Try GOLD - Free
GIVING IT THEIR ALL
Autocar UK
|December 22 - 29, 2021
The BMW M3 is fi nally being offered with optional all-wheel drive. Can the latest Audi RS3, revamped for the PlayStation generation, keep it in its sights? Matt Saunders heads to the Peak District to find out
There’s more than a hint of underground flavour about the new Audi RS3. Well, there is to me. I’ve never played a Need for Speed video game nor watched more than 10 puzzling minutes of any Fast and Furious film, so I’m at risk of exposing my ignorance here, as well as my age. But this is a car that looks very much like an invitation for some neon strip lights and an extra-flatulent exhaust to warble fruitily around a cinema car park on a Friday night.
This Audi has got dark, angry features that look a little, well, ‘aftermarket’. Flashy, animated LED headlights, too, that light up with ‘R… S… 3…’ when you unlock it. It has a drift mode, of a sort. All it’s missing is the ability to take video selfies of its occupants when you activate the launch control and then to automatically cut the footage into drag-race sequences for TikTok that alternatively also star Paul Walker or Vin Diesel (who will doubtless be upshifting in their rival ‘whips’ at wholly inappropriate times).

The funny thing is I don’t mean to be dismissive. This car is picking up on a cultural phenomenon far more influential than any car magazine or road tester. This is a new-era super saloon for a new generation. Twentysomething kids just don’t crave the cars their dad once owned, do they? They go their own way; they want new things of which they can claim full ownership. It’s understandable. I didn’t much fancy the AustinHealeys and MGBs my old fella used to drone on about when I was in my late teens, either.
This story is from the December 22 - 29, 2021 edition of Autocar UK.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Autocar UK
Autocar UK
PACE OF PROGRESS
This Jag proved big SUVs could be family-friendly yet dynamic too
2 mins
January 21, 2026
Autocar UK
GEELY SETS ITS SIGHTS ON DEFENDER WITH NEW 4x4
UK-bound Galaxy Cruiser is a rugged, upmarket hybrid with clever tech
1 mins
January 21, 2026
Autocar UK
GEELY STARRAY
Second UK-bound Geely is cut-price hybrid SUV with 83-mile EV range
2 mins
January 21, 2026
Autocar UK
NISSAN UNDER 'UNCOMFY' PRESSURE FROM CHINESE
Its European operations are feeling the heat, even with a plant in the UK
3 mins
January 21, 2026
Autocar UK
BYD DOLPHIN SURF
Pricier model brings extra kit, more power, less range
2 mins
January 21, 2026
Autocar UK
VOLVO XC90
Scares from a spider, eye strain from a slider and other curious issues
2 mins
January 21, 2026
Autocar UK
I've wanted an M5 like this since I was 12
George Flowerday's fondness for the BMW M5 has its roots in childhood when his dad owned an E39-generation 523i.
2 mins
January 21, 2026
Autocar UK
Damien Smith
\"As always, there was more than a fair share of controversy\"
3 mins
January 21, 2026
Autocar UK
Matt Prior
Have Jaguars recently become cooler?
3 mins
January 21, 2026
Autocar UK
Britain should convert its railways into roads
The death knell of British railways” is commonly held to have been rung by Dr Beeching in 1963 but, surprisingly, at least one writer heard it as early as 1912, claiming that “motor cars must supplant them” - despite there then being only about 150,000 slow motorised vehicles using often indirect roads.
3 mins
January 21, 2026
Translate
Change font size

