rbres
Getting familiar with the group...
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2017
- Messages
- 135
- Reaction score
- 17
- Points
- 18
- Location
- ca
- Genesis Model Type
- Genesis G70
5 ways the Genesis G70 can beat the German 3 (and 2 ways it can’t)
The all-new compact Genesis G70 sedan won’t go on sale in North America for at least six months, and we already like it. It’s got the look, even if that look is cluttered by some gratuitous adornment, and it has presence beyond its history. It speaks to us in a fashion few Korean-bred automobiles have.
That doesn’t necessarily mean everyone around here would buy a G70 or choose it first among its expansive list of competitors.
Let’s face it: The automotive subset of compact, luxury-branded sport sedans is crazy competitive, with 10 or so really interesting cars screaming for attention. There’s the minimalist chic of the Volvo S60, the rougher-hewn, emotionally throaty Infiniti Q50 and the hot-blooded, damn-the-torpedoes Alfa Romeo Giulia. One is not necessarily better than the others, in certain subjective analyses, and each speaks in a different way.
Then there’s the German 3, which have long dominated the category, ranking one (BMW 3-Series), two (Mercedes C-Class) and five (Audi A4/S4) in U.S. compact-lux sedan sales for 2016. The A4 has been substantially updated for 2018, which should move it back toward its familiar third-place spot. The 3-Series more or less invented the class. It’s been the benchmark since time immemorial, and even if over the last 10 or 15 years its beating heart has been buried deeper under buttons, knobs and electronic sorcery, there still beats within the 3-Series the heart of a true sports sedan.
So no, not everyone around here would buy the Genesis G70, but we assure you plenty of people out there will -- and for good reasons. Here are five ways the G70 can beat the German 3 and a couple more reasons it can’t. Read more...
The all-new compact Genesis G70 sedan won’t go on sale in North America for at least six months, and we already like it. It’s got the look, even if that look is cluttered by some gratuitous adornment, and it has presence beyond its history. It speaks to us in a fashion few Korean-bred automobiles have.
That doesn’t necessarily mean everyone around here would buy a G70 or choose it first among its expansive list of competitors.
Let’s face it: The automotive subset of compact, luxury-branded sport sedans is crazy competitive, with 10 or so really interesting cars screaming for attention. There’s the minimalist chic of the Volvo S60, the rougher-hewn, emotionally throaty Infiniti Q50 and the hot-blooded, damn-the-torpedoes Alfa Romeo Giulia. One is not necessarily better than the others, in certain subjective analyses, and each speaks in a different way.
Then there’s the German 3, which have long dominated the category, ranking one (BMW 3-Series), two (Mercedes C-Class) and five (Audi A4/S4) in U.S. compact-lux sedan sales for 2016. The A4 has been substantially updated for 2018, which should move it back toward its familiar third-place spot. The 3-Series more or less invented the class. It’s been the benchmark since time immemorial, and even if over the last 10 or 15 years its beating heart has been buried deeper under buttons, knobs and electronic sorcery, there still beats within the 3-Series the heart of a true sports sedan.
So no, not everyone around here would buy the Genesis G70, but we assure you plenty of people out there will -- and for good reasons. Here are five ways the G70 can beat the German 3 and a couple more reasons it can’t. Read more...