Renault Duster: What you'll like:• A Duster on steroids! 154 BHP motor has transformed its personality. • Very fast & loads of fun on the open road. Punchy mid-range will leave you grinning. • Turbo-petrol's refinement levels are terrific, including at high rpm. • Smooth CVT automatic available. It's quick too. • Mature ride quality & sorted dynamics. • The Duster is still a good-looking crossover. Exterior styling has aged well. • Robust, abuse-friendly build & construction. • Practical boot (475 - 1064 liters of cargo capacity). • Fair pricing for a 154 BHP crossover. Lakhs cheaper than the Creta / Seltos 1.4 Turbos. • ESP is a crucial safety feature in a fast car, while Hill Hold is very useful with a laggy engine. • 205 mm of ground clearance. Dismisses broken roads with aplomb. What you won't:• 1.3L turbo-petrol suffers lag at low revs. It's very easy to stall too. • Duster's terribly old & outdated interiors are the biggest deal-breaker. • Feature list is basic by current times (no sunroof or keyless entry & go, just 2 airbags...). • Ride quality is good, but retuned suspension & 17" rims have taken the "magic" away. • Price premium of ~2 lakhs for the turbo-petrol & 1.6 lakhs for the CVT is way too high. • Red highlights all over the car look extremely garish; we'd get them removed. • The next-gen Duster is already on sale globally, but Renault won't bring it here. • Workhorse 1.5L diesel & competent AWD are gone!!!• Mediocre rear seat legroom. More like C1 segment sedans than C2. • Road & wind noise are prominent at high speed. • Renault's after-sales service quality is inconsistent. Link to reviewNissan Kicks: Link to Launch ThreadHyundai Creta: What you'll like:• A superbly engineered all-rounder that delivers a premium experience. • We find the Hyundai Creta to be well-priced for what it offers. • User-friendly interiors with sufficient space & good quality parts. • Loved the 1.4L turbo-petrol & 1.5L diesel. These are fantastic engines. • Smooth & competent automatic gearboxes available. With the useful "auto-hold" feature too. • Sorted road manners & handling for a Hyundai, including on the highway. You will be surprised!• The Creta's safety package includes 6 airbags, ESP, all-wheel disc brakes, TPMS etc.• Impressive kit (panoramic sunroof, paddle shifters, Bose sound system, cooled seats, cabin air purifier & loads more). • Hyundai's competent after-sales service, fuss-free ownership & upto 5-years standard warranty. What you won't:• Oddball love it or hate it styling. We find the Creta's exterior design to be too weird & futuristic. • Firmer suspension isn't as cushy as the 1st-gen Creta. It is more comfortable than the Seltos though. • Back seat's width makes it better for 2 adults and a kid, rather than 3 adults. • Some misses (no auto wipers, 360-degree camera, illuminated window buttons, full-size spare tyre on top trims). • Dual-clutch ATs (like the Hyundai Creta Petrol DCT) have a history of poor reliability in India. • Diesel’s 113 BHP & 250 Nm – [I]although adequate[/I] – are the lowest in the segment. Old 1.6L CRDi was superior. • No manual transmission available with the fast 1.4L Petrol (Seltos offers this combo). • The stiffer Seltos has an edge in the handling department. IMHO, the Kia is better looking too. • You get bigger SUVs & Crossovers for the same money (e.g. Hector, Harrier, XUV500). Link to ReviewKia Seltos: What you'll like:• A superbly engineered all-rounder that delivers a premium experience. • Handsome, contemporary styling. Looks very sharp. • We find the Seltos to be well-priced for what it offers. • Nice, user-friendly interiors with sufficient space & good quality. • Loved the 1.4L turbo-petrol & 1.5L diesel. They are BS6 compliant too. • Both the automatics - Diesel AT & Petrol DCT - are simply fantastic!• Mature on-road behavior, including at highway speeds. A+ brakes as well. • Unusually wide variant offering. Seems there is something for everyone. • Top safety package includes 6 airbags, ESP, all-wheel disc brakes, blind spot monitor, TPMS etc.• Impressive kit (360 degree camera, HUD, front parking sensors, Bose sound system, cooled seats, cabin air purifier & loads more). What you won't:• Firm suspension. Liveable, but bad roads will bother you (especially on 17" wheel variants). • Back seat's width makes it better for 2 adults and a kid, rather than 3 adults. • Niggles are being reported by owners (details here). • Some misses (no paddle shifters or illuminated window buttons, thinner spare tyre on top trims, no dual-tone option on GTX+ / HTX+). • Dual-clutch ATs (like the Petrol DCT) have a history of poor reliability in India. • Diesel’s 113 BHP & 250 Nm – although adequate – are the lowest in the segment. • Extremely confusing & complicated variant spread. We still haven’t gotten the hang of it!• Kia's after-sales service quality is an unknown. We await details in our ownership reports. • Waiting periods are already a couple of months long for some trims. • You get bigger SUVs & Crossovers for the same money (e.g. Hector, Harrier, XUV500). Link to ReviewMG Hector: What you'll like:• Big size & lots of bling for the money! We find the Hector to be well-priced. • A spacious cabin that can easily seat 5 adults. Massive 587 litre boot too. • Fiat-sourced 2.0L diesel is simply fantastic. • Compliant ride quality. Suspension is tuned for comfort. • Lots of kit (panoramic sunroof, 360-degree camera, electric seats & tailgate etc.). • ‘Connected’ Tablet ICE with an embedded SIM & lovely sound quality. • 5-year / unlimited km warranty with roadside assistance. • Top safety equipment includes 6 airbags, ESP, HSA, all-wheel disc brakes, TPMS & more. What you won't:• Awkward styling on the side & rear profiles. Looks weird from some angles. • Sloppy high-speed handling, noticeable body roll & easy understeer. • The petrol engine is “adequate” at best. Its guzzling Automatic variant is unimpressive. • No Diesel AT (Creta, Seltos, XUV500, Hexa offer this combination, which we love). • Some annoyances like the ~6 meter turning radius, no auto-dimming IRVM, strange rpm meter…. • Small after-sales network. Service quality & long-term reliability are big unknowns. • Waiting period runs into a couple of months. • Don’t get blinded by the British branding. This is a Chinese car. Link to ReviewMaruti S-Cross: What you’ll like:• Solid build & good quality, inside out. • Competent 1.5L petrol offers excellent driveability & practicality. • Smooth torque-converter AT. Gets SHVS tech too. • Mature ride & handling package. High speed behaviour is exceptional. • Practical interiors, spacious cabin and supportive seats. • Features such as LED headlamps, cruise control, auto headlamps & wipers etc.• Maruti's excellent after-sales support network. What you won’t:• This 1.5L petrol motor is uninvolving to drive. Enthusiasts, look elsewhere. • 4-speed Automatic gearbox feels old & outdated. No manual mode or paddle shifters either. • No diesel option! Maruti’s BS6 1.5L diesel engine is still some time away. • AT option has a steep Rs. 1.24 lakh ex-showroom premium (will be more on-the-road). • Unappealing styling. Looks like a big hatchback (not a crossover / SUV). Is quite old too. • Missing features by 2020 standards (6 airbags, sunroof, wireless phone charging etc.). • 353 liter boot - though well shaped - is small for a car of this size & positioning. Link to Review Click here to read BHPian comments.