Faraday Future FX Super One Turns the Front Fascia into Prime-Time Screen Time

In the arms race of in-car tech, the dashboard stopped being the final frontier years ago. Screens multiplied, stretched pillar to pillar, and eventually crept into the second row like a rolling IMAX. Now, if Faraday Future has its way, the next logical step isn’t inside the cabin at all—it’s staring you down from the outside.

Meet the FX Super One, a vehicle that takes the idea of a “face” a little too literally. Where you’d expect a grille—or at least a polite nod to one—there’s instead a full-width LED slab. The company calls it FACE, short for Front AI Communication Ecosystem, which sounds less like a car feature and more like something you’d accidentally subscribe to. Functionally, it’s a rolling digital billboard: animations, messages, video playback, even voice interaction when parked. Your car doesn’t just arrive anymore; it performs.

If this feels like a gimmick, that’s because it kind of is—but not without precedent. Hyundai, Opel, and BMW have all flirted with exterior displays in concept form, typically pitched as a safety tool—think friendly signals to pedestrians or subtle cues for autonomous driving. Faraday Future, however, skips the subtlety entirely. This isn’t about a gentle “you may cross” icon; it’s about turning your morning commute into ad space.

Of course, the technical and regulatory questions pile up faster than pixels on that front fascia. How does a screen like this hold up against weather, road debris, or the occasional parking mishap? What happens when it inevitably meets a rogue shopping cart? And perhaps most critically, will regulators allow a moving vehicle to broadcast what amounts to dynamic advertising in traffic? The FX Super One may be ready for production—Faraday insists it is—but the world it’s driving into may not be ready for it.

Then there’s the company itself. Faraday Future’s track record is, at best, turbulent. The long-promised FF 91 finally trickled into reality years after its splashy debut, only to land with the quiet thud of a niche curiosity. A handful of deliveries later, it became less a Tesla rival and more a cautionary tale. The FX Super One, reportedly targeting a sub-€100,000 price point, is positioned as a reset—a second swing with broader appeal.

But ambition has never been Faraday’s problem. Execution is where things tend to flicker.

Still, there’s something undeniably fascinating about the FX Super One’s premise. Cars have always been expressions—of identity, status, engineering prowess. Now they might become literal communication devices, broadcasting messages to the world in real time. Whether that’s a glimpse of the future or just another overcooked tech flex remains to be seen.

One thing is certain: the line between automobile and advertisement is no longer blurred. It’s backlit, animated, and impossible to ignore.

Source: Faraday Future

BYD Turns EV Charging Into a Pit Stop

There was a time—not that long ago—when a 150-kW fast charger felt like the future. Then came 350 kW, and suddenly “coffee break charging” became the industry’s favorite buzz phrase. Now, BYD has effectively drop-kicked that entire narrative into irrelevance.

The Chinese giant has confirmed that its next-generation charging tech is headed to Europe, and it’s not arriving quietly. Over the next 12 months, BYD plans to deploy 6,000 fast chargers outside China, half of them planted firmly across the European map. That’s ambitious. What’s borderline absurd is the hardware itself.

We’re talking about chargers capable of delivering up to 1,500 kW. Yes, kilowatts—not a typo, not a rounding error. That’s more than four times the output of today’s quickest widely available public chargers. If current infrastructure made EV ownership convenient, BYD’s “Flash” network threatens to make it almost trivial.

And here’s the kicker: it’s not a walled garden. Unlike some charging ecosystems that feel like exclusive clubs, BYD is opting for inclusivity. The chargers will use CCS2 connectors, meaning they’ll play nice with most European EVs. Denza-branded chargers will appear at dealerships selling Denza models, while public installations will carry the Flash name. Behind the scenes, BYD plans to partner with existing charging providers rather than reinvent the wheel—or the grid.

Of course, headline numbers are only half the story. BYD claims its latest battery tech can take a compatible car from 10 to 70 percent in just five minutes, and to a near-full 97 percent in nine. That’s not charging—that’s a pit stop. It fundamentally reshapes how you think about long-distance EV travel. Range anxiety doesn’t disappear; it just becomes irrelevant.

The first beneficiaries of this high-voltage bravado will be the Denza lineup, including the theatrical Denza Z9GT. A three-motor, all-electric shooting brake packing a 123-kWh battery and enough punch to hit 100 km/h in 2.7 seconds, it reads like a spec-sheet fever dream. But it’s also a statement: performance and convenience no longer need to live in separate conversations.

Then there’s the curveball—the Denza D9 DM-i. A plug-in hybrid minivan probably isn’t what you picture when someone says “charging revolution,” but here it is, quietly rewriting expectations. Its 58.5-kWh battery can gulp down up to 559 kW, enabling the same five-minute 10–70 percent charge window. In a seven-seat MPV with 209 km of electric range and a total reach of 950 km, that’s not just impressive—it’s practical. Especially when some rival plug-in hybrids still treat DC fast charging like an optional personality trait.

Naturally, BYD isn’t alone in this arms race. Geely has already hinted that its own next-gen chargers and “Golden Brick” battery tech could push speeds even further. Because of course they could—this is 2026, and escalation is the only constant.

Not everyone is convinced, though. Over in Munich, BMW is playing the role of cautious realist. Markus Fallböhmer, the company’s head of battery production, has openly questioned whether chasing extreme charging speeds comes at a cost. Push one metric to the limit, he argues, and something else—longevity, reliability—inevitably gives way.

It’s a fair point. Physics, after all, doesn’t do hype.

Still, if BYD can deliver even a fraction of what it’s promising—consistently, reliably, and at scale—it won’t just be raising the bar. It’ll be moving it so far ahead that the rest of the industry will have no choice but to sprint just to stay in frame.

Source: BYD

Bentley Hits Pause on EV Dreams, Doubles Down on Hybrid Bentayga for 2028

There was a time—not long ago—when Bentley seemed ready to sprint headlong into an all-electric future. Five EVs by 2030, a battery-powered successor to the Bentayga, and a clean break from combustion. That plan, like so many ambitious electrification roadmaps, has now met reality. The new strategy? Slow down, recalibrate, and double down on plug-in hybrids.

At the center of that rethink sits the next-generation Bentley Bentayga, due in 2028. It won’t be the EV standard-bearer once envisioned. Instead, it will lead a new wave of Bentley plug-in hybrids—less a revolution, more a carefully judged evolution.

A Reality Check from Stuttgart

Bentley’s pivot isn’t happening in isolation. Parent group dynamics—and more specifically, delays at Porsche—have forced a rewrite. The much-anticipated SSP-based electric architecture, originally destined to underpin the Bentayga EV, has been pushed into the next decade at significant cost. That left Bentley with a choice: wait, or adapt.

Adapt it is.

Rather than sit on its hands, Bentley is shifting the next Bentayga onto the PPC platform—the same bones set to underpin the next Porsche Cayenne and future large Audi Q9. It’s a platform built for flexibility, capable of housing everything from straight-up combustion engines to next-gen plug-in hybrid systems.

The Bridge to Electric—Whether You Like It or Not

Bentley CEO Frank-Steffen Walliser isn’t shy about the reasoning. The demand for high-end EVs hasn’t quite matched the industry’s early optimism, and forcing customers into full electrification risks alienating a loyal base.

That base, crucially, loves the Bentayga. It’s been the brand’s best-seller since its 2015 debut, accounting for roughly half of all sales. In other words, you don’t mess with a winning formula—you refine it.

So the next Bentayga will lean heavily on a new-generation plug-in hybrid setup, likely centered around a 3.0-liter V6. Expect power outputs in the same ballpark as today’s 456 horsepower, but with a meaningful upgrade in electric-only range over the current car’s modest 30 miles. New battery tech and updated electronics should push it into genuinely usable EV territory—finally.

Not Quite Done with Gasoline

For all the electrified talk, Bentley isn’t quite ready to close the book on internal combustion. Select markets—particularly the U.S.—will continue to see pure gasoline variants, likely including V8-powered models. Limited-run specials could even sneak through in stricter regions, depending on legislation.

It’s a pragmatic approach, if not a romantic one. The days of unfiltered, twelve-cylinder excess may be numbered, but Bentley isn’t about to abandon its heritage overnight.

Design: Concept to Reality

Visually, the new Bentayga will take cues from the EXP 15 concept, signaling a subtle but meaningful shift in Bentley’s design language. Expect sharper surfacing, more pronounced lighting signatures, and a closer visual relationship to the upcoming “Urban SUV”—a smaller, electric-leaning model aimed squarely at rivals like the Cayenne Electric and Lotus Eletre.

Underneath, the new architecture brings more than just powertrain flexibility. Advanced air suspension with active ride control, the latest driver-assistance systems, and continued support for the Extended Wheelbase variant—all but guaranteed to remain a favorite among chauffeur-driven buyers—will ensure the Bentayga stays at the sharp end of the luxury SUV class.

The EV Isn’t Dead—Just Delayed

Bentley’s first EV, the so-called “Luxury Urban EV,” is still very much on track, with a reveal expected later this year and deliveries beginning in 2027. But if you’re waiting for a fully electric Bentayga equivalent, you’ll need patience—it won’t arrive until after 2030.

And when it does, it’ll likely pack serious firepower. Sharing PPE architecture with electric Porsche models, outputs north of 1000 horsepower aren’t off the table. Range figures approaching 400 miles? Also likely.

The Big Picture

What Bentley is doing here isn’t retreat—it’s recalibration. The brand is betting that plug-in hybrids, not full EVs, are the right answer for the next decade. It’s a hedge against uncertain demand, evolving legislation, and the simple reality that even ultra-luxury buyers aren’t all ready to go fully electric.

The next Bentayga, then, won’t be a revolution. But it might be something more important: exactly what the market is willing to buy.

Source: Autocar

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