9 Future Focused Cars That You Shouldn’t Miss

2020 Bentley Bentayga Speed

The fastest version of the Bentley Bentayga is also the priciest. The 626-horsepower Bentayga Speed crossover costs $235,700 to start. But, it can sprint to 60 miles per hour in about 3.8 seconds and on to a top speed of 190 mph.

 

2020 Lamborghini Sian

The stunning Lamborghini Sian is the supercar maker’s first production electrified vehicle, complete with a naturally aspirated 6.5-liter V12 paired to a 48-volt mild-hybrid system attached – the latter makes up 34 of the vehicles total 819 horses. No word on when the Sian officially goes on sale, but merely 63 lucky customers will get their hands on one. Price: $3,700,000.

 

2020 Ferrari Roma

The Ferrari Roma uses a twin-turbocharged 3.9-liter V8 that pushes out 612 horsepower. The new Ferrari Roma goes on sale this summer, and should start at around $220,000.

 

2020 BMW M8 Gran Coupe

The M8 is the most powerful BMW money can buy. Using the same twin-turbocharged 4.4-liter V8 found elsewhere in the lineup, the standard M8 Gran Coupe produces 600 horsepower, while the Competition model ups that number to 617 horses. Of course, this M8 is pricey: the base M8 Gran Coupe starts at $130,000 and the Competition costs $143,000.


 

2020 Porsche Taycan

The Porsche Taycan is an all-new model for 2020 and becomes this famous performance car brand’s first all-electric car for sale. The Taycan is available in three models – Taycan 4S, Taycan Turbo, and Taycan Turbo S – with each offering increasing levels of performance. Prices start at $103,800 for the 4S, $150,900 for the Turbo, and $185,000 for the Turbo S, while two battery packs are available – one 79.2 kWh and one 93.4 kWh.

 

2020 Bugatti Chiron Noire

This year the French hypercar maker debuted a special edition finished in black exposed carbon fiber aptly dubbed, the Noire. It still uses the same quad-turbocharged 8.0-liter 16-cylinder engine, good for 1,500 horsepower, but it’s limited to just 20 units worldwide. Oh, and it costs more than $3.3 million.

 

2020 Land Rover Defender

Land Rover’s long-awaited Defender debuted late last year, with power coming from either a base four-cylinder engine or a more-powerful turbocharged inline-six. The interior of the Defender is ripe with technology borrowed from other products in the Jaguar Land Rover portfolio, while the exterior keeps things rugged with 11.5 inches of ground clearance and 35.4 inches of water wading abilities. The new Land Rover goes on sale in a few months with a starting price of $49,900.

 

2021 Audi E-Tron GT

The sleek electric sedan, meant to accent the available E-Tron crossover, promised 590 horsepower, all-wheel drive, and the ability to hit 60 miles per hour in just 3.5 seconds. Though we haven’t seen much movement on the E-Tron GT since its debut, a production version will likely show up later this year in anticipation of an on-sale date of 2021.

 

2021 BMW iNext

The flagship, electric SUV will likely follow an extensive teasing campaign – kicked off by the Vision iNext concept from 2018 – before it hits the market. The range-topping, 120-kilowatt-hour version should offer as much as 435 miles of range.

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