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Honda Prelude 2026: New vs. old

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A lot has changed in the automotive landscape over the last 25 years.

Over the last quarter century we have seen the decline of local manufacturing, the dominant rise of SUVs and crew cabs, the introduction of electric vehicles, the arrival of new Chinese brands and the dawn of self-driving cars.

It’s been a turbulent start to the new automotive millennium, and there are no signposts to give us a clear direction.

But as much as things are changing, as our roads become more congested and suburban runabouts become homogenous boxes with big screens, there is still a section of owners who enjoy driving something special.

The purity of a sports car is, at its core, a selfish machine designed primarily for driving pleasure on unpaved roads or on the hectic race track.

They’re the cars we all fell in love with and hung posters of on our walls as kids, but today they’re few and far between unless you have more than six (or even seven) numbers burning a hole in your bank account.

Affordable coupes and sports cars from Japanese automakers such as Honda, Nissan, Mazda and Toyota gained popularity in the 1970s and 1980s as they became more efficient and lighter alternatives to American muscle cars.

The Honda Prelude was a prime example, establishing Japan as the new epicenter of high-tech performance motorsport along with vehicles like the Nissan Z, Mazda RX-7 and Toyota Celica/Supra.