What came first: the noisy, brightly coloured supercar – or the reckless, narcissistic show-off you so often see at the wheel of one?
A road tester may be in a uniquely fair position to address that. I’m lucky enough to drive plenty of fast, loud, exotic cars in my regular line of work, but not because I’ve spent a perspective-eroding sum to own any of them.
I have no interest to declare. I frequently have been, am and will continue to be both tutting bystander and tutted-at offender.
More often, probably, the former. How often have you been at a car show, event or club meet and seen a supercar that you’re inexorably drawn towards a short time before it is driven in a way that makes you roll your eyes?
Well, let’s consider the case for the defence. The next time you tut, ponder for a moment if your own expectations may be a factor. Modern supercars are, I assure you, dramatic, attention-grabbing cars.
Wherever you drive one, take one, park one, or just stand next to one in a manner suggestive of ownership, you are fair game. You are an attraction. You have invited the gaze of the public.
Eleven-year-olds at bus stops wave their arms and shout: “Rev it!” People ask to take photos, to see inside. They want to know what it’s like. Of course they do.
I usually retreat to a discreet distance and admit at the earliest opportunity that “it’s borrowed”, because I don’t like the glare that these cars create – much less the idea that someone might assume I’d intended to bathe in it.
Whatever you do, though, you can’t really escape it; and clearly, for some, the water’s lovely and they’re very happy to get carried away by it.
Also, when driving a supercar, you might be surprised just how hard you need to work in order not to conform to the stereotype. That sounds like the ultimate cop-out.
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There won't be too many super wealthy buyers left in the UK soon if Reeves sends them all to Dubai to avoid more tax hikes.Ferrari has already reduced its anticipated UK sales forecast for the next year.
Fair comment but numbers did need choking as residuals have taken a battering. My dealer will see a 45% reduction in new cars 2026 versus 2024 and as a punter that is welcome news. Latest gen models are excruciatingly expensive and the options list have got even more out of hand. Too much focus on Ferrari share price I feel.
The first thing you need to do if you can afford a modern supercar is get someone to teach you how to handle it properly at speed and when things get out of hand if you aren't a car journalist who's already had the driving courses at Snetterton, Knockhill and all the rest of it.
You're rather reinforcing Matt's point there chap if you're insinuating none of us have had training or competed at a decent level on track. As with most things in life, this subset of people have very varied degrees of experience and proficiency. After all, there's quite a few poor Prius drivers out there too
Although not a supercar I get positive comments on my current model RS6 Performance. A couple of years ago I also had a Bentley Continental GT W12. More mixed - my favourite was a chap who pulled alongside me at a traffic light in a VW Golf, smacked the side of his own car and said "this is all the car I need mate" and then drive off.