Checked out the new Hyundai Verna 1.5L Turbo MT SX(O) today.
Right off the bat, in person the car doesn’t look as bad as it does in pictures! This is one rare car where the white colour just doesn’t suit it! But you’ll either take a liking to it or you’ll not like it at all. There is no middle ground in the looks department with these newer-gen Hyundais, something that was present in previous generation Hyundai cars like the 2017 First-Gen Creta I have. The new design language adopted will age very fast!
What I Liked
- Quality levels (the leather wrapped steering and leather Seats felt brilliant to hold and touch) are better than the VAG 2.0 camp sedans for sure.
- The longer wheelbase has surely freed much needed room in the rear seat, which has always been a weak point of the previous gen Vernas.
- Bootspace at 528L is humongous for the segment.
- Features galore, it’s the most feature-loaded car in its segment; ADAS, Ventilated & heated seats, High-beam assist, electric 4-way driver seat, 64 colour ambient lighting etc etc.
- Ingress and egress was pretty good and not a pain.
- Finally a mass-market Hyundai gets all illuminated window switches, something that shouldn’t have been absent earlier (Tucson being the only exception)
- Plenty of space in the centre console area to store knick-knacks, something I really like about all Hyundais.
- MT being offered in several trims with the Turbo petrol engine, something that is missing in the VW Virtus but present with the Škoda Slavia.
- The button to switch between the AC controls and Infotainment controls is a party-trick, but the controls are touch-sensitive (a drawback for me especially while driving).
- Safety on these Indian-made Hyundais has always been a question mark, providing 6 airbags as standard is a good step but a crash test by GNCAP will be needed for the necessary answers.
What I Loathed
- There is not much to differentiate the 1.5L Turbo variant from the 1.5L NA variants other than the red brake callipers and black alloys from the outside. The 1.5L Turbo deserves a N-Line version, which I hope is in the pipeline.
- 1.5L Turbo MT SX(O) variants don’t get the EPB with Auto-hold feature and Rear-disc brakes, reserved exclusively for DCT owners ?! Who decides such a feature distribution, different variants getting different features is understandable but differentiating features on the basis of MT and AT is ridiculous when the same top-end variant is in consideration.
- Hate the twin-spoke steering wheel, just feels so incomplete in an otherwise great looking interior.
- The speedometer cluster is an absolute joke and has no business in a car so expensive!
- The subwoofer jutting out in the boot can be an issue if someone is not careful while stowing their luggage.
- The black interiors may look sporty, but the plastic-y feeling with an All-black cabin gets accentuated, something that dual-tone interiors do better with a more premium and sophisticated look.
Some Pictures
A design that you’ll either like or not like, no middle ground here. This is one rare car where the white colour just doesn’t suit it!:
The coupe-ish design and connected tail-lights give the car good presence when looked at from the rear:
The Black sharkfin antenna provides a good contrast:
Nowadays more and more manufacturers are going for satin finish for various exterior elements like the logos and door handles! First I saw Toyota do it with both the HyRyder and HyCross getting satin finish logos and monikers, now Hyundai has done it with the Verna, everything is in satin-finish on the exterior, several interior bits included. Only chrome I saw on this Verna is the lettering inside the gear knob. A surprising departure from Chrome! :
A very busy alloy wheel design, will be a pain to keep clean especially in full black. The red-callipers denote the 1.5L Turbo variant.
The All-Black interior with red-stitching and piping for the 1.5L Turbo variant:
Absolutely hate this steering wheel design, come on atleast the turbo variants deserve a sportier steering wheel with three-spokes:
With the button for switching between AC and Infotainment controls, a lot of space has been saved without compromising on the usability and ergonomics, smart! :
4-way Driver’s electric seat with a manual lever for adjusting the height, I’m sure providing a 6-way electric seat wouldn’t have costed much! :
Centre console space is a strong point for all Hyundai cars:
Rear seat space is much better on this new generation Verna, the longer wheelbase shows here. I had enough headroom for me at 5’8” even with the sloping roofline:
The rear-legroom on offer with the driver’s seat set to my driving position was on par with the competition:
Bose branding on the speakers, more of show than go as seen already with the Creta, unless Hyundai India has actually changed something dramatically:
Rear-AC vents and a total of 4 charging ports in the cabin with 3 being Type-C USBs ports and 1 USB-A port:
The massive 528L boot is really deep and well designed, the only gripe is the subwoofer jutting out:
Conclusion
With the pricing chosen by Hyundai for the Verna, this has brought some much needed life into the slowly-reviving C-Segment Sedan space.
A diesel will surely be missed in this segment, but that’s how the world is moving, can’t do much about it! By offering both a 1.5L NA and 1.5L Turbo (with class-leading specs) with AT and MT in both, Hyundai can cater to a much wider audience. Although is the 1.5L Turbo really class-leading can only be confirmed once the drive reviews are out, because there is a difference between Korean horses and German horses as seen with the previous-gen 1.0L Turbo 120hp Verna and 110hp 1.0L TSI Virtus/Slavia.
If I am in the sedan space in the near future as a replacement for my Creta, which one will I pick? Well, I had decided the Virtus GT 1.5L TSI long back when I got to test-drive one, will be eager to see if the 1.5L turbo Verna can sway me back to the Korean Camp.