Let’s look at the most popular version of the Pizza Trainer in detail.
| Hotkey | Feature | Description | |--------|---------|-------------| | F1 | Infinite Health | Never die. Fall damage disabled. | | F2 | Infinite Ammo | All weapons, including specials. | | F3 | Pizza Mode | Enemies turn into pizza boxes on death. Hilarious physics. | | F4 | One-Hit Kill | Any enemy dies from a single pistol shot. | | F5 | Super Speed | Move at 3x normal speed. Great for speedruns. | | F6 | Save Position | Stores current XYZ coordinates. | | F7 | Teleport | Returns to saved position. | | F8 | Unlock All Levels | Skip straight to any mission. | | F9 | Max Loco Meter | Perform endless El Gringo Loco moves. |
The Pizza Mode is the star attraction. When activated, defeated enemies don’t just ragdoll—they burst into a spray of tomato sauce and cheese, leaving a spinning pizza box behind. The sound effect is a comedic “ding!” like a microwave oven. It’s absurd, immersion-breaking, and utterly perfect for a game that already features wrestling moves on gangsters.
The "Pizza Button": In the most famous version of this trainer, the Numpad 0 key is mapped to "Eat Pizza." Every time you press it, your health refills and Ram shouts his signature "Orale!" (You can trigger this sound effect manually for comedic effect mid-gunfight). total overdose pizza trainer
Technically, yes. But Total Overdose is a single-player game. Using a trainer is not a bannable offense (no multiplayer servers exist officially). You’re only cheating yourself out of the challenge—or adding fun if you’ve already beaten the game.
Many players use the Pizza Trainer to:
If you want the pure experience, play without cheats first. Then bring out the Pizza Trainer for a second, schlocky playthrough. Let’s look at the most popular version of
Yes—if you love chaos and nostalgia.
No—if you’re looking for a serious, balanced gaming experience.
The Pizza Trainer is best enjoyed as a curiosity. Fire it up on a rainy weekend. Enable Pizza Mode, grab a shotgun, and watch El Gringo Loco turn Mexico’s underworld into a delivery driver’s nightmare.
Just don’t expect it to work on Windows 11 without compatibility mode (try Windows XP SP3). And for the love of all that is cheesy, back up your saves first. The "Pizza Button": In the most famous version
Q: Is the Pizza Trainer a virus?
A: Not if you get it from a trusted source. Because trainers inject code into running processes (TOD.exe), your antivirus will flag it as a "HackTool." This is a false positive. However, if the file is 10MB and called Setup.exe, delete it immediately. Legit trainers are under 1MB.
Q: Can I use the Pizza Trainer on the PS2 or Xbox version? A: No. The "Trainer" concept is exclusive to PC. Console players are stuck running across the map to find those greasy slices.
Q: Will this work with the Total Overdose: Retro Edition fan patch?
A: Yes. In fact, the Retro Edition (which adds widescreen support) has a specific compatibility mode for the Pizza Trainer. You may need to rename the trainer .exe to match the patched game's process name.
Q: Why is it called "Pizza Trainer" and not "Health Trainer?" A: Because of the game's unique identity. Calling it a "Health Trainer" would be generic. The modding community embraced the meme. On forums like Nexus Mods, searching "Pizza" yields the best results.
Trainers can cause crashes, especially during cutscenes. Save before enabling "Pizza Mode" or teleport functions.