Today in Cars: Nissan’s Hybrid Blitz, EQS Chases Range Glory, and China’s Luxury Wave Hits Australia
I had one of those multi-espresso mornings where the inbox reads like a roadmap. Nissan’s doing exactly what fans have been begging for (hybrids that feel like EVs, the Xterra’s comeback), Mercedes has decided the EQS deserves a second act with a wild steering yoke and more range, and Australia is about to be showered with premium metal from MG, Denza, Zeekr—and a couple of wallet-friendly tweaks from Cupra and Chery. Let’s unpack it, because there’s a lot to like (and a few eyebrow-raisers).
Nissan’s New Era: Rogue e-Power Leads, Xterra Returns, Juke Goes Full EV, Skyline Teased
Nissan’s global reboot finally has a shape—and it’s not a science project. It’s a pragmatic lineup with fewer nameplates and multiple ways to get electrons to the wheels. The headline is the 2027 Rogue Hybrid (think: X-Trail e-Power logic, American flavor), which swaps the typical hybrid feel for a series-hybrid setup. In practice—based on my time with e-Power in the current X-Trail—you drive electric all the time, while a petrol engine hums quietly in the background as a generator. No rubber-band CVT drone, more immediate torque, and the EV smoothness people crave without the charging anxiety.

- 2027 Nissan Rogue Hybrid: New design, e-Power series-hybrid system, gunning squarely for the Toyota RAV4 Hybrid’s crown.
- New Juke EV: Radically styled, British-built, and fully electric. The quirky crossover grows up, keeps the personality.
- Xterra comeback: Teased with a square-jawed face; targeted for late 2028 arrival (call it a 2029 model). Expect true off-road intent, not just mall-crawler cosplay.
- Skyline returns (teased): Not for America, says the early whisper. Still, a Skyline is a Skyline—expect big energy in Japan.
Inside the company, the plan pairs AI-enabled development with fewer, better models and a diverse powertrain spread—pure EVs where it makes sense, and smart hybrids where the charging map still looks like outback radio reception. If the Rogue drives like the e-Power X-Trail I’ve hustled through stop-start city chaos, Toyota’s RAV4 Hybrid finally has a real sparring partner that fights its own way.
Nissan Rollout Cheat Sheet
| Model | Powertrain | Region | Timing (Target) | What to Expect |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rogue (2027) | e-Power series-hybrid | North America | 2027 | EV-like feel, smoother than parallel hybrids; RAV4 Hybrid rival |
| X-Trail (2027 refresh) | e-Power, e-4ORCE AWD likely | Global (incl. AUS) | 2027 | Refined design, familiar electrified hardware |
| Juke (New) | Full EV | Europe (UK-built) | Unveiled now | Radical styling, compact footprint, urban ace |
| Xterra | ICE/Hybrid expected | North America | Late 2028 (’29 MY) | Body-on-frame vibe, real off-road chops |
| Skyline (New) | TBA | Japan | TBA | Return of an icon—details under wraps |
Use case vibes? The Rogue Hybrid reads like a school-run assassin that won’t wilt on a weekend highway slog. The Juke EV looks tailor-made for tight-city zipping and cheeky kerbside parking. The Xterra? Picture bikes on the roof, dust in the wheel wells, and a dog asleep in the boot while you hunt for a trailhead.
Mercedes-Benz EQS (2026): Longer Legs, Shorter Wheel?
The EQS never lacked comfort; it lacked character—and range that popped off the page. For 2026, Mercedes is reportedly fixing both. In Australia, the updated EQS is set to claim a new national EV range record, and it’s flirting with a yoke-style steering control to boot. The latter is a bold move. In recent tests of yoke setups elsewhere, low-speed maneuvers can feel like rubbing your stomach while patting your head, but on a fast, flowing road, the view and precision are addictive. If Mercedes nails the steering ratio and software, the EQS could finally feel as futuristic as it looks. Long-haul, Sydney-to-Melbourne-in-fewer-stops kind of range would be the clincher.

- More range: Targeting the top of Australia’s EV charts.
- Cabin polish: Expect the usual S-Class-grade quiet with added tech sheen.
- Yoke option: Controversial, but it might just suit the EQS’s lounge-on-wheels brief.
Australia’s Incoming Wave: MG’s Luxe E-REV, Denza’s 850kW Sledgehammer, Zeekr’s Double Act
Popcorn time in Oz. The premium-leaning Chinese marques are arriving with confidence—and interesting tech.
MG’s Extended-Range Flagship SUV
MG has previewed a luxury-leaning, extended-range electric flagship SUV—think EV primary drive with a petrol generator for long hauls. In previous stints with E-REV setups, the charm is simple: quiet urban running with the peace-of-mind of a tank for the countryside. If MG has paired that with a truly plush interior (big screens, soft hides, proper sound insulation), it could be the brand’s most convincing upmarket pitch yet.
Denza Z9 GT: 850 kW EV… and a PHEV, Too
Denza’s Z9 GT is confirmed for Australia with a tri-motor EV option pushing a monumental 850 kW, and a plug-in hybrid variant also on the cards. On paper, that’s stately-wagon practicality with supercar thrust. The PHEV’s the sleeper pick for big-country living: daily EV commuting, petrol safety net for Gold Coast getaways.

Zeekr 9X PHEV and 7GT Electric Wagon
Zeekr will land the 9X PHEV and the 7GT electric wagon. The latter matters: a sleek long-roof EV with real-world cargo space is catnip for families who don’t want another SUV. If Zeekr’s ride quality matches the low-slung promise, road trips just got more interesting.
Value Play: Chery and Cupra Adjust the Dials
- Chery Tiggo 9 Elite: Price trimmed on the brand’s largest SUV, keeping the value heat on rivals.
- 2026 Cupra Formentor: Updated range and pricing locked in for Australia—sporty crossovers with attitude remain very much a thing.
Polestar 2 (2027): Fewer Trims, Higher Base Price
Polestar is simplifying the 2’s lineup for 2027 by axing the base grade, which nudges the entry price up. The upside should be stronger spec standardization—bigger battery or more kit from the jump—though I’ll miss the appeal of a sensibly priced gateway EV for commuters who just want a quiet, sharp-handling liftback with an easygoing daily rhythm.
Luxury Strategy Shifts: Bentayga Goes PHEV, Commodore’s Ghost, and a Tiny Van Twist
- Bentley Bentayga (next-gen): Once destined for full-electric, it’s pivoting to a plug-in hybrid on an Audi platform. That tells you how the ultra-lux space reads the room: electric is coming, but high-luxe buyers want long legs and fast fill-ups right now.
- Holden Commodore’s “spiritual successor” rumor: Word is the Chevrolet Camaro sedan replacement could carry the torch, at least philosophically. If GM builds a proper rear-drive-feeling four-door with presence, Australian nostalgics will take notice—even if the badge wears a bowtie.
- Stellantis x Leapmotor: A tiny Chinese hatch transformed into a featherweight delivery van. Urban logistics love this stuff—tight alleys, low costs, easy charging.
Quick Takes & Buying Notes
- Nissan Rogue Hybrid vs RAV4 Hybrid: If Nissan’s e-Power calibration mirrors the X-Trail I’ve driven, it’ll feel more EV-smooth off the line. The Toyota still owns the fuel-sip reputation and dealer network depth. The test drives are going to be fascinating.
- EQS with a yoke: Try before you buy. For long motorway stints, it could be magic; tight carparks, less so—unless Mercedes nails the steering ratio wizardry.
- Denza Z9 GT EV vs PHEV: If you live near chargers and love drama, the 850 kW EV. If you split city weeks and country weekends, the PHEV is the smarter play.
Coming Soon: What to Watch
- First drive of Nissan’s Rogue e-Power when prototypes surface—curious about cabin hush and generator engagement under throttle.
- EQS Australian range certification figures—will it dethrone the current distance champs?
- Zeekr 7GT ride quality and charging curve; Denza Z9 GT brake feel with that much shove.
Conclusion
Today’s theme is moderation with momentum. Nissan’s no longer chasing EV headlines; it’s building hybrids people actually want to live with. Mercedes is sharpening the EQS into the long-legged limo it always threatened to be. And Australia’s about to receive a wave of premium Chinese hardware that could reset value and performance expectations in one go. It’s a good week to be a car nerd with a spreadsheet and an open mind.
FAQ
- When does the new Nissan Xterra arrive? Late 2028 is the target, likely as a 2029 model-year vehicle.
- What is Nissan’s e-Power in the Rogue Hybrid? A series-hybrid system where a petrol engine acts as a generator and the wheels are driven by electric motors, giving an EV-like feel without charging.
- Will the 2026 Mercedes EQS really set a range record in Australia? That’s the claim. Official local figures are pending, but it’s aimed at the top of the charts.
- Is the new Juke really an EV? Yes, the British-built Juke has been unveiled as a radically styled electric model.
- What’s notable about the Denza Z9 GT? It’s coming to Australia with an 850 kW tri-motor EV option and a plug-in hybrid variant, blending luxury wagon practicality with serious performance.

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