Some cars barely leave the driveway anymore. One owner works from home. Another keeps a second car for weekends. Someone else leaves town for a few weeks and comes back expecting the car to start like
One of the funniest things about modern cars is how much stuff they can do while most owners are still using maybe 20 percent of it. Not because people are lazy. Mostly because nobody really shows
Most people have a very specific relationship with dashboard lights. They notice one, feel mildly attacked by it, hope it is nothing, and then keep driving until the car forces the conversation. It
Car advice has a funny way of surviving long after it stops being true. Some of it came from older cars. Some of it came from guys who sounded confident. Some of it probably started because it made so
For a while, the car industry talked like the future had already been decided. Gas was on the way out, EVs were the next obvious step, and hybrids were just the awkward in-between phase people would m
Every time gas prices jump, the same thing happens. People who were perfectly happy to ignore EVs start opening a calculator. That is happening again right now, and this time it feels different.
Toyota is one of those brands people buy when they are tired of surprises. That is the whole appeal. You buy the Camry, the RAV4, the Highlander, and the expectation is pretty simple: it will start
A few years ago, the big argument against EVs was always the same. Nice idea, but charging takes too long and road trips sound annoying. That argument is starting to look old. BYD’s De
For a long time, electric cars had one big problem. They were just too expensive for most people. That is starting to change. Quietly, but in a very real way. Right now, something interestin
The 1992 Honda Accord was never the kind of car people hung posters of. Nobody bought one to feel cool. Nobody turned around in a parking lot just to admire it one more time. And that is exactly wh