AMG goes all‑electric, Aussie hot hatches shuffle, and utes play payload chess: Today’s car news you can actually use
I woke up to a world where the AMG GT 4‑Door now whirrs instead of rumbles, yet still wants to scare a Porsche. Meanwhile, Australia’s performance‑car faithful get a small win (hello again, Civic Type R) and a bittersweet miss (no GTI Edition 50 party). Add a sold‑out Ranger Hybrid, a Hilux countermove, and a PHEV debate with a very Spanish twist, and you’ve got a proper enthusiast’s breakfast brief.
AMG’s big swing: the all‑electric GT 4‑Door takes aim at Taycan

Mercedes‑AMG has pulled the cover off its new GT 4‑Door EV, a car that effectively writes “The End” on the V8 chapter and then underlines it in 860 kW ink. That’s 1169 bhp in old money, per early specs shared across the reveal coverage. It’s electric only—no safety V8 net—and it’s positioned squarely as the Porsche Taycan’s new nightmare. Australia is on the list, and in the U.S. it lands as a 2027 model.
Two nuggets I love from the engineering chatter: first, there’s a “transmission tunnel” of sorts, but not for a prop shaft—think structural packaging and cabin ergonomics more than tradition. Second, AMG didn’t pretend the V8 soundtrack never mattered; they’ve engineered a synthetic growl after multiple attempts to get the timbre right. If you’ve ever daily‑driven an AMG, you’ll appreciate that they’re not just chasing numbers; they’re chasing the feel.
From poring over the photos and notes, the stance reads proper AMG—broad shoulders, taut surfacing, the right amount of menace without cartoonish aero. I’ve done long highway slogs in Taycans and old GT 4‑Doors; if AMG gets the seating position and pedal weighting right (that tunnel can actually help), the transition to electrons might feel more familiar than you’d think.
Quick spec snapshot (what matters today)
- Power: up to 860 kW (1169 bhp) claimed
- Powertrain: all‑electric; no ICE variants
- Positioning: direct rival to Porsche Taycan and other super‑sedan EVs
- Sound design: synthetic “AMG‑tuned” V8‑inspired audio
- Platform note: raised central tunnel for structure/packaging, not a driveshaft
- Timing: 2027 model year globally, confirmed for Australia
Then vs Now: AMG GT 4‑Door, old guard and new wave
| AMG GT 4‑Door | Previous generation (ICE) | New generation (EV) |
|---|---|---|
| Power source | Petrol V8 and V6 options (market‑dependent) | Battery‑electric only |
| Headline character | Authentic V8 rumble | Engineered, AMG‑tuned synthetic sound |
| Target rival | Panamera, high‑end four‑doors | Porsche Taycan and EV super‑sedans |
| Packaging | Traditional drivetrain tunnel | Raised central spine for rigidity/packaging |
Australia watch: hot hatch highs and lows
Honda Civic Type R orders reopen (breathe out, enthusiasts)

Honda Australia will reopen the order books for the Civic Type R. Given tougher local emissions settings ratcheting up pressure on performance cars, that’s welcome news. When I last ran a Type R across some patched‑up B‑roads outside Melbourne, it felt like an honest, mechanical handshake—steering with real texture and a gearbox that invites you to find excuses for third‑to‑second downshifts. If you’ve been waiting, this is your cue; allocations tend to go quick.
Volkswagen Golf GTI Edition 50: party canceled (locally)
VW’s Golf GTI Edition 50 isn’t heading to Australia. A shame, because special‑run GTIs usually land the right blend of nostalgia and subtle tweaks. If it’s any consolation, the regular GTI remains a benchmark for daily‑usable performance, but the collector crowd will be miffed. I would be too—I’ve parked more than one “Edition” GTI at airport long‑term lots without a flicker of range anxiety or second thoughts.
Ute chess: Ranger Hybrid sells out, Hilux counters on capability

Ford’s Ranger Wildtrak Hybrid is sold out, and the timing isn’t coincidental—diesel prices are biting. No surprise that buyers pounced: a hybrid Ranger promises day‑to‑day fuel savings without giving up the family‑and‑fleet versatility that’s made it a staple. Every tradie I chat to wants one truck that can commute, tow, and not bankrupt them at the bowser.
Across the fence, Toyota’s Hilux answer isn’t a hybrid—at least not in this particular headline. Instead, the focus is on a Gross Vehicle Mass (GVM) upgrade, effectively addressing payload demands. It’s a different lever to pull, but a telling one: Ford lights the efficiency beacon, Toyota shores up workhorse credentials. That’s the ute segment in a nutshell—powertrain one‑upmanship on Tuesday, practical numbers war on Wednesday.
PHEVs at a crossroads—yet Cupra doubles down with more range
There’s a lively debate rumbling along: are plug‑in hybrids nearing the end of the road? The argument goes that as BEVs gain range and infrastructure, PHEVs risk being a complicated halfway house. But, and it’s a big but, PHEVs remain incredibly useful for apartment dwellers with wall power but no fast chargers, or for long‑haul commuters who like weekday EV miles and weekend flexibility.
Enter the updated Cupra Leon Ve. The Spanish‑styled PHEV hatch gets a significant electric‑only range boost and fresh pricing for 2026. That’s exactly how PHEVs stay relevant: give owners enough real EV mileage to cover the Monday‑to‑Friday grind, then let petrol handle the Christmas‑holiday dash up the coast. When I’ve lived with PHEVs, the key was simple: a nightly plug‑in habit turned fuel stops into rare events.
Design beat: Italdesign puts $20M on Detroit’s table
Italdesign is investing about $20 million to expand in Michigan, wagering that Detroit’s Big Three still want a dose of Italian flair. It’s easy to focus on styling, but these outfits also embed deeply in packaging, ergonomics, and production feasibility. The next American EV or pickup you sit in might owe its seat comfort—or its clever cupholder—to a sketch born in Turin and matured in the Midwest.
The takeaway
AMG’s EV moonshot shows the performance war isn’t dying with combustion—it’s mutating. Australia’s enthusiasts still get their fix (Civic Type R lives on), even if some special editions skip the island. Utes remain the nation’s heartbeat, with Ford and Toyota playing different strengths. And while pundits argue about the PHEV’s future, Cupra quietly makes the case with more electric range, not more noise.
Fast facts FAQ
- When does the Mercedes‑AMG GT 4‑Door EV arrive? — It’s slated as a 2027 model globally and has been confirmed for Australia.
- How powerful is it? — Up to 860 kW (about 1169 bhp), according to reveal coverage.
- Is the Civic Type R still available in Australia? — Yes, Honda is reopening orders locally.
- Is the Golf GTI Edition 50 coming to Australia? — No, that special edition isn’t planned for the Aussie market.
- Why is the Ranger Wildtrak Hybrid sold out? — Strong demand amplified by record diesel prices; buyers are chasing lower running costs.
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