This is what happens when a luxury upstart stops apologizing and just builds a genuinely excellent sedan. The current G80 nails the fundamentals, a cabin that feels $20k richer than the sticker, a ride that dissolves highway miles, and styling confident enough that strangers assume you paid BMW money. The infotainment will test your patience with menus buried three layers deep and touch controls that occasionally ignore your finger, but that's the tax for entry. Depreciation is brutal if you're the first owner, glorious if you're the second: $82k lease returns selling for $33k with under 30k miles. Buy it if you want S-Class comfort without the S-Class payment. Skip it if the nearest Genesis dealer is two states away.
Toyota's lifted hybrid sedan splits the difference between Camry and Lexus ES, delivering 40+ MPG and a genuinely upscale interior at a discount, dealers are knocking $7,000+ off sticker because nobody knows what to make of it. The powertrain is strong, the ride is smooth, and one owner walked away from a gooseneck truck collision with just a sore shoulder. The persistent flaw is wind noise from the A-pillar that dealers acknowledge but won't fix, calling it a design quirk rather than a defect. If highway hum doesn't bother you and you want Lexus comfort without the Lexus price, this is a smart buy. If you're noise-sensitive, the ES350h costs more but stays quiet.