Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “New Cars”
2026 Ferrari Roma Spider: The Convertible That Does Not Make Excuses
The Ferrari Roma Spider solved a problem that convertible GT cars have struggled with for decades: how to remove the roof without materially degrading either the driving experience or the visual coherence of the closed car. Ferrari’s retractable hardtop — which deploys or retracts in 13.5 seconds at speeds up to 60 km/h — preserves the Roma Coupe’s rear proportions sufficiently that the Spider does not look like a convertible that wishes it were a coupe. It looks like a car designed to be driven open, which is what it is.
2026 Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio: The Last Argument for the Combustion Italian Sports Sedan
The 2026 Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio has not been significantly changed from its predecessor in ways that the specification sheet reveals. The 2.9-liter twin-turbocharged V6, producing 505 horsepower, is carried forward. The carbon fiber driveshaft, the aluminum-intensive structure, and the rear-wheel-drive layout remain. The suspension — double wishbones at the front, multilink at the rear — is calibrated to deliver the steering feel and handling balance that made the previous generation the benchmark for driver engagement in the sports sedan segment.
2026 Ford Mustang Dark Horse: American Performance Logic Applied Correctly
The Mustang Dark Horse represents Ford’s attempt to produce a track-focused Mustang that is analytically justifiable rather than simply powerful in the way that American performance cars have traditionally satisfied their performance requirements. The 500-horsepower 5.0-liter Coyote V8 is carried over from the Mach 1 with specific modifications — a new flat-plane crankshaft that allows the engine to rev faster and produce a different sound character — and surrounded by chassis, suspension, and aerodynamic development that is serious enough to require explanation rather than simply impressive horsepower figures.
2026 Land Rover Defender V8: The Off-Roader That Learned Performance Without Forgetting Its Purpose
The Land Rover Defender V8 answers a question that nobody strictly needed to ask: what happens when you put a supercharged 5.0-liter V8 producing 518 horsepower into a car that can also ford rivers, climb gradients that defeat other off-road vehicles, and carry a family of five across terrain that requires disconnecting the front anti-roll bar and deploying a low-range transfer case? The answer is that it works, and it works in a way that is not obviously coherent but is undeniably entertaining.
2026 Toyota GR86: The Affordable Sports Car That Does Not Need an Excuse
The Toyota GR86 costs $32,000 in base form and provides a quality of driving engagement that cars costing three times as much work hard to replicate. This statement should require extensive qualification, and it does not. The GR86 is a rear-wheel-drive, naturally aspirated sports car weighing 2,822 pounds with a 228-horsepower flat-four that is intended not for straight-line performance but for the kind of driving that roads and tracks reward in direct proportion to the driver’s willingness to use the entire rev range and manage the car at the limit of adhesion.
2026 Porsche 911 GT3: Still the Standard Against Which All Sports Cars Are Measured
The case against the current Porsche 911 GT3 is that it is too good. The controls are too precise, the chassis too composed, the engine too willing — it conceals how fast it is going and how close to its limits you are, which means you can arrive at speeds that require considerable competence to manage without having received adequate warning that they were approaching. This is not a criticism that would survive scrutiny in court, but it is the honest assessment of what makes the GT3 different from sports cars that communicate their limits more generously.
2026 Chevrolet Corvette E-Ray: The Hybrid That Makes the Corvette Better Without Making It Different
The Chevrolet Corvette E-Ray is the first Corvette to use all-wheel drive and the first to use a hybrid powertrain, two statements that would have been inconceivable to anyone familiar with the Corvette’s sixty-year identity as a rear-wheel-drive, naturally aspirated (or supercharged) American sports car. The E-Ray adds an electric motor to the front axle — drawing from a 1.9 kWh battery that is too small for any meaningful EV range but large enough to provide front-axle torque on demand — while retaining the 6.2-liter LT2 V8 at the rear.
2026 Mercedes-AMG GT 63: The Four-Door That Makes the Sedan Argument Redundant
The AMG GT 63 four-door coupe occupies a position in the Mercedes lineup that required a new category rather than a modification of an existing one. It is not a sedan. It is not a GT car in the traditional two-seat sense. It is not a crossover despite its elevated roofline providing more headroom than a conventional saloon. It is a 630-horsepower, four-seat automobile that covers the distance between major European cities in a way that is faster, more comfortable, and more dramatic than any alternative in its price class.
2026 BMW M5: The Most Capable M Car Ever Made and the Most Conflicted
The new BMW M5 will do zero to sixty in 3.4 seconds. It weighs 2,445 kilograms. These two facts exist in a tension that the M division has spent considerable engineering effort resolving and that no amount of engineering can fully reconcile. The car is extraordinarily fast. It is also extraordinarily heavy, and the M5 lineage — from the E28 original through the E39 that most enthusiasts consider the definition of the breed — was built on the proposition that performance and mass should not coexist if the goal is driver engagement.