AUSTIN, Texas — Tesla has begun pushing Full Self-Driving (Supervised) version 14 to more drivers outside North America, and the change owners are noticing first is a new set of selectable speed profiles that let the car match its pace to the moment.
Sloth to Hurry, on the Scroll Wheel
The v14 release introduces four driving modes — Sloth, Chill, Standard and Hurry — that drivers can cycle through using the right-hand scroll wheel on the steering wheel. The setting governs how assertively the car accelerates, takes gaps and carries speed, giving owners a simple way to move the system between relaxed cruising and brisker, more confident progress. It is a meaningful upgrade over v13, which offered far less control over the car's temperament, and it arrives as Tesla continues widening access across hardware tiers, including its plan to bring a lighter build to older cars detailed in its FSD v14 Lite rollout for HW3 vehicles.
A Smoother Start and Finish
Beyond the speed modes, early hands-on reviews of the update — including a detailed first drive published by The Driven — singled out how much better v14 behaves at the very beginning and end of a trip. Those transitions, where the car has to move between a parked state and live traffic, have long been the hardest moments for automated systems to handle gracefully.





