Category Archives: NEW CARS

Škoda Epiq

If Škoda’s EV strategy were a ladder, the Epiq would be the first rung that most people actually want to step on. Unveiling in the first half of this year, the all-new Epiq is Škoda’s smallest, cheapest, and arguably most important electric vehicle yet—a city-sized crossover aimed squarely at drivers who like the idea of an EV but not the price tags that usually come with one.

And in classic Škoda fashion, it’s trying to do the sensible thing in an irrational market.

A Kamiq for the Electric Age

Park the Epiq next to a combustion-powered Kamiq and you’ll immediately understand what Škoda is going for. At 4171 mm long, it sits right in the same urban-SUV footprint, but it uses Volkswagen Group’s new front-wheel-drive MEB+ platform to stretch the wheelbase, flatten the floor, and carve out far more usable space.

The result? A 475-liter trunk, which is a ridiculous number for a sub-compact crossover—and 75 liters more than the Kamiq manages. Fold the seats and you get 1344 liters, meaning the Epiq punches well above its weight for IKEA runs, airport trips, and anything else city life throws at it.

This is where Škoda keeps winning: not with flashy tech demos, but with quiet, practical victories.

Small EV, Big Range

Three versions will be offered, and they’re neatly spaced for different buyers:

ModelPowerBattery0–100 km/hRange
Epiq 3585 kW38.5 kWh (LFP)11.0 s315 km
Epiq 4099 kW38.5 kWh (LFP)9.8 s315 km
Epiq 55155 kW55 kWh (NMC)7.4 s430 km

The smaller battery uses LFP chemistry, which is cheaper, more durable, and better suited for everyday charging habits. The bigger 55-kWh pack switches to NMC, trading cost for higher energy density and a genuinely impressive 430-km WLTP range.

Fast charging is another win: the top-spec Epiq 55 pulls up to 133 kW, good for a 10–80% recharge in 23 minutes. That’s proper road-trip usability, not just city-car convenience.

A New Face for Škoda

The Epiq is also the first production Škoda to go all-in on the brand’s new Modern Solid design language. You get a chunky, confident stance, tight body lines, and a drag coefficient of just 0.275, helped by active air shutters and hidden air curtains in the front bumper.

But the real headline is the lighting.

For the first time, a Škoda production car wears a T-shaped light signature front and rear, giving the Epiq a look that’s more sci-fi than supermarket parking lot. Higher trims get Matrix LED headlights with 12 segments and adaptive modes for city, highway, and bad weather.

This is Škoda finally admitting that even affordable cars deserve to look cool.

Minimalist, But Still Clever

Inside, the Epiq ditches old-school clutter for a clean, horizontal layout built around a 5.3-inch driver display and a 13-inch central touchscreen. It feels modern without going full tablet-on-a-stick.

Materials matter too. Every interior uses 100% recycled PES fabrics, with three design themes:

  • Studio – simple and durable
  • Loft – grey or mint green with synthetic Techtona trim
  • Suite – brown Suedia and Techtona for a more upscale vibe

Ambient lighting is standard on Loft and Suite, helping the small cabin feel bigger and warmer.

And yes, it still has Škoda’s beloved Simply Clever tricks:
an umbrella in the door, a ticket holder on the windshield, an ice scraper made from recycled plastic—and a clever bag in the trunk specifically for charging cables.

Tech From a Bigger Class

Škoda didn’t cheap out on safety. The Epiq comes with Travel Assist 3.0, which combines adaptive cruise, lane centering, traffic-sign recognition, and even automatic stopping at red lights and stop signs.

There’s also:

  • Top View 360-degree cameras with 3D visualization
  • Cross Assist 2.0, warning of cars and cyclists when pulling out of blind intersections
  • Up to seven airbags, including a center airbag between the front seats

This is the kind of kit you used to find only in larger, more expensive SUVs.

The EV That Actually Makes Sense

Here’s the part that really matters: in many markets, the Epiq will be priced roughly the same as a gasoline-powered Kamiq.

That’s a big deal.

It means buyers won’t have to choose between affordability and electrification. They can simply pick the powertrain they prefer. For Škoda, it also means the Epiq becomes the gateway drug to its electric lineup—sitting below the Elroq and Enyaq, with the upcoming seven-seat Peaq waiting above.

In a European EV market full of either overpriced crossovers or ultra-cheap compromises, the Škoda Epiq aims straight for the middle—and that’s exactly where the real volume lives.

If Škoda gets the pricing right, this little electric SUV won’t just be another model in the lineup.
It could be the car that finally makes going electric feel… normal.

Source: Škoda

The Ram Dakota Is Back

For more than a decade, Ram has been glaring at the booming midsize pickup market from the sidelines, watching rivals cash checks while the Dakota nameplate gathered dust. That drought is finally coming to an end. At a closed-door dealer showcase during this year’s NADA Show in Las Vegas, Stellantis pulled the cover off a new Dakota—one slated to hit showrooms in 2028—and the early word from the people who actually sell these trucks is loud and clear: Ram might be back in a big way.

Official specs are still locked in Stellantis’ vault, but dealers who saw the truck came away impressed by what they did get to see. According to Automotive News, several described the new Dakota’s styling as “rough” and “aggressive”—two adjectives that fit Ram’s blue-collar image like a well-worn pair of work gloves.

Jason Feldman, a Houston-area dealer manager, said the proportions look spot-on for going toe-to-toe with the Toyota Tacoma and Ford Ranger. “As long as the pricing is in line, it’s going to be a huge hit,” he noted. That’s not faint praise in a segment where every inch of bed length and every dollar of sticker price is a battlefield.

Others were even more bullish. Adrian Gonzalez, general manager of Payne Edinburg Chrysler-Dodge-Jeep-Ram in south Texas, didn’t mince words: “It really did look nice. Toyota better be careful—we’re going to start competing with them when it comes to the Tacoma.” Ralph Mahalak Jr., who owns six Stellantis dealerships across three states, went so far as to call the Dakota a “game changer.”

Importantly, this Dakota isn’t the one Ram sells in South America. That truck, launched in late 2025, rides on a Chinese-sourced platform and uses a Fiat-derived diesel—hardly the recipe for a red-white-and-blue workhorse. The North American Dakota will be a different beast altogether, built on a ladder-frame chassis and powered by a combustion engine. So much for the unibody EV concept teased back in 2021.

Ram CEO Tim Kuniskis has been clear about the mission: this Dakota has to be a real truck, with the towing and payload numbers to prove it. A V-8 is off the table, but a hybrid powertrain is very much in the cards, a nod to both emissions realities and where the market is heading.

Production plans have also shifted. Instead of Illinois’ Belvidere plant, the Dakota will now be built at the Toledo Assembly Complex in Ohio, alongside the Jeep Wrangler and Gladiator. That move is part of Stellantis’ $13-billion push to modernize U.S. manufacturing—and, presumably, to ensure the Dakota is built with the scale and quality a volume player needs.

And volume is exactly what Ram is after. As Stellantis CEO Antonio Filosa recently admitted, Ram is a “huge, strong pickup maker that is missing a midsize pickup truck.” The Jeep Gladiator may technically live in the same segment, but its off-road-first personality leaves a wide-open lane for a more conventional, utility-focused Ram.

By the time the Dakota arrives in 2028, the midsize truck field—Tacoma, Colorado, Canyon, Ranger, Frontier—will all be on their next turns of the product cycle. Ram is betting that showing up a little late, but with the right hardware and the right attitude, is better than not showing up at all.

If the early dealer buzz is anything to go by, the Dakota won’t just be back—it might finally be ready to fight.

Source: Ram

2026 Mercedes-Benz Marco Polo: A Premium Camper Gets a Factory-Fresh Reset

By the time most campervans manage to feel less like a cargo box and more like a college dorm, the Mercedes-Benz Marco Polo has already checked into boutique-hotel territory. Leather, wood trim, mood lighting, and a three-pointed star on the steering wheel will do that. Now, less than three years after its last refresh, Mercedes has rolled out another update—and this one is less about looking pretty and more about tightening the screws behind the scenes.

The headline is not the roof, the screens, or even the sound system. It’s the factory. For the first time, the Marco Polo will be built entirely in-house, with Mercedes moving the camper conversion from long-time partner Westfalia to its own plant in Ludwigsfelde, Germany. The base V-Class still comes from Spain, but the motorhome magic now happens under Mercedes’ direct control. Translation: better quality oversight, potentially faster delivery times, and a quieter whisper in Stuttgart that says, this thing really matters to us now.

Same Suit, Better Tailoring

Visually, don’t expect your neighbors at the campsite to do a double take. The Marco Polo already adopted the refreshed V-Class face earlier, so the 2026 update keeps the same clean, upscale van look. The real upgrade is overhead.

There’s a new aluminum-shell pop-up roof, complete with adjustable LED ambient lighting and a 2.05-by-1.13-meter bed. Mercedes says the redesign improves both thermal and sound insulation, and it even adds 10 millimeters of headroom. That’s not much on paper, but in a camper van, every millimeter counts—especially when you’re trying not to bonk your head while pulling on a hoodie at 7 a.m.

The awning has also been reworked for easier install and removal, which is a polite way of saying it should now fight you a little less when you’re setting up camp in the rain.

Downstairs, the rear bench still folds into a second double bed, so four people can sleep in the Marco Polo without anyone drawing the short straw on the floor.

Digital Campfire

Up front, the familiar twin 12.3-inch screens remain, but they now run the latest version of Mercedes’ Advanced Control system. While it doesn’t have the eye-watering width of the S-Class Superscreen, it does matter more here, because this software also runs camping-specific functions—lighting, roof operation, and other van-life essentials. Mercedes promises smoother operation, which is something you’ll appreciate when you’re trying to dim the cabin lights without waking everyone else.

The living space keeps its clever, compact layout: kitchen, wardrobe, swiveling front seats, all the good stuff. New magnetic covers for the cockpit add privacy, turning the front seats into part of the living room instead of a glass-walled fishbowl.

Mercedes also tweaked the small but important things. Folding tables and sliding drawers work better, the rear bench has a redesigned control panel, and the refrigerator is more efficient—good news for anyone who likes cold drinks on hot days without constantly checking the battery gauge.

And then there’s the sound system: eight speakers plus a subwoofer, and it can stream via Bluetooth even when the main infotainment system is off. Yes, that means you can keep the vibes going at the campsite without lighting up the entire dashboard like a spaceship.

Same Drivetrain, No Surprises

Under the hood, nothing changes—and that’s not a bad thing. The Marco Polo sticks with Mercedes’ 2.0-liter turbo-diesel, offered in three outputs, topping out at 237 horsepower. A nine-speed automatic sends power to the rear wheels or all four in the 4Matic version, and there’s still an optional self-leveling suspension for those who don’t want to sleep on a slope.

It’s a familiar, proven setup, which is exactly what you want when you’re a long way from the nearest dealer and a long way from home.

A Simpler Sibling and an Electric Future

Alongside the full Marco Polo, Mercedes also introduced the Horizon, a more minimalistic version that ditches the kitchen and walk-in closet but keeps most of the updates. Think of it as the “bring-your-own-camp-stove” edition.

Both versions go on sale soon, with deliveries starting in the second half of 2026. Pricing is still under wraps, but let’s be honest: if you’re shopping for a Mercedes camper van with ambient lighting and an aluminum pop-top, you’re not hunting for bargains.

Mercedes has also confirmed that a next-generation Marco Polo is already in the works, based on its new Van Architecture platform. That means both combustion and fully electric camper vans are on the way, with VAN.CA for gas and diesel and VAN.EA for battery power. Expect to see electric and traditional versions before the end of the decade.

For now, though, the updated Marco Polo is all about refinement, quality, and confidence. It may not look new, but it feels more Mercedes than ever—and in the world of premium camper vans, that might be the most important upgrade of all.

Source: Mercedes-Benz