you’d expect from someone whose supercar has just been used as a speed bump. Video Reddit Let’s be super clear though. This wasn’t a minor lapse. This driver was moving faster than they should’ve been in a parking lot. They missed an entire car, hit it, and kept going briefly. It sucks to see that Huracan damaged, but this could’ve just as easily been a person, a child, or a pet. Would the driver have stopped at all in those cases? It sure doesn’t seem like it from the way they don’t stop at initial impact. That’s besides the point though. Nothing about this truck is especially rare anymore. Lift kits, oversized tires, and sky-high ride heights are everywhere, while the rules around them remain fragmented at best. There’s no meaningful requirement to prove that a heavily modified truck still maintains safe visibility or reasonable interaction with smaller vehicles. There probably should be. Nobody is required to prove that they can operate things this tall and large safely. We require CDLs for truly large trucks, but somehow think everyday folks can manage trucks like this. Call this driver error if you want. That’s part of it, no doubt. But it’s also a system that allows vehicles to grow beyond the point where average awareness is enough to keep everyone safe. And when that happens, situations like this stop being shocking. They start being inevitable. Thankfully, all we lost in this case was a wonderful supercar. Photo Reddit u/2kylander