What Is a Genesis Car? Test-Driving Hyundai s Fresh Luxury Line

What Is a Genesis? I Tested the two thousand seventeen G90 From Hyundai’s Luxury Brand

Did you witness any sports this past weekend? If so, you may have noticed ads for what looks like a fresh brand of car, the American-sounding Genesis. Potentially you’ve seen one on the road, with that mysterious winged logo that kind of looks like Aston Martin’s.

What is a Genesis?   Fine question.

Even however it’s produced by Hyundai, the fresh Genesis brand will be a separate brute entirely, much like Toyota’s Lexus, or Honda’s Acura. The price point is certainly different: The Genesis G90 starts at almost $70,000. And when I tested one this month, I found that the level of luxury indeed did set it apart from its economy-minded siblings. I drove (and, even more crucially, railed in the backseat of) a Caspian black two thousand seventeen Genesis G90 and found it to be of the caliber of rival cars from BMW, Mercedes, and Audi. I suspect others will feel the same, if they can get past the instinctual dealership-lot feeling that paying more means you get better quality.

Suited for City and Highway

I took this dark coach while on sojourn in Fresh Mexico last week. A friend and I used it to explore the flea markets near Santa Fe before heading to Taos to hunt down turquoise (or at least some decent blue-corn enchiladas). We even ventured past the galleries onto gravel and mud to visit a Pueblo township outside town.

It’s not the car you might hand-select for such a dusty locale; we didn’t see another on the road, as you might expect, and parking attendants plied us with questions and compliments about its looks and heritage. With its straight roofline, long, narrow windows, and blade-like alloy rims, the G90 looks better suited to rolling through downtown Chicago, Dallas, or Manhattan.

But the G90 suited our purposes well. It’s exceptionally quiet and spacious; from behind the wheel on the high road to Taos, it felt like easing a just-arrived spaceship deep into a Martian desert.

Against the Others

It seems natural to compare it to the $72,520 Lexus LS, but the depth of its silent expanse makes it feel nearer to the segment-favorite $96,600 Mercedes-Benz S Class. At three hundred sixty five horsepower and an expected 0-60 sprint of Five.Five seconds, it is not as powerful or rapid as the Mercedes, but it falls in the middle of the power and speed ratings for Audi A8 L and BMW 7-Series. The distance inbetween those fades even more when you consider that this car is more than $Ten,000 less expensive and just as nicely done in the rear cabin, where it counts. And at 124.4-inches long, the wheelbase in the G90 is just shorter than the S600 (124.6”) and BMW 740i (126.Four”), but it hits the Audi A8 by harshly two inches.

G90 comes with a twin-turbocharged V6, as in the one I drove ($Sixty nine,050), or a 420-hp V8 ($70,650) version, if you truly want to thrust the limit. Each version comes with a $Two,500 optional all-wheel drive. It has an in-house eight-speed automatic transmission with rear-wheel drive and manual spanking paddle shifting. There are four drive modes. We stayed in Sport mode most of the time because it felt best, and the suspension and brakes held up their share of the bargain. They are as sleek as any you’d feel in the more expensive Audi A8 or BMW seven Series.

Upon acceleration, there is a slight pause inbetween gas pedal decompression and take-off, but once the car awakes you’ll find sixty miles per hour at the same rhythm you would elsewhere (Five.1 seconds in that V8 version). The treating, too, is as sleek as the silky transmission, with a feel on the steering wheel that is precise but not overly taut. At speed—and felt from the back seat—the G90 becomes an airliner: We soared our way through the pueblos. Where the Cadillac CT6 could pose as a sports sedan, this is a decent town car, nothing less.

Reserved but Memorable

You’d never mistake the G90 for Cadillac’s flashy sedan, but you could be forgiven for mistaking it for an A7 (that big front grille) or an S-Class (from the long, clean sides). It looks at the same time unremarkable but interesting—nondescript enough to elicit the question, “What’s that?”

The back seat is spacious and well-appointed.

The Genesis logo always grabs attention, too, because it is familiar-looking but totally generic, like a symbol you’d make up for a car brand in a movie about the near future. One parking attendant spotted the wings on the nose and suggested it was Bentley, however that is no near-comparison.

This is not to say that it looks boring. Its bi-xenon, high-intensity headlights, LED daytime running, and ambient-lit mirrors come standard; it has the low slung figure of the Merc and slight rear angles of a BMW. The effect is politesse on wheels: quiet, efficient, and well-in-hand.

You Belong in the Back

The interior holds up well vs. competitors, with real polished wood, aluminum, and stainless-steel trims. This is where the G90 shows its best side. Once I had made my friend drive me around town while I sat in the back, feeling like a raja, I couldn’t bring myself to switch back. The muffle of the rail is amplified in the rear, which swaddled me like an infant. The leather is supple and well-sewn, the window shades are power automated and feel blessedly private, and the space afforded me enough room to open up my gams out vapid. The controls in the center and side of the rear even permitted me to shift the front passenger seat forward without opening up.

The controls and touchscreen are well-designed and convenient.

The 12.3-inch infotainment touchscreen, heads-up display, heated front and rear seats, and adaptive cruise control all come standard. In fact, hardly any extra options are suggested; everything you need comes included. Two of my beloved standard features were the crisp heads-up display ideally placed in front of my eyes while driving and the extensive cornering cameras that had the resolution clarity of an apostle. They came in handy identically well as we cruised at 80mph toward Taos and as we backed out of lil’ gravel lots at a Japanese bathhouse that springs up like an oasis in the hills outside Santa Fe.

Fuel efficiency on the G90 is slightly less awesome than on its competitors—24 miles per gallon on the highwaym compared to the A8’s 29mpg and the 740’s 28mph—but that’s more of a consideration if you hit the highway every day than if you’re just being driven around town, for which the G90 is ideally suited.

The bottom line is that Genesis has come strongly out of the gate with this flagship sedan. Company executives have promised to introduce four more extra models by 2021. If this one is any indication, they’re off to a good begin.

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