Mazda has once again decided to surprise the world — this time with the Vision X-Coupe concept. Formally, it's a four-door sedan, but the company insistently calls it a "coupe." And, looking at the body, it's hard to argue with them. A long hood, a sweeping roofline, smooth curves — everything in this car looks honed to the millimeter. It seems that not just designers worked on the forms, but real jewelers with surgical precision.
The concept's appearance causes a slight cognitive dissonance — it seems like a production car of the future, but at the same time, it's as if it came off the cover of a science fiction magazine. However, something much more interesting than just a spectacular design is hidden under the smooth panels.
Rotary Engine That Didn't Die
Yes, that legendary Mazda rotary engine, on which the fame of the RX-7 and RX-8 rested, and about which motoram.ru wrote earlier, is returning. In the Vision X-Coupe, it has undergone a second birth — now paired with an electric motor and battery. The combined power of the setup reaches 503 horsepower, and this is perhaps the main sensation of the concept.
On electric power, the car is capable of traveling up to 160 km, and the total range reaches almost 800 km. But power and numbers are not the most surprising. The main "feature" is in the fuel.
Mazda claims that the rotary engine runs not on gasoline, but on environmentally friendly fuel produced from microalgae. It sounds like a joke from the internet, but the company is seriously developing carbon-neutral biofuel that can be obtained from renewable sources. Of course, this is all at the concept level so far, but the idea itself is striking in its scale.
Drives and Cleans the Air
If fuel from algae didn't surprise you — wait. Mazda went further and equipped the Vision X-Coupe with a Mobile Carbon Capture system. It collects carbon dioxide directly from the car's exhaust in order to then recycle it. In essence, the car not only does not pollute the atmosphere, but on the contrary — cleans it while driving.
Agree, it sounds almost fantastic: you drive along the highway and leave behind not exhaust, but cleaner air. Of course, all this is just a demonstration of technology, but the direction is impressive. Mazda clearly wants to show that the "ecology of the future" can be not boring, but exciting.
Interior Without Giant Screens
Against the background of the widespread enthusiasm for multimedia panels and virtual cockpits, the interior of the Vision X-Coupe looks unexpectedly restrained. In front of the driver's eyes are three classic round instruments, and to the side is one neat display. That's all. No "televisions" on half the dashboard, no dozens of buttons.
Mazda focuses on the purity of forms and returns the feeling of a real "analog" in the digital world. Even the gear lever here has remained physical — which in itself is already a rarity for a concept. The interior is not overloaded with details: smooth surfaces, minimalism and attention to detail — the signature style of the Japanese brand.
Dream or Reality?
The Vision X-Coupe looks like a car from the near, but still future. It's hard to take it seriously — the stories about microalgae, a "self-cleaning" exhaust system and the revival of the rotor sound too futuristic. But Mazda insists: this approach will become the basis for models after 2035.
You can smile, but let's remember — once the rotary engine also seemed like madness, and Mazda made it a symbol of its engineering courage. Perhaps the Vision X-Coupe will become a new milestone — the beginning of a "clean" era, where power and ecology do not contradict, but complement each other.
The Vision X-Coupe is not just another concept. This is Mazda's manifesto: the brand remains true to its ideals, is not afraid to experiment and is looking for a way to preserve the spirit of classic cars in a new, environmentally friendly world.
The rotor is alive, technology has stepped further, and the imagination of the Japanese, it seems, knows no bounds. If all this ever becomes a production model — the future will clearly smell of gasoline... or microalgae.