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
A lot of people hear “AI is changing the car industry” and assume it means smarter voice assistants, self-driving features, or dashboards that talk too much. But there is a less obvious
This year’s New York Auto Show did not feel like one of those sleepy events where automakers wheel out a few mildly updated SUVs and call it a day. It felt bigger than that. More confident. More
The BMW 6-Series Coupe might be gone, but people haven’t really let it go. There’s still a lot of interest in seeing it come back, and Sugar Design decided to take a shot at what that coul
Concept cars are what happen when car companies stop being practical for a minute. No one is worrying about cupholders, resale value, or whether the average buyer will understand the design. It is
Mercedes is changing something most cars still keep old-school. The steering. In the updated EQS, there is no physical connection between the steering wheel and the front wheels. Instead, everythin
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
For a long time, luxury cars followed a pretty predictable script. If someone wanted something high-end, they looked to Germany first, maybe Japan or the UK next. That was just how the market worked.
A few years ago, the car industry seemed completely sure of itself. EVs were the future, end of story. Every brand had a big electric promise. Every launch felt like a warning that gas cars were on bo
Chrysler is not done yet, and Stellantis is starting to show it. There is real interest in bringing the brand back, and one idea points to a new sedan, or something close to it. However, do not exp