If you popped into Doc Brown’s DeLorean and zipped back, say, a decade or so, you’d certainly have plenty of interesting facts to tell the folks of 2011-2012 about what the future holds. But among the exclamations of “Who was president?” and “How much is Apple worth?” you might hear something along the lines of the following from a car enthusiast: “Wait — Porsche is leading the charge into electric cars?”
Here at the end of 2021, though, it doesn’t seem so crazy anymore. Much as we quickly got used to water-cooled 911s and the Cayenne, we’ve all grown pretty much used to the idea of the Taycan. Porsche, smartly, helped win over hearts and minds by launching not with the base model as is their custom, but with the thermonuclear Turbo and Turbo S models, the latter of which can demonstrate that EVs don’t need to be boring in 2.2 neck-snapping seconds.
Remarkably, the Taycan has already reached the stage in a Porsche model’s life cycle where the GTS variant — usually one of the last to debut before a new model or mid-life refresh arrives — rolls up. Given that the GTS has proven to be the sweet spot of the current 718 Boxster / Cayman, Panamera and Cayenne model ranges, I was, shall we say, quite excited to take the Taycan GTS for a spin in the mountains above Los Angeles — especially when I found out I’d be piloting the Sport Turismo version.
Wait, break it down: What’s the Porsche Taycan GTS Sport Turismo exactly?

Time for the now-requisite Porsche name explainer: Taycan refers to the model, the company’s electric car (that’s really closer to a four-door 911 than a smaller Panamera, but that’s neither here nor there); GTS means this is one of the company’s Goldilocks models, which balance all-around performance against price to create one of the better bargains in the Porsche fleet; and Sport Turismo means it’s a station wagon, not to be confused with the ostensibly soft-roader-esque Cross Turismo models.
Putting it simply: it’s an electric sport wagon that’s mean to be a ton of fun to drive.