The O.G. hot hatchback, the Volkswagen Golf GTI, came about when engineers tuned up a perky, practical compact for precise corner handling and more power. But the car world has moved on from hatchbacks in the nearly 50 years since. The base Golf is no longer even on sale in America.
The equivalent perky, practical compact for the 2020s looks more like Hyundai’s Kona subcompact crossover. And Hyundai’s N division is now giving us a new full-fat, fire-powered version of it: the Hyundai Kona N, which I recently drove it around my home in Michigan for a week.
The Kona N packs the same 2.0-liter engine as the Elantra N — putting out 276 horsepower and 289 lb-ft of torque — but without the manual option. The styling cues are similar. You could argue it’s a more reasonable package than the quirky, three-door Veloster N, now departed from the lineup for being too quirky. And it can be engrossingly fun.
But the Kona N also packs few of the benefits of being a crossover — and all of the drawbacks. And it will be a hard car for most people to own.
How does the Kona N drive?

Cars like the GTI and Honda Civic Type R are in the rock opera stage — still awesome, but very technical, sophisticated and self-consciously trying to hit the apex of their potential. The Hyundai N cars, in contrast, bring things back toward the smashing guitars and exploding drum kits stage.