The R1T is the electric truck that drives like a sports car and rides like a luxury SUV, genuinely class-leading dynamics wrapped in a genuinely useful gear tunnel. The catch is you're buying into a startup still finding its footing: Gen 1 trucks suffer systematic 12V battery failures (some owners on their fifth replacement), service centers are scarce and slow, and Gen 2's rear door release is so poorly designed it requires panel removal in an emergency. If you love the truck enough to tolerate growing pains and can live near decent service, it's a thrilling machine; if you need Toyota-grade reliability or can't afford downtime, walk.
The Tundra is a tale of two engines: the 2007-2021 models with the 5.7L V8 are legitimately bulletproof workhorses that justify every ounce of Toyota's reputation, while the 2022+ twin-turbo V6 has suffered catastrophic bearing failures requiring full engine replacements on over 130,000 trucks, some grenading at highway speed. Toyota is replacing engines under warranty and extending coverage, but you're paying F-150 Platinum money for a truck currently in the shop longer than competitors and delivering worse real-world fuel economy than promised. Buy a late second-gen V8 if you want the Tundra everyone actually recommends, or wait a model year to see if the third-gen sorts itself out.