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Stellantis Built A Wild Hot Hatch Concept You Can Drive On Gran Turismo

  • The brand says this concept can hit 62 mph (100 km/h) in as little as 2 seconds.
  • Inside there’s a lightweight driver’s seat, racing harnesses, and colorful upholstery.
  • Despite having an 82 kWh battery pack, the concept weighs in at just 1,170 kg.

Opel has just lifted the veil on an intriguing concept that it teased last week, though it is not a new high-performance model that consumers will be able to buy. Instead, the one-off Opel Corsa GSE is the latest Vision GT creation that’ll be added to Gran Turismo 7 later this year.

Like other Vision GT cars, the Corsa GSE goes far beyond what Opel would actually sell to the public – both in terms of design and performance.

Read: The Most Powerful Opel Ever Comes With A Shocking Price Tag

Regarding the powertrain, it has fitted two electric motors, one at each axle, that deliver a combined 789 hp (588 kW / 800 PS) and 800 Nm (590 lb-ft) of torque. It has also been imagined with an 79 hp (59 kW / 80 PS) overboost function that can be used for four-second bursts and needs 80 seconds to recharge.

The wild hot hatch accelerates from 0-62 mph (0-100 km/h) in just 2.0 seconds, and has a top speed of 200 mph (320 km/h). Providing the motors with their juice is an 82 kWh battery pack. Opel says that the car’s lightweight construction results in it weighing just 1,170 kg (2,579 lbs).

Visually, the Opel Corsa GSE Vision Grand Turismo features bespoke parts which allow it to sit lower and wider than the current Corsa, despite having a similar footprint. Key design details include the flared arches, the latest iteration of the Vizor grille, and the combination of a large rear wing and pronounced diffuser.

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The interior is just as radical and includes a lightweight driver’s seat with six-point seatbelts and sensors that alert the driver to other vehicles on the road. If a car enters the car’s blind spot, a warning will appear through the special illuminated fabrics on the dashboard and door inserts.

More: Opel Built An Electric SUV That Might Make Hot Hatches Nervous

While this will remain firmly a concept, Opel notes that it serves as a “preview of upcoming GSE models”. This might include a hot hatch version of the next Corsa, following the example of the fully electric Peugeot E-208 GTI. The brand recently relaunched its performance sub-brand with the Opel Mokka GSE that pumps out 278 hp (207 kW / 280 PS) and 255 lb-ft (345 Nm) of torque, enough to send the EV to 62 mph (100 km/h) in 5.9 seconds.

A New Corsa Is Coming Soon

The Opel Corsa, currently in its sixth-generation, is a sibling to the Peugeot 208. The next iteration is expected to debut in 2026, riding on the STLA Small underpinnings. As with its predecessor, the subcompact hatchback will likely offer a choice between gasoline, mild-hybrid, and fully electric powertrains.

Styling-wise, the production model will borrow a few cues from the wild Corsa GSE concept like the slimmer Opel Vizor grille at the front. However, it will adopt a more conventional five-door bodystyle which is the new norm in the segment, doing without the oversized aero of the track-focused concept.

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Stellantis

VW’s Rarest Electric Hot Hatch Is More Expensive Than A Golf R

  • Volkswagen unveiled a production version of the ID.3 GTX Fire+Ice concept from 2024.
  • It draws inspiration from the 1990 Golf Fire and Ice and shares a similar color theme.
  • Production is limited to 1,990 units with pricing starting at €56,020 ($65,500) in Germany.

Electric flair is taking on a retro twist. While Volkswagen has signaled that the GTI nameplate will carry on in its future performance EVs, there’s still time for one last spotlight on the short-lived GTX badge. Before the GTI transition arrives, VW introduced a special edition that puts a striking spin on its current electric lineup called the ID.3 GTX Fire+Ice.

Evolving from last year’s vibrant concept, this limited-run model draws direct inspiration from a memorable early ’90s Golf.

Retro Styling Details

The production model dials back the concept’s shimmering finish in favor of a more conventional Ultra Violet Metallic paint. Even so, it retains several distinctive touches, including a custom logo on the spoiler, transparent matte decals on the C-pillars, a Flaming Red roof strip, and coordinating GTX | FIRE & ICE lettering along the side. Rounding out the look are 20-inch Locarno alloy wheels with anodized accents that match the body color.

More: VW Beats Tesla Where It Hurts Most And The Numbers Are Brutal

Inside, the two-tone color scheme from the concept carries over, with Fire Red on the driver’s side and Keep Cool Blue on the passenger’s side. The jacket-style zippers on the front seats remain as a design nod, though they’re now decorative rather than functional. Additional details include contrast stitching and custom puddle lights.

As for equipment, the Fire+Ice edition is well stocked, featuring premium sport seats with massage function, an augmented reality head-up display, a Harman Kardon sound system, and an advanced suite of driver-assistance systems.

Performance Carries Over

The ID.3 GTX FIRE+ICE doesn’t get any performance upgrades over the standard GTX and GTX Performance trims. This means it is available with a single rear-mounted electric motor producing either 282 hp (210 kW / 286 PS) or 322 hp (240 kW / 326 PS). The more powerful variant can sprint from 0 to 100 km/h (62 mph) in 5.7 seconds and comes equipped with the DCC adaptive chassis. That said, it’s still slower than the more affordable Golf R, which does the deed in just 4.6 seconds.

The 79 kWh battery pack is good for a WLTP range of up to 591 km (367 miles) and is compatible with DC charging of up to 185 kW.

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Volkswagen

A Nod to the ’90s

This new Fire+Ice edition pays tribute to the 1990 VW Golf Fire and Ice, developed with fashion designer Willy Bogner. The original stood out with its color scheme and was available in several trims, including the GTI. VW reports it sold 16,700 units, well above its original target of 10,000.

More: Forgotten Polo GTI Cabrio Concept Let Drivers Enjoy Open-Air With Roof Up

That retro influence carries into the present through a modern partnership with performance apparel brand BOGNER FIRE+ICE. Production will be strictly limited to 1,990 units, making it even rarer than the model that inspired it.

In Germany, pricing for the ID.3 GTX Fire+Ice starts at €56,020 (around $65,500), a €8,795 ($10,300) premium over the standard GTX trim. It’s also more expensive than both the gasoline-powered Golf GTI Clubsport (€49,280 / $57,600) and the Golf R (€55,000 / $64,300), solidifying its status as the most exclusive and most expensive ID.3 on offer.

 VW’s Rarest Electric Hot Hatch Is More Expensive Than A Golf R
The VW ID.3 GTX Fire+ICE Concept from 2024.

Alpine’s New A290 Rallye Throws Mud And Sparks At $70K

  • Alpine has turned its A290 hot hatch into a €60k competition-prepped electric rally car.
  • The A290 Rallye makes the same 217 hp as the road car, but gets many chassis upgrades.
  • Rallye-only features include a hydraulic handbrake and pedestrian-scaring noise generator.

Rally successes in the 1950s, ’60s, and early ’70s helped put Alpine on the map, and now the brand has released the competition-ready A290 Rallye to remind us that going electric is no barrier to sending mud, snow, and gravel flying.

Related: The Man Behind Ferrari’s SF90 Is Now Building Alpine’s SF90 Rival

The Rallye isn’t some wild Group B-style monster, but an entry-level rally car that’s eligible for entry in local competitions. So it sticks fairly close to the road-going A290 hot hatch, which together with its Renault 5 brother pulled off a victory in the 2025 Car of The Year competition.

Powertrain Tweaks and Track-Focused Hardware

That means it has a single motor under the hood that sends the same 217 hp (220 PS / 160 kW) to the front wheels as the top-spec production A290 (the entry-level road car makes do with 178 hp / 180 PS / 132 kW). But the ponies reaching those wheels are now dished out by a ZF mechanical limited-slip differential, and the rest of the chassis features some key upgrades that ought to keep it on the wiggly and narrow.

ALP Racing Suspension shocks control wheel and body movements, the 18×8-inch Evo Corse wheels are wrapped in Michelin Pilot Sport A tires, and the front brakes are upgraded from 320 mm rotors and four-piston callipers to 350 mm discs and six pots. Alpine’s engineers have also tweaked the ABS setup and fitted a hydraulic handbrake to boost agility on hairpin bends.

Purpose-Built for the Stage

 Alpine’s New A290 Rallye Throws Mud And Sparks At $70K
Alpine

FIA compliance and common sense mean the Rallye has Sabelt bucket seats and a welded roll cage, but there’s one more tweak that’s got nothing to do with safety and everything to do with putting on a good show for watching rally fans.

The A290 already features a synthesised soundtrack, but for the Rallye Alpine, a new external sound generator was developed that emits noises which change depending on the EV’s speed and throttle position.

Price, Availability, and What Comes Next

The €59,990 (equal to about £51,900 / $70,800) price puts it at the accessible end of the customer rally car scale, although it’s still 40 percent more expensive than a stock A290 with the more powerful of the two available motors. But besides the upgrades, you’re also buying an A290 that is hand-built in the competition workshop at Alpine’s Jean Rédélé factory in Dieppe.

Alpine is unveiling its first electric racer aimed at private customers at the Rallye Rouergue Rodez Aveyron Occitanie this weekend, after which it’ll be trucked to the UK for an appearance at Goodwood, followed by a showing at the Rallye Mont-Blanc Morzine.

Furthermore, A290 Rallye buyers will get the chance to compete in a one-off event in France later this year, which Alpine promises will be backed by technical support and, just as importantly, a specific charging infrastructure.

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Alpine

One Lancia Ypsilon HF Is Fast The Other Just Pretends

  • The Ypsilon HF features a 276-hp EV powertrain, sharper chassis, and aggressive bodykit.
  • Lancia also offers the HF Line with sporty looks but no performance or chassis upgrades.
  • The company presents two racing versions of the Ypsilon: the HF Racing and Rally 4 HF.

More than a year after making its digital debut, Lancia’s long-awaited hot hatch has finally rolled onto the tarmac. The sub-compact Ypsilon HF was officially launched at the Balocco proving ground in Italy, giving the world a first proper look at the fastest, most expensive Ypsilon to date.

More: The First Electric GTI Isn’t From VW

For those who like the sporty aesthetic without the price tag (or the horsepower), there’s also the HF Line for the supermini, a trimmed-down alternative available in both hybrid and electric form. It keeps most of the visual drama while skipping the mechanical upgrades.

Performance

Starting with the full-blown Ypsilon HF, the hot hatch is equipped with a single electric motor generating 276 hp (207 kW / 280 PS) and 345 Nm (255 lb-ft) of torque. That puts it right in line with other high-performance EVs under the Stellantis umbrella, such as the Abarth 600e, Alfa Romeo Junior Veloce, and the upcoming Opel Mokka GSE and Peugeot 208 GTI.

With the help of a front-mounted Torsen limited-slip differential, the Ypsilon HF can launch from 0 to 100 km/h (62 mph) in 5.6 seconds. While that’s quick for its class, top speed is less impressive, capped at 180 km/h (112 mph). Power is drawn from a 54 kWh battery, providing a WLTP-rated range of 370 km (230 miles) between charges.

The HF rides on a stiffened chassis with revised suspension geometry and a lower stance. It sits 20 mm (0.8 inches) closer to the ground than the standard Ypsilon and gets a wider footprint, with 30 mm (1.2 inches) added to the front and rear tracks. Braking has also been upgraded, courtesy of an Aclon system with monobloc four-piston calipers and 355 mm discs up front.

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Rally-inspired Looks

Visually, the Ypsilon HF stands apart with a sportier bodykit and unique 18-inch alloy wheels. Compared to the standard model, it features redesigned bumpers with larger intakes, wider fenders with aero extensions behind the front wheels, a rear diffuser, and the HF badge featuring the iconic red elephant. It’s offered in Nero Ardesia, Bianco Quarzo, and Arancione Lava, the last of which pays tribute to the racing liveries of classic Fulvia and Stratos models.

Inside, the Ypsilon HF gets an electric-blue dashboard, aluminum pedals, sports seats wrapped in Econyl, and a generous scattering of HF logos. Standard equipment includes dual 10.25-inch displays with custom graphics, wireless charging, ambient lighting, and Level 2 driver assistance features. Lancia’s quirky “multifunctional coffee table” console is also along for the ride.

The HF Line As A Budget Alternative

If the full-fat HF is a bit much for your wallet, or you just don’t need all that power, the HF Line delivers the visual flavor at a more digestible price. It wears the same bumpers and logos as the HF, but skips the wide fenders and drops down to 17-inch alloys. Inside, it gets its own version of sporty seats featuring a “cannelloni-style” design with orange stitching. It’s still dramatic, just with a milder aftertaste.

More: 2025 Lancia Ypsilon Hybrid Gains More Power Without Gaining More Power

Despite its aggressive styling, the Ypsilon HF Line doesn’t come with any performance or chassis upgrades. It’s available with either a mild-hybrid 1.2-liter three-cylinder engine producing a rather poor 109 hp (81 kW / 110 PS), or the standard electric powertrain. In its ICE form, the HF Line does 0 to 100 km/h (62 mph) in 9.3 seconds, a full 3.4 seconds slower than the HF. Oddly enough, it manages a higher top speed of 190 km/h (118 mph).

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Price and Release Timeline

The Ypsilon HF is scheduled to hit European dealerships after the summer, while the HF Line is already available for order. In Italy, the fully electric HF starts at €39,200 ($45,900), which makes it the priciest Ypsilon ever sold. The HF Line, on the other hand, starts from a much more palatable €22,450 ($27,300) with the mild hybrid.

Track-Ready Versions

Lancia isn’t stopping at the road-going versions. The brand also shared details on two racing-spec Ypsilons, both powered by non-electrified 1.2-liter turbocharged three-cylinder engines and featuring mechanical limited-slip differentials up front.

More: Is Stellantis Secretly Working On A New Lancia Fulvia?

The entry-level Ypsilon HF Racing produces 143 hp (107 kW / 145 PS) and aims for value-conscious racers with a starting price of €38,900 ($45,600). At the top of the heap sits the Ypsilon Rally 4 HF, packing 209 hp (156 kW / 212 PS), a five-speed Sadev gearbox, upgraded brakes, and proper rally hardware. That one will cost you though, as it starts at €74,500 ($87,400).

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Lancia

This Is The Electric Hatch VW’s ID.3 Wishes Had Never Been Born

  • Cupra is giving its Born electric hatch a mid-life refresh four years after launch.
  • Spy shots show camouflage covering tweaked front and rear lights and bumpers.
  • The sister car to Volkswagen’s ID.3 gained a 332 hp VZ hot hatch version last year.

The Cupra Born is one of our favorite small EVs. It takes the competent but slightly ordinary VW ID.3 and adds some sparkle to the exterior design and interior quality, and both of those attributes could be about to get another boost as part of a midlife refresh.

The VW ID.3 and Cupra Born don’t only share a platform as most VW Group products do. They share so much even the doors are interchangeable, and while it looks like those doors won’t be receiving any changes a part of a 2026 facelift, the bodywork and trim either side of those doors have definitely gone under the knife.

Related: The Next Cupra Leon Will Be EV Only

Eye-scrambling camouflage hides the finer details, but new lights and bumpers will make an appearance when the updated EV is revealed later this year. Images of the facelifted car’s nose indicate a taller lower grille with a new outline and a vertical vent at each outer edge of the front bumper, just ahead of the front wheels.

And the rear shots appear to show a new design of diffuser within the rear bumper, this time with a pronounced lip at the bumper corners to make the German-built Spanish hatch look tougher and lower.

The Born doesn’t need a ton of work because it still looks modern and already has most of the corporate family face now seen on models like the Tavascan and Terramar and soon to debut on the Raval subcompact EV. And Cupra already updated the Born’s interior in 2024 with VW’s bigger 12.9-inch central touchscreen.

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Baldauf

The ID.3 also got the same screen in 2024, but only the Cupra features an e-boost function (optional in some countries) to increase power over the equivalent VW model. While base models in Spain come with a single 201 hp (204 PS / 150 kW) motor, UK models skip that and go straight for the 228 h (231 PS / 170 kW) version that’s a stepping stone to the 322 hp (326 PS / 240 kW) VZ hot hatch introduced last year.

We’re not expecting big changes to those power outputs, but it’s possible Cupra’s engineers could liberate a few more range miles from the 59, 77 and 79 kWh batteries. The Born with the longest legs at present is the VZ, which can go for 366 miles (590 km) before a charge is needed.

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Baldauf

The First Electric GTI Isn’t From VW

  • Peugeot has revealed an E-208 GTI electric hot hatch at this year’s Le Mans 24 Hours.
  • The first electric Peugeot to get the GTI badge has a single motor generating 276 hp.
  • Zero to 62 mph takes 5.7 seconds, but the small 54 kWh battery limits range to 217 miles.

VW has promised to put its legendary GTI badge on a production EV before the end of the decade, but one of its biggest hot hatch rivals, a brand with its own back catalog of GTI heroes, has only gone and beaten it to the punch.

Peugeot revealed the E-208 GTI at this year’s Le Mans 24H in France, bringing the GTI badge back to its lineup after a six-year absence and using it on an electric car for the first time. The regular 208 is available with petrol or ICE power, so Peugeot has hinted that it could also create a 208 GTI with a combustion engine in the future, but for now, it’s going all-in on electric.

Related: Peugeot E-3008 And E-5008 Gaining New Performance Variant

The 208/e-208 is built around a version of the e-CMP Stellantis platform used on cars like the Fiat 600 and Alfa Romeo Junior, and so it comes as no surprise that the e-208 GTI shares much with the hot electric version of those cars, the Abarth 600e Scorpionissima and Alfa Romeo Junior Veloce.

It gets the same single electric motor that sends 276 hp (280 PS / 206 kW) and 255 lb-ft (345 Nm) to the front wheels, though Peugeot claims a small performance advantage, saying the GTI gets to 62 mph (100 kmh) in 5.7 seconds, rather than the 5.9 seconds it takes the Alfa and Abarth.

Outmoves the Mini JCW

That makes the E-208 GTI Peugeot’s quickest accelerating GTI ever, and quicker than all three electric Mini Coopers. The punchiest of those, the 258 hp (262 PS / 192 kW) JCW  is 0.2 seconds slower to 62 mph, though it will pull clear of the Pug at the top end, reaching 124 mph (200 kmh), rather than 112 mph (180 km) before a limiter stops the fun.

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Peugeot

Both have 54 kWh (gross) batteries, but the JCW does more with it, stretching a charge up to 226-250 WLTP miles (364-402 km) while the Pug is reaching for the plug at just 217 miles (350 km). Charge speeds are nothing special, Peugeot claiming a 20-80 percent fill takes “less than” 30 minutes, which is on a par with the JCW, though the 208 proves faster in AC hook-up situations and is the only one to offer standard V2L.

Retro design cues

A 30 mm (1.2 inches) suspension drop and a track widened by 56 mm (2.2 inches) at the front and 27 mm (1.06 inches) at the rear give Peugeot’s latest GTI the kind of square stance that made the classic 205 GTI 1.9 a visual knockout. The 18-inch wheels even pay homage to the 1.9’s rims with their multi-hole design and a center badge whose red GTI letters look like the ones on the badge fitted to the 205’s C-pillar.

 The First Electric GTI Isn’t From VW
Peugeot

There’s more red on the stretched arch flares, the outer portions of the grille, the headlights, and on the four-piston brake callipers, which grab 355-mm rotors. And the red-fest continues inside with red ambient lighting and digital displays (both can be changed to other colors), red floor mats and seatbelts, red stitching on the dashboard and also on the sports seats whose central red stripe again riffs on the design 205 1.9’s half-leather chairs, while the mesh-effect pattern tips a hat to the 1.6 versions’s cloth seats.

With all those nods to Peugeot’s greatest ever hot hatch, let’s hope the driving experience lives up to the promise when the GTI goes on sale later this year, probably priced around £36,000. Besides the better brakes, the GTI package includes retuned springs and dampers, a new rear anti-roll bar, track-friendly Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 rubber, and reworked steering assistance, so the signs are good. But the proof is going to be in the driving. How do you rate the E-208’s chances of going down in history as another GTI icon?

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Peugeot

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