If you've been thinking about buying a car, the last few months probably felt like the worst possible time. Tariff headlines everywhere. Price hikes of $3,000 to nearly $9,000 on imported vehicles
There’s a weird pattern in the U.S. car market. We stop buying something, automakers kill it, and then a few years later everyone starts asking, “wait… why did we get rid of that?&r
The DRAM chip shortage is hitting cars in 2026 in a way most buyers never saw coming. You have probably heard about AI changing everything. What you probably have not heard is that it is quietly makin
A full paint job sounds fun right up until someone says the price out loud. That is why car wraps have gotten so popular. They give people the part they actually want, the color change, without tur
Infiniti isn’t wasting time here. What started as a pair of wild concepts is already becoming real, and it’s happening sooner than expected. Last year, the brand showed two extremes of
BYD is taking Denza into Europe with a clear statement. No slow rollout, no testing the waters. It’s going straight after the premium crowd. The history is a bit different from most. Denza st
A lot of people assume that once someone starts making serious money, the next move is obvious. Bigger house, nicer watch, luxury car in the driveway. But when it comes to cars, that idea falls apa
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
The Bugatti EB 112 came out of a moment when the brand was trying to figure itself out again. Early 1990s: new ownership, big plans. This was supposed to be the luxury sedan to sit next to the EB 110.
Some car brands fade out quietly. Others keep trying again. Marcos belongs to the second group, shaped by a scene that thrives on risk and second chances. It started back in 1959 with Jem Marsh and