When I first heard about this car, I wondered, who would buy it. Then once I saw it and sat in it I realized that it was me they were targeting. I admit it my perception of Hyundai goes back to the Rodney King era, when he got caught doing 85 mph in his Exel, and I remember thinking, "I didn't know a Hyundai could go that fast." I will now say that anyone who thinks this car is a joke, has clearly not seen one in person. When I see people comparing them to M300, Maxima, even
Infiniti G35 (I have a G35 Coupe), I think, they haven't seen one. I look at a Maxima and see a Nissan. If it was an
Infiniti it would be 8-12 grand more. The Genesis is a Genesis, it just still has the Hyundai flying H. It definitely (for me anyway) competes in styling and fit and finish with Lexus, Acura and
Infiniti, and styling with BMW and Mercedes.
The previous post about the Phaeton, my thoughts on this is I believe they were asking around 80 grand (don't quote me on that), in which case why would I not just get an Audi. I would equate this to Toyota coming out with a $70,000 Avalon, and wonder why no one is buying it when you can have a Lexus instead. As for should they have come out with a luxo brand? It would have made it easier for the Hyundai haters, and
badge conscious (BMW, Lexus) buyers to feel good about their purchase, but also comes with a huge investment, and if their strategy pays off will raise the image of their entire line-up.
I will also say that Hyundai's strategy of selling this much car for the listed MRSP is smart, I'm just hoping the dealers don't screw it up by forcing the "market adjustment". 40 grand for a loaded V6, great deal, 45 grand (47 with custom wheels) not so much and would keep me from pulling the trigger.
When evaluating cars for my newly licensed daughter, my list was Civic, Mazda 3 and Toyota Corolla. Now I find myself with the previoulsy off the radar Elantra as the top choice.
The wife however is still, "Eeew, a Hyundai?". I'm guessing once I take her to see the Genesis, that will all change.