As we move forward, we may find that the Tuk Tuk is eventually subsumed by the Globe Twatter—that the physical patrol is replaced by the digital surveillance, and the heat of the engine is replaced by the cool glow of the screen. These texts serve as the warning and the prophecy: we are all just waiting to be picked up, or perhaps, we are already drowning.
That is the central question of Globe Twatters 2 . The final scene shows Driver No. 30 removing their helmet, revealing… your face. Or a potato. The resolution depends on your screen brightness. tuk tuk patrol pickup vol 30 globe twatters 2
When interacting with tuk tuks or any local modes of transportation and community patrols, be respectful of local customs. As we move forward, we may find that
But that wasn't the interesting part. The channel was being hijacked by a digital scavenger hunt. A group of wealthy tourists had setup a challenge on a travel app called 'Globe Trotters' (which the drivers mockingly called 'Globe Twatters' due to the users' tendency to tweet about every street food stall they visited). The app had pinged a "Golden Fare"—a ride that paid triple the meter rate if the driver could find the passenger within ten minutes of the digital 'ping'. The final scene shows Driver No