The nascent Genesis brand wants increasingly to look like a responsible alternative to the usual suspects in the luxury car market. That its first all-electric models are now coming through into showrooms ought to help a great deal on that score; but elsewhere it’s also omitting some more of the more powerful engines from its European showrooms that buyers elsewhere in the world can choose.
And so, if you’d prefer petrol- rather than diesel-power in your large family SUV, the Genesis GV80 offers a four-cylinder engine only. It’s a 2.5-litre turbocharged motor with both direct in multi-point fuel injection, and it makes bang-on 300bhp for this 2.1-tonne car: more than an equivalent Volvo XC90 offers, but less than most other rivals which typically use six-cylinder lumps.
The GV80 is a little bit cheaper, too, than most of those six-cylinder competitors if you buy it in entry-level ‘Premium’ trim, but we tested it in top-end ‘Luxury’ model guise. Both versions of the car run ostensibly the same rolling chassis specification - steel coil suspension with camera-controlled adaptive dampers, and rear-biased four-wheel drive with an optional electronic locking differential. But while the cheaper trims get 20in wheels as standard, the upper-level ones come on 22s.
This is a big car with quite a laid-back dynamic character. It’s lavishly roomy and generally very smooth and quiet on the move, with a richly equipped and -upholstered interior, a giant-sized steering wheel, a soft ride and fairly gentle handling responses.
Go for a top-of-the-range car with Genesis’ ‘ergo motion’ driver’s seat and you’ll get a large and comfortable chair with heating, ventilation, ‘dynamic’ (read actively adjustable) side bolstering, and multi-setting massage. The driving position is a good one, with predictably good visibility aided by the usual suite of cameras and sensors; so squeezing what is a big car into a typical UK parking bay isn’t as tricky as you might think. Space in the back, meanwhile, is very generous indeed. The second-row chairs slide fore and aft, as well as reclining and folding flat, and the boot behind them is vast.
Up front again, the GV80’s secondary controls are fairly intuitive - and overwhelmingly physical, rather than existing in the touchscreen realm. A chunky, glass-topped rotary gear selector is a reassuring presence, and there’s an equally sizable one next to it that makes scrolling around the infotainment system easy - and something you can do without taking your eyes off the road for long. Genesis’ 3D instrument mode is more gimmicky, and this tester couldn’t switch it off quickly enough. Once it is off, though, there’s nothing at all wrong with the way the GV80 conveys and displays information.
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Stunning inside and out. One of the rare new cars that's truly exeptional value. If I needed a bigger car, and I wasn't such a tightarse, this would be it (can't afford a LX).
XC90, Q7 these are 7 seaters so why the comparasion to this 5 seater. And why does this 4 pot elephant weigh in at 2145kg, that's not a million miles of a 7 seater Model X, looks like it's killing the mpg.
Bottom line is if you cannot afford it save money and buy a Porsche V6
Sorry V6 Cayenne starts at this price, but you get the idea.
Not forgetting its stunning to look at inside and out as well as the quality it exudes.
Glaring omissions from the article.
Would buy this over any German boredom.
I think you mean that you "would buy this USED over any German boredom". The depreciation will be massive from new.