Mercedes knows the S-Class is holy ground. You do not screw this car up. So when they tell you this is just a facelift, do not believe that for one second. This is more like Mercedes taking a deep bre
Alfa Romeo looked at the Giulia Quadrifoglio and decided it wasn’t dramatic enough. So they turned it up to eleven and called it the Giulia Quadrifoglio Luna Rossa. Only 10 will ever exist, and
Modellista, Toyota’s in-house tuning and styling brand, is getting ready to show something new at the Tokyo Auto Salon 2026. For now, it’s keeping things mysterious, releasing just one tea
BMW is apparently thinking it’s a good idea to turn all the screws on their cars into tiny versions of their logo. Yep, you heard that right. Their new patent features heads that divide into fou
Some cars are rare. Then there’s the Nevera R Founder’s Edition. Rimac has made just ten of these, and each one tells its own story. Every detail is crafted with care, every design choice
Toyota usually plays it safe with luxury. Quiet designs, no big statements. That’s why the Century Coupe turning up in Japan last fall felt so unexpected. The Century name has always stood for s
Owning a McLaren is out of reach for most people, but McLaren has found a way to sneak into more homes anyway. Not through a car, but through a gaming chair that costs about as much as a used hatchbac
For decades, the parking brake was as simple as it gets: a metal lever (or a floor pedal) yanking on a pair of cables to keep the rear wheels locked in place. It didn’t matter if the car was a s
Cars have been part of American life for more than 100 years — and along the way, the auto world has cranked out some genuinely cool eras… and some truly awful ideas. For every ‘60s
Mercedes brought the W124 to America in 1985, and honestly, it might've been the last time they built a car that was basically indestructible. People bought them, drove them forever, and then just