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M2410008_#🥰🥰🥰 #❤️❤️❤️ _part2

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October 24, 2025
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M2410008_#🥰🥰🥰 #❤️❤️❤️ _part2

Review: 2025 Audi SQ8 Combines Style With Substance

Driving along in the 2025 Audi SQ8, I feel conspicuous thanks to the bright metallic paint, blacked out trim, and the sinister coupe-like profile. In traffic, the SQ8 hasn’t impressed me yet, at least not enough to justify its $127,490 sticker price. The cabin is muted in black and I have yet to tap into the power or stress the handling enough to make a judgment. Is this thing only about style? Is there a good reason to want one? 

But then I find a country road that’s not only twisty but also rough. It’s a true test of the suspension and a chance to unleash the power away from traffic. I switch to Dynamic mode and have at it. Dynamic mode immediately wakes up the 4.0 liters of German V8 under the hood, raising the revs by holding gears longer, hastening the throttle response, and opening a butterfly valve in the mufflers to bypass the baffles and let the engine sing its deep and soulful tune at a volume above library quiet. 

A red 2025 Audi SQ8 SUV drives on a winding road with mountains and trees in the background, showcasing its impressive style under a clear sky.
A red 2025 Audi SQ8 SUV drives on a curved mountain road with greenery and blue sky in the background.

The twin-turbo V8 spins up 500 horsepower and 568 pound-feet of torque smoothly and confidently. The power arrives early, delivering a jolt from a stop when I step into it as all four wheels hook up thanks to the standard quattro all-wheel-drive system. The 0-60 mph sprint takes just 4.1 seconds, and the SQ8 builds speed easily. With so much power on tap, it’s hard to believe the RS Q8 sits above this model and turns up the wick to 617 horsepower. 

The smooth-shifting eight-speed automatic transmission proves responsive as I link corner to corner. It downshifts to tap into the power coming out of the turns without overdoing it with extremely high revs and hard, disruptive shifts. The sport differential that’s included along with active anti-roll bars in this tester’s optional S sport package also apportions the power side to side at the rear for best traction on corner exit.

Opting for Auto or Comfort modes calms the powertrain, muting the sound, relaxing the throttle, and grabbing the next gear earlier. In these modes, the engine only makes itself known when my right foot gets too frisky. The downside of twin-turbo V8 is fuel economy. It’s EPA rated at 15 mpg city, 21 highway, and 17 combined. I’m only averaging 16.4 mpg per the trip computer.

Close-up of a modern car interior, as seen in the Review: 2025 Audi SQ8 Combines Style With Substance, showing the center console with digital touchscreens, gear shifter, climate controls, cup holders, and leather upholstery.
A red 2025 Audi SQ8 SUV is driving on a paved road with blurred trees and rocky hills in the background.

Dynamic mode also stiffens the chassis. The SQ8 has five-link independent suspensions front and rear, adaptive dampers, a four-corner air suspension, and rear axle-steering. While that’s all pretty advanced stuff, It’s the effect of the active anti-roll bars I feel most. When I toss 5,269 pounds of luxury SUV into a 180-degree lefthander, the anti-roll bars doggedly fight lean to keep the attitude flat, despite 8.2 inches of standard ground clearance and 6.6 inches in Dynamic mode. It feels like it’s defying physics. Not only that, but it rotates well, with just a touch of understeer that’s remedied easily by lifting off the throttle. The rear-axle steering likely doesn’t come into play here. It can turn the rear wheels up to five degrees opposite of the fronts, but that’s at parking lot speeds.

The hefty steering feels stable and the SQ8 reacts directly to my inputs. I’m getting pretty good feedback through the steering wheel, too. I can feel the bumps and ruts of the patchwork pavement without disrupting the ride quality. This is some deft suspension tuning as only the deeper potholes send a shock into the cabin, despite low-profile 285/35R23 Continental SportContact 6 summer performance tires. That’s a lot of unsprung weight to harness, but the SQ8 does it well. Braking is strong, too. Audi outfits the SQ8 with 15.8-inch front rotors with six-piston calipers and 13.8-inch rear rotors with single-piston calipers. The pedal remains firm throughout my shenanigans, but this isn’t a long and winding road and I’d be leery of them holding up on a track.

Interior view of the 2025 Audi SQ8 showcasing its sleek dashboard, sporty steering wheel, center console, and front seats, with a desert landscape visible through the windshield.

A closer look at the cockpit reveals well-chosen, high-quality materials and technology that while aging still looks cutting edge. The SQ8 comes with the screen layout introduced in 2019 with the redesign. It includes a 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster and stacked touchscreens on the dash and center stack. The top screen measures 10.1 inches and the bottom screen stretches 8.6 inches. Both provide haptic feedback to confirm touch inputs. 

The bottom screen is for climate control functions, and the top screen and handles the typical infotainment controls: phone, navigation, and audio. It allows access to apps through the Audi Connect Plus subscription and can be controlled with voice commands. However, those commands can’t control vehicle functions like climate controls or lighting, which means the system is slightly behind the times. The system in the new Audi A5, for instance, incorporates ChatGPT into the navigation system, has even bigger screens, and offers a passenger screen. 

While a color other than black (red is available) would create a more visually interesting interior atmosphere, the SQ8’s cabin materials are top notch. It comes standard with diamond-stitched Valcona leather upholstery, carbon-fiber trim, and aluminum and piano black surfaces. The $3,700 Luxury package included on my tester extends the leather to the dash, upper doors, center console, and armrests, and ands a synthetic suede headliner. Spending another $4,900 brings a bangin’ 19-speaker, 1,820-watt Bang & Olufsen Advanced 3D audio system, though the standard system is also from Bang & Olufsen and has 17 speakers base and 730 watts. 

Close-up of a 2025 Audi SQ8 car door interior, showcasing a speaker grille with a metallic, lined design and a textured black lower section.
A red 2025 Audi SQ8 is parked on a paved surface near a mountain at sunset, viewed from the rear three-quarter angle—an impressive sight for any Audi SQ8 review.

The Q8 family shares its platform and 118-inch wheel base with the Audi Q7. The Q7 cuts a more traditional SUV profile, though, and offers three rows of seats as well as more cargo space. The SQ8’s coupe-like rear roofline cuts into cargo space and precludes the third row. Still, the SQ8 has good second-row room for up to three adults, though two will be far more comfortable, and cargo space is decent at 33.7 cubic feet behind the rear seats and 60.8 cubic feet with rear seats folded down.

The 2025 Audi SQ8 starts at $98,895, including a $1,295 destination fee. That money gets you some of the equipment that makes this such an appealing luxury SUV, including the V8 goodness, the adaptive dampers, the air suspension, sporty suspension tuning, and the rear-axle steering. Inside it includes the screens, leather upholstery, four-zone automatic climate control, heated front sport seats, and wireless smartphone charging.  Spending an extra $7,300 for the Prestige package, which is essentially a trim level, adds such niceties as dual-pane acoustic glass side windows, front seat ventilation and massage, Matrix LED headlights, a head-up display, heated rear seats, soft-close doors, and remote parking.

A full suite of active safety features is standard on all SQ8s. It consists of automatic emergency braking, adaptive cruise control, lane-departure warning, blind-spot monitors, rear cross-traffic alerts, traffic sign recognition, front and rear parking sensors, automatic high beams, and a surround-view camera system. Many of my test vehicle’s options are what make it so good. The $6,000 S sport package improves the dynamics, as does the $2,500 for the 23-inch wheels and summer performance tires. The Prestige package also adds features most buyers will find indispensable.

A stylish SUV, the 2025 Audi SQ8, is parked on a mountain road with trees and rocky hills in the background under a clear blue sky.

The 2025 Audi SQ8 may be aging, but it still has swagger to back up its style. It’s powerful, agile, and luxurious—especially if you pick the right set of options. It sacrifices some utility for its dashing good looks, but that’s part of the swagger, too. You don’t buy a luxury vehicle because you need one. You do it because you want to, and the Audi SQ8 makes me want one.

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2026 Rivian Gen 2 R1S & R1T Quad-Motor Review: Sleeper Supercars in SUV and Pickup Truck Form

by Michael Van Runkle

 July 8, 2025

in Reviews, Rivian

The top image shows a Rivian Gen 2 R1S SUV driving through water, while the bottom image features an R1T Quad-Motor pickup truck kicking up sand on a dirt road.

Instantaneously available electric power allows Rivian’s new Gen 2 Quad-Motor pickup truck and SUV to rip off 0-60 times just as fast, if not faster, than many seven-figure supercars. Those four motors, one powering each wheel, combine for total ratings of 1,025 horsepower and even more importantly, an absurd 1,198 pound-feet of torque – good enough for a claimed 0-60 mph time of just 2.5 seconds for the R1T and 2.6 seconds for the R1S. Plus, each Gen 2 Quad can now manage up to 400 miles of all-electric range in an updated Conserve mode that prioritizes efficiency rather than all-out performance.

Rivian achieved these mind-boggling stats by significantly working over the Gen 2, and then taking advantage of every last improvement for the flagship Quad-Motor variants. Neither looks particularly different from the outside, but beneath the skin lurks new motors, a new front inverter, and reduced electrical complexity that cuts out 10 fewer ECUs, while the remaining seven run far quicker processing speeds than on the Gen 1.

In addition to the on-road performance, Gen 2 also enhances the Quad’s off-road capability, for the adventurous lifestyle that makes up much of the Rivian appeal. Two new nifty features, RAD Tuner and Kick Turn, allow for quite possibly the most discretely complex set of adjustable performance parameters on any car ever, plus the ability to crank through tight turns or drifts on the fly. To show off the revived Quad’s insane power, off-roading prowess, and improved tech integration, Rivian recently invited me to join select media for a long drive day, on and off-road, around Lake Tahoe in Northern California.

A Day of Adventure in the New Rivians

Two green Rivian Gen 2 electric vehicles, the R1T Quad-Motor pickup and an SUV, are parked on a dirt road with stunning red rock formations in the background.

For Gen 2, Rivian purposefully limited the R1S and R1T’s stylistic changes. The SUV and pickup profile therefore look quite familiar, though the Launch Edition spec brings back the popular Launch Green paint job, while every Quad receives blue brake calipers and subtle blue badging surrounds. Rivian’s hilarious cartoon character nicknamed “Gear Guard” dots the body panels, too, which might be the easiest way to tell a Quad apart from lower-spec models.

Otherwise, the clever storage solutions, big central touchscreen, three rows for the R1S, and a surprisingly usable pickup bed for the R1T carry over. But my main goal for the Tahoe program? Figuring out whether the new Quads improve on some of Gen 1’s main flaws: namely, the suspension and steering calibrations. Early in the morning, running along the lake’s west coast, I immediately started fiddling with RAD Tuner, hoping to figure out a way to program out some of my least favorite driving dynamics.

The interior of a Rivian Gen 2 vehicle showing a steering wheel, digital dashboard display, and touchscreen center console with navigation and controls.
A green Rivian R1S SUV drives on a dirt road, kicking up dust as it navigates a rocky, off-road terrain.

First impressions revealed perhaps a slight positive improvement even before I started digging into menu options, admittedly. The R1S Quad I started the day in weighs around 6,800 pounds, but received new suspension tuning to handle such massive torque gains and improved grip for a new set of Michelin Pilot Sport S 5 summer tires. This helped to reduce some of the suspension clunks that I discovered in previous Rivians, but the steering wheel still displayed odd shuddering and vibrations. 

The steering and suspension need to work hard to manage so much weight – not to mention the 7,000-pound R1T Quad – but I did manage to ameliorate some of the woes through RAD Tuner by setting the steering assist to Standard, the ride height to Low, the shock damping to 40%, and the roll stiffness to Soft. Here, combining the plushest ride with a rear-biased torque split of 70:30 and full regenerative braking, seemed to keep the Rivian’s weight in a happy place. 

A Rivian Gen 2 R1S drives along a winding road through a rocky canyon with layered cliffs and lush green vegetation on either side.

But when I then stiffened everything up into Sport mode and started ripping up the winding road toward Donner Pass, the sheer acceleration and handling also effectively masked much of that mass. Without exaggeration, I managed a 3.15-second sprint to 60 mph using launch control, even while going up a slight incline on the straightest section of road I could find. And that was without prepping the tires at all, just by switching on Launch Control then stepping on the brake pedal, pushing the accelerator to the floor, and stepping off the brake.

Exploring Tech on the Trails

A Rivian Gen 2 R1T drives up a dusty, barren hill in a rugged desert landscape, with a large, flat-topped mesa dominating the background under a clear sky.
A white Rivian Gen 2 R1S electric SUV drives up a grassy, sunlit hillside with trees and wildflowers in the background.

I made sure to push my head back into the headrest to avoid whiplash, since the Quad puts out enough punch to quite literally take my breath away. Some supercars and EVs might manage slightly quicker times – the Rimac Nevera and Lucid Air Sapphire come to mind – but it’s hard to match the unbelievable sensation of something so big accelerating so quickly. And nothing, bar none, in a similar performance class can come anywhere near the off-road capability of a Rivian.

At the top of Donner Pass, I swapped into a new R1S Quad Motor equipped with smaller off-road wheels that mimic a classic Method Rally Series design and come shod in Pirelli all-terrain tires. A group of spotters directed our caravan over some rocks, coaching us along as we climbed little obstacles, powered up steep inclines, and negotiated a few technical cross-axle balancing situations. The Rivians all got the job done, but I spent most of the time simply watching the spotters’ directions, rather than taking advantage of the 11 onboard cameras. I also turned off Hill Hold mode after a few minutes to let me left-foot brake while improving throttle response, since I kept easily spinning the tires with all that unbelievable torque available so quickly.

A gray Rivian Gen 2 R1T Quad-Motor pickup truck climbs a rocky, red desert hill under a partly cloudy sky with distant mountains in the background.
A green Rivian Gen 2 pickup truck drives through orange sand, its front tire kicking up a large spray of dust.

Then, we ventured over to a wide open dirt pad to test Kick Turn, the coolest new addition to the Gen 2 other than RAD Tuner. Kick Turn will only come on the Quad, because the system uses all four motors simultaneously to spin one side’s two wheels forward and the other two in reverse. It’s easy to turn on, with a little graphic of Gear Guard doing a jump kick on the center touchscreen. Then, actually using Kick Turn takes a moment of mental adjustment, since turning no longer requires actually turning the steering wheel. Instead, either at speeds up to 15 mph, holding both buttons on the steering wheel in either direction prompts one side’s motors to spin in reverse.

Think of the Mercedes-Benz G580 with EQ Technology, which features a similar “Tank Turn” function. Rivian’s Kick Turn can do the same thing while stopped, but is much more useful in the real world to either turn the Quad into a legit trail-runner by slinging around tight switchbacks, or a legitimate drift machine by starting a rotation then pushing out with more throttle and a bit of countersteering.

Rivian Gen 2 Quad Motor: Conclusions 

Two green Rivian Gen 2 off-road vehicles drive through shallow water at the edge of a small waterfall in a rocky, forested landscape.

As impressive as the power and tech of the new Quad seemed throughout such variable conditions in Tahoe, Rivian clearly makes tradeoffs to cover as wide a range of potential use cases as possible. In direct competition, for example, the Rivian can’t stack up to the dual-motor Lucid Gravity Grand Touring’s nimble handling nor its far more engaging steering and suspension (by a long shot). Now imagine the Gravity’s inevitable Sapphire version with another motor between the rear wheels. Plus, Lucid’s three-row features more space on the interior than an R1S – but achieves that impressive volume thanks to minivan styling that I struggle to move past no matter how sublime the engineering.

Then there’s the Escalade IQ, which leans more toward the traditional luxury buyer with impressive presence, more space inside, and opulent touches ranging from chrome and leather to the enormous touchscreens and up to 40 interior speakers. The electric Escalade can also manage an absurd 480 miles of range, but weighs well over a ton more and costs half again as much.

The new Gen 2 Rivian Quads start at $115,990 for the R1T and $121,990 for the R1S. Each blurs the lines between a stylish option for city life and enough capability for those weekends out camping with the family. And Rivian also provides a happy alternative outside the traditional automotive manufacturer sphere, with a tech-friendly user experience – that’s critically not a Tesla Model X or Y. 

Until the forthcoming R2 and R3 models debut, if you simply must have a Rivian, the Gen 2 Quad’s unbelievable power, and those fun Kick Turn and RAD Tuner features definitely make it the way to go. Plus, the Quad will debut with standard NACS port to charge up at Tesla Superchargers, an absolute gamechanger until the rest of the lineup receives them for model year 2026.

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