This $52,450 luxury sedan is not only comfortable, but loaded with conveniences that will make you hate traffic and the ill-kept roads a little less.
Take, for instance, Hyundai’s Smart Cruise Control (radar-assisted cruising) is incredibly intelligent and can help you avoid becoming overly angry at the person six cars ahead of you doing 10 miles an hour underneath the speed limit. Instead of getting anxious, turn the 17-speaker radio up, pop into smart cruise control and relax your way around aggravating traffic in style and luxury.
There’s plenty of room for all size of passengers, too, with tons of room in the back seats for even the tallest of adults. The heated seats are sure to please everyone in the back-seat area, along with the rear-heating options, too. No longer will the backseat be the lesser of all seats, as they have many of the same creature comforts.
Drivers have the ultimate in creature comforts, with the 12-way power front seats, including some of the best lumbar support I’ve seen in a vehicle, along with a power tilt and telescopic steering column, ensuring one can find the best position all-around.
The soundtrack for this car had me smiling the whole time I had it.
While the powerhouse normally stays quiet so as not to disturb the luxuriant driving experience, it can come to life with but the tap of a pedal. The Genesis’ HTRAC all-wheel drive technology, can increase or decrease the amount of power to each of the wheels in order to accommodate driving conditions.
What this means in the real world is that when you step on the gas, there’s little screech of tires and a lot of grip all around. A drive-train intelligent enough to provide just the right amount of power to each wheel.
The Heads-up Display (HUD) not only shows the car’s speed, the next turn while using navigation functions, cruise control speeds, distance to other cars while using the smart cruise control features, but also (the reason no cop will listen to a Genesis driver’s complaints about no speed limit signs) a notification of the current speed limit for the area.
As a diligent auto-journalist, I tested out the speed limit notification by driving around through changing speed limits and… it’s smart. The changes in speed limit show up on the HUD within 10 to 20 feet of the sign, so you really will know pretty quickly that you’re speeding. You can’t help but notice it, the limit is right next to where your speed is shown!
However, the luxuries that surround occupants of the 2015 Hyundai Genesis is going to make the lack of better fuel economy fade away into the (automatically dimming) rearview mirror.