Let’s face it: Chris Pine’s dramatic line reading of the slogan notwithstanding (that’s right, he’s the voice in those ads), it’s been a long time since BMW could legitimately claim that its cars represent “The Ultimate Driving Machine.” Recent years have seen a host of new models that, while certainly fancy and certainly packing plenty of motor, have lacked that fun-to-drive spirit that set Bimmers apart from Benzes and Audis and other mainstream luxury brands for decades.
BMW, in some ways, has been struggling to find a new identity to help define it for the next couple decades. As it just so turns out, though, that search comes at an opportune time: a moment when basically every carmaker on Earth is scrambling to figure out how their character will change as they ditch decades of internal combustion-based charisma for the anodyne hum and anonymous shove of electric power.
And perhaps no vehicle the brand currently sells offers a better look into what that future could be than the all-new BMW iX.
What makes the BMW iX special?

Simply put, it’s the first purpose-built electric vehicle from BMW meant for a mainstream audience.
Now, it’s not the first vehicle from the i sub-brand, or even the company’s first EV; the i3 city car introduced a decade ago was an electric car that, in some cases, offered a gas-powered generator to extend its paltry range. Likewise, the BMW i4 that went on sale around the same time comes bearing electric motors and battery packs in lieu of a Bavarian engine.