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
Everyone knows someone with a car that just refuses to die. It is usually not pretty. The paint is tired, one of the buttons stopped existing emotionally years ago, and the inside smells faintly li
The average car on American roads is now almost 13 years old, which sounds surprising until you think about what a new car costs now. Then it sounds completely logical. A lot of people are h
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
A scratch on the car can ruin the mood weirdly fast. You walk out, see it, and your brain immediately jumps to the same place: great, now this is going to be expensive. But sometimes it is n
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.
A used car with low miles can feel like a win before you even leave the lot. The price makes sense. The odometer looks reassuring. The seller keeps repeating how clean it is. Everything about the deal
Few things are more annoying than walking up to the car and spotting a scratch that definitely was not there before. It throws off the whole mood instantly. For about ten seconds, it feels like the da
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