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Twisted Roblox storm chasing

Updated June 29, 2026 · 9 min read

Twisted Guide (2026) — Storm Chasing, Probes, Vehicles & Codes

Twisted is a storm-chasing game on Roblox where you drive into the path of tornadoes across the fictional state of Keysota, deploy data-collecting probes for cash, and track storms with tools modeled on real meteorology. Made by Twisted Official (place ID 6161235818), it runs around 3,300 concurrent players, has pulled 159M+ visits, holds a 90% rating, and is still in beta. This guide covers the full chase loop, how probes make you money, which vehicles survive a direct hit, reading radar and EF ratings, the game passes, the current code status, and how to earn free Robux for it.

In This Guide

  1. What Is Twisted?
  2. The Storm-Chasing Loop
  3. Making Money With Probes
  4. Vehicles & Interceptors
  5. Reading Radar & EF Ratings
  6. The Map of Keysota
  7. Pro Tips
  8. Game Passes
  9. Does It Have Codes?
  10. How to Earn Free Robux
  11. FAQ

What Is Twisted?

Twisted is a storm-chasing game by Twisted Official on Roblox place ID 6161235818. It drops you into the rolling hills and prairies of the fictional state of Keysota, where scientists and thrill seekers take to the roads in chase of severe weather. Some players observe a violent tornado from a safe distance; others risk everything to get a perfect shot from close range, deploy probes, or intercept in an armored vehicle. It is a slower, more simulation-flavored game than most Roblox titles, and that attention to detail is exactly why it has built up 159M+ visits, a 90% rating, and a steady ~3,300 concurrent players even while still in beta.

What sets Twisted apart is how seriously it treats the meteorology. Instead of cartoon storms, it uses instruments based on real tools like doppler radar to help you find and track a twister, then drive to intercept it. Tornadoes are dynamic, varying in shape and movement, and the world reacts to them — trees bend and street lights sway harder the closer a storm gets. The result is a chase that feels earned: you read the data, position yourself, and either come away with valuable probe readings or a destroyed car.

The Storm-Chasing Loop

The core loop in Twisted is simple to describe and hard to master: pick a target, get into position, deploy probes, and survive long enough to collect the payout. Every run starts on the Keysota map.

1. Pick a Blip and Drop In

From the map, you select a blue blip — an area of interest that could spawn a tornado — then drop into the game and choose a car. Picking the right blip is the first skill: you want a cell with real potential, not a quiet patch of sky.

2. Track the Storm

Once you are on the road, use radar to find rotation and head toward it, watching the environment for the tell-tale signs of a strengthening tornado. Position is everything — you want to be ahead of the storm's path, not chasing its tail.

3. Deploy and Collect

Buy probes from the warehouse and place them directly in the tornado's path so they collect data on impact. When the storm hits them, you earn cash scaled to the windspeed, then reinvest in stronger vehicles and more probes for the next chase.

Making Money With Probes

Cash drives almost everything you do in Twisted, and the primary way to earn it is deploying probes. You buy probes from the warehouse in the menu and place them in front of an approaching tornado, then leave them there to collect data when the storm impacts them. The payout is determined by windspeed: a probe only generates money if the tornado that hits it is moving faster than roughly 65 mph, and the stronger the storm, the larger the reward. That single rule shapes the whole risk-reward of the game — a weak EF-0 brush barely pays, while getting probes into the core of a violent wedge can be a huge payday.

The trick is placement. You have to predict where the tornado will actually travel and seed your probes along that line, then get clear before the windfield reaches you. Set probes too far off the path and the storm never touches them; set them perfectly and you bank big. Beyond probes, you can take on trucking jobs (with the Trucking pass) for steady runs worth roughly 500 to 3,000 each, or rate tornado damage as part of the National Weather Service team for additional cash. Early on, the active code gives you a cash head start so you can afford your first real probes and a sturdier car.

Vehicles & Interceptors

Your vehicle is one of the most important parts of any chase, and the type you drive completely changes how you play. You begin with dealership vehicles — civilian cars that are unarmored with a low damage threshold. They are perfectly fine for observing and photographing from a distance, but they fall apart quickly near a tornado, so you have to be cautious. As you earn cash, you graduate to warehouse vehicles and eventually interceptors: armored vehicles built specifically to drive into a tornado and come out in one piece.

The numbers matter here. Undeployed interceptors can handle a minimum of around 140 mph, while deployed interceptors (with their armor and anchoring extended) handle a minimum of around 165 mph. The strongest interceptors push to roughly 155 mph undeployed and 235 mph deployed. The golden rule for survival: chase the core only with a strong interceptor, and never enter the windfield without a full-speed escape route, because if a storm exceeds your vehicle's threshold and you cannot get out, you die. In a dealership car, that means keeping your distance and treating the tornado as something to photograph, not punch through.

Pro Tip: Match your vehicle to your goal. If you only need probe placement and photos, a fast civilian car ahead of the storm is enough. Save the interceptor for genuine core punches, and always deploy it before contact — an undeployed interceptor caught off guard is far more fragile than a deployed one.

Reading Radar & EF Ratings

Twisted's instruments are modeled on real meteorology, and learning to read them is what separates a guessing chaser from an efficient one. The key tool is doppler radar. A TVS (Tornado Vortex Signature) on radar tells you a mesocyclone or tornado has been identified. When a tornado is on the ground, the TVS color scales from green up to pink, with pink marking the strongest storms — roughly 140 mph and above. In practice, that color is your shopping list: a pink TVS means a high-windspeed storm worth committing probes and an interceptor to, while a green one may not be worth the fuel.

After a tornado passes, damage is graded on the EF scale, from EF-0 through EF-5, based on real-world damage indicators, with unrated storms labeled EF-U (EF-Unknown). If you own the National Weather Service pass, you can rate that damage yourself and earn in-game cash for doing it — turning the aftermath of a chase into its own income stream. Even without the pass, understanding the EF scale helps you judge which storms are worth chasing for the biggest probe payouts.

The Map of Keysota

The fictional state of Keysota is split into three counties: Wadena County, Beltrami County, and Cherokee County. Each has a major hub city — Hazelton in Wadena, Viroqua in Cherokee, and Hibbing in Beltrami. The map is large and built for driving, with long highways connecting the towns and open country in between where tornadoes tend to form. Learning the road network pays off directly: the faster you can reposition between a blip and the storm's path, the more often you will land your probes before a tornado dissipates.

The environment is also part of the gameplay feedback. Object reactions to wind ramp up in violence the closer you get to a tornado — trees bending, street lights swaying — so the world itself helps you gauge proximity and intensity without staring at the radar the whole time. Use those cues alongside your instruments to stay on the right side of the windfield.

Pro Tips

Game Passes

Twisted is free to play, and its game passes split into convenience boosts, extra vehicles and tools, and role access. Based on the in-game store and community listings as of July 2026, the lineup includes Infinite Fuel (around 200 Robux, toggle infinite fuel on any vehicle you own), 2x Income (around 200 Robux, doubles cash earnings), Starter Pack (around 150 Robux), Custom Vehicle Color (around 50 Robux), Chainsaw (around 150 Robux), Fire / EMS (around 300 Robux), Drone (around 350 Robux), Trucking Jobs (around 350 Robux, for jobs worth roughly 500 to 3,000 each), and National Weather Service Access (around 650 Robux), which lets you join the NWS team, issue warnings, and rate damage for cash.

For a long-term player, 2x Income and Infinite Fuel are the two passes that quietly improve every single chase, while National Weather Service Access and Trucking Jobs open up whole extra ways to play and earn. None of them are required to progress — a free player can chase, probe, and bank cash just fine — so treat passes as accelerators. Prices and the exact lineup can shift with beta updates, so always confirm the current cost in the in-game store before buying.

Does Twisted Have Codes?

Yes — Twisted has a working code system, and codes mainly give in-game cash, which is exactly what you need to fund probes and vehicles. As of June 2026, reputable trackers list START as active, redeeming for 20,000 cash. Older codes such as EasterWeekend, aprilfools, and 100MILLIONVISITS have expired. Codes are case-sensitive and are redeemed through the in-game Settings menu, where you paste a code into the Promo Code box and press Enter. Because codes rotate and expire with updates, always confirm one in-game before counting on it. We keep the verified list current on our Twisted codes page.

How to Earn Free Robux for Twisted

Twisted's most useful passes — 2x Income, Infinite Fuel, the National Weather Service role, and the extra vehicles — all cost Robux. If you would rather not spend out of pocket, you can earn Robux through Earnaldo by completing simple tasks and put it toward whichever pass fits your chasing style. Here is how Earnaldo works. If you like round-based Roblox games with a darker edge, our DOORS guide is a good next read.

Earn Free Robux While You Chase

Want the 2x Income pass or a National Weather Service slot without spending? Earnaldo lets you earn free Robux by completing simple tasks — no survey spam, no downloads, just real rewards.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Twisted on Roblox?

Twisted is a storm-chasing game by Twisted Official (place ID 6161235818) set in the fictional state of Keysota. You drive out to intercept tornadoes, deploy data-collecting probes in their path for cash, and use real-world-style tools like doppler radar to track storms. It is in beta with around 3,300 concurrent players, 159M+ visits, and a 90% rating.

How do you make money in Twisted?

The main way is deploying probes from the warehouse and placing them in a tornado's path. When the tornado hits a probe, it generates cash based on the windspeed, and payouts only start once windspeeds are over about 65 mph, so the stronger the tornado, the bigger the reward. Trucking jobs and rating damage as NWS are additional income paths.

What vehicles should you use in Twisted?

You start in unarmored dealership cars that are fine for observing from a distance but fragile near a tornado. As you earn cash you move to warehouse vehicles and armored interceptors built to survive a direct hit. Undeployed interceptors handle a minimum of around 140 mph and deployed ones around 165 mph, with the strongest reaching 235 mph deployed.

Does Twisted have codes?

Yes. As of June 2026 the code START is listed by trackers as active and gives 20,000 in-game cash. Codes are redeemed through the Settings icon and are case-sensitive. Older codes like EasterWeekend, aprilfools, and 100MILLIONVISITS have expired. Always confirm a code in-game before relying on it.

What is the National Weather Service pass in Twisted?

The National Weather Service (NWS) Access pass (about 650 Robux) lets you join the NWS team, issue your own warnings, and rate tornado damage on the EF scale after a storm, which rewards in-game cash. It is the most expensive pass and aimed at players who want the meteorologist side of the game rather than just chasing.

How does radar work in Twisted?

Twisted uses tools modeled on real meteorology, including doppler radar. A TVS signature on radar flags a mesocyclone or tornado, and when a tornado is on the ground the TVS color scales from green up to pink, with pink indicating the strongest storms (roughly 140 mph and up). Learning to read it tells you which blip is worth chasing.

Is Twisted pay-to-win?

No. You can chase, deploy probes, and earn cash entirely for free, and the active code gives you a head start. The game passes such as Infinite Fuel, 2x Income, and the vehicle and role passes are convenience and content add-ons rather than requirements, so a free player can fully progress with patience.

About This Guide

This guide is based on the live beta of Twisted (place ID 6161235818) by Twisted Official as of July 2026, drawing on the in-game experience, the official experience description, community wikis, and the in-game store. As a frequently updated beta, vehicles, passes, prices, and codes can change — confirm current details in-game. See also our Twisted hub and the Twisted vs Murder Mystery 2 comparison.