The interior is spectacular; the exterior looks better in person than on screen.
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I literally wrote Silicon Valley in the second paragraph.Nice way of saying, "Silicon Valley" without saying Silicon Valley.![]()
Each one of those individually is probably anathema to some Ferrari fans, never mind all three together. But it’s 2026, and the reality is that the manufacturer absolutely needs something emissions-free in its offerings for vitally important markets like China and Silicon Valley. And now, here it is.
I literally wrote Silicon Valley in the second paragraph.
What a blast from the past! I had a similar one as well. Hadn't thought of that in years!My first reaction was that it reminded me of the VHS rewinder I had as a kid:
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It's absolutely grown on me since Sunday evening. I was very underwhelmed at first but in the right color I am starting to appreciate what they're trying to do.Takes some getting used to, but I like that it’s a very clean look. Once I noticed the black part almost being separate from the colored part, I was intrigued. This design could be a grower instead of a show-er..
I'm not being rude but did you just not read the bit where I wrote that the car was designed by Ive and Newson's agency?
I remember purchasing my first car with a digital display back in 1985, paid a premium for it. Now you pay a premium for analog.
I like it. Love the yellow. If I ever pay a lot of money for a car I want an exciting color. Aero efficient designs are great to see. Am tired of American cars that sacrifice everything to create a four wheeled condominium in either crossover, SUV, or truck shapes. I write truck as most trucks never truck anymore.
Edit: Doc, just saw another article that says Ives contributed to the design of the Luce?
Like some legendary Ferraris of the past, the company chose to work with an outside design team for the Luce, in this case LoveFrom, helmed by Jony Ive and Marc Newson. Many will detect some hints of Apple in the car’s design; more than one journalist said they could imagine it wearing that computer company’s logo rather than the prancing horse shields that dot its exterior. But the almost cab-forward glasshouse perhaps calls to mind the Lotus Etna concept, with some Ferrari F90 (a one-off for the Sultan of Brunei) here and there too. And the four round tail lights obviously reference ’90s designs like the 360 and 550.
I have the theory that the cost in $MONEY$ is a fair approximation of footprint. Not perfect of course, some things are extra toxic. But in general, that money is re-entering the economy to be used on everything the average person uses money on.I AM curious about how the carbon footprint for manufacturing supercars and these luxury vehicles is vs. the average still unaffordable-for-most people new cars today stacks up. Luxury EV's vs economy EV's and luxury ICE's vs economy ICE's, all new model years.
What a blast from the past! I had a similar one as well. Hadn't thought of that in years!
They might need REALLY BIG BADGES.I feel the same about the whole car as the dashboard reveal. It's fine for a car, but doesn't look like a Ferrari. Seeing the whole thing now I bet if you swapped the badges you could convince people that it's some sort of Renault concept.
Not only that. Check the (forgotten) Nissan Max-Out prototype
That entire top part of the screen is not a touchscreen, the stuff you see there is always shown there, plus the physical clock.Making the dashboard touch screen display even more unusable by putting a round cut for a real analogue clock/chronometer into the top right is certainly a choice.
The choice of launch display color was unfortunate, allowing this comparison. As far as paying homage, the tail lights are 308/328. My greatest fear in all this? We’re entering a period of homogenization, mostly aero derived through wind tunnel optimization for the sake of efficiency, which is going to make most cars look quite similar.