Toyota bZ4X Touring BEV

Toyota’s first swing at a mass-market EV SUV, the bZ4X, was competent, sensible, and about as emotionally expressive as a spreadsheet. Now comes the sequel: the bZ4X Touring, launched in Japan on February 25, 2026. And this time, Toyota says it listened.

The pitch is simple: keep the original’s easygoing electric manners and range, then inject a dose of utility, performance, and outdoorsy credibility. Think less suburban shuttle, more weekend-warrior long-hauler.

More Metal, More Space, More Purpose

The headline number? Roughly 1.4 times more luggage space than the standard bZ4X. That’s not a subtle tweak—it’s a mission statement. Toyota’s internal research apparently found that families eyeing EVs still want something that can swallow camping gear, sports equipment, and the inevitable “just in case” duffel bags.

The Touring obliges with a significantly enlarged cargo hold and a squared-off rear profile that looks ready for a roof box and a muddy golden retriever. Outdoor-inspired trim details underline the message: this isn’t just an EV; it’s an EV that wants to leave pavement.

Range That Silences the Doubters

Toyota claims a class-leading 734 km (456 miles) of cruising range. In a world where range anxiety still lurks like a low-battery warning at 2 a.m., that’s a big deal. It puts the bZ4X Touring squarely in long-distance territory—road-trip capable without the need for a charging strategy worthy of NASA mission control.

Even better, rapid charging can take the battery from low to livable in about 28 minutes, even in cold conditions. That’s the kind of real-world usability metric that matters more than theoretical peak charging rates. Ski trip? No problem. Frozen charger cables? Less of a problem.

Quick Enough to Be Interesting

Then there’s the 4WD model. Zero to 100 km/h in 4.6 seconds. That’s hot-hatch quick in a family-friendly electric crossover with a cargo hold big enough for a mountain bike. Electric torque has always been the party trick, but Toyota seems intent on making it part of the brand DNA.

Standard X-MODE on the 4WD version signals genuine off-pavement aspirations. Toyota isn’t pretending this is a rock crawler, but it does want you to feel confident tackling snow, gravel, and muddy trailheads on the way to your campsite. In that sense, the Touring bridges the gap between eco-conscious commuter and light-duty adventurer.

A More Thoughtful EV

Underneath the spec-sheet bravado lies something more strategic. Toyota has doubled down on its “multi-pathway” approach to carbon neutrality—hybrids, plug-ins, hydrogen, and full EVs all coexisting rather than replacing each other overnight. The bZ4X Touring fits into that philosophy as a practical, less intimidating electric option.

The company’s new brand spirit—“to you”—is corporate speak for personalization and customer focus. But here, it translates into something tangible: more space, more range, more capability. In short, fewer compromises.

The Bigger Picture

The original bZ4X proved Toyota could build a credible electric SUV. The Touring suggests Toyota understands what buyers actually want from one. Not just silent acceleration and zero tailpipe emissions, but flexibility. The ability to haul friends, gear, and expectations without flinching.

If the first bZ4X was a toe dipped cautiously into the EV waters, the Touring feels like Toyota wading in up to its knees—still measured, still methodical, but finally having a little fun.

And in the rapidly crowding electric-SUV landscape, that combination of pragmatism and performance might be exactly what the market ordered.

Source: Toyota

Bugatti W16 Mistral ‘La Perle Rare’

There are special editions, and then there are statements. The Bugatti W16 Mistral ‘La Perle Rare’ falls squarely into the latter camp—a one-off, open-top monument to excess, craftsmanship, and the end of an era defined by 16 cylinders and four turbochargers.

If the standard W16 Mistral already represents the final, roofless crescendo of Bugatti’s quad-turbo W16 symphony, this Sur Mesure commission turns the volume up on artistry. Think less “option package,” more rolling haute couture.

Pebble Beach Origins, Billionaire Intentions

The story begins on the manicured lawns of the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance in August 2023, where Jascha Straub—Bugatti’s Manager of Sur Mesure and Individualization—met the client who would commission this pearlescent ode to personal taste. The brief wasn’t about shouting louder than the other hypercars. It was about elegance. Flow. Reflection. A sculptural presence that would look just as at home under the California sun as it would under gallery lighting.

That philosophy tracks. The W16 Mistral is already a design object, its speedster proportions stretched tight over mechanical insanity. The Sur Mesure program simply gives the buyer the brush.

A Study in White and Gold

At first glance, ‘La Perle Rare’ reads as restrained—at least by Bugatti standards. Look closer, and the complexity reveals itself.

The entire car is split visually into upper and lower halves, separated by hand-executed white and gold dividing lines that required hundreds of hours of taping, masking, and paintwork. This isn’t vinyl wizardry. It’s old-school craftsmanship applied to a car capable of rearranging the horizon.

The two-tone concept evolved from an early silver proposal into something far more nuanced: two entirely bespoke whites. Up top sits a warm, gold-infused hue laced with metallic flake, shimmering subtly in direct light. Below, a softer warm white grounds the car. The effect is less contrast, more conversation—sky meeting earth, light playing off surface.

The inspiration draws from Bugatti’s signature “Vagues de Lumière” paintwork, a finish meant to capture how its hypercars bend and reflect light. Here, that idea morphs into something more elemental—a pearl-like glow befitting the name “La Perle Rare.”

Even the diamond-cut wheels get in on the theme, finished in a curated blend that mirrors the body’s gold-and-white interplay. From every angle, the car seems to radiate rather than merely reflect.

A Jewel-Box Cockpit

Inside, subtlety gives way to full commitment. All visible carbon-fiber components are painted white, transforming the cockpit into something resembling a high-end timepiece casing rather than a traditional hypercar interior.

The door panels wear alternating white and warm-gold linework that follows their concave surfaces like tailored piping on a Savile Row suit. Ambient lighting glows softly against the sculpted forms, amplifying the pearl motif after dark. Polished aluminum accents—steering wheel details, console dials, door handles—act like tiny mirrors, bouncing light around the cabin.

And then there’s the signature.

“La Perle Rare,” rendered in Straub’s own handwriting, appears stitched along the central tunnel, engraved on the bespoke engine cover, and painted beneath the rear wing. It’s a designer signing his canvas—except this canvas produces four-digit horsepower.

In a nod to heritage, the iconic Dancing Elephant—originally sculpted by Rembrandt Bugatti—appears within the gear selector casing and on the exterior body panels behind the front wheels. It’s a quiet reminder that while this car is a modern fever dream, the brand’s artistic DNA runs more than a century deep.

The Final Open-Air W16 Statement

The W16 Mistral itself already carries historic weight as the last roadgoing Bugatti to feature the brand’s legendary quad-turbocharged W16 engine. In standard form, it’s a 1600-hp, wind-in-your-hair celebration of mechanical excess. In ‘La Perle Rare’ guise, it becomes something more intimate.

Straub describes the project as a shared passion for elegance and precision—a collaboration where every line and reflection was refined until the car became a pure expression of its owner’s vision. That’s the promise of Sur Mesure: not just customization, but co-authorship.

In the end, ‘La Perle Rare’ isn’t about lap times or top-speed records. It’s about closing a chapter properly. As Bugatti pivots toward a new hybrid future, this one-off roadster stands as a luminous farewell to an engine configuration that redefined the outer limits of internal combustion.

Some cars mark the end of an era with fireworks. This one does it with a pearl-like glow—and 16 cylinders singing into the open sky.

Source: Bugatti

Rimac Hands the Keys to a New CEO

If you were building a Mount Rushmore of modern European automotive disruptors, Mate Rimac would already be chiseling his own face into the granite. At 38, he has managed to do what most industry veterans need a lifetime to attempt: run not one, but two globally significant car companies. But even the most ambitious founder eventually runs into the same immovable object—time.

This week, the Croatian electric powerhouse confirmed a leadership reshuffle that feels less like corporate housekeeping and more like a strategic rebalancing of an empire. Former COO Nurdin Pitarević steps up as CEO of the Rimac brand, while Rimac himself transitions to president, freeing him to focus more intently on his role at Bugatti, where he remains CEO. Taking over the COO role is Marko Brkljačić, who has effectively been operating in that capacity already.

The Real Story Isn’t the Cars

On the surface, this might read as a changing of the guard at the company that built the 1,914-hp Rimac Nevera, the EV hypercar that rewrote the performance record books. But the truth is more industrial—and arguably more important.

Rimac today isn’t just a boutique hypercar manufacturer crafting carbon-fiber lightning bolts for the ultra-wealthy. It’s a Tier 1 technology supplier moving tens of thousands of battery systems and high-performance power units annually. The real growth engine is Rimac Technology—the division that quietly powers everything from limited-production exotics to major OEM electrification programs.

And that’s precisely where Pitarević comes in.

The Operator Takes the Wheel

Pitarević arrived from Continental with the kind of operational pedigree you don’t usually associate with hypercar dream factories. Over the past several years, he has served as Rimac’s right hand, translating vision into production lines, and ambition into contracts. If Mate Rimac is the visionary who imagines a 250-mph electric missile, Pitarević is the executive who ensures the battery modules arrive on time and under budget.

In Rimac’s own words, Pitarević blends “deep operational experience with clear strategic thinking and a strong sense of people and culture.” Translation: he’s the adult in the room when scaling from dozens of cars to tens of thousands of high-voltage systems.

His mandate runs through 2030 and beyond, and it’s anything but modest. The roadmap includes sweeping digitalization powered by artificial intelligence, plus development of next-generation solid-state batteries—likely in partnership with ProLogium Technology, following an agreement signed in September 2025. If solid-state tech reaches production viability under Rimac’s roof, the company won’t just be building the fastest EVs in the world—it could be supplying the chemistry that defines the next decade of electrification.

Beyond the Nevera

Yes, the Nevera still exists as a rolling proof-of-concept for what happens when engineers are given free rein and a carbon budget that rivals a space program. And yes, the newly revealed Bugatti Tourbillon signals that combustion—albeit heavily electrified—isn’t dead in Molsheim.

But the broader play stretches far beyond halo cars. Partnerships with BMW Group and Ceer Motors are already public. Additional joint programs remain under confidentiality, which in automaker-speak usually means “very real and very expensive.”

This is where the leadership shift makes sense. Rimac the founder thrives on moonshots. Rimac the supplier needs structure, scale, and relentless process optimization. You can’t personally oversee hypercar development in France while simultaneously managing exponential battery output in Croatia—not if you plan to sleep.

Founder as President, Builder as CEO

Importantly, Mate isn’t going anywhere. As president, he retains strategic oversight and the cultural stewardship that made Rimac what it is: fast, fearless, and engineering-obsessed. But day-to-day execution now belongs to Pitarević.

In Silicon Valley terms, this is the classic transition from founder-CEO to founder-chairman. In automotive terms, it’s more unusual—and more telling. Hypercar startups don’t typically evolve into global battery suppliers. Then again, most hypercar startups don’t end up controlling Bugatti.

If Pitarević successfully scales Rimac Technology through AI integration, solid-state breakthroughs, and deeper OEM entanglements, this move won’t be remembered as a simple executive reshuffle. It’ll be seen as the moment Rimac stopped being just the company that built the world’s wildest electric hypercar—and fully embraced its role as one of Europe’s most important EV technology architects.

For enthusiasts, nothing changes. The cars will still be outrageous. The numbers will still be absurd.

But behind the scenes, the company just shifted into a higher gear.

Source: Rimac Automobili

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