One vehicle that made a splash in 2018 was the all-new Alpine A110. There's just a couple problems:
1) I most likely wouldn't fit; and, 2) It's not offered in the States, which is a shame, really. C'est la vie.
While many of you may not be sure why this is a big deal, many people who have driven the A110 have made some bold claims. The latest? They've noted it is brilliant in a multitude of ways. Even comparing it with the like of automotive superheroes in form of the aforementioned in this story's headline.
Perhaps its hyperbole but this Autocar article is a particularly interesting read. That's because the writer had it in their possession for several months. 
That said, check out the excerpt below and read the full story by clicking "Read Article," below.
Do you know when an Alpine A110 is  at its absolute best? When you drive it ‘normally’. In the three months  that it was mine, I threw it along mountain passes and around race  tracks. I thrashed its little 1.8-litre motor to the limiter more times  than I’d care to admit, and broke the traction of its rear tyres at  every available safe opportunity. But never was I more dumbstruck by the  car than when, say, taking it to the airport, or collecting a child  from school. Because in those sorts of environments, it shouldn’t have  worked at all. Yet it did. 
And that is remarkable. Imagine you had another one-tonne, two-seat  sports car in the same situation: you’d go down the M4 simply accepting  that the lack of refinement, stiff ride, crude interior and clunky  functionality were merely the price that needed to be paid to drive a  car so light and enjoyable on the right road. But the Alpine is quiet, it is comfortable, it is very nicely trimmed and works nearly as well as a Mégane  most of the time. There is no quid pro quo. Which is why now, more than  ever, I think the A110 is not just a fine new car but a landmark. I use  the word carefully because in the sports car world they don’t come  along very often: the McLaren F1, the original Audi Quattro, Ferrari’s Dino 246 GT and, of course, the first Porsche 911...
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