This Apocalypse-Ready Off-Road Trailer Has Bulletproof Windows and Blast Shields, Because Of Course It DoesMammoth Overland just raised the bar for what an off-road trailer can actually be. The Washington-based company has officially unveiled its newest build, the Xtinction Level Escape -- the XLE -- and it's not your typical glamping rig. This thing was engineered for scenarios most people hope they never face.The XLE takes Mammoth's existing Extinction Level Event trailer as its foundation and pushes nearly every element further. It's the longest trailer the company has ever built, stretching 18.4 feet from nose to tail. It rides on a double axle setup, a configuration shared only with the company's TL model, and it carries the ground clearance needed to handle serious off-road terrain without breaking a sweat. The aluminum body that defines the Mammoth lineup is here, but the XLE goes further with a powder-coated steel chassis underneath everything.That's where the build gets interesting. Standard trailers worry about rock chips. This one comes equipped with MOLLE-style blast shields mounted to the exterior and windows built from inch-thick bulletproof glass. These aren't marketing flourishes -- they're structural decisions that signal exactly what this trailer was designed to handle.AdvertisementAdvertisementStep inside and the XLE offers more than most people would expect given the armored exterior. The pressurized cabin can be configured with either a king-size bed or a dual bunk bed setup, with enough capacity to sleep four adults comfortably. There's a 12-volt air conditioning system, a 45-liter refrigerator inside the cabin, and a functional bathroom complete with a stand-up shower. The kitchenette is positioned outside the trailer itself, which keeps the interior layout cleaner and more livable on longer trips.The safety and survival systems packed into the XLE read like a checklist for a small tactical unit. A full 360-degree night-vision CCTV system covers the perimeter. Sonic defense and bear deterrent systems are included as standard equipment, along with dedicated communication systems for areas where cell coverage disappears entirely. A rapid-access roof hatch gives occupants an exit point when ground-level exit isn't a viable option. There's a dedicated gun safe built into the structure, and an integrated medical kit is part of the package as well.Power is handled through a 1,200 amp-hour battery system paired with a 400-watt solar panel array, giving the XLE the ability to operate completely off the grid for extended stretches. A backup portable generator rounds out the power strategy, ensuring that if solar isn't delivering, there's still a fallback option in place.Mammoth is currently accepting reservations for the XLE through its website, with deliveries expected before the end of the year. The price sits at $123,994 -- a significant number, but one that starts to make sense when you consider the engineering stacked into every square foot of this build.AdvertisementAdvertisementThe XLE isn't trying to compete with mainstream travel trailers. It's operating in a completely different category, one where the assumption isn't that conditions will be inconvenient but that they could genuinely turn dangerous. As more buyers look for gear that performs at the absolute edge of what's possible, Mammoth is making a clear statement about where the ceiling for off-road trailers actually sits.SourceImages Via: Mammoth Overland