Re: Hyper car [Accepting Entries]
I mostly agree with 07ColbaltGirl. Although In my humble opinion most cars that hope to qualify as "hypercars" should have at least 500HP because its idea that if I'm paying a quarter of a million dollars (or more, usually more) for a car it should have a stupid amount of power because, for me, the difference between a super and hyper is the ability to go stupid fast in short order. Not saying there aren't cars that can keep up with hypercars for less, but you most likely lose the super refined interiors and electronics especially when dealing with modern hypercars. So you get speed, but you end up strapped to a PCB-framed chair with some cloth draped over it and a pipe-cleaner seat belt instead of those hand-stitched Italian leather seats. But if you still have that interior, but only 380hp well then can you keep up? You can? OK, but why should I buy your 250K car instead of that other one with 700hp? Oh you only cost 75K...well...700hp sounds better.
You can make those supercar/hypercar competitors for a (much) lower price. The problem there, for me, is that those competitors aren't hypercars because of that price/accessibility. If its a car a good amount of people could afford then its hard to be an exclusive or limited product which lowers the prestige (IRL anyway the game less so). For example, the Dodge Hellcats, both challengers and chargers, are amazing cars. That's 707 horses, 3.7 second 0-60 times and 200 mph top speed all at a fairly attainable price, but its no hypercar. Supercar...probably not. Now perhaps that's not a great comparison. So Nissan GT-R. In 2012 the GT-R had 500+ horses and sub-4 second 0-60 times, less attainable than a Hellcat but still not outright outrageous. Still not hypercar. Supercar...maybe, I'd be fine saying that. Its accessibility that makes a super/hyper, but if its not fast then its what....a Delorian?
And I went on a rant...
