BMW still builds the sport sedan everyone else chases, the steering feel, the balance, the way it shrinks around you on a back road, but the company is actively dismantling what made people pay the premium. The 2023-and-later models strip out physical climate buttons, delete cargo nets and glove boxes, cheapen the materials, and slap an oversized touchscreen onto a dashboard that used to feel like a cockpit, all while raising prices. If you want the 3 Series people actually love, hunt a 2019-2022 G20 before they're gone; if you're shopping new, understand you're paying luxury money for an increasingly unluxurious experience wrapped around an admittedly brilliant chassis.
This twin-turbo sport sedan undercuts BMW and Audi by $10k while delivering quilted Nappa leather, a silky 365-hp V6, and handling sharp enough to embarrass cars twice its price. The 3.3T engine is bulletproof, the warranty is a 10-year safety net, and the styling turns heads without trying. But the top Sport Prestige trim, the one enthusiasts want for its limited-slip differential and Brembo brakes, has a persistent rear differential issue: metal shavings, groaning noises, multiple warranty replacements that don't stick because Genesis keeps using inadequate factory fluid. Owners fix it themselves with aftermarket oil; Genesis should have issued a TSB years ago. Skip the 2.0T (scattered gremlins), confirm your local dealer isn't a disaster before buying, and you've got a car that punches way above its weight. Just know the differential drama is real if you go Sport Prestige.