Welcome to Autocar’s annual look at our favourite cars. Most years we examine all cars on sale, but in these somewhat trying times we thought we’d limit the trawl to those we like not for their looks, comfort, refinement, practicality or innovation, but simply for the way they drive.
Which is not to say they must all be supercars or even sports cars, just cars we find inherently interesting to drive. They needn’t even be the most technically accomplished in this regard, as the presence of the Ford Ranger Raptor makes very clear. They must just be fun.
This is also why you’ll notice a conspicuous absence of lifestyle SUVs on the list. These cars are high and heavy – some might say gratuitously – yet no one’s going to routinely enjoy driving them off road. On road, there is none that’s as good to drive as the best equivalent saloon or estate so we make no apology for their omission.
Otherwise, the rules are the same, insofar as there are no rules. If a car is on the list, it’s because those of us on the magazine who spend our lives driving cars want it to be there. And that’s it.
Yes, we know: viewed objectively it shouldn’t get anywhere near this list. Yet despite being slow and heavy, the iconoclastic entertainment on offer, both on and off the road, is indisputable.
Land Rover’s best, deftly judged in its positioning, fluently executed in its engineering and, for the money, better by far than anything else on offer. Great fun and extraordinary off road.
Join the debate
Another traveller
F40
289
@ another traveller
Haha! Oh dear what a faux Pas Matt Saunders......I thought every petrolhead in the land knew a F40 was turbocharged! Are you sure you drove an F40 Matt? -no normally aspirated car behaves like this.
Sackcloth and ashes for a week young man- whilst reading the dummies guide to CARS!
scrap
Another traveller wrote:
Yes, hard to believe he's driven one really. He certainly seems pretty ignorant about it.
artill
Interesting to see that
Interesting to see that nearly all run on petrol, a couple on diesel, and no EVs. Get one while you can!
si73
All well and good but you don
275not599
Just for once could we forget
Just for once could we forget lap times, incisive turn in and red calipers, be less selfish and discuss the best cars for passengers? Ride, quietness and long distance comfort count for every mile you travel, so up go cars like the smooth riding 720S (assuming they don't go bust), down goes the very noisy 911, up goes the Bentley Continental, down goes the Ford Frenetic ST. I'm not a What Dishwasher reader with a white goods car, I own a BRZ but I also have a very good bangernomics LS430. We need to respect the engineering that makes cars comfortable.
russ13b
passengers
most cars i see don't have any, but it's a fair point. How many people are reading something like this, with a view to buying a car that they're going to be a passenger in? What bugs me is that it's always the expensive one of whatever it is, and the most fun i've ever had driving was in a 2cv
Boris9119
No GT3
Did I miss it or is their really no GT3 amongst the list of the Top 50 Fun Cars? I've always found it great fun, as have most motoring journalists?
russ13b
gt3
nobody's saying they're bad, but historically the cheaper Porsches are more fun as a road car
4rephill
How can you trust Autocar.....
Sadly, it's not the first time Autocar journalists have made such an elementary error about cars ("Check the timing belt service has been carried out" on a BMW E46 petrol coupe was another recent error [For the Autocar journalists: All BMW E46's have timing chains - Not belts!] )
It gives the impression that the Autocar staff either know very little about cars, or are simply too lazy to check their facts!
Add your comment