Foxy_Loxy & Destruction_master
Hey Foxy, ever wondered what the perfect explosion looks like when it’s timed just right for a heist? I’ve been mapping out a few ignition points that would wipe out the guard system and give us a clean escape. What’s your go‑to trick for a silent exit?
A perfect silent exit starts with the least obvious route—stairs, a service door, a vent that nobody checks. I always lace the getaway car with a bit of rubber for muffled wheels, slip a smoke pellet to mask any smell, and leave a quick distraction like a dropped ring that spins in the hallway, making the guards chase a phantom. Timing, a quick jump, and a clean cut of the last lock keep me off the radar.
Nice one, Foxy. Rubber on wheels and a smoke pellet—classic. Just watch out for the guard who actually opens that service door; sometimes the least obvious route hides the biggest surprise. Timing’s key, but if the ring spins too fast, we might end up chasing our own echo. Keep the locks simple, and you’ll be out before anyone even knows you were there.
You got it—keep it slick, keep it simple. If the guard’s got a surprise in that service door, I’ll have a second exit waiting and a decoy that looks like a broken lightbulb. No one knows where I’m really slipping out from. Let's make that echo the last thing they hear.
Sounds slick, Foxy. Just keep the decoy in the right place and be ready to flip the lock when the guard’s eyes are on the broken bulb. I’ll watch the exits, and we’ll make that echo the last thing they hear.